="@public@vhost@g@html@files@44202@44202-h@44202-h-14.htm.html#Page_346" class="pginternal">346 | ||
Post, Dr. Geo. | Co-operation of Cuban physicians | 643 |
Cuban refugees, relief, Tampa and Key West | 368 | |
Spanish-American War | 360 | |
Cuba and the Cuban campaign | 514 | |
Cuban Hospital, Siboney | 557, 614 | |
Cargo for north coast of Cuba, Mary E. Morse | 624 | |
Chadwick, Capt., battleship “New York,” correspondence | 575 | |
Clinics while waiting | 551, 644,645 | |
Clothing report, Miss Fowler | 656 | |
“Clinton,” steamer furnished by Government for Red Cross transportation | 583, 629 | |
“Clinton” leaves Havana, Sept. 1, 1898 | 585, 630, 652 | |
“Comal,” steamer arrives Havana | 585 | |
Committees, central or national | 27, 28 | |
Charities, difficulties in administering | 166 | |
Conference of 1863, preliminary to the Convention of Geneva, of Aug. 22, 1864 | 23, 24, 28, 35, 36, 38, 51, 52, 53 | |
Conference, second, Oct. 20, 1868 | 74 | |
Congress votes $1,000 for printing | 92 | |
Convention of Geneva, Red Cross, Aug. 22, 1864 | 24, 57 | |
Conclusion | 681 | |
Correspondence in time of war | 608, 644, 683 | |
“Crevasse,” escape from a | 121 | |
Cyclone of Mississippi and Louisiana | 112 | |
Cyclone of Mount Vernon, Ill., Feb. 19, 1888 | 143 | |
D. | ||
Death rate from wounds, small | 593 | |
Diet Kitchens | 400, 402, 429, 505 | |
Distribution places, Havana | 522, 600, 601 | |
Douglas, Robert, house and warehouse for Red Cross, Santiago | 619 | |
Dufour, General | 23, 50 | |
Dunant, Henri (Swiss) | 399, 411, 595, 646 | |
Nurses of the Red Cross, tribute to, by Hussey | 677 | |
Nurses in operating tents | 646 | |
Nurses for Siboney carried to Porto Rico | 492 | |
O. | ||
Objections to Red Cross answered | 26 | |
Official instructions to officers, land and naval, concerning steamship “State of Texas” | 367 | |
Officers in the field, kindness of | 664 | |
Ohio river floods, 1884 | 115 | |
Ohio river flood, “Josh. V. Throop,” Red Cross steamer on Ohio river, 1884, 114 | 124 | |
559 | ||
Opinions of a major surgeon about women on the field | 569 | |
Organization and methods of work (see methods) | 27 | |
Orphanage in Havana | 531, 545, 602, 642 | |
P. | ||
Packing supplies for shipping, suggestions | 656 | |
Palmella, Duke of (President Portuguese Red Cross) | 664, 665 | |
Partello, Dr. S.S. (field agent at Tampa) | 653 | |
Phinney, Miss, death of | 495 | |
Pinar del Rio, Artimesa | 540 | |
Plans for self-help formulated with co-operation of General Blanco | 547 | |
Poem, “The Women who Went to the Field” | 509 | |
Proctor, Senator Redfield | 531, 533, 534 | |
Porter, Mrs. J. Addison | 567, 569, 570, 643 | |
Portuguese Red Cross, intermediary between United States and Spain | 608, 644, 664, 665, 683 | |
Postmaster Brewer at Siboney | 568, 650 | |
Preparations for war | 25 | |
Press, the support of | 364 | |
President Arthur, declaration of the articles of navy | 80, 385 | |
President Arthur explaining articles of navy | 555 | |
President Arthur recommends treaty in message, December, 1881 | 72 | |
President Arthur, special message giving adhesion of United States to treaty and additional articles | 80, 385 | |
President Arthur transmits treaty papers to Senate | 492 | |
Hospital ship “Lampasas” | 492 | |
