849 UC-NRLF B ^ 50b b75 JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS A LIST OF WORKS IN THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY DOROTHY PURVIANCE MILLER AMERICAN HISTORY DIVISION NEW YORK 1921 JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS A LIST OF WORKS IN THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY COMPILED BY DOROTHY PURVIANCE MILLER AMERICAN HISTORY D I V I SfO N NEW YORK 1921 KOTE This list contains the titles of works m The Kcw York Public Library on January 1. 19n They are in the Reference Depart- ment of the Library. In the Central Building at Fifth Avenue and Forty-second Street. ntumTlo. jun !•:' pnoil »Ht ,Ull.CTI« OF TMl M.« YOU. PUILIC UK." OF j«i.u««t "«•£"."•' '"' pmiiua »T T«t »«• To.« puttic i..«««t furti. I-IJI lrll-»-lU'l 6>6 TV- TABLE OF CONTENTS PACE Bibliography ..-.---------1 Periodicals ..----------- 1 General Works ------------- 2 Early Relations ------------ 3 General Works ------------- o Perry's Expedition ----------- 6 Shimonoseki Affair and Japanese Civil War ------ 7 Extraterritoriality ----------- 8 Immigration --------------8 General Works ------------ 8 Exclusion -------------- '^2 California Question -.---------15^ School Question ------------18 Alien Land Bill ------------19 Arbitration Treaty -------------1 Far Eastern Question -----------21 General Works ------------- 21 Russo-Japanese War ----------- 24 Anglo-Japanese Alliance ---------- 25 Korea --- .-----25 China - - - - - - " ^^ _ The Open Door -------- -^ - - - 29 Manchurian Question ----------- 30 Lansinc-Ishii Agreement ---------- 32y Chinese Loans ------------ 3- Japan and the European War --------- 35 The Shantung Question ----------38 Japanese Resources -----------43 Trade Relations ------------45 Miscellaneous Topics ----48 Peace Talk -------------48 War Talk ------------- 51 Pan-Asia ------------- 53 Control of the Pacific -----------54 Japanese in Mexico and South America --------55 Japanese in Hawaii and the Philippines -------55 464851 JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS A LIST OF WORKS IN THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Compiled by Dorothy Purviance Miller American History Division ORDER OF ARRANGEMENT Bibliography. Periodicals. General Works. Early Relations: General Works. Perry's Expedition. Shimonoseki Affair and Japanese Civil War. extratejiritoriality. Immigration: General Works. Exclusion. Immigration — continued: California Question: — School Question. Alien Land Bill. Arbitration Treaty. Far Eastern Question: General Works. Russo-Japanese War. Anglo-Japanese Alliance. Korea. China: The Open Door. Manchurian Question. Lansing-Ishii Agreement. Chinese Loans. Far Eastern Question — continued: Japan and the European War: The Shantung Question. Japanese Resources. Trade Relations. Miscellaneous Topics: Peace Talk. War Talk: Pan-Asia. Control of the Pacific. Japanese in Mexico and South America, Japanese in Hawaii and the Philippines. Bibliography A Bibliography on Japan. Chautauquan. Springfield, C, 1904. 8°. v. 39, Aug., 1904, p. 596-598.) *DA Cordier, Henri. Bibliotheca Japonica. Paris: Ernest Le'rou.x, 1912. xii p., 762 col. [381 p.i 4°. (ficole des langues orientales vivantes. Publications, serie 5. tome 8.) * OAF • Bibliotheca Sinica. Dictionnaire bi- bliographique des ouvrages relatifs a I'em- pire chinois. Paris: E. Guilmoto, 1904-08. 4 V. 2. ed. 4°. Reserve V. 4 contains material on the relations of China and the United States, including the "open door," Korea, Russo-Japanese war, etc. Evening Post, New York. Japanese sup- plement of the Evening Post, Dec. 30. 1916. New York, 1916. 32 p. illus. f°. f BET Bibliography of Japan, p. 23-26. Firkins, Ina Ten Eyck. Japanese in the United States. (Bulletin of bibliography. Boston, 1914. 4°. v. 8, p. 94-98.) * GAA Pages, Leon. Bibliographie japonaise. Paris: Duprat, 1859. 2 p.l., 67 p. 4°. Wenckstern, Friedrich von. A bibliogra- phy of the Japanese empire... Leiden: Brill, 1895-1907. 2 v. 8°. V. I contains a facsimile of Pages' "Bibliographie Japonaise." Periodicals Vj Asia. V. 1-date (1898 -date). New York, 1898 -date. 4°. t BBA Previous to March, 1917, called Journal of the American Asiatic .Association. Asiatic Society of Japan. Transactions. V. 1-date (1872-date). Tokyo, 1872-date. 8°. *OSA The China review, or, Notes & queries on the Far East. v. 1-25 (July, 1872- July, 1901). Hongkong, 1872-1901. 8°. * OVA The China vear book. 1912-1914. 1916, 1919/20. London, 1911-date. 8\ * OVA Volume for 1915 not issued, Chinese social and political science re- view. V. 1-date (April, 1916-date). Pe- king, 1916-date. 8°. SA Issued quarterly. Eastern commerce, v, 2-date (Nov,, 1916- date), Yokohama, 1916-date. 8°. TLA Previous to V. 2, no. 8 (June, 1917) called Com- mercial Japan. [ 1 1 TI-iE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Periodicals, continued. The Far East. A weekly newspaper and review, v. 5, no. 15, 24 (June 27, Aug. 29, 1914), V. 6. no.1-8, 10-12, 14-l.S (Sept. 19- Nov. 7, 21 -Dec. 5, 19-26, 1915), v. 8, no. 21 (Feb. 19, 1916), v. 10, no. 15, 20, 24 (Tan. 13, Feb. 17, March 17. 1917), v. 11-13 (April 7, 1917 -Oct. 12, 1918), V. 15, no. 1, 3-8, 10-14, 16-26 (April 26, May 10 -June 14, 28- July 26, Aug. 9 -Oct. 18, 1919); v. 16-date (Oct. 25, 1919-date). Tokyo, 1914-date. f°. V. 13 lacks issue for May 25, 1918. t* OSA Far Eastern political science review, v. 1- date (Sept., 1919-date). Canton, 1919-datc. 8°. SEA Far Eastern review, v. 1, no. 1-3. 10-11 (June-Aug., 1904, March-.^p^il, 1905). v. 2, no. I, 8-13 (June, 1905, Jan.-June, 1906), V. 3-dafe (Tune, 1906-date). Shanghai, 1904-date. f°. f BBA Herald of Asia. A weekly review of life and progress in the Orient, v. 3, no. 5-date (April 28, 1917-date). Tokyo, 1917-date. 4°. tBBA The Japan chronicle, new series, no. 887 -date (Jan. 2, 1919-date). Kobe, 1919-datc, i°. tBERA File lacks issues {or July 17 and Dec. 18, 1919. The Japan current. Printed every month for the dissemination of ideas of Japan in .'\merica. v. 1, no. 3 (Nov., 1907), v. 2, no. 1-4, 6-7 (Jan.-April. Tulv-Aug., 1908). Se- attle, Wash., 1907-08. 16° and 4°. lEA Japan dailv mail. Weeklv edition. Tan. 14, 28- Feb." 18, March 11 -April 15, May 6. 20 -Sept. 9, 1882; Jan. 5, 1895 -Aug. 25, 1917. Yokohama and Tokyo, 1882-1917. f°. *A Previous to April 3, 1915 called Japan weekly mail. Lacks issues for March 25 - July 22. 1916. Japan financial and economic monthlv. V. 1, no. 3 (Sept., 1907), v. 5-date (Jan., 1911 -date). Tokyo, 1907-date. 8°. TLA The Japan magazine. A representative monthly of things Japanese, v. 1-8, no. 10 (Feb., 1910-Feb., 1918), v. 9, no. 1 (Mav, 1918), v. 10. no. 9-date (Jan., 1920-date^. Tokyo, 1910-date. 8°, 4° and f°. t*OSA Japan Society of London. Transactions and proceedings, v. 1-15 (1892-1917). Lon- don, 1892-1917. 4°. * OSA ^Japan year book, issues 1-3, 6-14 (190?- 07,1911-19). Tokyo, 1905-19. 8°. BERA — V Japanese-American commercial weekly. V. 6. no. lcS6-187. 201-233 (Feb. 4-11, May 20 -Dec. 30, 1905), v. 7-13 (1906-12), v. 14 (Jan. 4-25. .^ug. 9. 1913). v. 15 (June 6- Dec. 26. 1914), v. 16-date (1915-date). New York, 1905-date. 4°. ft* OSA V. 10 lacks issue for Aug. 21, 1909; v. 12, issue for Jan. 1-4, 1911. In Japanese and English. Millard's review of the Far East. v. 1- date (June 9, 1917-date). Shanghai, 1917- date. V. *DA New China review. v. 1-date (1919- date. Hongkong, 1919-date). 8°. * OVA The New East. A monthly review of thought and achievement in the eastern and western worlds, v. 1 - v. 3, no.*6 (Dec, 1917 -Dec, 1918). Tokyo, 1917-18. 4°. *DA Text in English and Japanese. Ceased publication with v. 3, no. 6, Dec, 1918. New York Japan review. To interpret Japan to .-\merica and .America to Tapan. V. 1-2, no. 3 (Julv, 1913 - March, "I'lMt. New York, 1913-14. 4°. BERA Societe franco-japonaise de Paris. Bul- letin, no. 18-32 (1910-14). Paris, 1910-14. 4°. tBERA The Trans-Pacific. .A financial and eco- nomic magazine of international service. V. 1-date (Sept., 1919-date). Tokvo. 1919- date. 4°. fTLA Yokohama Chamber of Commerce. Chamber of Commerce journal, v. 18-date (1913-date). Yokohama, 1913-date. 4°. TLK Text in English and Japanese. General Works Blakeslee, George Hubbard, editor. Ja- pan and Japanese-.-\morican relations, edited by George H. Blakeslee... New York: G. E. Stechcrt and Co., 1912. xi, 348 p. 8°. (Clark University addresses.) *R-BEI Brinkley, Frank. Japan; its history, arts, and literature. Boston; J. B. Millet Com- pany icop. 1901-02i. 8v. illus. 8°. •R-BES V. 5, chap, 2 deals with foreign policies, from 1858. Collier, Price. The West in the East from an American point of view. New York: C, Scribner's Sons, 1911. ix p., 11. 534 p. 8°. 'R-BGT C'h.iptcr 10, p. 409-462: Japan. Coolidge, Archibald Cary, The United States as a world power. New York: The Macmillan Co,, 1908, vii. 385 p. 8°. IC The last chapter contains an excellent resume of the relations between the L'nited States and Japan. The Rrcatcr part of the chapter is taken up with a discussion of the two chief causes of friction between the two countries, immigratiiin and expansion in the Pacific. Ferguson. C. E. The American embassy in Tokyo. (Overland monthly. San Fran- JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS General Works, continued. 8 Cisco, 1910 334.) new series, v. 55, p. 330- *DA Fish, Carl Russell. American diplomacy. New York: Henry Holt & Company, 1919. xi, 551 p., 3 maps. 3. ed. rev. 8°. IC Flowers, Montaville. The Japanese con- quest of American opinion. New York: George H. Doran Company (1917). i.x, 272 p. 8°. TEA Strongly anti-Japanese. Foster, John Watson. American diplo- macy in the Orient. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1903. xiv, 498 p. 8°. IC Fraser, Mary Crawford. Our relations with Japan. (World's work. New York, May, 1907. v. 14, p. 8919-8922.) * DA Griffis, William Elliot. America in the East. .\ glance at our history, prospects, problems, and duties in the Pacific Ocean. New York: A. S. Barnes & Co., 1900. x, 244 p. illus. 12°. BBH Written just at the close of the Spanish war, it is an account of the duties and privileges which will devolve upon the United States in the Pacific, through our control of the Philippines. ^ American makers of new Japan. illus. (Century magazine. New York, Aug.. 1913. 8°. V. 86, p. 596-605.) * DA Gulick, Sidney Lewis. Evolution of the Japanese, social and psychic. New York: Fleming H. Revell & Co. [1903.] vi, 457 p. 8°. *R-BER The object of the book is to interpret the charac- teristics of modern Japan from a social viewpoint. A careful analysis of the Japanese. The teachers of America and the problems of Asia. (National Education Association. Journal of proceedings and addresses. Ann Arbor, Mich., 1915. 8°. 1915, p. 186-190.) SSA Johnson, Willis Fletcher. .\merica's foreign relations. London: Eveleigh Nash Co.. Ltd., 1916. 2 v. illus. 