Labouchere, Henry, 146. Lafayette, General, 755. Lamb, Mary and Charles, 118. Landor, Walter Savage, 121. Larrinaga, Tulio, 517, 692. Latrobe, Benjamin Henry, 116. Lea, Henry Charles, 381. Lepine, Louis, 655. · Lindsay, Benjamin B., 305, 307. Loeb, Jacques, 766. Longworth, Nicholas, 261; Mrs. Longworth, 261. Loomis, Francis B., 475. Louisa, Queen of Denmark, 273. McAneny, George T., 514. McCleary, James T., 138. McClellan, Mayor, and his department heads, 139. McCurtain, Green, 701. Macdonald, J. R., 269. McKellop, A. P., 700. McKenna, Joseph, 386. Maeterlinck, Maurice, 244. Mahan, Alfred T., 727. Masterman, C. F. G., 382. Maybach, von, Albert, 353. Mechelin, Leo, 232. Merriam, George S., 508. Meunier, Constantine, 499. Millard, Thomas F., 636. Milner, Lord, 613. Mims, Edwin, 479. Mitchell, John, 263. Mitre, Gen. Don Bartolomé, 322. Moltke, von, General, 274. Morley, John, 37. Mouromtsev, Sergei Andreievich, 660. Muñoz, Jorge, 694. Nabuco, Joaquim, 692. Nichols, T. D., 263. Noyes, Walter C., 124. Pennypacker, Samuel W., 394. Phelan, James D., 644. Poincarré, M., 487. Porter, Pleasant, 343, 701. Potter, Margaret, 758. Proctor, Mary, 510. Red Cloud, Chief, and wife, 702. Redmond, John, 146. Reed, John C., 114. Reid, Sir Robert T., 36. Reyes, Rafael, President, 568. Ripon, Marquis of, 39. Robbins, Francis L., 262. Robertson, Lawson, 664. Roosevelt, Alice, 261. See also Mrs. Longworth. Roosevelt, Theodore, 521. Root, Elihu, 693. Rosenthal, Hermann, 767. Rothschild, Alonzo, 638. Rowe, Leo S., 517. Rowntree, Joseph, 768. Runyon, Charles F., 214. Saleeby, C. W., 510. Sangster, Margaret E., 640. Sankey, fra D., 511. Sargent, Frank P., 10. Sarrien, Jean Marie Ferdinand, 400. Schaumann, Eugene, 232. Schmitz, Eugene C., 644. Schofield, John M., Gen., 397. Schurz, Carl, 98, 673, 674, 675. Scott, Robert F., 125. Shaler, Nathaniel S., 255. Somerset, Lady Henry, 761. Spicer, Evan, 528. Starboro, Andrea, 214. Stokes, J. G. Phelps, 514. Stubbs, George W., 309. Suttner, von, Baroness Bertha, 490, 761. Tai Hung-Chai, 299, 301. Tawney, James A., 6. Tchaikovski, Peter Ilich, 253; Nicholas, 536. Temple, Frederick, 637. Thompson, David E., 137. Thorne, W., 269. Tillman, Benjamin R., 387, 648. Togo, Admiral, 22, 152. Traubel, Horace, 507. Trumbull, Henry Clay, 253. Tuan Fang, 299, 301. Tuthill, Richard S., 309. Tweedmouth, Lord, 37. United Mine Workers' Committee, 263. Vienna, Congress of, in 1815, 90. Vivian, Henry F., 269. Wadsworth, James W., Jr., 141. Walker-Martinez, Joaquin, 694. Washburne, Elihu B., 217. Washington, Booker T., 396, 514. Watchorn, Robert, 10. Watson, William, 122. Weeden, William B., 765. Weir, Harrison, 282. Wekerle, Alexander, 537. Wheeler, Benjamin Ide, 213. Wheeler, Gen. Joseph, 288. White, Edward D., 386. White, Henry, 136. Whitman, Walt, 380. Whitridge, Frederick W., and Mrs., 516. Wilkie, A., 269. Willcox, David, 262. Willcox, William R., 581. William II. of Germany, and the Empress, 402, 409. Wilson, Francis, 767. Winchester, C. T., 507. Wise, John S., 764. Wolff, Eugene, 232. Woods, Frederick Adams, 639. Worcester, Dean C., 280. Wrede, P. A., 233. Wright, Luke E., 136. Yerkes, Charles T., 144. Yuan-Shi-Kai, viceroy of Pechili, 278. Post-Office Department: Improvement of service, 261. 580. Presidency, American and the French compared, 163. Progress of the World, 3, 131, 259, 387, 515, 643. RACE problem and Southern citizenship, 625. viii Rydberg, Victor, reformer, the "Dante of Sweden," 95. SACCHARIN, What is? 105. Sacconi, Giuseppe, Italian architect, 101. Sahara, Three unarmed men cross, 327. San Francisco earthquake and fire, 527, 541, 643, 683, San Francisco, Relief work in, 683. San Francisco, The new, 681. San Francisco,-Why it will rise again, 679. Sargent, Dudley A. A physical instructor's suggestions Savinien, Francis P. The new era in Colombia, 567. School children, Free meals for, 733. School reports, better, The demand for, 575. Sea, Bottom of, 363. Seattle election, 527. Servia, Tariff matters in, 531. Servo-Bulgarian convention and its results, 500. Shaw, Albert. Georgia, 174. Walter B. Hill, a great citizen of Simplon tunnel, 725. Sioux Indians, Tuberculosis among, 340. Smith, Munroe. The French Presidency and the Amer- ican, 163. Solar system, How it came to be, 367. South Africa under British Liberalism, 612. South, Independent voter in, 479. Spain, Affairs in, 657. Spain, Cabinet resignation in, 17. See also under Al- Spain, Tariff matters in, 530-31. Sponges,-How they are gathered, 108. Standard Oil, Missouri and, 143. Standard Oil report by Commissioner Garfield, 652. Stead, Henry. What the people read in Australasia, 469. Stead, W. T. The Liberals again at the helm in Great Suffrage, universal, in Europe, Progress of, 404. TARIFF, Dual: Shall we adopt a ? 137. Tariff, Single or dual-which? 