New York Times Current History: Vol 1, No. 1 | Page 2

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464
THE ELIOT-SCHIFF LETTERS 465 By Jacob H. Schiff and Charles W. Eliot
LA CATHEDRALE (Poem Translated by Frances C. Fay) 472 By Edmond Rostand
PROBABLE CAUSES AND OUTCOME OF THE WAR 473 Series of Five Letters by Charles W. Eliot, with Related Correspondence
THE LORD OF HOSTS (Poem) 501 By Joseph B. Gilder
A WAR OF DISHONOR 502 By David Starr Jordan
MIGHT OR RIGHT 503 By John Grier Hibben
JEANNE D'ARC--1914 (Poem) 506 By Alma Durant Nicholson
THE KAISER AND BELGIUM (With controversial letters) 507 By John W. Burgess
AMERICA'S PERIL IN JUDGING GERMANY 515 By William M. Sloane
POSSIBLE PROFITS FROM WAR 526 Interview with Franklin H. Giddings
"TO AMERICANS LEAVING GERMANY" 533 A German Circular
GERMAN DECLARATIONS 534 By Rudolf Eucken and Ernst Haeckel
THE EUCKEN AND HAECKEL CHARGES 537 By John Warbeke
CONCERNING GERMAN CULTURE 541 By Brander Matthews
CULTURE VS. KULTUR 543 By Frank Jewett Mather, Jr.
THE TRESPASS IN BELGIUM 545 By John Grier Hibben
APPORTIONING THE BLAME 548 By Arthur v. Briesen
PARTING (Poem) 553 By Louise von Wetter
FRENCH HATE AND ENGLISH JEALOUSY 554 By Kuno Francke
IN DEFENSE OF AUSTRIA 559 By Baron L. Hengelmuller
RUSSIAN ATROCITIES 563 By George Haven Putnam
"THE UNITED STATES OF EUROPE" 565 Interview with Nicholas Murray Butler
A NEW WORLD MAP 571 By Wilhelm Ostwald
THE VERDICT OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE 573 By Newell Dwight Hillis
TIPPERARY (Poem) 581 By John B. Kennedy
AS AMERICA SEES THE WAR 582 By Harold Begbie
TO MELOS, POMEGRANATE ISLE (Poem) 587 By Grace Harriet Macurdy
WHAT AMERICA CAN DO 588 By Lord Channing of Wellingborough
TO A COUSIN GERMAN (Poem) 593 By Adeline Adams
WHAT THE ECONOMIC EFFECTS MAY BE 594 By Irving Fisher
EFFECTS OF WAR ON AMERICA 600 By Roland G. Usher
GERMANY OF THE FUTURE 605 Interview with M. de Lapredelle
GERMANY THE AGGRESSOR 609 By Albert Sauveur
MILITARISM AND CHRISTIANITY 610 By Lyman Abbott
VIGIL (Poem) 612 By Hortense Flexner
NIETZSCHE AND GERMAN CULTURE 613 By Abraham Solomon
BELGIUM'S BITTER NEED 614 By Sir Gilbert Parker

NUMBER IV.
THE WAR AT CLOSE QUARTERS
SIR JOHN FRENCH'S OWN STORY 619 Famous Dispatches of the British Commander in Chief to Lord Kitchener
STORY OF THE "EYE WITNESS" 650 By Col. E.D. Swinton of the Intelligence Department of the British General Staff
THE DAWN OF A NEW DAY (Poem) 678 By Edward Neville Vose
THE GERMAN ENTRY INTO BRUSSELS (With Map) 679 By John Boon
THE FALL OF ANTWERP 682 By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle
AS THE FRENCH FELL BACK ON PARIS 689 By G.H. Perris
THE RETREAT TO PARIS 691 By Philip Gibbs
A ZOUAVE'S STORY 704 By Philip Gibbs
WHEN WAR BURST ON ARRAS 707 By a Special Correspondent
THE BATTLES IN BELGIUM (With Map) 711 By The Associated Press
SEEKING WOUNDED ON BATTLE FRONT 714 By Philip Gibbs
AT THE KAISER'S HEADQUARTERS 718 By Cyril Brown of The New York Times
HOW THE BELGIANS FIGHT 725 By a Correspondent of The London Daily News
A VISIT TO THE FIRING LINE IN FRANCE 727 By a Correspondent of The New York Times
UNBURIED DEAD STREW LORRAINE (With Map) 729 By Philip Gibbs
ALONG THE GERMAN LINES NEAR METZ 731 By The Associated Press
THE SLAUGHTER IN ALSACE 736 By John H. Cox
RENNENKAMPF ON THE RUSSIAN BORDER 738 By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle
THE FIRST FIGHT AT LODZ (With Map) 740 By Perceval Gibbon
THE FIRST INVASION OF SERBIA (With Map) 742 By a Correspondent of The London Standard
THE ATTACK ON TSING-TAU 745 By Jefferson Jones
THE GERMAN ATTACK ON TAHITI 748 As Told by Miss Geni La France, an Eyewitness
THE BLOODLESS CAPTURE OF GERMAN SAMOA 749 By Malcolm Ross, F.R.G.S.
HOW THE CRESSY SANK 752 By Edgar Rowan
GERMAN STORY OF THE HELIGOLAND FIGHT 754 By a Special Correspondent of The New York Times
THE SINKING OF THE CRESSY AND THE HOGUE 755 By the Senior Surviving Officers, Commander Bertram W.L. Nicholson and Commander Reginald A. Norton
THE SINKING OF THE HAWKE 757 By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle
THE EMDEN'S LAST FIGHT 758 By the Cable Operator at Cocos Islands
CROWDS SEE THE NIGER SINK 760 By a Correspondent of The London Daily Chronicle
LIEUTENANT WEDDIGEN'S OWN STORY 762 By Herbert B. Swope and Capt. Lieut. Otto Weddigen
THE SOLILOQUY OF AN OLD SOLDIER (Poem) 764 By O.C.A. Child
THE EFFECTS OF WAR IN FOUR COUNTRIES 765 By Irvin S. Cobb
HOW PARIS DROPPED GAYETY 767 By Anne Rittenhouse
PARIS IN OCTOBER 770 From The London Times
FRANCE AND ENGLAND AS SEEN IN WAR TIME 772 Interview with F. Hopkinson Smith
THE HELPLESS VICTIMS 776 By Mrs. Nina Larrey Duryee
A NEW RUSSIA MEETS GERMANY 777 By Perceval Gibbon
BELGIAN CITIES GERMANIZED 780 By Cyril Brown of The New York Times
THE BELGIAN RUIN 786 By J.H. Whitehouse, M.P.
THE WOUNDED SERB 788 From The London Times
SPY ORGANIZATION IN ENGLAND 790 British Home Office Communication
CHRONOLOGY OF THE WAR 793
THE MEN OF THE EMDEN (Poem) 816 By Thomas R. Ybarra

NUMBER V.
THE NEW RUSSIA SPEAKS
AN APPEAL BY RUSSIAN AUTHORS, ARTISTS AND ACTORS 817 With Their Signatures
RUSSIA IN LITERATURE 819 By British Men of Letters
RUSSIA AND EUROPE'S WAR 821 By Paul Vinogradoff
RUSSIAN APPEAL FOR
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