Dateline- Toronto
Page 54
rum-running
Provence, France
Psalmanazar, George
Puccini, Giancomo
Q
Quail
Quebec, seige of
Queen’s Wharf (Toronto)
Quill pig
Quo Vadis? (Sienkiewicz)
R
Rabbit shooting
Railways, German
Rhineland railway
Raimondi, Harry
Rainbow trout
Rakovsky, Christian
Rapallo, Italy
Rapallo, Treaty of
Rathenau, Walter
Raynaldy (French official)
“Read Them and Weep”
(Hergesheimer)
Red Army, march of the
Red Badge of Courage, The (Crane)
Red Crescent
Redmond, Louis
Reds, Italian
Refugees, Christian
Reparations
See Germany, reparations
Restaurants
in Chicago
Chinese
in Paris
in Strasbourg
in Toronto
See also Cafés
Rheims, mayor of
Rhine River
duck shooting on the
Rhone canal
Rhône River
Richards, Walter
Richardson, Hugh
Richtor, Jacques
“Rime of the Ancient Mariner, The” (Coleridge)
Riviera, Ligurian
Rochester, New York
Rodosto, Turkey
Roman Catholic Church
Rome
nightlife in
Roosevelt, Theodore
Rosenberg (Russian official)
Ross, J. Allen
Rossetti, Dante Gabriel
Rotten Row (London)
Rousseau, Jean Jacques
Royal Coachman fly
Royal College of Dental Surgeons (Toronto)
Royalist party (France)
Royal North-West Mounted Police (Canada)
Royal Ontario Museum
Ruble, Russian
Rug vendors
Ruhr
occupation of the
shooting in the
tours of the
Ruhr rebellion, the
Rumania
Rumanian consulate (Constantinople)
Rum-running
Lord Birkenhead on
Russia
and Allied proposals at Genoa
conference
Canada’s recognition of
delegation at Genoa Conference
delegation to Lausanne Conference
and disarmament
feminist movement in
and Kemal Pasha
Tchitcherin on problems of
Treaty of Rapallo
war debts
Russia, South
Russians
aristocracy
in Paris
Russo-German treaty
Rutland, Vermont
S
Saint Bernard Pass (Alps)
Saint Louis, Missouri
breweries
fur market
St. Louis Browns
San Gabrielle, Mount
San Giorgio, Palazzo
Santa Marguerita, Italy
San Sebastian, Spain
Santander, Spain
Saskatchewan Province
Savoy Hotel (Lausanne)
Savoy, House of
Schio, Italy
Schober, Johann
Schwab, Charles
Scientific American, The
Sea slugs
Seine River
Sembry, Elsa
Serbia
at Genoa Conference
Service, Robert W.
Seton, Ernest Thompson
Seville, Spain
Slocombe, George
Shakespeare, William
Sharpi, Gen.
Shaves, free,
Shevchenko, Taras
Shileh, Turkey
Shinborn, Mark
Shooting, in Europe
Shoplifting
Shrimp, Chinese river
Sienkiewicz, Henryk
Silver fox
Simmons, Isobel
Simplon-Orient Express
Sion wine
Smith, Edward H.
Smith, F.E. (Lord Birkenhead)
Smith, Gunboat
Smithers, Lieut.
Smollett, Tobias
Smuggling
rum-running
Smuts, Gen. Jan Christian
Smyrna, Turkey
Snipe shooting
Snails
Socialist party (Austria)
Sonloup, Col du
Sonloup Les Avants
Soo River, Canadian
Soviet Union
See Russia
Spaghetti
Spain
tipping the postman in
trout fishing in
tuna fishing in
Sparrow hats
Sparrows
Speckled trout
Spee, Maximilian (Count von)
Sport of Kings, the
Stamboul
See Constantinople
Stambouliski, Aleksandr
Starvers
Statue of Liberty
Stevenson, H. A.
Stinnes, Hugo
Stone, Judson
Stone, Melville
Strasbourg, France
Strater, Henry (Mike)
Submarine, Kemal’s
Sudbury, Ontario
Superior, Lake
Sweden
Switzerland
bobsledding in
Christmas in
exchange pirates
game in
goiter in
hotels in
luge
tourists in
trout fishing in
T
Taft, William Howard
Tagore, Rabindranath
Tancredo
Tardieu, André
Tashkeupsu, Turkey
Tavshanjik, Turkey
Taxi-drivers, Parisian
Tchitcherin, Grigory
and Barthou
commissars’ uniform
objects to Allied plan
protests presence of Japan and Rumania at Genoa Conference
speaks at Genoa Conference
and Treaty of Rapallo
Ted
Teeth
filled, free,
pulling
Temiskaming, Lake
Templar Hall (Toronto)
Temps (newspaper)
Tennessee River
Tennis Tamburello
Tetrazzini
Thornton, Ann
Thornton, Henry
Thrace
evacuation of
Three Stories & Ten Poems
Thurston, D.W.P.
