Indi 



ex 



Fur Seal, problem of the, i. 545-550; de- 

 scription of, 545 n.; duty of American 

 commission of 1 896-97 regarding problem, 

 550; study of habits and rookeries of, 

 558-563; census taken of, 563-564; second 

 trip of investigation, 577; ravages of 

 hookworm among herds, 584-586; plans 

 for branding and for fencing in, 586-587; 

 stupidity of, 587-588; of the Komandor- 

 ski, 590; extinct on Guadalupe Island, 

 601; publication of government report on, 

 606-607; provisions of final treaty con- 

 cerning, 607-608; increase in, resulting 

 from protection, 608; arguments for 

 killing of superfluous males, 610 



Fusan, Korea, visit to, ii. 387 



Gadow, Hans, Cambridge professor, 1. 645 



Gage, Henry T., California governor, i. 518 



Gage, Lyman J., McKinley's Secretary of 

 Treasury,!. 573 



Gage, Simon H., member of Delta Upsilon, 

 i. 58 n.; Carnegie pension granted to, 

 ii. 189 n. 



Gaimard, Paul, colleague of Quoy, ii. 204 



Gaines, General Edmund P. , i. 6 



Gainesville, N. Y., birthplace of author, i. 

 6, 10-12; visit to, in 1909, ii. 260 



Gainesville Female Seminary, i. 35; author's 

 studies at, 35-36 



Gainesville Zouaves, baseball team i. 37, ii. 

 260 



Gale, Horace B., member of Stanford fac- 

 ulty, i. 400 



Gale, James G., translation by, ii. 395 



Galland, Theophile, of Cannes, ii. 559 



Gallant, Bernard, journalist, ii. 692 



Galloupe, C. W., i. 107 



Galsworthy, John, "The Mob" by, i. 658 



Gamble, Frederick W., at Birmingham, Eng- 

 land, ii. 54I 



Garber, John, attorney for Stanford Univer- 

 sity, i. 503 



Gardiner, Alfred G., tribute paid Geddes by, 

 ii. 327; meeting with, 475 



Gardner, Augustus P., speech of, at Eco- 

 nomic Club, New York (1914), ii. 653 



Gardner, D. Charles, chaplain at Stanford, 

 i. 405 



Gardner, Nathaniel Lyon, i. 302 



Garfield, James A., election to presidency, 

 and assassination of, i. 313 



Garfield, James R., member of Roosevelt's 

 "tennis" cabinet, i. 310; author's visit to 

 White House with, 316 



1:864 3 



Garland, Hamlin, at dinner with Edwin 



Markham and author, i. 463 

 Garman, Samuel, assistant at Penikese, i. 



116; quoted on Agassiz, 117 

 Garrison, Robert, Harvard student, ii. 723 

 Gates, Dr. and Mrs., of Robert College, ii. 



607, 608 

 Gayley, C. M., address by, ii. 285 

 Geddes, Patrick, of University of Edin- 

 burgh, i. 298, ii. 327 

 Geikie, Archibald, meeting with, ii. 474 

 Geldesmeester, Dutch agent of Germany, 



ii. 689 

 Geminate Species, Law of, i. 329 

 Genealogy, colonial, i. 665-687 

 " Genera of Fishes, The," work on, ii. 708 

 General Grant Forest, sequoia grove, i. 650 

 Genoa, visit to (1914), ii. 557 

 " Gentlemen's Agreement" between Amer- 

 ica and Japan, ii. 8, 95, 366—367, 446-447 

 Geode deposits about Bloomington, In- 

 diana, i. 198-199 

 Geography, author's early interest in, i. 



21-22 

 Geology, early study of, i. 36; of Indiana, 



198-200 

 George, David Lloyd. See Lloyd George, 



David 

 George, George, teacher at Auckland, ii. 241 

 George, Henry, a talk with, i. 303-304 

 Georgia, study of fish fauna of streams of, 



i. 154-157 



Germans, atrocities of, in China during 

 Boxer uprising, ii. 28-32; holdings of, in 

 Samoa, loi; address by author on Japan- 

 ese imitation of, 376; feeling against, in 

 Alsace-Lorraine, 503-511 



Germany, Studenten-Corps in, i. 60-61; 

 the universities of, 8.J.-86; visit to (1883), 

 276; ideals of Kultur in, 277; Emperor 

 William II in Norway (1890), 345-346 

 (see William II); address delivered in, on 

 "War and Manhood" (1910), ii. 299-300; 

 author's travels in and opinions expressed 

 by scholars of, 301-304; talks on "War 

 and Manhood" in (1913), 535 flf-; three- 

 class system of voting in, 537; junkerism 

 in, 539; peace addresses continued in, 

 551-553; plans of Pangermanist Union in, 

 554-556; entrance of, upon World War, 

 635 ff.; the guilt of, 635; statement issued 

 by, in "White Book," 641; mistaken view 

 of America held by war party in, 643; two 

 great groups in, 648; letter addressed by 

 American professors to scholars of, 656, 



