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INDEX

Abdication of the Kaiser de-
manded, must he go? 212-
213; abdication announced,
213; his signed abdication,
219; of rulers of German
States, 233; of Queen of
of Queen of
Netherlands demanded, 232.
"Adoration of the Lamb," Ger-

many to restore, 347.
Agawam. Speed in building, 52.
Age of draftees extended, 35-37.
Albania, Claims of, 326.
Albemarle, Lord and Lady, pre-
sent portrait of Washington,
104.
Alexander, King of Greece.

Fourth of July greetings, 105.
Alien Property Custodian, his
duties, 63; property seized by,
64; extension of his powers,
63, 64.

Alliances, entangling, 309-310.
-Allies, the, call for troops, 36

Lloyd George on the call, 49-
50; food supply for, 54;
Hoover's appeal, 54, 56; vol-
untary rationing, 54-57;
amount of food sent, 56.
Allies, the, feeding, 56, 57.
Alsace-Lorraine, 324, 345.
Amendments proposed to League

of Nations by neutral powers,
312; by Mr. Taft, 312, 313,
320, 390-391; by Senator
Borah, 297-298; by Japan,
312; by Switzerland, 313; by
Mr. Hughes, 318, 320; Com-
mittee on Foreign Relations,

401, 403; majority report,
404-405; lost, 419-420.
American Defense Society, 67.
American Library Association,

84.

American Protective League, 44,
47, 48.

American troops in Russia, 227.
Andrassy, Count Julian, Min-
ister of Foreign Affairs, 199;
appeals to Lansing, 202; re-
signs, 205.
Anniversary

of landing of
American troops in France.
Poincaré to President Wil-
son, 99; Poincaré to General
Pershing, 100; Clémenceau to
General Pershing, 100; Gen-
eral Petain to Pershing, 100.
Arab nation, 325.
Archangel, American troops in,
227.

Armistice with Bulgaria, 168-
169, 170; excitement in Ger-
many, 173-174; in Vienna,
175; Austria asks peace, 176;
Germany asks peace, 176-179;
the Kaiser announces peace
offer to his army, 182; Presi-
dent's reply to Germany's of-
fer, 183; answer of Germany,
187; reply of the President,
190-192; Turkey asks peace,
192-193; President answers
Austria, 195; reply of Ger-
many, 196-197; answers of
the President, 198-199; Ger-
many answers the President,

200; Austria asks him to act,
200; appeal to Lansing, 202;
rumors of collapse of Austria
and Germany, 202-205; Gen-
eral Diaz delivers terms to
Austria, 205; Austria accepts,
206; War Council drafts
terms for
for Germany, 206-
207; Foch to deliver them,
206; Memorandum on the
terms, 206-207; the first Ger-
man delegation, 207; false
rumor of an armistice, 208;
Foch notified by the Germans,
209-210; explanation of the
false announcement, 210-212;
Germany signs the Armistice,
215; the President reads the
terms to Congress, 222; the
two texts compared, 222-226;
Ebert denounces, 285; ex-
tended, 286; effort to obtain
modification, 292-293; Foch
refuses, 292; protest to Foch,
293; again extended, 328;
anger of Germany, 329.
Armistice, false report of, 208;
explanation of, 210-212.
Army-Registration, June,
1918, 32, 33; Crowder's ad-
dress, 32-33; number regis-
tered, 33; classification, 34;
draft age extended, 36, 37;
proclamation by the Presi-
dent, 38; registration, August
36, 37; registration in Sep-
tember, 38, 40, 41; number
registered, 41; Student Army
Training Corps, 41-43; Al-
lies' call for troops, 49; Lloyd
George on the call, 49-50;
movement of troops, 50; num-
ber sent, 50, 51; Germans
press on, 51; Vice Admiral
von Capelle on, 51; French
ports used by army, 85; placed

at disposal of Marshal Foch,
85, 86; the First Division at
Cantigny, 88; the Marines at
Château-Thierry, 89; foreign
newspapers on the fight, 89-
94; Lloyd George on Ameri-
can soldiers, 94; Second Di-
vision on the Marne, 88, 89;
Marines take Belleau Wood,
94-99; Celebration of anniver-
sary of landing of our troops
in France, 99-101; the Ger-
man fifth offensive, 108;
Third Division at the Marne,
108-110; battle line, July
16th, 110; Allied offensive,
July 18th, 111; First Divi-
sion, 111-112; Second Divi-
sion, 111-112; Fourth Divi-
sion, 112, 115; 26th Division
captures Torcy, Belleau, Giv-
ry, 113; Germans evacuate
Château-Thierry, 113; Epieds,
113; Allied front, 114; 42d
Division crosses the Ourcq,
114; Sergy, 114; Fismes,
115; and Vesle crossed, 115;
St. Mihiel salient, 116-121;
King George sends congratu-
lations, 121; Lloyd George
and General Haig, 122; Poin-
caré, 122; fighting in Fland-
ers, 124-126; Gen. Degoutte
on, 126; near Rheims, 129;
moved to Meuse-Argonne,
130; first phase of the battle,
130-132; the "lost Battalion,"
132; the second phase, 132-
134; second American Army,
135; the Armistice, 135-136;
the march to the Rhine, 237-
240; number of troops in
Europe, 136; in Russia, 227.
Article VIII., 294.
Article X. of the Covenant, ob-