8°. IC Kawakami, Kiyoshi Karl. Japan in world politics. New York: The Jvlacmillan Company, 1919. xix, 300 p. 8°. *R-BET Latourette, Kenneth Scott. The develop- ment of Japan. New York: The Macmil- lan Company, 1918. xi, 237 p. map. 8^. *R-BES Masaoka, Naoichi, editor. Japan to America; a symposium of papers by poli- tical leaders and representative citizens of Japan on conditions in Japan and on rela- tions between Japan and the United States, edited by Naoichi Masaoka. Authorized American edition issued under the auspices of the Japan Society of America. With introduction bv Lindsay Russell. New York : G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1915. xii p., 11., 235 p. 12°. BET Moore, John Bassett. A digest of inter- national law as embodied in diplomatic dis- cussions, treaties and other international agreements. . .of the United States. Wash- ington: Gov. Prtg. Off., 1906. 8 v. 8°. *R-XBD V. S, p. 733-762 contains a resume of American diplomatic relations with Japan. Consult also the general index in v. 8. Murray, David. The story of Japan. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1894. (Story of the *R-BAC X. 431 p., 2 maps, 2 pi. 12° nations.) Nitobe, Inazo. The Japanese nation; its land, its people, and its life. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1912. xiv, 334 p., 1 map. 12°. *OSD Russell, Lindsay, editor. America to Japan; a symposium of papers by repre- sentative citizens of the United States on the relations between Japan and .A.merica and on the common interests of the two countries. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1915. XV, 318 p., 2 ports. 12°. ICM United States. — State Department. Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States transmitted to Congress with the annual message of the president. 1861- 1913. Washington, 1862-1920. 8°. ICB General index, 1861-1899. Wash- ington: Gov. Prtg. Off., 1902. 945 p. 8°. ICB For references to material on Japan appearing previous to 1900 consult p. 444—463 of the general index. For 1900 to date the indexes to the individual volumes should be consulted. United States. — Treaties. Treaties, con- ventions, international acts, protocols, and agreements between the LTnited States of -America and other powers, 1776-1909. Compiled by William N. Malloy. Wash- ington: Gov. Prtg. Off., 1910. 2 v. 8°. {V. S. 61. cong., 2. sess. Senate doc. 357.) ICD Treaties with Japan, v. 1, p. 996—1047. .Mso in the U. S. Collected documents, serial 5646- 5647, 'SBE. Early Relations Gener.^l Works Adams, Francis Ottiwell. The history of Japan from the earliest period to the present time. London: Henry S. King, 1875. 2 v. 2. ed. rev. 12°. BES V. 1 covers period from 1853-1865; v. 2, 1865-18/1. Barnes, James. Our first mission to Japan: the story of Commodore Biddle's visit in 1846. illus. (Harper's weekly. New York, March 22, 1913. f °. v. 57, p. 1 1- 12.) * DA THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Early Relations, continued. General Works, continued. Callahan, James Morton. American rela- tions in the Pacific and the Far East, 1784- 1900. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, IpOl. 177 p. 8°. (Johns Hopkins Univer- sity studies in historical and political sci- ence, series 19, no. 1-3.) IC Chamberlain, Basil Hall. Things Japa- nese, bcinR notes on various subjects con- nected with Japan for the use of travellers and others. London: J. Murray, 189S '> p.l., 470 p., 1 I., 1 map. 3. cd. 12°. BER Clark, E. Warren. International rela- tions with Japan. (International review. New York, Jan.. 1S77. 8°. v. 4, p. 51-67 ^ *DA Cuppy, E. P. Argument. . .addressed to the Committee on Naval .\lfairs of the House. . .in support of the claim of the offi- cers and crew of the United States steam- ship Wyoming, to a portion of the Japa- nese indemnity fund. Washington: Chron- icle Print. 1870. 15 p. 8°. (Xaval Affairs Committee.) * C p.v.l28I A Curious revision of history. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe. Sept. 20, 1917. f" new series, no. 820, p. 445-447.) BERA Curtis, William Eleroy. The United States and foreign powers. Meadville. Pa : Flood & Vincent, 1892. vi, 313 p. mans. 12°. IC Davis, George Lynn-Lachlan. A paper upon the origin of the lapan expedition. Read the 7th of May. 1857, before the Maryland Historical Society... Balti- more: Printed by J. Murphy, 1860. 14 p. 2 pi.. 4 ports. 8°. (Maryland Historical Society. Publications, no. 26.) lAA Davis, Horace. Japanese wrecks in American waters. (Overland monthly. San Francisco, 1872. 8°. v. 9, p. 353-360!) *DA .^ Dubois, Patterson. The great Japanese embassy of 1860. A forgotten chapter in the history of international amity and com- merce. (.American Philosophical Society. Proceedings. Philadelphia, 1910. 8°. v 49 p. 243-266.) • ea! Foord, John. Japanese in America. (Outlook. New York, May 18, 1907 8° V. 86, p. 101-105.) • DA Foster, John Watson. American diplo- macy in the Orient. Boston: Houghton Mifflin & Co., 1903. xiv. 498 p. 8°. IC Griffis, William Elliot. American makers of new Japan. (Century magazine. New York, Aug., 1913. 8°. v. 86, p. 597-605.) •DA American relations with the Far East, illus. (New England magazine Boston, 1894. 8°. v. 11, p. 257-272 )♦ DA ■ Matthew Calbraith Perry, a typical American naval officer. Boston: Hough- ton. Mifflin & Co., 1890. xvi, 459 p illus i2.ed., 8°. *^ VY(J Millard Fillmore and his part in the opening of Japan. (Buffalo Historical Society. Publications. Buffalo, 1906 8° v. 9, p. 53-79.) lAA -; — Relations between Japan and the United States. (Magazine of .-\merican history. New York, June, 1892. 8". v V p. 449-454.) lAA Townsend Harris, centre of Japa- nese drama. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo Marcli 13, 1920. l" . y. 8, p. 658-659 ) ' tBBA Gubbins, John Harrington. The prog- ress of Japan. 1853-1871. Oxford: Claren- don Press, 1911. 323 p. map. 8°. BES Habersham, .A. W. An .Vmerican in Ja- pan in 1858. (Harper's magazine. New- York, Jan., 1859. 8°. v. 18, p. 223-231 ) *DA Harris, Townsend. Memorial of Town- send Harris, praying compensation for diplomatic services in negotiating a treaty with the kingdom of Siam, while consul general at Japan. Feb. 27, 1857. (Wash- ington, 1857., 2 p. 8°. (U. S. 34. cong.. 3. sess. Senate misc. doc. 52; serial 890.) *SBE Gives details concerning his appointment as consul general to Japan, and of his arrival there. House, Edward H. Japan. (.Atlantic monthly. Boston, 1860. 8°. y. 5, p. 721- 7i3.) * 5a Hubbard. Richard B. The United States in the Far East; or. Modern Japan and the Orient. Richmond. Va.: B. F. Tohnson Pub Co., 1899. 384 p., 28 pi., 8 ports. 8°. HEW iTlic Japanese embassy in .America in 18()0., illus. (Harper's weekly. New York May 26- June 9, 23- July 7, 1860. l" y 4 p. 332. 327-329. 337-338, '340, 358-359. 386! 389.391,407,410,418.) * DA '/ Lanman, Charles. The Japanese in .America. London: Longmans, Green Reader, & Dyer, 1872. vii, 406 p. 12°. lEA I'art 1. The Japanese embassy. Part 2. Essays liy Japanese students. Part i. Life and resources in .America. Luce, Stephen Bleecker. Commodore Biddle's visit to Japan in 1846. 2 pi. (United States Naval Institute. Proceed- ings. .Annapolis, Md., 1905. 8°. v. 31. p. 555-563.) VXA Macgowan, Daniel Jerome. Japanese foreign relalions. (Continental monthly New York, Sept., 1863. 8°. v. 4, p. iii- 345.) • DA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS Early Relations, continued. General Works, continued. Nitobe, Inazo. American-Japanese inter- course prior to the advent of Perry. (Ameri- can Historical Association. Report, 1911. Washington, 1913. 8°. v. 1, p. 129-140.) lAA The intercourse between the United States and Japan; an historical sketch. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1891. i.K, 198 p. 8°. (Johns Hopkins Univer- sity. Studies in historical and political sci- ence. E.xtra vol. 8.) ICM (Japan) Palmer, Aaron Haight. Documents and facts illustrating the origin of the mission to Japan. . .1851. . . Appended a list of the memoirs, etc., prepared and submitted to ...J. P. Kennedv. . .secretary of the navy bv A. H. Palmer. Washington: H. Polk- inhorn. 1857. 22 p. 8°. II p.v.2S Panllin, Charles Oscar. Diplomatic negoti- ations of American naval officers, 1778- 18S3. Baltimore : The Johns Hopkins Press, 1912. 380 p. 12°. (Albert Shaw lectures on diplomatic history, 1911.) IC Prospective commerce with Japan. (De Bow's commercial review. New Orleans, Oct., 1850. V. 9, p. 44-1-449.) TAA Sixty rears after, illus. (Far Eastern review. ' Shanghai, Feb., 1918. f°. v. 14, p. 69-72.) t BBA Snow, Freeman. Treaties and topics in American diplomacy. Boston: The I5oston Book Company, 1894. vii. 515 p. &" . IC A summary of all the treaties of the United States with other countries. Those with Japan are the early ones. Stevens, D. W. The relations of Japan to other nations. (Forum. New York, Dec, 1898. 4°. v. 26, p. 427-433.) * DA 'Stewart, Charles W. Early American visitors to Japan. (United States Naval Institute. Proceedings. Annapolis, Md.. 1905. 8'. v. 31, p. 945-958.) VXA ^xTreat, Payson Jackson. The early diplo- matic relations between the United States and Japan, 1853-1865. Baltimore: The Johns" Hopkins Press, 1917. i.x, 459 p. 8°. (The Albert Shaw lectures on diplomatic history, 1917.) ICM (Japan) Treaties with Japan. (Living age. Bos- ton, 1856. 8°. "v. 48, p. 661-663.) * DA United States. — Navy Department. Im- prisoned .\merican seamen. Letter from the secretary of the navy, transmitting cor- respondence relative to the visit of the "Preble" to the port of Nangasacki, for the purpose of demanding imprisoned American seamen. Aug. 28, 1850. [Wash- ington, 1850., 44 p. 8". (U.S. 31. cong.. 1. sess. House ex. doc. 84.) * SBE Correspondence concerning the survivors of the whaler "Lagoda" of New Bedford, wrecked on the coast of Japan, and imprisoned by the Japanese. Letter from the superintendent of the Naval Academy, in relation to the Japa- nese admitted into that institution as cadet midshipmen. Feb. 19, 1872. (Washington, 1872., 2 p. 8°. (U.S. 42. cong., 2. sess. Senate misc. doc. 77; serial 1482.) * SBE United States. — State Department. Frank Epps. Message from the president. . .trans- mitting... a report from the secretary of state, with accompanying papers, respect- ing the killing, at Nagasaki, Japan, of Frank Epps, a sailor of the L^. S. S. Olym- pia. Jan. 26, 1898. (Washington, 1898., 13 p. 8". (U. S. 55. cong., 2. sess. Senate doc. 93, part 1; serial 3593.) * SBE Killing of Frank Epps. AJessage from the president of the United States, transmitting, in further response to resolu- tion of the Senate. . .a report of the secre- tarj' of state, with three additional com- munications, regarding the killing... of Frank Epps. Feb. 4, 1898. [Washington, 1898., 17p., Iplan. 8°. (U.S. 55. cong.. 2. sess. Senate doc. 93, part 2; serial 3593.) *SBE Frank Epps. Message from the president of the LTnited States, transmit- ting, in further response to resolution of the Senate... a report of the secretary of state, with accompanying papers, in relation to the killing of Frank Epps... March 1. 1898. [Washington, 1898., 8 p. 8°. (U. S. 55. cong., 2. sess. Senate doc. 93, part 3: serial 3593.) * SBE Japanese pupils to West Point. Letter from the secretary of state, sub- mitting the draught of a bill for admitting six Japanese pupils to West Point Military Academy, and recommending the passage of the same. April 11, 1871. [Washington, 1871., 1 p. 8°. (U. S. 42. cong., 1. sess. House ex. doc. 17; serial 1471.) * SBE Letter of the secretary of state, to Hon. Charles Sumner, enclosing a report of the examiner of claims of that depart- ment in relation to claims by citizens of the United States upon the six hundred thou- sand dollars paid to this government by tlie government of Japan. March 17. 