Thyroid gland
Thyssen, August
Times (London)
Tipping, in Spain
Toreros
Toronto
banks
betting in
cafeterias in
child Communists in
Christmas Eve in
clothing in
free services in,
goiter in
harbor
Lloyd George’s recollections of
money-selling in
restaurants in
society
war medals for sale
Yeats in
Toronto-Hamilton gag
Toronto Juvenile Court
Toronto Star Daily
Toronto Star Weekly
Toronto Telegram
Toronto University
Toros, Plaza de
Tourists
in Paris
in Switzerland
Touts
Traveling clocks
Trebizond, Turkey
Tre
nto, Italy
Triberg-in-Baden
Trillium (ferry)
Trotsky, Leon
Trout, fried
Trout fishing
in the Black Forest
brook trout
in Europe
hints
indoor fishing
the Rhone Canal
rainbow trout
Troy, New York
Tuna fishing
off Catalina Island
in Spain
Turin, Italy
Turkey
and Bulgaria
Turkish army
Turkish irregulars
See also Constantinople, Turkey
Turkey, wild
Turkish Nationalists
See also Kemalists
Tuscana, Brigata
Tuscany (Italy)
Two Little Savages (Seton)
“Two-Ten,”
“Tyger, The” (Blake)
Typhoon (Conrad)
U
Ukranian young Communists
Ulysses (Joyce)
Umbrella shoplifting method
Ungaretti, Signora
Union Station (Toronto)
United Press
United States
and fox farming
French mission to
game in
War Department
University of Minnesota Medical School
University of Palermo
University of Würzburg
V
Vacations
Vaillant-Coutourier (French war hero)
Valentino, Rudolph
Vancouver, B.C.
Vatican
Vaudeville
Vaults, bank
Venice, Italy
Venison
Verdun, cemetery at
Veritable Restaurant of the Third Republic (Paris)
Verona, Italy
Veronicas
Versailles, Avenue de
Versailles, Treaty of
Vesuvius, Mount
Victor Emmanuel II, King of Italy
Victory (Conrad)
Victory medals
Vigo, Spain
Villalta, Nicanor
Ville de Paris, Hotel de la
Ville Marie, Quebec
Viollet-le-Duc, E. E.
Viviani, René
Voltaire
Vorovsky (Russian diplomat)
W
Waldorf Hotel (New York)
Walton, Izaak
Wanderings in New Guinea (Lawson)
War debts, Russian
Ward (Toronto)
War medals, sale of
War Purchasing Commission (Canada)
Washington arms conference
Watson, Thomas
“We Are the Young Guards” (song)
Wedding gifts
Wells, Bombardier
Weygand, Maxime
Whiskey, Canadian
Wide World Magazine
Wiesbaden, Germany
Willard, Jess
Wilson, Lieut.
Wilson, Woodrow
Wilson Dam (Alabama)
Windsor, Ontario
Wirth, Joseph
Wittal, Capt.
Wolfe, Gen.
Wolff, Theodore
Wolves
Women
at Genoa Conference
German wives
Woodbine (racetrack)
Woodcock
Woolworth Company (Canada)
World War I
battlefields
Canada’s war record
and Clemenceau
Lieutenants’ mustaches
medals from
and Muscle Shoals, Alabama
and reparations
slackers
Stinnes and
Worms, trout fishing with
Wornall, Shorty
Wrangel, Gen. P. N.
Wright, Harold Bell
Würzburg, Prince of
Y
Yarmise, Turkey
Yeats, William Butler
Yokohama Harbor
York Club (Toronto)
Yorkshire pudding
Young, Mrs. Kenneth T.
Young Communist International
handbook
Young Communist League
Group (English Section)
“Youth” (fascist hymn)
Ypres, France
Yudenitch, Nicolai
Yugoslavia
Z
Zchewchenko, Taras
See Shevchenko, Taras
Zelli’s (Paris)
Zionist movement
Zita, Queen of Hungary
Zurich, Switzerland
About the Author
ERNEST HEMINGWAY was born in Oak Park, Illinois, in 1899, and began his writing career for The Kansas City Star in 1917. During the First World War he volunteered as an ambulance driver on the Italian front but was invalided home, having been seriously wounded while serving with the infantry. In 1921 Hemingway settled in Paris, where he became part of the expatriate circle of Gertrude Stein, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ezra Pound, and Ford Madox Ford. With the appearance of The Sun Also Rises in 1926, Hemingway became not only the voice of the “lost generation” but the preeminent writer of his time. This was followed by his novel of the Italian front, A Farewell to Arms (1929). In the 1930s, Hemingway settled in Key West, and later in Cuba, but he traveled widely—to Spain, Italy, and Africa. Later he reported on the Spanish Civil War, which became the background for his brilliant war novel, For Whom the Bell Tolls (1939), hunted U-boats in the Caribbean, and covered the European front during the Second World War. Hemingway’s most popular work, The Old Man and the Sea, was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1953, and in 1954 Hemingway won the Nobel Prize in Literature “for his powerful, style-forming mastery of the art of narration.” One of the most important influences on the development of the short story and novel in American fiction, Hemingway has seized the imagination of the American public like no other twentieth-century author. He died, by suicide, in Ketchum, Idaho, in 1961. His other major works include To Have and Have Not (1937), Across the River and Into the Trees (1950), and posthumously, A Moveable Feast (1964), Islands in the Stream (1970), The Dangerous Summer (1985), and The Garden of Eden (1986).
First Scribner ebook edition 2002
All inquiries about print and electronic permissions (use of excerpts) for books and other works by Ernest Hemingway can be sent by email to:
hemingwaypermissions@simonandschuster.com,
or by regular mail to Simon & Schuster, Inc., Permissions Dept., I230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York I0020, or by fax to (2I2) 698-7284.
Visit
www.simonsays.com/hemingway
for additional information about Ernest Hemingway.
Copyright © 1985 Mary Hemingway, John Hemingway, Patrick Hemingway, and Gregory Hemingway
First Scribner ebook edition 2002
All inquiries about print and electronic permissions (use of excerpts) for books and other works by Ernest Hemingway can be sent by email to:
hemingwaypermissions@simonandschuster.com,
or by regular mail to Simon & Schuster, Inc., Permissions Dept., I230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York I0020 , or by fax to (2I2) 698-7284.
Visit
www.simonsays.com/hemingway
for additional information about Ernest Hemingway.
ISBN 0-7432-4167-3