Index 



West, Raymond Fred, ii. 345 



Westermann, Madame, ii. 300 



"Western man," defined, ii. 279 



Westlake School, Los Angeles, ii. 651 



West Lectures, ii. 345-346 



Westphal, Dr., ex-secretary of German 

 Peace Society, ii. 551 



Wetterle, Abbe, ii. 502; visit to and account 

 of, 506-508 



Weulersse, Dr. G., French visitor to Stan- 

 ford, ii. 147 



Weymouth, Frank W., Stanford professor, i. 

 569 n. 



"What Europe Thinks of Us," proposed 

 book, ii. 512 



"What of Democracy?" address, ii. 740 



"What of the Nation?" Sunset Magazine 

 articles, ii. 452 



"What Shall We Say?" papers, ii. 442 



Wheeler, Benjamin Ide, i. 451, 659-660 



Wheelock, E. M., quoted, ii. 295 



Whelan, Fairfax, address by, ii. 285 



"When Man Shall Rise," poem, ii. 836 



Whitaker, Albert C., Stanford '99, i. 710 



White, Andrew D., first president of Cornell, 

 i. 64-65; as university president, 77-78; 

 early experiences of, at Hobart College, 

 87; lectures on History by, 90-91; tele- 

 gram from, concerning author's call to 

 Stanford, 354; Autobiography of, cited 

 and quoted, 354 n., 368; offered presi- 

 dency of Stanford, 368; author recom- 

 mended to Stan fords by, 368-369; lec- 

 tures by, at Stanford, 401; advocate of 

 movement for national university, 538; 

 author's letter to, concerning Carnegie 

 Peace Endowment, ii. 339-342 



White, Horatio S., i. 397 



White, William Allen, "Happy New Year" 

 from, ii. 763 n. 



White Mountains, visit to, i. 320 



White Pass Trail and its Argonauts, ii. 140 ff. 



Whiteside, Job, owner of Calaveras Grove, 



i-5 2 3 



Whitman, Charles O., zoologist, i. 115 

 Whitney, Mt., in the High Sierra, i. 654 

 Whittier, Clarke B., Stanford '93, i. 710 

 Whymper, Edward, mountain climber, i. 



260, 262, 268 

 Wiener, Leo, at Munich, ii. 552; address by, 



at Economic Club, Boston, 654 

 Wiertz paintings, Brussels, ii. 501 

 Wiesbaden, address on "War and Man- 

 hood" at (1913), ii. 535-536; August 

 Weddegen as host at, 536-537 



c 904 : 



VViggin, Kate Douglas, story of Sir William 



Jordan told by, ii. 489 

 Wight, Evelyn (Mrs. Mansfield Allan), 



Stanford '96, i. 710 

 Wilbur, Ray Lyman, Stanford student, 



professor, and president, i. 413; painting 



of Stanford post office attributed to, 544; 



dean of medical school, ii. 282; dinner 



given by, in honor of author's seventieth 



birthday, 778 

 Wilbur, Mrs. R. L. (Marguerite Blake), i. 



413 

 Wilder, Burt G., Cornell professor, i. 92; 



personality of, 93; at Penikese, Iio, 117 

 Wilder, Garrett P., ii. 405 

 Wiley, Harvey \V., Indianapolis friend, i. 

 146, ii. 150; independent character and 

 rare wit of, i. 146-147; at Purdue Uni- 

 versity, 147 



Wilkins, James H., journalist, i. 462 

 Willard, James H., Indiana politician, i. 291 

 William II of Germany, first sight of, i. 

 345-346; attitude of, during Boer War, 

 656; introduction of term "Huns" by, 

 ii. 29; prophetic remark of mother of, 

 to Spring-Rice, 271 n.; copy of "The 

 Human Harvest" sent to, 337; letter of 

 acknowledgment, 337-338; Roosevelt's 

 admiration for, 421; joke related about, 

 543; bitterness of Queen Eleanora of 

 Bulgaria toward, 583; Sir Edward Carson 

 and, 624-625 



Williams, Frank F., of Buffalo, ii. 581 

 Williams, H. S., founder of Sigma Xi at 



Cornell, i. 61 

 Williams, Thomas M., Stanford student, i. 



5*6, 533 



Williams, Valentine, war correspondent, ii. 

 514; quoted on Bulgarian atrocities, 605 



Williams, Walter O., member of Matterhorn 

 expedition, i. 260 



Willoughby, originator of "The Silent City 

 of the Muir Glacier," i. 600-601 



Willoughby Lake, Vermont, i. 327 



Wilmington, California, visit to, i. 205 



Wilson, Edmund B., i. 397, 577 



Wilson, Huntington, Assistant Secretary of 

 State, ii. 271 



Wilson, Woodrow, i. 315; frank speech by, 

 in San Francisco (1911), ii. 343; news of 

 nomination of, 427; disregard by, of state- 

 ment sent to, from England, 643; essen- 

 tials of plan for League to Enforce Peace 

 accepted by, 665; second election due to 

 fact that "he kept us out of war," 674; 



