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tria The Task of Italy Two Devoted Nations Rumania, Serbia, Bulgaria, Greece Dr. Conybeare's Recantation The Case of Muenter Devotion to the Kaiser Scientists and the Military Hudson Maxim on Explosives Thor! "I am the Gravest Danger" THE EUROPEAN WAR AS SEEN BY CARTOONISTS The Belligerents' Munitions The Power of the Purse Cases Reserved New Recruiting in Britain American War Supplies Magazinists of the World on the War Germany's Long-Nourished Powers "To Avenge" The Pope, the Vatican, and Italy Are the Allies Winning? Selling Arms to the Allies War and Non-Resistance "Good Natured Germany" Italy's Defection Apologies for English Words Germanic Peace Terms France's Bill of Damages A French Rejoinder Dr. Von Bode's Polemic "Carnegie and German Peace" Russia's Supply of Warriors Austria and the Balkans Italy's Publications in War-Time Sweden and the Lusitania A Threatened Despotism of Spirit "Gott Mit Uns" On the Psychology of Neutrals Chlorine Warfare Rheims Cathedral The English Falsehood Calais or Suez? Note on the Principle of Nationality Singer of "La Marseillaise" Depression--Common-Sense and the Situation The War and Racial Progress The English Word, Thought, and Life Evviva L'Italia Who Died Content! "The Germans, Destroyers of Cathedrals" Chronology of the War THE LUSITANIA CASE The American Note to Berlin of July 21 Steps Leading Up to President Wilson's Rejection of Germany's Proposals The German Admiralty on Feb. 4 proclaimed a war zone around Great Britain announcing that every enemy merchant ship found therein would be destroyed "without its being always possible to avert the dangers threatening the crews and passengers on that account." The text of this proclamation was made known by Ambassador Gerard on Feb. 6. Four days later the United States Government sent to Germany a note of protest which has come to be known as the "strict accountability note." After pointing out that a serious infringement of American rights on the high seas was likely to occur, should Germany carry out her war-zone decree in the manner she had proclaimed, it declared: "If such a deplorable situation should arise, the Imperial
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