1868. [Washington, 1868., 3 p. 8°. (U.S. 40. cong., 2. sess. Senate misc. doc. 52; serial 1318.) *SBE Message of the president of the LTnited States, communicating. . .certain official documents relative to the empire of Japan, and serving to illustrate the exist- ing relations between the United States and Japan. April 12, 1852. [Washington, 1852., 87 p. 8°. (U.S. 32. cong., 1. sess. Senate ex. doc. 59; serial 620.) * SBE THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Early Relations, continued. General Works, continued. Message of the president of the L'nited States, communicating. . .corre- spondence of Charles E. De Long, minister resident of the United States to Japan, relating to American interests in that country. Feb. 28. 1870. [Washington, 1870.1 10 p. 8°. (U.S. 41. cong., 2. sess. Senate ex. doc. 52; serial 1-406.) * SBE Message of the president of the United States, commimicating, in answer to a resolution of the Senate of the 30th ultimo, a report of the secretary of state, relative to the building of ships-of-\var for the Japanese government. [Washington, 1863., 8 p. 8°. (U.S. 37. cong., 3. sess. Senate e.x. doc. ii; serial 1149.) * SBE Message from the president of the United States, transmitting a report from the secretary of state, with accompanying papers, relating to the delivery by the l'nited States consul at Shanghai of two Japanese citizens to the Chinese authori- ties, and other information called for in the resolution. Jan. IS, 1895. [Washington, 1895., 48 p. 8°. (U. S. 53. cong., 3. sess. Senate ex. doc. 36; serial 3275.) * SBE Report of the secretary of state communicating, in compliance with a reso- lution of the Senate, tlie correspondence with the United States minister in Japan, concerning the proposed diplomatic mis- sion from lapan to the United States. March 22, 1860. [Washington, 1860., 13 p. 8°. (\]. S. 36. cong., 1. sess. Senate ex. doc. 25: serial 1031.) * SBE Walsh, Thomas. .\ letter addressed to v' the president of the L'nited States on the existing diplomatic relations with Japan. New York: John Amerman, 1871. 10 p. 8'. IC p.v.9 Young, John Russell. Around the world with General Grant. New York: Ameri- can Book News Company [1879). 2 v. illus. 8°. KBG Ziunoto, Motosada. Townsend Harris in Yedo. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo. .'\ug. 3 -Oct. 19, 1918. f°. V. 5. p. 562-563, 591- 592, 620-621, 648, 676, 704, 754-755: v. 6, p. 8-9, 36-37, 64-65, 92-93.) t BBA Perry's Expedition Americans in Japan. (De Bow's com- mercial review. New Orleans, Oct., 1859. 8°. V. 27, p. 371-382.) TAA Connors, John W. W'ith Perry in Japan in '53. illus. (Overland monthly. San Francisco, June, 1913. 4". new series, v. 61. p. 583-589.) • DA Hawks, Francis L., editor. See United States. — Navy Department. Hildreth, Richard. Japan as it was and is. Boston: Phillips, Sampson, & Co., 1855. xii, 576 p. map. 12°. BES The last chapter describes Perry's visit and gives President Fillmore's letter and the text of Perry's treaty. Japan. (Democratic review. Washing- ton, April, 1852. 8°. V. 30, p. 319-332.) ♦DA ^ Komatz, Midori. Japan and the L'nited States, illus. (World's work. New York. Nov., 1901. 8°. V. 3, p. 1386-1393.) * DA A general account of Perry's first visit. Murray, David. The storv of Japan. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1894. x, 431 p. illus. 2 maps. 12°. (Storv of the nations.') *R-BAC "< Nicholson, S. How .America opened Japan to trade, illus. (Harper's weekly. New York, March 19, 1904. f°. v. 48. p. 426-428.) * DA By a member of the Perry expedition. Nitobe, Inazo. The intercourse between the L'nited States and Japan: an historical sketch. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press. 1891. ix, 198 p. 8°. (Johns Hop- kins L'niversity. Studies in historical and political science. Extra vol. 8.) • I CM (Japan) Paullin, Charles Oscar. Diplomatic negotiations of .Vmerican naval officers, 1778-1883. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1912. 380 p. 12°. (Albert Shaw lectures on diplomatic history, 1911.) IC Perry, Matthew Calbraith. S'.-i- United States. — Navy Department. Rossiter, William S. The first American imperialist. (North American review. New York, 1906. 8°. v. 182, p. 239-254. i •DA Sewall, John Smith. The log book of the captain's clerk; adventures in the China seas. Bangor, Me.: (C. H. Glass & Co., 1905. xii. 278 p. illus. 12°. BEW Written by a member of the Perry expedition. Tomes, Robert. Perry's expedition to Tapan. illus. (Harper's magazine. New York. March. Mav, 1856. 4°. v. 12, p. 441- 466. 733-756.) ' » DA ^ United States. — Navy Department. Message of the president of the L'nited States, transmitting a report of the secre- tary of the navy, in compliance with a resolution of the Senate of Dec. 6. 1854, calling for correspondence, etc., relative to the naval expedition to Japan. (Wash- ington, 1854., 195 p. 8°. (LT. S. 33. cong., 2. sess. Senate ex. doc. 34; sdrial 751.1 •SBE Narrative of the expedition of an American squadron to the (Zhina seas and JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS ^ Early Relations, continued. Perry's Expedition, continued. Japan, performed in the years 1852, 1853, and 1854, under the command of Commo- dore M. C. Perry, United States Navy, by order of the government of the^United States. [House edition.) Washington: A. O. P. Nicholson, 1856. 3 v. 4°. f BEV T. 1. Compiled by Francis L. Hawks, xvii, 537 p., 5 maps, 85 pi., 2 ports. V. 2. 5 p.I., 414 p., 1 1., xi p., 8 1., 43 pi., 14 maps. (U. S. 33. cong., 2. sess. House ex. doc. 97.) V. 3. Observations on the zodiacal light, from April 2. 1853, to April 22, 1855, with conclusions from the data thus obtained; by George Jones, xiii, 705 p. illus. [Congressional edition.) Wash- ington: Gov. Prtg. Off., 1856. 3 v. 4°. (U. S. 33. cong., 2. sess. Senate ex. doc. 79. Serial 769-771.) * SEE V. 1. Compiled from the original notes and jour- nals... by Francis L. Hawks. xvii(i), 537 p., 3 diagrs., 6 maps, 76 pi., 10 ports. V. 2. 4 p.I., 414 p., 2 1., 14, xi p., 1 1., 16 diagrs., 18 maps, 27 pi. V. 3. United States Japan expedition. Observa- tions on the zodiacal light, from April 2, 1853, to April 22, 1S55, made chiefly on board the United States steam-frigate Mississippi, during her late cruise in eastern seas, and her voyage homeward. With conclusions, from the data thus obtained, by Rev. George Jones. . . xliii, 705 p. Narrative of the expedition of an American squadron to the China seas and Japan in the years 1852. 1853, and 1854, under the command of Commodore M. C. Perry... House edition. f BEV V. 1. Compiled from the original notes and jour- nals... by Francis L. Hawks. Washington: Gov. Prtg. Off., 1856. xvii(i), 537 p., 3 diagrs., 6 maps, 76 pi., 7 ports. 4°. This edition has extra pi. "Public bath at Simoda,'* between p. 404 and 405. V. 2. Washington: A. O. P. Nicholson, 1856. 5 p.I., 3-414 p., 2 1., 14, xi p., 1 1., 16 diagrs., 16 maps, 30 pi. 4°. (U. S. 33. cong., 2. sess. House ex. doc. 97.) V. 3. United States. Japan expedition. Observa- tions on the zodiacal light, from April 2, 1853, to April 22, 1855, made chiefly on board the United States steam frigate Mississippi, during her late cruise in the eastern seas, and her voyage homeward. With conclusions from the data thus obtained by Rev. George Jones... Washington: A. O. P. Nichol- son, 1856. xliii, 705 p. 4*. Narrative of the expedition of an American squadron to the China seas and Japan, performed in the years 1852, 1853, and 1854, by order of the government of the United States, under the command of Commodore M. C. Perry, U. S. N. Com- piled from the original notes and journals of Commodore Perry and his officers at his request and under his supervision, by Francis L. Hawks. D.D. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1856. vii, 624 p., 11 maps, 76 pi., 1 port. 4°. BEV Hale, Edward Everett. Perry's expedi- tion to Japan. (North American review. Boston, July, tSCOr 8°. v. 83, p. 233-260.) .^••c *DA r.-Hawks' narrative. Shimonoseki Affair and Japanese Civil War Alcock, Sir Rutherford. The capital of the Tycoon; a narrative of a three years' resi- dence in Japan. New York: Harper & Bros., 1863. 2 v. illus. maps. 12°. BEV Gilman, Daniel Coit. The Japanese in- demnity fund. (Overland monthly. San Francisco, 1873. 4°. v. 10, p. 184-189.) *DA Griffis, William Elliot. Our war with one gun. illus. (New England magazine. Boston, Aug., 1903. 4°. new series, v. 28 p. 662-678.) DA Townsend Harris, first American envoy to Japan. Boston: Houghton, Mif- flin & Co., 1895. xii, 351 p., 1 port. 12\ BES House, Edwprd H. The Simonoseki af- fair: a chapter of Japanese historv. n. t.-p. [1875.) 33 p. 8°. BETp.v.3 MacCauley, Clay. The Heusken memo- rial; an old story retold. Tokvo. Tapan, 1917. V, 28p. 12°. ICM (japan) Misconception about the "Shimonoseki affair." (lapan weekly chronicle. Kobe, Oct. 4, 1917. f°. new series, no. 822. p. 529- 531.) / fBERA Treat, Payson Jackson. The early diplo- matic relations between the United States and Japan, 1853-1865. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1917. ix, 459 p. 12°. (The Albert Shaw lectures on diplomatic history, 1917.) ICM (Japan) ■ The return of the Shimonoseki in- demnity. (Journal of race development. Worcester, 1917. 8°. v. 8, p. 1-12.) QOA United States. — Foreign Affairs Com- mittee (House, 47: 1). The Japanese in- demnity fund. [Report on H. R. 1052 relat- ing to the disposition of the Japanese in- demnity fund.) Jan. 31, 1882. [Washing- ton, 1882.) 5 p. 8°. (U. S. 47. cong., 1. sess. House report 138; serial 2065.) *SBE United States. — State Department. Jap- anese indemnity fund. Letter from the secretary of state, in relation to the install- ments of the Japanese indemnity fund which remain unpaid. [Washington. 1872.) 7 p. 8°. (LT. S. 42. cong., 2. sess. House misc. doc. 151; serial 1526.) * SHE • Message of the president of the United States, communicating a report from the secretary of state, in relation to recent events in the empire of Japan. May 25, 1868. (Washington, 1868.) 46 p. 8°. (U. S. 40. cong., 2. sess. Senate ex. doc. 65; serial 1317.) * SBE 8 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Extraterritoriality Cheney, Annie Elizabeth. Japan and her relations to foreign powers, (.\rena. Bos- ton, 1893. 8°. V. 8, p. 455-466.) * DA Flower, Benjamin Orange. Justice for Japan. (.Arena. Boston, 1894. 8°. v. 10, p. 225-236.) 'DA Griffis, William Elliot. Our treaties with Japan, (.\ndover review. Boston, lune, 1888. 8°. V. 9, p. 605-610.) 'DA Hinckley, Frank Erastus. American con- sular jurisdiction in the Orient. Washing- ton. D. C. : W. H. Lowdermilk & Company. 1906. XX, 283 p. 8°. IC Hubbard, Richard B. Courts of the United States in Japan. (.American law review. St. Louis, Jan.-Feb., 1888. 8°. v. 22. p. 125-138.) XAA Liscomb, William Shields. The Japa- nese treaty revision. (The Nation. \ew York. Jan. 15, 1891. 4°. v. 52, p. 50.) * DA Matsuyama, Makoto. Japan and the western powers. ( Xorth .American review. New York, 1878. 