[13] Mrs. Walter H. Page.

[14] Miss Katharine A. Page, the Ambassador's daughter.

[15] "Effendi" is the name by which Mr. F.N. Doubleday, Page's partner, is known to his intimates. It is obviously suggested by the initials of his name.

[16] A reference to William Sulzer, Governor of New York, who at this time was undergoing impeachment.

[17] See Chapter VIII, page 258.

[18] The Ambassador's son.

[19] Miss Katharine A. Page.

[20] Mr. Andrew Carnegie.

[21] Mrs. Walter H. Page is the daughter of a Scotchman from Ayrshire.

[22] The astonishing thing about Page's comment on the leadership of the United States—if it would only take this leadership—is that these letters were written in 1913, a year before the outbreak of the war, and eight years before the Washington Disarmament Conference of 1921-22.