[The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume I by Burton J. Hendrick]@TWC D-Link book
The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, Volume I

CHAPTER V
108/108

Copies are made and printed, and sent to the King, the Prime Minister, the British Ambassador in the country to which the interview relates, and occasionally to others.

All these records are, of course, carefully preserved in the archives of the Foreign Office.] [Footnote 25: The Rev.Hardwicke Drummond Rawnsley, the well-known Vicar of Crosthwaite, Keswick, poet and student of Wordsworth.

President Wilson, who used occasionally to spend his vacation in the Lake region, was one of his friends.] [Footnote 26: It is perhaps unnecessary to say that the Ambassador was thinking only of a diplomatic "fight."] [Footnote 27: The Underwood Bill revising the tariff "downward" became a law October, 1913.

It was one of the first important measures of the new Wilson Administration.] [Footnote 28: Secretary of Agriculture in President Wilson's Cabinet.] [Footnote 29: Of Aberdeen, North Carolina, the Ambassador's brother.] [Footnote 30: Of Pinehurst, North Carolina, the Ambassador's eldest son.] [Footnote 31: Mr.and Mrs.Francis B.Sayre, son-in-law and daughter of President Wilson, at that time on their honeymoon trip in Europe.] [Footnote 32: Mr.Robert N.Page, the Ambassador's brother, was at this time a Congressman from North Carolina.] [Footnote 33: This is from a letter to President Wilson.].


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books