jections to, 295, 298, 304,

318, 322; 382; 390; 391; 396; | Automobile owners, Voluntary
conservation of gasoline, 62-

a moral obligation, 397-398;
U. S. not to assume obliga-
tions under, 402; the Presi-
dent on, 407, 411, 412, 413,
414, 424, 425, 426, 427; bi-
partisan conference on, 437-
438 and note; Mr. Taft, 438,
note; the "round robin," 443
and note; the Senate, 447;
the President on, 448; new
reservations on, 449 and note.
Article XII., 302.
Assembly,

German

National,
234, 235, 236, 253, 285, 329,
350-352.
Asquith, Herbert Henry, favors
punishing of German
criminals, 251.

war

Atrocities, German, Allied note
on, 364-366.

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63.

Balfour, Arthur J., 110, 144,
147, 157; on Austrian note,
164-165; favors League of
Nations, 251.

Barrage, The mine barrage in
the North Sea, 30-31.
Barrett, Dorothy, sinking by a
submarine described, 25.
Baseball, game on Chelsea field,
The King present, 104.
Bastile Day, Americans cele-
brate, 107-108.

Bastin, R. H., prisoner on UK-
140, 15, 16; describes attack
on Diamond shoal Light Ship,
19-20; experiences on the
UK-140 described, 20-21.

Attorney-General, explains raid Battles-Cantigny, 88; Château-

on slackers, 46-49.

Australia, claims of, 283; on
League of Nations, 312-313.
Austria, peace speech of Baron

Burian, 148-150; his speech
to German newspaper men,
151-152; Austrian peace note,
156-160; American news-
papers on the note, 160-163;
British journals on the note,
163-164; Balfour, 164; Ger-
many on the note, 165; Lans-
ing's reply, 165, 166; German
press on the reply, 166; Bul-
garian Armistice, 168-170;
excitement in Vienna, 174-
176; Armistice asked, 176;
Emperor to his people, 194;
President's answer to Aus-
trian peace offer, 195; Aus-
tria accepts, 200; Count An-
drassy appeals to Lansing,
202; revolution in, 204-206;
Armistice signed, 206.

Thierry, 89; Belleau Wood,
94-99; on the Marne, 108-
110; advance to the Vesle,
113-115; St. Mihiel, 116-121;
in Flanders, 124-126; Meuse-
Argonne, 129-135.
Battle lines in France, April,

May, June, 1918, 86, 87, 89.
Belgian Army, Fourth of July

greetings to Pershing, 106.
Belgium, von Kuhlmann on,

142; von Hertling on, 145,
146; Berlin Tageblatt on,
147; Vossische Zeitung on,
147; Germania on, 147;
Vice-Councillor Preyer on,
155; reported German peace
offer to. 160; German Chan-
cellor on, 179; protests against
representation, 282; on abro-
gation of treaty of 1839, 330.
Belleau Wood, 94-99; called

"Bois de la Brigade de
Marine," 99.

Bentinck, Count, Kaiser finds
refuge in his castle, 216, 217.
Bernstorff, Count von, 66.
Bipartisan Conference,
Conference,

The,
437-438; reservations, 443 and
note.

Boards, War Industries, 58; War
Labor, 60, 61, 62; Sugar
Board, 55.

"Bois de la Brigade de Marine"

order of General Degoutte, 99.
Borah, William Edgar, Senator

from Idaho, resolution on
treaty of peace before it was
made, 249; resolution on
Monroe Doctrine, questions.
Mr. Taft, 297-298; receives
copy of the treaty, 378; at-
tempts to read it, 379; Borah-
Johnson statement of confer-
ence with the President, 397-
399.
Boundaries, 324, 325, 326-327,
330; in the treaty, 345.
Bourgeois, Leon, 270, 286.
Bread, Victory bread, 54; ra-
tioning, 54, 56.
Brest, reception to the Presi-
dent, 254-255.
Brest-Litovsk treaty, 175.
British Army in Picardy and

Flanders, 1918, 85. General
Haig "With our backs to the
wall," 88; the German drives,
85-87.