8°. v. 127, p. 406-426.) *DA Memorial of .American residents in Japan in favor ol further legislation for their gov- ernment as such residents. Jan. 5. 1882. [Washington. 1882.| 7 p. 8°. (U. S. 47. cong., 1. sess. Senate misc. doc. 70: serial 1993.) * SEE Newton, James King. Japanese treaty revision. (The Xation. \ew York, March 29,1888. 4'. V. 46, p. 254-255.) * DA -;-— Obligations of the United States to initiate a revision of treaties between the western powers and Tapan. [Oberlin. O., 1887., 1 p.l.. 46-70 p. 8°. BET p.v.3 Repr.: Bibliotheca sacra, Jan., 1887. United States. — State Department. Mes- sage of the president of the United States, communicating a copy of regulations for the consular courts of the L'nited States in Japan, decreed and issued by the minister of the United States in that country. Jan. 27, 1871. (Washington, 1871., 50p. 8'. (U. S. 41. cong., 3. sess. Senate ex. doc. 25; serial 1440.) * SBE -; — Message of the president of the United States, communicating. . .informa- tion as to what legislation is necessary to insure the administration of justice and to protect .American interests in China and Japan. [Washington, 1870., 21 p. 8°. (U. S. 41. cong., 2. sess. Senate ex. doc. 58; serial 1406.) * SBE _-; — Message of the president of the United States, communicating. . .informa- tion concerning the exercise or claim by consuls of the United States in Japan of judicial powers in cases arising between -American citizens and citizens.of any other foreign nation other than Tapan. Jan. 12, 1869. (Washington, 1869., 7 p. 8". (U. S. 40. cong., 3. sess. Senate ex. doc. 20; serial 1360.) * SBE Wiginore, John Henry. Foreign juris- diction in Japan. (The Xation. Xew A'ork, Jan. 12, 1893. 4°. v. 56, p. 26-27.) 'DA Immigr.ation General Works Adams, Thomas Sewcll, and Helen- L. SuMXEK. The problem of immigration. (In: Labor problems. Xew York: The Macniillan Co., 1908. 8°. p. 99-107.) TD Americanization on Pacific coast. (Ja- pan weekly chronicle. Kobe, March 11, 1920. i\ new series, no. 949, p. 295.1 tBERA Anti-Japanese agitation in .America. (Herald of .Asia. Tokyo, Oct. 18, 1919. f V.8. p. 90-91.) tBBA Aoki, S. Japanese immigration. (World's work. Xew York, 1913. 8°. v. 15, p. 10041- 10044.) * DA Aubert, Louis. Amcricains ct Japonais. L'cniigration japonaise aux Hawaii, en Californie. au Canada et dans I'.Amerique du Sud. Le conflit economiquc, social et politique. Lcs Etats-Unis. Ic lapon et Ics puissances. Paris: .A. Colin, 1908. 340 p.. 1 map. 12°. BES Can we assimilate the Japanese? (Lit- erary digest. Xew York, Aug. 2, 1913. f°. V. 47, p. 165-166.) *DA Canada. — Royal Commission on Chi- nese and Japanese Immi;>ration. Report. Ottawa: S. E. Dawson, 1902. 2 p.l., v-xiy p., 11., 430 p. 8°. (Canada. — Parliament. Sessional papers, 1902, no. 54.) • SEE A discussion of th45.) 'DA School question and exclusion. (Cur- rent literature. New York, March, 1<'07. f °. V. 42, p. 237-244.) • DA Secretary Mctcalf's report on the Japa- nese in San Francisco. (Outlook. New York. Dec. 29, 1906. 4°. v. 84. p. 104(1- 1042.) * DA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 19 Immigration, continued. California Question, continued. A Senseless insult to a friendly nation; the school question in California. (Out- look. New York. Feb. 13, 1909. 4°. v. 91, p. 315-316.) *DA Thomson, William H. San Francisco and the Japanese. (World to-dav. Chi- cago, Dec, 1906. 4°. V. 11, p. 1310-1313.) *DA Webb, E. Y. Treaty-making power of the states and the Japanese-San Francisco school controversy. (Congressional rec- ord. Washington, Feb. 16, 1907. f°. v. 41. p. 3132-3139.) *SAE Alien Land Bill Alien land bill in California. (Outlook. New York, April 19-26, 1913. 4°. v. 103, p. 828-829. 875.) * DA Alien land-ownership in Japan. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe. March 4. 1920. f°. new series, no. 9. p. 255.) t BERA American-Japanese discussions relating to the tenure law of California. (.American journal of international law. Baltimore, July, 1914. 8°. V. 8. p. 571-578.) XBA The Anti-alien law problem. (Outlook. New York. May 7, 1913. 4°. v. 104. p. 86- 87.) " * DA The Backbone of Japanese public opin- ion on Japanese-American relations. (New York lapan review. New York. Sept., 1913. 4°. 1913, p. 159-164.) BERA Brown, Alice M. Japanese in Florin, California: prepared by Alice M. Brown, in. p., 1913.) 7 p. 8°. lEA Favorable to the Japanese. Bryan, J. Ingram. The situation in Ja- pan. (Outlook. New York, Aug. 2, 1913. 8°. V. 104, p. 757-758.) * DA California e.xasperates the Japanese gov- ernment. (Current opinion. New York. May. 1913. f°. v. 55, p. 365.) * DA California insistent. (Independent. New- York, May' 8, 1913. 4°. v. 74, p. 1010- 1011.) *DA California and Japan. (Independent. New York. May 8, 22, 1913. 4°. v. 74, p. 1053, 1115-1116.) *DA California and the Japanese. (Outlook. New York, Feb. 3, 1915. 4°. v. 109, p. 249- 250.) * DA The California land law agitation. (Out- look. New York, May 3, 1913. 4°. v. 104, p. 6-8.) * DA California precipitates an embarrassing situation. (Current opinion. New York, June, 1913. f°. v. 54, p. 445-449.) * DA California's anti-alien land bill. (Liter- ary digest. New York, April 19, 1913. f°. V. 46, p. 878.) * DA California's solution of her Japanese problem. (Literary digest. New York, May 17, 1913. i". v. 46, p. 1107-1109.) *DA Collins, Charles Wallace. Will the Cali- fornia alien land law stand the test of the fourteenth amendment. (Yale law journal. New Haven, 1914. 4°. v. 23, p. 330-338.) XAA Concessions to aliens. (Tapan weekly chronicle. Kobe, Feb. 27, 1919. f°. new series, no. 895, p. 298-299.) f BERA Dickey, Francis W. The sanctity of con- tracts. (The Nation. New York, May 22, 1913. f°. V.96, p. 519-520.) * DA Diplomatic communications with Japan. (Outlook. New York, July 11, 1914. 4°. V. 107, p. 578-580.) * DA Edwards, Percy L. The industrial side of the alien land law problem. (Overland monthly. San Francisco. Aug., 1913. 4°. new series, v. 62, p. 190-200.) * DA Eliot, Edward C. The treaty-making power with reference to the reserved power of the states. (Case and comment. Rochester, N.Y., 1913. 4°. v. 20, p. 77-83.) XAA Friendship of Japan with America and the long diplomatic struggle. (Review of reviews. New York, June, 1913. 4". v. 47, p. 643-651.) * DA Gadsby, John. The Japanese "Law re- lating to foreigners' rights of ownership in land." (Law quarterlv review. London, 1914. 4°. v. 30, p. 91-960 XAA Governor Johnson on the alien land law. (Outlook. New York, May 24, 1913. 4°. V. 104, p. 129-130.) * DA Gulick, Sidney Lewis. .America's Orien- tal immigration problem. (Chicago City Club. Bulletin. Chicago, 1914. 4°. Bul- letin 7, p. 173-181.) SERA How foreigners are treated in Japan. (Harper's weekly. New York, 1907. f. V. 51. p. 1083-1084.) *DA Hungerford, Edward. California's side of it. (Harper's weekly. New York. Tune 7. 1913. i°. v. 57, p. 13.) *DA Inglis, William. Playing with dynamite. (Harper's weekly. New York, May 3, 1913. f°. v. 57, p. 7, 26.) * DA The Issue between Japan and California. (Literary digest. New York, May 3, 1913. i". V.46, p. 991-994.) * DA The Issue with Japan grows into a world issue. (Current opinion. New York, July, 1913. i". V.S5, p. 7-11.) *DA 20 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Immigration, continued. California Question, continued. Japan in America. (Xew England maga- zine. Boston. June, 1913. 8^ new series. V. 49. p. 159-160.) * DA Japan and the land law. (Literary digest. New York, Mav 31, 1913. f^ v. 46, p. 1214- 1215.) *DA Japan on the land-law deadlock. (Liter- ary digest. Xew York, Aug. 15, 1914. i' . V. 49. p. 263-264.) * DA Japan's economic interest in California. (Current opinion. Xew York, July, 1913. f°. V. 55, p. 70.) * DA Japan's view of the white peril. (Liter- ary digest. Xew Y'ork, June 14, 1913. f°. V. 46, p. 1326.) *DA The Japanese controversy. (World's work. New York, lune, 1913. 4°. v. 26, p. 144- 146.) * DA Japanese population and land ownership in California. (Xew York Japan review. New York, July, 1913. A'. 1913, p. 7-8.) BERA The Japanese press on California. (Lit- erary digest. Xew York, May 3, 1913. f°. V.46, p. 1002-1003.) *DA Japanese resignation. (Literary digest. Xew York, July 19, 1913. 1° . v. 47, p. 90.) *DA Quotations from Japanese newspapers. Japanese rights in .'\merica. (Literary digest. Xew York, July 11, 1914. f°. v. 49. p. 48-.=i0.) *DA The Japanese situation. (Outlook. Xew York, May 31, 1913. 4\ v. 104, p. 233-234.) »DA Japon et Amerique. [Articles by Sir Val- entine Chirol. G. Clcmenceau and others.] (Socicti- franco-japonaisc de Paris, I'ul- Ictin. Paris, 1913. no. 30, p. 69-84.) BERA Jordan, David Starr. Japanese exclu- sion. (Independent. Xew York, Dec. 13, 1906. 4°. V. 61, p. 1425-1426.) • DA Japanese exclusion. New York, May 1. 1913. 4° (Independent. V. 74, p. 978.) *DA Kaltenborn, Hans von. Land ownership liy .-ilicns. (.\cadcmy of Political Science in Xew York City. Proceedings. Xew York, 1917-18. 4°. v. 7, p. 570-575.) SEA Komai, T. G. America and Japan: the Tapancsc case. (Spectator. London, 1913. P. v. 111. p. 208-210.) *DA Land ownership. (Herald of .'\sia. Tokyo. July 17. 1920. f». v. 9, p. 429.) tBBA Macfarlane, Peter Clark. Japan in Cali- fornia. (Collier's weeklj'. Xew York. June 7, 1913. i\ v. 51. p. 5-6.) * DA Mahon, J. The Japanese question. (American law reyiew. St. Louis, Sept., 1914. 8\ V. 48, p. 698-713.) XAA Makino, Xobuaki. Alien land legislation in California. (Xew York Japan review. Xew York. Feb., 1914. 4°. 1914. p. 71-73.) BERA Malcolm, Roy. Anti-Japanese legislation in California, and the naturalization of the Japanese. (Historical Society of Southern California. Annual publication. Los .\n- geles. 1912-13. 8°. v. 9, p. 97-103.) lAA Maxey. Edwin. Japanese-.\merican re- lations. (Forum. Xew York, July, 1913. i\ y. 50, p. 66-75.) * DA Minis, Henry .■\lvin. California and the Japanese. (Survey. Xew York. June 7, 1913. i\ V. 30, p. 332-336.) SKA The Nation and California. (The Xa- tion. Xew York, May 8, 1913. l\ v. 96. p. 458.) *DA Peabody, Francis Greenwood. Xagging the Japanese. (Xorth .\mcrican review. Xew' York. Sept., 1913. 8\ v. 198, p. ^:i2~ 340.) *DA The Race issue in the Japanese problem. (Literary digest. Xew York, Mav 31. 1913. f°. y. 46. p. 1209-1210.) * DA Ridgely, Harold C. Are the Japanese unfriendly? (Forum. Xew York, Oct., 1913. f °. v. 50, p. 483-485.) * DA Robinson, Edgar Eugene, and \'. J. Wkst. TIu- foreign policy of Woodrow Wilson. 1913-1917. Xew York: The Mac- millan Company, 1917. 7 p.l., 3-428 p. 12^ IC Contains considerable material on the California alien taiul bill. Secretary Bryan in California. (Har- per's weekly. Xew York, Mav 3, 1913. f. V.5, p.3.) ■ *DA Secretary Bryan's visit to Sacramento. (Indcpiiulent. Xew York, ^^av 1, 1913. 4°. v. 74. p. 945-946.) * DA Soyeda, Juichi. and Tadao K.vmiva. .V survey of the Japanese question in Cali- fornia. San Francisco: Japanese Associa- tion of America, 1913. 16 p. 8\ lEA Terms of our treaty with Japan. (Cur- rent opinion. Xew York, May, 1913. 4°. V. 54, p. 364.) • DA Villoldo, Julio. El Japon y los Estados L'nidos. (Cuba contemponinea. Habana. 1913. 4°. tomo 2. p. 140-146.) * DR Wanted: a final solution of the Japanese problem. (Independent. Xew York, Xov. 6, 1913. 