Nurses’ work in Tampa | 493 | |
President and Secretary of War, committee’s conference with | 494 | |
Auxiliary No. 5, equipped cots | 475, 479 | |
Auxiliary No. 10, ice and ice plants | 402, 475, 479, 486 | |
Auxiliary No. 17, supplies | 475, 479 | |
Auxiliary No. 19, laundry | 475, 480 | |
Auxiliary No. 22, garments, food, reading | 475, 480 | |
Auxiliary No. 40, emergency hospital furnishings, soldiers’ families | 475, 480 | |
California Red Cross: | ||
Mrs. Willard B. Harrington, president | 431 | |
Letter of secretary, Mrs. L.L. Dunbar | 431 | |
Early work, supplementing government necessities | 431 | |
Executive board | 433 | |
Organization | 434 | |
Red Cross delegate to Pacific coast, Judge Sheldon | 435 | |
Manila, nurses sent to | 435 | |
Transports, nurses and agents with | 435, 436 | |
Field hospital to Manila | 436 | |
Soldiers’ home built at Presidio | 437 | |
Manner of work | 438 | |
Identification medals | 438 | |
Financial statement, consolidated, California Red Cross societies | 439 | |
Red Cross of Oregon: | ||
Mrs. Henry E. Jones, president; Mrs. F.E. Lounsbury, secretary | 441 | |
Auxiliaries of Oregon, 449 | ||
Emergency funds | 444 | |
Novel contribution of Lipman, Wolf & Company | 447 | |
Red Cross of St. Paul, Minn.: | ||
A.S. Talmadge, president; Miss Caroline M. Beaumont, secretary | 425 | |
Red Cross of Washington State: | ||
Mrs. John B. Allen, president; Miss Marie Hewitt, secretary | 452 | |
State of Washington Emergency Corps, extract from report | 458 | |
Seattle Red Cross: | ||
Mrs. J.C. Haines, president; Mrs. H.C. Colver, secretary | 455 | |
Tacoma Red Cross: | ||
Mrs. Chauncey Griggs, president; Mrs. H.M. Thomas, secretary | 456 | |
Walla Walla Red Cross: | ||
Mrs. Lester S. Wilson, president; Mrs. Eugene Boyer, secretary | 456 | |
Spokane Red Cross: | ||
Mrs. Virginia K. Hayward, president; Mrs. A.J. Shaw, secretary | 663 | |
United States Senate, first action towards adhesion of treaty, May, 1881 | 73 | |
United States, thirty-second nation to adopt treaty, and first to adopt the articles of navy | 86, 87 | |
W. | ||
Warehouse, San Jose, Havana | 521, 600, 642 | |
Wertsch, Captain P.C., letter and reply | 631 | |
Women’s auxiliaries of the Red Cross relief committee, report | 491 | |
Women nurses | 28, 30, 401, 411, 412, 429, 435, 436, 492, 493, 494, 590, 595, 596, 646 | |
Women nurses, testimony of army surgeons | 403, 504 | |
Women nurses accepted by Surgeon-General | 494 | |
Women’s work in foreign countries | 28, 30 | |
Wounded, all available assistance requested | 593 | |
Wood, General Leonard, military sanitary work | 626 | |
Wood, Surgeon-Major, Red Cross surgeon | 646 | |
Wounds, character of | 593, 594, 595 | |
Wounds heal rapidly | 593, 594 | |
Wounded of the “Maine” in hospital | 525, 600 | |
Wounded, working among, at the front | 564, 590, 616, 646, 649 | |
Y. | ||
Yacht “Red Cross” | 429, 559 | |
Yellow fever in Florida, 1888 | 147 | |
Yellow fever nurses, Howard Association of New Orleans | 147 | |
Yellow fever nurses declined by superintending surgeon | 147 | |
Yellow fever in Cuba | 574, 650 | |
Yellow fever, first appearance at Siboney | 596 | |
Yellow fever talk at the front and Siboney | 573, 574, 617 | |
Yellow fever scare prevents landing supplies for Cubans at Guantanamo |