ALLIED War Council, see INTERALLIED
Conference; SUPREME War Council.
ALLIES' Commissions to United States, aid
of experts to War Dept. stated by Sec.
Baker, 458; account of visit of Serbian
Mission, 497.
ALLIES' Treaties, disclosure by Bolsheviki
of secret treaty between England, France,
Russia, and Italy, 12; text of treaty, 495.
ALMEREYDA, Miguel, arrest and murder,
234.
ALSACE-LORRAINE, British Labor Party
comes out for self-determination, 202;
French aims stated in Deputies by M.
Pichon, 211; in war aims of Pres. Wilson,
Lloyd George, and the Bolsheviki, 258;
German claims made by Count Hertling,
390; article by F. Masson presenting his-
torical claims to be and remain French,
485; article by A. Thomas, "Why Alsace-
Lorraine Should Be Restored Without a
Plebiscite,'
490.
See also AIMS of the War; PEACE.
America in the War, 421.
America on the Battlefront, 423.
American Army at Home and Abroad, 57.
American Camp in England, 246.
America's Purpose in the War, 54.
ANCONA (S. S.), case cited as one of rea-
sons for U. S. war with Austria, 71.
ANNEXATION, declared against by British
Labor Party in message to Bolsheviki,
206.
See also AIMS of the War; PEACE.
ARCHIBALD, James F. J., 71.
ARGENTINA, public utilities in Buenos
Aires affected By Amer. blacklist, 88; se-
cret telegrams of Count Luxburg to Ber-
lin on submarine controversy and show-
ing German influence, 322.
ARMED Merchant Ships, Sir E. Geddes on
progress in arming vessels, 81.
ARRAS, full text of report of Sir D. Haig on
offensive, 521.
See also CAMPAIGN in Europe, Western.
ASIA, see CAMPAIGN in Asia-Minor.
Aspects of Bolshevist Rule, 299.
ASQUITH, Herbert Henry, indorsement of
Pres. Wilson's message on war aims, at
Birmingham, 2; "Restatement of Brit-
ain's Aims," 271; question in Commons as
to Germany's intentions in Belgium; re-
tort by Lokal-Anzeiger, 330.
ATROCITIES, "Gruesome German War
Humor," 160; "Austrian Atrocities in
Serbia," 161; "Torture of Prisoners in
Belgium," 165; account of atrocities on
western front by Capt. D. Fallon, 166;
formal protest of Commission for Relief
in Belgium, against torpedoing of relief
ships, 167; "Sinking Hospital Ships,'
British reply to a German charge, 168;
"German Terrorism in Belgium," by an
escaped civilian, 339; "U. S. Govern-
ment's Summary of the Harrowing Prac-
tices of German Soldiers Against Civil-
lans." from pamphlet German War
Practices," issued by Comm. of Public In-
formation, 343; "Summary of the Ger-
man Outrages," by V. Kellogg, 350; Brit-