4°. V.76, p. 236-237.) ♦DA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 21 Immigration, continued. Arbitration Treaty Another peace victory: Japan and the United States. (Independent. New York, Dec. 3. IVOS. 4°. v. 65, p. 1315-1316.) » DA Brooks, Sidney. Aspects of the Ameri- can-Japanese agreement. 1908. (.Indepen- dent'. New York, Dec. 24, 1908. 4°. v. 65, p. 1554-1558.) *DA The Japan treaty. (Independent. New- York, Mav 14, 1908. 4°. v. 64, o. 1099- 1100.) ■ *DA Japan watching onr treaties. (Literary digest. New York, Mav 11, 1912. f. v. 44, p. 979-980.) * DA The Japanese treatv. (Independent. New York, March 2, 1911. 4\ v. 70, p. 475-476.) *DA Kinnosuke, Adachi. Anglo-.\merican arbitration and the Far East. (Review of reviews. New York, Nov., 1911. 4°. v. 44, p. 602-604.) * DA The New Japanese treaty. (Outlook. New York, March 11, 1911. 4°. v. 97, p. 522-523.) • DA United States. — Treaties. Convention between the United States and Japan. Arbitration. Signed at Washington, ilav 5. 1908... Proclaimed. September 1, 1908. Washington: Gov. Prtg. Off., 1908. 4 p. 8'. (L'nited States. — State Department. Treaty series, no. 509.) XBDD Agreement between the L^nited States and Japan. Arbitration. Extending the duration of the convention of Mav 5. 1908. Signed at Washington,. June 28. 1913 . . . Proclaimed. Mav 26, 1914. Washins^ton : [Gov. Prtg. Off.,, 1914. 4 p. 8°. (United States. — State Department. Treatv series, no. 591.) XBDD Agreement between the United States and Japan. Arbitration. Extending the duration of the convention of May 5. 1908. Signed at Washington, .\ugust 23. 1918... Proclaimed, Feb. 25, 1919. Washington, 1919. 4 p. 8°. (United States. — State Department. Treaty series, no. 639.') XBDD F.\R E.\STERX Question Gexer.\l Works Addison, James Thayer. The value of Japanese promises. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Dec. 13, 1919. f°. v. 11, p. 60. 62-66.) * DA y America — lapan — England. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, April 24, 1920. f^ v. 9, p. 92-93.) fBBA America — Tapan — The Far East. ^ (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, March 15. 1919. f°. V. 6. p. 680-681.) tBBA American Chamber of Commerce of China. Japanese interests in China. (Con- gressional record. Washington. Sept. 4. 1919. f °. V. 58, part 5, p. 4819-4820.) * SAE Reprinted in Millard's review, v. 10, Oct. 25, 1919, p. 307-309, '■DA. American foreign policy, by a diploma- tist. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1909. vii. 192 p. \2\ IC American interference in the Orient. (Literarv digest. New York, June 19, 1920. i\ V.65, p. 28.) *DA American policv. (Herald of Asia. To- kyo, March 27, 1920. i". v. 8, p. 703-705_) f BBA American sentiments towards Japati. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, March 16. 1918. f°. V. 5, p. 776.) tBBA Asia and America. (Outlook. New York, Feb. 28. 1914. 4°. v. 106, p. 440-441.) * DA "Asiaticus." China: colony or nation? maps. (Asia. New York, March, 1919. f. V. 19, p. 209-220.) t* OAA Attitude of Americans and Britons in China towards lapan. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Dec. 21, 1918. f°. v. 7, p. 89- 94.) * DA : The Big stick. From the "Herald of Asia." (^Millard's review. Shanghai, May 1,1920. 4°. v. 12, p. 452, 454-456.) * DA Brooks, Sidney. How England regards our Far-East problem. ( Harper's weekly. New York, Aug. 10, 1907. f. v. 51, p. 1160.) *DA Brown, Arthur Judson. The mastery of the Far East. The story of Korea's trans- formation and Japan's rise to supremacy in the Orient. New York: Charles Scrib- ner's Sons. 1919. ix, 671 p. illus. 8'. * R-BE Bullard, Arthur. Expanding Japan. (Harper's magazine. New York, Nov., 1919. 4°. V. 139, p. 857-866.) * DA Child, Richard Washburn. Japan, the peace and the destinv of .Xsia. illus. (World's work. New York, July, 1919. 4". V. 38. p. 313-329.) * DA 99 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Far Eastern Question, continued. General Works, continued. Chung, Henry. The Oriental policy of the L'nited States. With introductory note hy Jeremiah W. Jenks. New York: Flem- ing H. Revell Company [Cop. 1919j. 306 p., 1 map. 12°. BE Part 1. The development of the policy. The open- ing of the East. China in the twentieth century. American rivalry with Japan. The Lansing. Ishii agreement. Present policies and opportunities. Part 2. An undercurrent shaping the policy: Japan's con- trol of publicity. The official espionage. The gov- ernment censorship. Publicity propaganda. Part 3. Documents in the case. Close, Upton. Living over the crater. (Millard's review. Shanghai, June 7, 1919. f°. V.9. p.-l-S.) *DA The Nipponese slant. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Mav 3, 1919. f°. v. 8. p. 356-359.) " * DA Coleman, Frederic .'Xberncthy. The Far East unveiled. An inner history of events in Japan and China in the year 1916. Lon- don: Cassell and Company, 1918. xiii, 304 p. 12°. BE Bent. Silas. Japan and the open door. (The Dial. New York, Nov- 29, 1919. f°. V. 67, p. 479-480.) * DA Criticism in international issues. (Japan wecklv chronicle. Kobe. .Xpril 1, V>20. f. new scries, no. 952, p. 370-371.) t BERA Dempster, Arthur. Secretary Taft's mis- sion to Japan. (Harper's wceklv. New York, Nov. 23. 1907. {°. v. 51, p. 1722.) *DA Dewey, John. The Far Eastern dead- lock. (New republic. New York, March 16,1921. i°. V. 26, p. 71-74.) 'DA lapan and .America. (The Dial. New York, Mav 17, 1919. f°. v. 66, p. 501- 503.) * DA The Diplomacy of Sino-Japancse war. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, ^iarch 30- July 6, 1920. f°. v. 5, p. 11, 43. 75, 107, 139, ■l7i, 203. 235, 267, 299, 331, 363. 392-393, 421. 448- 449.) t BBA Dollar, J. Harold. .-Vnierican trailc in China now — and in the future. (Millard's review. Shanghai, June 7, 1919. f°. v. 9, p. 35-39.) • DA Emancipation of Asia. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Nov. 3. 1917. f°. y. 5. p. 164-165.) tBBA Froelick, Louis D. Democracy collides with imperialism over Shantung. (.'\sia. New York, Sept., 1919. f°. v. 19. p. 875- 877.) t*OAA Gallagher, Patrick. .'Smerica's aims and Asia's aspirations. New York: The Cen- tury Co., 1920. XV, 49') p. illus. 8°. BTZP Gibbons, Herbert Adams. The new map of Asia (1900-1919). New York: The Cen- tury Co., 1919. xiv, 571 p. maps. 8°. BBB Gulick, Sidney Lewis. American democ- racy and .Asiatic citizenship. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1918. xii, 257 p. 8°. SEV The white peril in the Far East; an interpretation of the significance of the Russo-Tapanese war. New York: Fleming H. Revell Company (Cop. 1905,. 191 p. 12°. BES H., H. E. Japan's hand in China. (Mil- lard's review. Shanghai, May 25, 1918. f°. V. 4. p. 460-463.) *DA Harding. Gardner L. Peace in the Pa- cific. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Sept. 15.1917. f°. v. 2, p. 66-68.) 'DA Hishida, Seiji G. The international posi- tion of Japan as a great power. New York: Columbia University Press. 1905. 289 p., 1 port. 8°. (Columbia University studies in history, economics and public law. v. 24, no. 3.) BES Honda, Masujiro. Diplomacy de luxe. (North .Vmcrican review. New York, Nov.. 1910. 8°. v. 192, p. 671-679.) 'DA Hornbeck, Stanley Kuhl. Contemporary politics in the Far East. New York: D. Appleton & Co.. 1916. xii, 466 p. illus. 8°. ♦R-BE Hyndman, Henry Mayers- The awaken- ing of .Asia. London: Cassell and Com- pany, 1919. viii, 291 p. 8°. BE Japan and .America. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo. Feb. 21. 1920. f°. v. 8, p. 562-563.) tBBA Japan and China. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai. Dec, 1915. f°. v. 12. p. 263-264.) tBBA Japan and democracy. (Review ot re- views. New York, Feb., 1918. 4°. v. 57. p. 212.) 'DA Japan tries to personally conduct Amer- ica to China. (Far Eastern review. Shang- hai, Dec. 1916. f°. v. 13. p. 264-265.) t BBA Japan and the l'nited States. (Outlook. New York, March 2S. 1917. 8°. v. 115. p. 548-549.) * DA Japan's China policy misunderstood. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Aug. 16, 1919. f°. V. 7. p. 563-565.) t BBA Japan's isolation. (Herald of .Asia. To- kvo. June 21. 1919. f°. y. 7, p. 343-344 > tBBA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 23 Far Eastern Question, continued. General IVorks, continued. Jenks, Jeremiah Whipple. Japan and her imperialistic ambitions. (Current opinion. New York, June, 1919. f°. v. 66, p. 356- 359.) * DA Japan and her neighbor. (North American review. New York, Aug., 1919. 4°. V. 210, p. 212-221.) * DA Remaking our Far Eastern policy. (Asia. New York, Sept., 1919. f°. v. 19. p. 886-888.) t* OAA Jordan, David Starr. When East meets East. (Sunset. San Francisco, Dec, 1919. f^ V. 43, p. 39-40.) * DA Kahn, Ida. A challenge to the students of China. (Millard's review. Shanghai. March 22, 1919. i\ v. 8, p. 126-128.) * DA — '— .\ Chinese view on Far Eastern politics. (Millard's review. Shanghai, April 6, 1918. f°. v. 4, p. 188-189.) * DA Kahn, Julius. Remarks of Hon. Julius Kahn of California on Shantung question. (Congressional record. Washington. .-Xug. 8, 1919. i\ V. 58, appendix, p. 8976-8979.) *SAE Knapp, Arthur ^lay. Japanese ambition. (Atlantic monthly. Boston, 1910. 8°. v. 105, p. 68-76.) * DA Latane, John Holladay. America as a world power. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1907. xvi, 350 p. illus. 8°. (American nation series, v. 25.) *R-IAE Our relations with Japan. (Univer- sity of Chicago magazine. Chicago, Nov.. 1913. 8°. V.6, p. 6-18.) STG Lincoln, Chester C. American prestige in China. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Dec. 27, 1919. f°. v. 11, p. 154, 156, 158- 160.) * DA McCormick, Frederick. The menace of Japan. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1917. vi, 372p. map. 12°. ICM McCormick, Medill. Remarks... on Ja- pan and China. (Congressional record. Washington, Aug. 20, 1919. i°. v. 58, part 4, p. 4041-4047.) * SAE The Mastery of the Far East. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, May 24, 1919. f°. v. 7, p. 237-238.) t BBA Millard, Thomas Franklin. The new Far East. An examination into the new position of Japan and her influence upon the solution of the Far Eastern question, with special reference to the interests of America and the future of the Chinese em- pire. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1906. xii, 319 p. map. 12°. BES "Mistakes" as a policy. (Japan chronicle. Kobe, May 13, 1920. f°. new series, no. 958, p. 534-535.) t BERA Norman, Sir Henry. The peoples and politics of the Far East; travels and studies in the British, French, Spanish, and Portu- guese colonies. Siberia, China, Japan. Ko- rea, Siam and Malaya. London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1895. 3 p.l., vii-xvi p., 1 1., 3-608 p., 2 maps, 48 pi. 8°. *R-BE Okuma, Shigenobu. marquis. Japan's policy in China. (Current history maga- zine, New York Times. New York, March, 1920. 4°. V. 11, part 2, p. 510-512.) ♦R-BTZE Our feelings towards Japan. (World's work. New York, Dec, 1917. 4°. v. 35, p. 125-126.) * DA A Philippine view of Japan. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Sept. 1, 1917. f°. v. 3, p. 710- 711.) tBBA • Pooley, Andrew Melville. Japan's for- eign policies. London: George Allen & Unwin, Ltd. il920., 202 p. 8°. BES Prime Minister Hara asserts the rights of the yellow races. (Current opinion. New York, April, 1919. f°. v. 66, p. 213- 214.) *DA Rea, George Bronson. America's Far Eastern muddle. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Feb., 1920. f°. v. 16, p. 76-77.) tBBA A heart to heart talk with the edi- tors of Japan. (Far Eastern review. Shang- hai, Aug., 1916. f°. V. 13, p. 81-84.) t BBA Japan's burden and China's oppor- tunity. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Feb., 1920. f°. V. 16, p. 113-114.) f BBA The new American diplomacy in the Far East. (Far Eastern review. Man- ila, March, 1911. i°. v. 7, p. 351-352.) tBBA Reinsch, Paul Samuel. World politics at the end of the nineteenth century as influenced by the Oriental situation in 1900. New York: The Macmillan Co.. 1900. xviii, 366 p., 1 map. 12°. SEC The Rule that works both ways. port. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Sept., 1916. f°. V. 13, p. 121-125.) tBBA Sherrill, Charles Hitchcock. Korea and Shantung versus the white peril. (Scrib- ner's magazine. New York, March, 1920. 4°. V.67, p. 367-372.) * DA Simpson, Bertram Lenox. If Japan re- fuses? By Putnam Weale (pseud.i. illus. (Asia. New York, May, 1919. f°. v. 19, p. 453-459.) t* OAA 24 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Far Eastern Question, continued. General IVorks, continued. The truce in the East and its after- math, being the setiuel to "The re-shaping of the Far East." By B. L. Putnam Wcale. London: Macmillan and Co., 1907. xv. 638 p. illus. 8°. *R-BEG The truth about China and Japan. New York: Dodd, Mead and Company. 1919. 248 p., 1 map. S'. BE Sino-Japanese crisis. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo. Doc. _'0, 1919. f°. V. 8, p. 343-344.) tBBA The Status of the Japan-China dispute. (Current history magazine, New York Times. New York, June, 1920. 4\ v. 12. p. 463-464.) *R-BTZE The Status quo in the Far East. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Nov., 1915. f°. V. 12. p. 231-232.) tBBA Timeo Danaos et dona ferentes. illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, .Aug., 1916. f°. V. 13, p. 90-93.) t BBA Tong, Hollington K. How Japan's policy is undermining her position in China. (Mil- lard's review. Shanghai, Aug. 9, 1919. i". V. 9, p. 388-390.) * DA Why not arbitrate the China trouble? (Millard's review. Shanghai, May 24, 1919. f°. v. 8, p. 471, 474-475.) ♦DA Uenoda, Setsuo. ^Vhen East meets East. (Asia. Now York, Dec. 1919. i\ v. 19, p. 1214-1217.) t*OAA United States. — Foreign .'\ffairs Com- mittee (House. 64: 2). United States and the Orient. Hearings. . .on H. R. 16661. Statement of Miss Jane Addams and others. December 12, 1916. Washington: Gov. Prtg. Off., 1916. 12 p. 8°. * SBF United States. — Treaties. Agreement effected by the exchange of notes between the United States and Japan, mutual interest relating to the republic of China. Signed Nov. 2. 1917. Washington, 1917. 4 p. 8°. (United States. — State Department. Tre.ntv series, no. 630.) XBDD Wainwright, Richard. The United States and tile I'ar East; an economic and mH\- tary program. (.Vmerican Academy of Po- litical and Social Science. .Vnnals. Phila- delphia, lulv, 1916. 4°. V. 54. p. 251-253.) SA Weale, R. L. Putnam, pseud. See Simp- son, Bertram Lenox. ^ Willoughby, Wostel Woodbury. China. Japan, ami the western powers — Democ- racy and the Eastern question. (Congres- sional record. Washington, July 23, 1919. f°. v. 58. part 3. p. 3045-3046.1 • SAE A review of Millard's Dfmocracy and the Eajtern qmrstion. Foreign rights and interests in China... Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1920. xx. 594 p. 8°. XBN Reviewed in the .American historical rcz-icu; October, 1920. Japan's political ethics, illus. (Asia. Xew York, Sept., 1919. f°. v. 19, p. 898- 902.) t'OAA Yoshino, Sakuzo. Some diplomatic prob- lems of the dav. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, July 24, 1920. 'f. v. 9, p. 454-455.) f BBA Russo-Jap.\xese W.\r Americans on Japanese policy. (Out- look. .\cw York, May 5, 1915. 4°. v. 110, p. 4-5.) * DA Bigelow, John. Peace given as the world giveth; or. The Portsmouth treaty and its first year's fruits. New York: Baker & Taylor Co., 1907. 86 p., 3 pi. 12°. GLO Flower. Benjamin Orange. Why Amer- ica sympathizes with Japan. (.Arena. Bos- ton, '.May, 1904. A\ V. 31, p. 518-522.) *DA Hammond, John Hays. The menace of Japan's success. (World's work. New York. 1905. 4°. v. 10, p. 6273-6275.) * DA Japan. — Department of Foreign .Affairs. Correspondence regarding the negotiations between Japan and Russia. (1903-1904.) Presented to the Imperial Diet, March. 1904. [Washington: Gibson Bros.. 1904., xii, 59 p. 8\ BETp.v.l.no.lO Japan on the American attitude. (Re- view of reviews. New York, May, 1904. 4°. v. 29, p. 578-580.) * DA Quotations from Japanese newspapers. Japan's trade since the war began. (Far Eastern review. Manila, March, 1905. i". V. 1. p. 11.) tBBA McCormick, Frederick. How America got into Manchuria: inside history of America's diplomatic fight for the open door and equality of trade. (Century magazine. New York, Feb., 1911. 4". v. 81. p. 622-6.^0.) *DA Maxey, Edwin. Why we favor Japan in the present war. (Arena. Boston, .Aug.. 1904. 4°. v. 32. p. 131-133.) * DA Millard, Thomas Franklin. The powers and the settlement. (Scribner's magazine. New York, Jan., 1906. 4°. v. 39. p. 100- 120.) * DA Porter. Robert Percival. Japan: the rise of a tnodern power. Oxford: The Claren- don Press. 1918. 361 p. illus. 12'. •R-BES JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 25 Far Eastern Question, continued. Russo-Jaf'anese War, continued. Reinsch, Paul Samuel. Japan and Asi- atic leadership. (North American review. New York. 1905. 8°. v. 180, p. 48-57.) * DA United States. — President. Neutrality — Russia and Japan. By the president of the United States, a proclamation. Feb. 11, 1904. [Washington, 1904.) 4 p. f°. tt BBH p.v.l Axgi.o-Jap.\nese Alli.^nce The Alliance and Japan's assistance. Hapan weeklv chronicle. Kobe, June 3, 1920. f°. new series, no. 961, p. 629-630.) fBERA The Alliance and secret treaties. (Japan chronicle. Kobe, Mav 13, 1920. f°. new series, no. 958, p. 533-534.) fBERA Anglo-Japanese alliance. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, May 29, 1920. f°. v. 9. p. 232-233.) t BBA The Anglo-Japanese alliance. (Japan chronicle. Kobe, Tune 17, 1920. f°. new series, no. 963, p. 709-711.) fBERA Anglo-Japanese alliance. (Millard's re- view. Shanghai, Oct. 12, 1918. V. v. 6, p. 221-222.) * DA From the Herald of Asia. The Anglo-Japanese alliance again. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, June 28, 1919. f °. V. 7, p. 367-369.) f BBA Anglo-Japanese alliance and the League of Nations. (.Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Nov. 29,1919. f°. V. 8, p. 258-259.) f BBA Anglo-Japanese alliance: prospects of its renewal. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, April 1, 1920. i' . new series, no. 952. p. iiZ.) f BERA Anglo-Japanese alliance; should it be re- newed? (Herald of .^sia. Tokyo, Sept. 28, 1918. f°. v. 6, p. 7-8.) fBBA Anxiety of Japanese for renewal. (Japan weeklv chronicle. Kobe, June 3, 1920. f°. new s'eries, no. 961, p. 645-646.) fBERA Australia and Japan. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, Sept. 1, 1917. f°. v. 3, p. 708-709.) fBBA China's reply. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, June 3. 1920. f°. new series, no. 961, p. 633-634.) f BERA Hayashi, Tadasu. count. Secret memoirs of Count Tadasu Hayashi; edited by ,'\. M. Poolev. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1915. 'v, 331 p., 1 map, 4 ports. 8°. BES Hazeltine, Mayo Williamson. Would England aid Japan against America? ( North American review. New York. Dec. 21, 1906. 8°. v. 183, p. 1280-1284.) * DA Improved economic bonds between Eng- land and Japan. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, Sept. 15, 1917. i°. V. 3, p. 776.) fBBA Japan, England and India. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Feb. 2, 1918. f^ v. 5, p. 586.) fBBA Japan and the Monroe doctrine. (Living age. Boston, July 6, 1912. 4°. v. 274. p. 48-50.) * DA Japan, the United States and Great Brit- ain, with the text of the Anglo-Japanese agreement. (Harper's weeklv. New York, Feb. 16, 1907. f°. v. 51, p. 223-224.) * DA Japanese press opinions: the .^nglo- Japanese alliance. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, June 19, 1920. f°. v. 9, p. 317-318.) fBBA Kincaid-Smith, M. England, America, and Japan. (Living age. Boston, Mav 9, 1908. 8°. v. 257, p. 323-330.) *DA Marquis Okuma on the Anglo-Japanese alliance. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo. Tune 26,1920. f°. v. 9, p. 342-343.) fBBA Poindexter, John. The menace of Japan. (Harper's weekly. New York, Sept. 7, 1907. f°. V. 51, p. 1317.) *DA Remer, C. American opinion and the Anglo-Tapanese alliance. (Millard's re- view. Shanghai, May 15-29, 1920. 4°. v. 12. p. 528, 530, 532, 578, 580, 582, 584, 629- 630, 632-634.) * DA U. S., England and Japan. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, July 10, 1920. f°. v. 9, p. 405.) f BBA The United States, the Anglo-Russian treatv. and Japan. (Harper's v.-eekly. New' York, Oct. 12, 1907. l" . v. 51. p. 1479.) * DA The Value of the Anglo-Japanese alli- ance. (Tapan weekly chronicle. Kobe, April 29,' 1920. i" . new series, no. 955-956, p. 453-454, 477-478.) f BERA Viscount Kato on foreign relations. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, June 9, 1917. i". V. 3, p. 328.) fBBA Who should be Tapan's allv? And why? (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Jan. 17, 1920. f°. V. 8, p. 426-427.) fBBA Korea Allies on the Pacific, illus. (World's work. New York, Nov., 1918. 4°. \::i7. p. 68-82.) * DA Are American missionaries behind the Korean agitation? (Herald of .^sia. To- kvo, Dec. 27, 1919. i\ v. 8, p. 370-371.) fBBA 26 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Far Eastern Question, continued. Korea, continued. Brown, Arthur Judson. The mastery of the Far East. The story of Korea's trans- formation and Japan's rise to supremacy in the Orient. Xew York: Charles Scrib- ner's Sons, 1919. i.x, 671 p. illus. 8". ♦R-BE Campaign of slander. (Herald of .\sia. Tokyo, Aug. 2, 1919. i\ v. 7, p. 508-509.) tBBA Changing Korea: reforms and progress under Japanese administration, illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Jan., 1918. i". V. 14, p. 30-36.) tBBA Chung, Henry. The Oriental policy of the United States: with introductory note by Jeremiah W. Jenks. Xew York: Flem- ing H. Revell Company icop. 1919j. 306 p. map. 8°. BE Dempster, .\rthur. Secretary Taft's mis- sion to lapan. (Harper's weekly. New York, Nov. 23. 1907. i'. v. 51, p. 1722.) *DA "The Desired effect." (Millard's review. Shanghai, Nov. 29, 1919. {'. v. 10, p. 540- 542.) * DA Disturbances in Korea. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, March 15, 1919. f°. v. 6, p. 676- 677.) tBBA The Facts regarding the "Tientsin inci- dent." (Millard's review. Shanghai, .Xpril 12,1919. f°. v. 8, p. 241-246.) 'DA Fisher, Fred B. What Japan wants. (World outlook. New York, Slav, 1918. {\ V. 4, p. 14-15.) ' tKAA Griffis, William Elliot. Japan's debt to Korea, illus. (.\sia. New York. .