425. Tariffs and diplomacy, 137. Taxation of the unearned increment, An English plan Telephone, Independent movement, 344. Telharmonium, The: Electricity's alliance with music, Texas, southwest, Growth of, 206. Tramps: see under beggars. Trust, anti-, cases, Testimony in, 389. Tuberculosis among the Sioux Indians, 341. See also under Consumption. Turbine steamship, Largest, 220. Turkey versus Europe in the Balkans, 17, 77. UNGER, FREDERIC WILLIAM. George F. Baer: Master- VAN NORMAN, LOUIS E. The New York post-office : its Venezuela's dispute with France, 266. Volcanoes and earthquakes in the Caribbean regions, 440. Volcanoes: Their causes and their activity, 728. WARD, ROBERT DEC. Sane methods of regulating im- Warfare: Armaments, limitation of, Captain Mahan Warfare: Dreadnought, New British turbine battle- ship, 497. Warfare, modern, Barbarities of, 745. football, 72. A Western view of college Wheeler, Benjamin Ide. The new San Francisco, 681. Williams, H. W. Is the Russian revolution construc- tive? 464. Windmüller, Louis. Fire insurance lessons from San Francisco's experience, 713. Woman: see Feminism. Women, Invasion of French literature by, 498. Woolley, Robert W. The development of our gulf Wright, Hamilton. Building up a State by organized YARROS, VICTOR S. Strikes and lockouts of 1905, 43. A SCENE IN POLAND'S STRUGGLE AGAINST THE RUSSIAN AUTOCRACY. (This drawing represents a parley outside the Pawiak Prison at Warsaw, between a crowd of forty thousand people and the officers of the Russian troops. This popular demonstration took place on the anniversary of the Czar's accession, when a number of political prisoners were released. The crowd occupied the street before the prison. Troops with guns arrived, and negotiations were opened between the officers and the leaders of the people. A row of candles was placed in the roadway, between the soldiers and the people. It was understood that if this line were crossed the troops would fire.) Review of Reviews. VOL. XXXIII. . NEW YORK, JANUARY, 1906. No. 1. Peace Among THE PROGRESS OF THE WORLD. The year 1906 dawns upon a world the Tribes in which peace once more predomi and Nations. nates. The great war in the far East, with its amazing succession of events, made 1904 and 1905 very memorable years in military annals. But it came to an end through a treaty drawn up and signed in this country, under the auspices of our government, last summer. England has no "little wars on hand just now. The Germans, according to reports last month, had quelled the revolt of native tribes in Southwest Africa, and that protracted affair had seemed to be the only war, great or small, that was likely to carry over into the new year as an exception to the rule of peace. More serious and more formidable, however, than many an armed conflict between nations has proved to be is the great social and political upheaval in Russia. Thus far, it has been disorder on a vast scale rather than civil war. What may come of it all during the year 1906 no man can predict, even from one day to another, with any degree of intelligence. There will emerge some kind of representative government, but there will be anxious times in Russia for many months to come. Some Recent Abroad. In England, the close of the year 1905 History has witnessed the long-expected retirement of Mr. Balfour's Conservative ministry and the formation of a successful Liberal administration under the premiership of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman. Nothing important, however, will be attempted by this ministry until there has been a new Parliamentary election, which will occur early in the present year. The most important event of the past year for the people of France has been the sepa ration of Church and State, which goes into effect, under the law, on the 1st of January. Germany has been active during the past year in strengthening its international position, and its chief contribution to history, perhaps, has Meanwhile, the German Emperor has made notable approaches toward more intimate relations with Russia, while the good understanding between England and France has steadily grown. The shifting of real international relations, irrespective of formal alliances, has been of such a nature as to make for permanent peace rather than for menace among the great powers of Eu rope. The last weeks of the year have been marked by the coöperation of the great European powers in bringing pressure upon the Sultan of Turkey to put into effect governmental reforms in Macedonia. Conditions in This In this country, the great event of the year was the entrance of Presi-Country. dent Roosevelt upon his new term of office, with an influence that was effective in bringing Russia and Japan to an agreement at Portsmouth, that subsequently brought the Southern States into a friendly attitude toward the administration, and that finally showed itself in the reform wave that swept the country in the November elections. Recent years have witnessed in this country an industrial progress far beyond anything the world had ever known. So rapid a growth of industry and wealth was inevitably attended by many evils. The exposure of these evils and the attempt to remedy them have passed over to the year 1906 as “unfinished business" from the year that lies behind us. The recent campaign attack upon the control of politics by corporations through the boss system will be continued this year, and will make itself felt in the State and Congressional elections next November. The investigation carried on by the Armstrong legislative committee in New York into the methods of the large insurance companies will merely have pointed the way to many other inquiries and exposures that must take place before the fight against corporation control of our government and politics can be fairly |