Brockdorff-Rantzau, Count von,
German plenipotentiary, 337;
receives the treaty, insulting
speech, 344; protest against
treaty, 353-354; against ex-
clusion from League, 354;
note on labor and repatria-
tion, 354; against economic
boundary reparation terms,
355; more notes, 355; Cabi-
net declines to sign, 356-357;

counter proposal, 358-359;
sends protest of delegation,
359-364.

Bryan, William J., appeal for
Fourth Liberty Loan, 79-80;
speech at Jackson dinner, 435-
436.

Bulgaria asks an armistice, 168-
169; German press on, 169;
armistice signed, 170; Ger-
man press on Bulgaria, 173-
174; excitement in Vienna,
175, 176; King Boris abdi-
cates, 205-206.

Burian, Baron, on terms of

peace, 148-150; 151-152.

Cabinet, The German, will not
sign treaty, 356-357; counter
proposal, 358-359; resign,
368.

Cables, The, taken over, 244,
245.

Cantigny, captured by First Di-
vision, 88.

Cape Cod, vessels off, sunk by
submarine, 13.

Capelle, Admiral von, belittles

troop movement, 51.

Charles, Emperor of Austria, to
his people, 194.
Château-Thierry, Third Divi-
sion at, fight of the Marines,
89; foreign newspapers on,
89-94; Lloyd George on, 94.
Chicago, raid on slackers, 45.
Chinese, refuse to sign treaty,
375.
Classification of registrants, 33-

34.

Clémenceau, Georges, appeal for

Fourth Liberty Loan, 80;
congratulates Pershing, 100;
on a new balance of power,
264; chairman of Peace Con-
ference 273; small nations

protest to, 282; speech on de-
livering treaty, 343-344; an-
swer of Brockdorff-Rantzau,
344; German notes to, 354,
355; sends Allies' review of
German atrocities, 364-368;
Scapa Flow note, 372-373;
speech at signing of the
treaty, 374.

Cloture, 425, 426.

Clubs, rationed, 54, 55.
Coal, war economy in use of,
58; President appeals to min-
ers, 58, 59.

Coblenz, American army en-
ters, 238-239.
Colleges, the Student Army
Training Corps, 41-43; vote
on reservations to League,
437.
Colonies, the German Claims

of the Allies to, 283; British
press on, 284-285.
Commons, the House of, Mr.
Bonar Law announces Ameri-
can victory, 110.
Congress, Bill to extend draft
age, 37; "work or fight"
amendment, 37-38; Mr. Gom-
pers objects, 38; the Act
signed, 38; gives power to
take over telephone, cable and
telegraph lines, 62; President
addresses on finance, 69-71;
amount of money needed, 71;
President reads text of Ar-
mistice, 222-226; The Annual
Message, December, 1918,
246-247; the President an-
nounces he will attend Peace
Conference, 247; Senators op-
pose, 248-249; Senator Fre
linghuysen on League of Na-
tions, 248; President requests
Congress not to discuss Lea-
gue, 293; adjourns leaving

business undone, protest of
the President, 306-307; called
in extra session, 322.
Conscription, Industrial, "work
or fight" order, 34, 35.
Conservation of food, 54; Vic-
tory bread, 54; sugar, 54, 55;
meat, 54, 55; scarcity of
sugar, 55; amount of food
saved for the Allies, 56; Hoo-
ver's second appeal, 56-57; of
fuel, 58, 59; of gasoline, 62-
63; of travel, 63.
Counter-proposal of Germany,
358-359.

Creel, George, 244-245.
Crowder, Provost Marshal Gen-
eral. Address to registrants,
32-33; "Work or fight" order,
34-35; asks extension of draft
age, 36, 37; on August regis-
tration, 37; on slackers, 44.
Crown Prince of Germany, ob-

servation tower captured, 131;
flees to Holland, 217.
Czecho-Slovakia, 325, 345, 348,
359.

Daniels, Josephus, Secretary of
Navy, on the submarine raid,
8; telegram to London Times,
8.

Danzig, 324, 345.
Degoutte,

General, Belleau
Wood to be called "Bois de la
Brigade de Marine," 99; on
Americans in Flanders, 126.
Denmark, 324. Schleswig, 345.
Devastation by the Germans,
St. Quentin, 136; the French
Government protests Repara-
tions Committee, 136-137;
United States protests, 138.
Diaz, General, receives Bulgar-

ia's offer of peace, 168-170;
delivers terms to Austria,

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