■\ug., 1919. f°. v. 19, p. 742-748.) t* OAA The Imperial Chosen (Korean) railways. General information, illus. (Far Eastern review. Manila, Oct., 1911. f°. v. 8, p. 141- 148.) . tBBA Japan. — Residency-General in Korea. Recent progress in Korea. Compiled by H. I. J. ^f.'s Residencv-Gcncral. (London: Bradburv, Agnew, &'Co., Ltd., 1910.i vii. 122 p. illus. &\ BEO Japan in Korea, illus. (Far Eastern re- view. Manila, Sept., 1910. f°. v. 7, p. 125- 128. 133.) tBBA Kawakami, Kiyoshi Karl. American- Japanese relations: an inside view of Ja- pan's policies and purposes. Xew York: Fleming H. Revell Co. (1912.1 370 p. 8°. BET Knapp, .Xrtlnir May. Japanese ambition. (.Atlantic monthlv. Boston, 1910. 4°. v. 105, p. 68-76.) * DA Korea. illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Feb., 1919. i\ v. 15, p. 218-224.) tBBA McKenzie, F. .\. The unveiled East. London: Hutchinson & Co., 1907. viii. 347 p. illus. 8°. »R-BEW Mishima, Taro. Korea's foreign trade development, illus. (Trans-Pacific. To- kyo, Feb., 1920. i". v. 2, p. 69-72.) t* OAA The "Open door" in Korea, illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Jan.. 1916. i' . v. 12. p. 315-316.) " tBBA Presbyterian Mission. Report by Pres- byterian Mission on atrocities in Korea committed by Japan. (Congressional rec- ord. Washington, hilv 15, 1919. f^ v. 58. part 3, p. 2597-2600.) * SAE Progress in Korea, illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Oct.. 1912. i°. v. 9, p. 220-223.) t BBA Reform in Korea. (Herald of .\sia. To- kyo, Sept. 6, 1919. C. V. 7, p. 648-649.) tBBA Roosevelt and Japan. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe. Ian. 23, 1919. f^ new tBERA Reforms and series, no. 890, p. 107-108.) Scidmore, George H. progress in Korea. (Far Eastern review. Manila, Feb., 1912. f°. v. 8, p. 281-284. 287-288.) t BBA Trade and industries of Chosen. illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai. April. 1914. f°. V. 10, p. 436-439.) tBBA The Seoul- Wiju Railway, illus. (Far Eastern review. Manila, April, 1907. f. V. 3, p. 347-348.) t BBA Shastri, H. P. China, Japan, Korea, and the war. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Aug. 10, 1918. f°. V. 5, p. 419-422.) * DA The Japanese situation in north China and Korea. (Millard's review. Shanghai, June 22, 1918. {'. v. 5, p. 134- 136.) *DA Singh, Saint Xihal. The .Asiatic view of Japan's world menace. (Overland monthly. San Francisco, 1909. 4°. new series, v. 53, p. 327-328.) • DA .•\ Sino-Japanese problem. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Oct., 1915. i\ v. 12. p. 170-177.) tBBA Ciiix.x America in China; (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, June 16. 1917. i\ v. 3, p. 356-357.) tBBA Anti-Japanese movements in China. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, July 12, 1919. {'. V. 7, p. 420-427.) t BBA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 27 Far Eastern Question, continued. China, continued. An Appeal to Americans. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Aug. 30, 1919. 1° . v, 7, p. 622-623.) t BBA The Basis of American-Japanese co- operation. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo. Mav 12.1917. f. V. 3, p. 196-197.) f BBA The Black Dragon memorandum. (Con- gressional record. Washington. Aug. 26, 1919. i\ V. 58, part S, p. 4355-4356.) *SAE Britannicus, pseud. American policy in the Far East. (North ."Kmerican review. New York, Sept., 1910. 8°. v. 192, p.415- 424.) *DA China and Japan. (Herald of ."Xsia. To- kyo, June 7, 1919. f°. V. 7, p. 283-284.) tBBA China, Japan und die Vereinigten Staaten, von einen Diploniaten. (Deutsche Revue. Stuttgart, 1907. 4°. Jahrg. 32, p. 264-269.) *DA China's White book on Shantung : official story of Japanese aggression in 1915 as laid before the Peace Conference. (Current history magazine, New York Times. New York,'Sept., 1919. A", v. 10, part 2, p. 550- 552.) *R-BTZE The Claim of China for the abrogation of the treaties and notes concluded with Japan on May 25, 1915. (Congressional record. Washington. July 25, 1919. f°. v. 58, part 3, p. 3117-3129.) * SAE Colcord, Lincoln. ^Making diplomatic correspondence public. (New republic. New York, June 5, 1915. f°. v. 3, p. 124- 125.) *DA Crow, Carl. Japan and America: a con- trast. New 'York: Robert M. McBride & Co., 1916. 316 p. 12°. BET Dewey, John. China's nightmare. (New republic. New York, June 30, 1920. 4'. v. 23, p. 145-147.) * DA Ferguson, John C. Japan's use of her hegemony. (North .\merican review. New York, Oct., 1919. 4°. v. 210, p. 456-469.) *DA Free, James E. The war cloud. (Over- land monthly. San Francisco. Feb., 1907. 4°. new series, v. 49, p. 136-139.) * DA The Fundamental principle of China policy. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, July 13, 1918.' f\ V. 5, p. 474-475.) t BBA Garrett, Caret. The snarl of waking Asia. (Everybody's magazine. New York. May, 1915. 4°. v. 32, p. 587-600.) * DA Glimpses behind the scenes of Japanese diplomacy. (Current opinion. New York, Sept., 1919. i\ V. 67, p. 142-144.) * DA Gulick, Sidney Lewis. Problems in .American-Japanese relations. (.Asia. New York, 1917. l\ v. 17, p. 526-528.) t* OAA Hashiguchi, Jihei. A Japanese point of view on the Sino-Japancse question. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Aug., 1919. f°. v. 15, p. 572.) tBBA Honda, Masujiro. The Far Eastern diplomacy and .America. (Journal of race development. Worcester, Mass., April, 1918. 8°. v. 8, p. 401-410.) QOA Is China worth saving? (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Nov., 1919. f°. v. 15, p. 693.) t BBA lyenaga, Toyokichi. Relations of the United States with China and Japan. (.American Academy of Social and Politi- cal Science. Annals. Philadelphia, July, 1914. 4'. y. 54, p. 254-259.) SA Japan and China. (Current history maga- zine. New York Times. New York. March, 1920. 4°. y. 11. part 2, p. 505-510.) *R-BTZE Japan and China. (Herald of Asia. To- kyo, June 21, 1919. i\ v. 7, p. 342-343.) tBBA Japan in China. (Herald of Asia. To- kyo, Dec. 7, 1918. f°. v. 6, p. 286-287.1 tBBA Japan's foreign policy. (Herald of .Asia. Tokvo, Tan. 25, 1919. f°. v. 6, p. 480-481.) tBBA Japan's latest demands on China. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Jan., 1917. i' . y. 13, p. 295-297.) tBBA Japan's special position in China. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, May 1, 1919. {" . new series, no. 904, p. 643-644.) t BERA Japanese claim more "compensation" from China. (Far Eastern review. Shang- hai, Sept., 1919. i\ y. 15,. p. 610-611.1 tBBA Japanese claims in China. (Congres- sional record. Washington, May 13. 1919. l". y.5S. part 1, p. 139-140.) * SAE The Japanese Mission. (New republic. New York, Aug. 25, 1917. f°. v. 12, p.94- 95.) * DA Jenks, Jeremiah Whipple. Japan in ac- tion. (North -American review. New York. Sept., 1919. i\ V. 210, p. 312-322.) * DA Kawakami, Kiyoshi Karl. Japan's acts in China. (.Vorth American review. New York, Nov., 1919. 4'. v. 210, p. 622-634.) *DA 28 THE N"E\V YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY America and Japan. Shanghai, July, 1917. Machray, Robert. Far Eastern Question, continued. China, continued. Kinnosuke, .Adachi. China and Japan — and America. (Harper's weekly. New- York. April 13, 1915. i". v. 60, p. 330-.331.) *DA The L'nitcd States, China and Ja- pan; what the new understanding means to Japan. (Asia. New York, 1917. f\ v. 17, p. 788-791.) t*OAA La Motte, Ellen N. Peking dust. New York: The Century Company, 1919. xi. 240 p. ilhis. n". ' BEM Lindsay Russell and his sacred treasure. A few words on cooperation between (Far Eastern reyiew. f°. V. 13, p. sei-sw.) fBBA China, Japan, and the peace. (Fortnightly reyiew. London, Aug., 1919. 4°. V. 112, p. 248-258.) * DA McKenzie, F. A. The unyeiled East. London: Hutchinson & Co., 1907. viii. 347 p. illus. 8°. *R-BEW The "Mailed fist" of friendship. What is in Japan's professions of a change of policy tow-ards China? (Far Eastern re- yiew. Shanghai, Feb., 1917. f°. v. 13. p. 333-336.) fBBA Making China "pay." ^Vhat policy promises the largest dividends to Japan? (Far Eastern reyiew. Shanghai, .Vug.. 1919. f°. V. 15, p. 540-543.) f BBA Millard, Thomas Franklin. America and the Far Eastern question: an examination of modern phases of the Far Eastern ques- tion, including the new activities and policy of Japan, the situation of China, and the relation of the L'nitcd States of .America to the problems inyolvcd. New York: Mof- fat, Yard & Co.. 1909. xxiv, 576 p., 35 pi.. 1 port., 2 maps. 8°. BE Our Eastern question. .-Xmerica's contact with the Orient and the trend of relations with China and Japan. Illustrated with photographs and maps. New York: The Century Co., 1916. 543 p. illus. S\ IC Monroe doctrine in east .-\sia. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Oct. 6, 1917. f°. v. 5. p. 36.) t BBA More aspersions on Japan. (Herald nf Asia. Tokyo, Oct. 25, 1919. f°. v. 8, i- 115- 117.) ■ fBBA Morse, Ilosea Ballon. The international relations of the Chinese empire. London: Longmans, Green, and Co., l''l.'^, 3 v. illus. 8°. 'R-BEE V. y. The prrioil of subjection, 1894-1911, con- tains matter of interest on the relations of Japan and China. The Much debated agreements between China and Japan. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, April, 1919. I', y. 15, p. 361- 364.) t BBA Read, Thomas T. Need for coal and iron determine Japan's policy in China. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, March. 1917. 1°. y. 13, p. 396.) tBBA The Recent Sino-Japanese agreements. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai. lune. 1^18. f°. y. 14, p. 236-239.) + BBA Relations with China. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo. lune 26. 1920. f°. y.9, p. 345.1 t BBA Richard, Timothy. Some forces in mod- ern (~hina. ( Far Eastern review. Shang- hai. March, 1917. f°. v. 13, p. 372-373.) tBBA Sino-Japanese agreement. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo. May 25 -June 1. 1918. {'. V. 6, p. 261-262, 294^295.) t BBA Sino-Japanese agreements. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, May, 1918. f°. y. 14, p. 192-193.) t BBA Ukita. Sino-Japanese relations, where Japan has blundered. — A criticism of dip- lomatic methods. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, April, 1917. f°. v. 13, p. 42"- 430.1 t BBA United States. — State Department. Text of notes exchanged between the L'nited States and Japanese governments regard- ing their policy in China, and declaration of the Chinese government on the subject. London: (Harrison and Sons.i 1918. 1 p.l., 4 p. f°. (Great Britain. — Foreign Office. China. 1918, no. 1.) ft XBI Cd. 8895. Wheeler, William Reginald. China and the world-war. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1919. ix p., 21., 263 p. illus. 12°. BTZE Whelpley, James Davenport. East and West; a new line of cleavage. (Fortnightly review. London, 1915. 4°. y. 103, p. 883- 8'>5.) * DA Wilfley, Lebbeus Redman. ,\merica and the I"ar ICastcrn question. (Outlook. New York, May 29, 1909. 4°. v. 92, p. 282-285.) •DA .\ review of Millard's .'imcrica and the Far East- ern qiifslion. Words of wisdom from Japan. