[ [!-- Note Anchor 71 --][Footnote 71: Ibid. No. 84. Sir E. Grey to Sir E. Goschen, July 29.]

[ [!-- Note Anchor 72 --][Footnote 72: p. 8 and Exhibit 12 (see infra [Appendix I]).]

[ [!-- Note Anchor 73 --][Footnote 73: Correspondence, No. 11. Sir E. Grey to Sir II. Rumbold, July 24.]

[ [!-- Note Anchor 74 --][Footnote 74: Correspondence, No. 46. Sir E. Grey to Sir E. Goschen, July 27.]

[ [!-- Note Anchor 75 --][Footnote 75: Ibid. No. 80. Sir R. Rodd to Sir E. Grey, July 29.]

[ [!-- Note Anchor 76 --][Footnote 76: Ibid. No. 43. Sir E. Goschen to Sir E. Grey, July 27.]

[ [!-- Note Anchor 77 --][Footnote 77: Although the German White Book attempts to make out that Russia mobilized on July 26th, it produces no evidence more satisfactory than the information of the German Imperial attaché in Russia, whose account of the Russian military preparations supports only in part the allegations made at Berlin. See German White Book, Exhibits 6 and 7; also Correspondence, No. 78, Sir G. Buchanan to Sir E. Grey, July 29. For the Austrian decree of general mobilization, see the Russian Orange Book No. 47 (infra in [Appendix VI]).]

[ [!-- Note Anchor 78 --][Footnote 78: Correspondence, No. 43. Sir E. Goschen to Sir E. Grey, July 27.]

[ [!-- Note Anchor 79 --][Footnote 79: Ibid. No. 76. The same to the same, July 29.]

[ [!-- Note Anchor 80 --][Footnote 80: Correspondence, No. 78. Sir George Buchanan to Sir E. Grey, July 29, 1914.]