INDEX. 



407 



Page. 

 Chamorro language, modern, modified bj' 



Spanish 118 



Chamorros, name applied to Marianne Is- 

 landers 117 



Chanting for the dead 108 



Charadrivs/ulvus, a shore-bird 79 



CheiliHus trilobatits, a fish, called gadu 84 



Chesnnt, V. K 10 



Chestnut, Polynesian, absent from Guam.. 154 



Chiefs or nobles called chamorri 104 



Children and parents IOC, 129, 130 



Choco. a Chinaman, shipwrecked on the 



island 14 



Chocolate 127 



Choris, Ludwig 28 



Christian rites, establishment 112 



Chrysarobin (Goa powder) 121 



Cienaga (marsh ) prepared for rice culture . 34 



Cigars wrapped with fiber 176, 183 



Citizenship desired by natives 136 



Citrons 146, 229 



Citrus fruits plentiful 146 



Clearings, abandoned 58 



Clesmeur, Chevalier du, visit 23 



Cliffs, caverns 47 



vegetation 54 



Climate 41 



Climbing plants 231 



Clothing of aborigines 96 



of modern inhabitants 123 



Coal (lignite) 51 



Coal depot at Guam 50 



Cockfights 131 



Coconut, described by Dampier 18, 234 



butter 240 



fiber (coir) 75, 241 



groves owned by nobles 106 



oil 95,127,147,236 



products 239 



sap made into toddy (tuba) 99 



sugar 127 



thatch 125, 150 



vernacular names 115, 153 



Coconut-eating crabs 236 



Coffee 127,143,244 



culture suggested as a commercial enter- 

 prise 35 



substitutes 211, 218 



Coin sent from island 137 



Coir 241 



Coleoptera 94 



College endowed by Maria Anna of Austria. 21, 127 



Collins, Guy N 4,10 



CoUocalin fuciphaga, the edible-nest swift . . 79 



Communal methods in labor 131 



Communication, means 57 



Concubinage among aborigines 105 



Conquest by Spaniards 15 



Convict labor, experiments 36 



Convicts, uprising 38 



Cook, O. F 4,10 



Cof)k, O. F.. on collecting botanical speci- 

 mens of tropical trees 61 



Cooking of aborigines 99 



modem methods 126 



Copra 137, 239 



Page. 

 Corals >v9 



Coral-eating animals 90 



Coral-fishes 84 



Coral reefs 11, 47 



structure 49 



vegetation 52 



Coralliferous limestone 47, 48, .51 



Cordage made of bark 148, 346 



Coris aygiila, a fish called tAtanung 89 



Corn (maize) 144, 402 



introduction 24 



Corte, Felipe de la. See La Corte. 



Corius kubaryi, a crow 79 



Cosmogony of the aboriginal inhabitants.. 110 



Cotton 285 



Cotton fabrics, importation 137 



Cotton leaves, nectar glands 67 



Counting, method 102 



Courtesy shown to visitors 103 



Coville, Frederick V 10, 359, 370, 3a5, 400 



Cowley, an English pirate 16, 155 



Cows and oxen u.sed for steeds 77 



Crabs 90 



Craven, Lieutenant Commander J. E 4 



Crayfish (Panulirus) 90 



Creation myth 110 



Crow 79 



Crozet's visit 23 



Cruel treatment of natives 12, 15, 105 



Crystals, needle, in taro leaves 70 



Cultivated plants 143 



Curlews, called KaWlang 80 



Currents, ocean 13, 45 



Customs of aborigines 104, 109 



Customs of modern inhabitant.s 128 



Cycas cireinalis 71, 2.52 



Cycas nuts used for food 98, 145 



Dampier, English navigator 17, 101, 190, 234 



Dances of aborigines 107 



Dances of modern inhabitants 130 



Dardanus punctulatus, a hermit crab 90 



Darwin on nectar glands 67 



sea beans collected by 74 



Date palm introduced 61 



Dead, spirits invoked 109 



Deer, destruction caused by 152 



introduction 76 



Delpino on nectar glands 68 



Demigretta sacra, a heron 79 



Demons, or aniti 109 



Denudation of mountain slopes 48 



De Pages, a French traveler 21, 156 



Descriptions of Guam 1.56 



Detergents, or plants used for cleansing . . . 256 



Devil called Chayfl 109 



Devils, or aniti 109 



Dewey, Lyster H 10, 151 



Dhobieitch 121 



Diodon hystrix, a porcupine-fish 83 



Dioscorea, confusion of species 64 



alata, vernacular names 116, 153 



spinosa, a yam with spines protecting 



roots 68 



Diptera 92 



Discovery of Guam 12 



Diseases, freedom of aboriginal inhabitant.s. 95 