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Sept., 1917. f . v. 13, p. 673-674.) t BBA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 29 Far Eastern Question, continued. China, continued. The Opex Door Addison, J. T. The value of Japanese promises. (Xew republic. X'ew York, Sept. 17, 1919. i°. v. 20, p. 202-205.) * DA The Agreement with Japan. 1908. (Inde- pendent. Xew York, Dec. 17, 1908. 8°. v. 65, p. 1446.) *DA The Root-Takahira agreement. Aldridge, Francis. A new menace in the Far East. (North .American review. New York. Mav. 1915. 8°. v. 201, p. 714-718.) *DA Americus, pseud. Japanese tactics in China. Plea for the American government to uphold the "open door." (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Feb., 1917. f . v. 13, P.345-.S46.) fBBA Another step to China. TNew republic. New York, April 3, 1915. f°. v. 2, p. 221- 222.) * DA Japan's twenty-one demands on China. Asia and the Pacific. (Millard's review. Shanghai, April 6, 1918. f°. v. 4, p. 194- 196.) *DA Britannicus, pseud. Japan and China. The genesis of the demands: the responsi- bility of Baron Kato. (Far Eastern re- view. Shanghai, Aug., 1915. f . v. 12, p. 86-87.) fBBA Brooks, Sidney. America and the Anglo- Japanese alliance. (Fortnightlv review. London. April, 1902. 4°. v. 77, p. 555-564.) *DA The American in the Far East. (Living age. Boston, Feb. 6, 1904. 8°. v. 24, p. 372-374.) * DA Aspects of the American-Japanese agreement, 1908. (Independent. New York. Dec. 24, 1908. 4°. v. 65, p. 1554- 1558.) *DA The Brow-beating of China. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, May, 1915. C. v. 11. p. 467-486.) fBBA Chidell, Fleetwood. The menace of Ja- pan. ( Contemporary review. London, May. 1920. 4\ v. 107, p. 655-662.) * DA Closing the diplomatic door in China. Oapan weekly chronicle. Kobe, Tune 3, 1920. f°. new- series, no. 961, p. 631-6.32.) tBERA Closing the door in China. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Feb., 1915. f°. v. 11, p. 331-341.) fBBA Davis, Oscar King. Whose open door? (Everybody's magazine. New York, Ian., 1917. 4°. V. 36, p. 34-46.) * DA Economic effect of the extension of Ja- pan's spheres of influence in China. ( Far Eastern review. Shanghai, May, 1915. l\ V. 11, p. 487-491.) fBBA The Fall of the Okuma ministry. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Aug., 1915. f. V. 12, p. 95-96.) fBBA Harvey, George. Closing the door in China. (North American review. New York, Tulv, 1916. 8°. v. 204, p. 25-28.1 *DA Hodges, Charles. The case froin the documents. map. (Asia. New York, Sept., 1919. f°. V. 19, p. 935-945.) f* OAA Hornbeck, Stanley Kuhl. Conteinporary politics in the Far East. New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1916. xii, 466 p., 1 map. 8°. *R-BE Howes, Osborne. What Japanese exclu- sion would mean. (North .-Vmerican re- view. New York, Jan. 4, 1907. 8°. v. 184, p. 29-34.) * DA Hyndman, Henry Mayers. Japan as mistress of China. (Living age. Boston. July 5, 1919. 4°. v. 302, p. 1-4.) * DA .An Important agreement between Japan and the United States. (Independent. New York, Dec. 3, 1908. 4". v. 65, p. 1265- 1266.) * DA Ishii, Kikujiro, viscount. Japan's politi- cal intentions in the Far East. (Economic world. New York. Oct. 6. 1917. i\ v. 100 [uew series, v. 14,, p. 472-473.) f SIC Japan and America. (Living age. Bos- ton, Tan. 9, 1909. 8°. v. 260, p. 119-121.) *DA Japan and America: war cloud, 1907. (Outlook. New York, July 20, 1907. 4°. v. 86, p. 572.) * DA Japan in .Asia and America. (North -American review. New York, March. 1917. 8°. v. 205, p. 330-333.) * DA Japan and the closed door. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, Feb., 1915. f°. v. 11. p. 359-360.) fBBA Japan and the open door. (New repub- lic. New York, May 1, 1915. f°. v. 2. p. 318-319.) I- DA Japan's demands on China. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, April, 1915. f°. v. 11, p. 433-443.) fBBA Jenks, Jeremiah A\'hipp!e. Japan's acts in China: the mainsprings of Chinese re- sentment and .American anxietv. (World's work. New York, Jan., 1917. 4°. v. 33. p. 312-,328.) *DA Jernigan, T. R. The .American note to China. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Tune 23,1917. i\ V. 1, p.67-69.) * DA 30 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Far Eastern Question, continued. China: The Open Door, continued. Kahn, Ida. Japan's iron clutch tighten- ing on China. (Millard's review. Shang- hai, Nov. 3, 1917. f°. V. 2, p. 269-271.) *DA Kawakami, Kiyoshi Karl. Japan and the open door. (Century magazine. New York, Dec, 1916. 4°. v. 93, p. 280-289.) ♦DA Reprinted in his Japan in -world politics, p. 117- 139, 'R-BET. ' Latane, John HoUaday. From isolation to leadership. A review of .American for- eign policy. Xew York: Doubleday, Page. & Company. 1918. 215 p. 12°. IC McCormick, Frederick. The menace of Japan. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1917. vi, i'l p. map. 8°. ICM Martin, Xewell. Democracy's crusaders in Shantung. (Century magazine. New- York, Nov., 1919. 4°. v. 99, p. 8-19.) * DA Masaoka, Naoichi, editor. Japan to America; a symposium of papers by states- men and other leaders of thought in lapan. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1915. 235 p. 12°. BET Menace to the United States in Japan's triumph over Cliina. (Current opinion. New York. June, 1915. i\ v. 58, p. 386- 388.) • DA Millard, Thomas Franklin. Shall China he pcrmancntlv partitioned ? map. (.\sia. New York, Sept., 1919. i\ v. 19. p. 878- 882.) t* OAA The "Open door" and its solution. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Nov., 1916. f. V. 13, p. 201-203.) tBBA P., F. K. The violation of the open door hv China. (Far Eastern review. M.iiiila. Dec, 1911. f°. V. 8, p. 221-223.) t BBA Prescott, C. Lane. Time for foreign in- tervention has arrived. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Sept. 21, 1918. i\ v. 6, p. 97- 100.) • DA Rea, George Bronson. The relation of China to the war in Europe. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Jan., 1915. f°. v. 11. p. 273-284.) t BBA The violation of the "open door" by China. The reason why it is impossible for .American manufacturers of railway materials to secure fair play in the award- ing of tenders under present conditions, illus. (Far Eastern review. Manila. .Vug., 1911. V. v. 8. p. 73-87.) tBBA Regional understandings. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, May 17. 1919. i°. v. 7. p. 199-200.) tBBA Root's triumph. (Outlook. New York, Dec. 12, 1908. 4°. v. 90. p. 815-816.) 'DA The Sino-Japanese negotiations, map. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, March. 1915. f = . v. 11, p. 398-400.) tBBA Stowell, Ellery Channing. The policy of the United States in the Pacific. (.Ameri- can Academy of Political and Social Sci- ence. Annals. Philadelphia, July, 1914. A\ V.54, p. 245-250.) * DA Tomimas, Shutaro. The open-door policy and the territorial integrity of China. With verses in Japanese. New York: A. G. Sel- ler, 1919. xi, 161 p., 1 port. 8°. BE Tong, Hollington K. What Japan really wants of China. (Millard's review. Shang- hai, April 20, 1918. i\ v. 4, p. 264-267.) •DA y Uncle Sam in an Oriental triangle. (Lit- \ crarv digest. New York, 1917. f°. v. 55, >^24. ) * DA Unmasked lapan. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, June, 1915. i' . v. 12, p. 20-23.) tBBA Waiting for Japan. (Independent. New- York, Aug. 9, 1919. f°. v. 99, p. 178-181.) *DA Wang, C. T. How can .America help China? (Millard's review. Shanghai. Tulv 28,1917. l". v.l, p. 205-208.) 'DA M.vNcneRiAN Question The Anti-American animus of the Far Eastern policv. (Current literature. New York. Oct., 1910. f = . v. 49, p. 376-379.) •DA Daylight in Manchuria. China's prob- Uin to retain possession of the three east- ern provinces. (Far Eastern review. Man- ila, March, 1910. i\ v. 6, p. 449-451. "> tBBA The Development of Dairen. illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, .Aug.-Sept.. 1914. f. v. 11, p. 85-96, 117-119.) tBBA The Development of Manchuria. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Aug., 1918. f°. V. 14, p. 323-328.) tBBA The Development of the South Manchu- ria Railwav (lo. illus. (Far Eastern re- view. Manila. Sept., 1911. f°. v. 8, p. 109- 117.) tBBA Dillon, Emile Joseph. A dual alliance for the Far East. (Contemporarv review. London, July. 1910. 8°. v. 98, p. 107-119.) •DA Ex Oriente lux. Ex Occidcnte Knox. (Contemporary review. London. April, 1910. 8°. V. 97, p. 492-503.) 'DA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 31 Far Eastern Question, continued. China: Manchurian Question, continued. Fisher, Fred. B. What Japan wants. (World outlook. New York, May. 1918. f. new series, v. 4, p. 14-15.) f KAA Fushun coal mines, illtis. (Far Eastern review. Manila, May, 1909. i\ v. 5, p. 438-444.) t BBA Garvin, J. L. Mr. Knox and Manchuria. (Fortnightly review. London, March, 1910. 4°. V.93, p. 404-406.) * DA H., W. B. A chance for statesmanship; a new light on Secretary Knox's Manchu- rian policj'. (World's work. New York, Dec. 1910. 4°. V. 21, p. 13801-13806.) * DA Honda, Masujiro. Diplomacy de luxe. (North American review. New York, Nov., 1910. 8\ V. 192, p. 671-679.) * DA Japan in Manchuria. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Oct. 11. 1919. l\ v. 8, p. 61-62.) tBBA Japan and the United States. (The Na- tion. New York, March 17, 1910. f°. v. 90, p. 254-255.) * DA Japanese concessions in Manchuria, map. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai. Oct., 1913. f°. V. 10, p. 181-182.) tBBA Japanese hints to Mr. Knox. (Literary digest. New York, Oct. 5, 1912. l". v. 45, p. 555-556.) *DA Japanese newspaper comment. Japanese in Manchuria. (Far Eastern review. Manila, Feb., 1909. i\ v. 5. p. 297-298.) tBBA ^ Kawakami, Kiyoshi Karl. America and l/^the Russo-Japanese alliance. (Review of reviews. New York. Sept., 1916. 4°. v. 54, p. 299-302.) *DA Reprinted in his Japan in world politics, *R — BET. American-Japanese relations: an in- side view of Japan's policies and purposes. New York: Fleming H. Revell Co. [1912., 370 p. %'. BET Knox's note on China. (Independent. New York, Feb. 15, 1912. 4°. v. 72, p. iii- 334.) *DA McCormick, Frederick. How America got into Manchuria: inside history of .America's diplomatic fight for the open door and equality of trade. (Century magazine. New York, Feb., 1911. 4°. v. 81. p. 622-630.) * DA The Manchurian situation. (Independ- ent. New York, March 24, 1910. 4°. v. 68, p. 605-606.) * DA Millard, Thomas Franklin. America in China, illus. (Far Eastern review. Man- ila, Aug., 1910. i\ v. 7, p. 71-78.) tBBA Our blundering diplomacy in the Far East. (.\merican magazine. New York, July, 1910. 4°. v. 70, p. 417-425.) *DA Our dollar diplomacy and Secretary Knox. (Harper's weekly. New York. April 23, 1910. f°. v. 54, p. 8.) * DA The Policy of Secretary Knox concern- ing China. (Outlook. New York, Feb. 12. 1910. r. v. 94, p. 330-333.) * DA Porter, Robert Percival. Japan, the new world-power; being a detailed account of the progress and rise of the Japanese em- pire. London: H. Milford, 1915. xxiv. 789 p., 3 maps. i2. ed.i 8°. ♦R-BES Rea, George Bronson. Beans: the solu- tion of the commercial situation in Man- churia, illus. (Far Eastern review. Ma- nila, March, 1910. f°. v. 6, p. 453-461. 486- 489.) t BBA Neutralization, extension, or coer- cion? illus. (Far Eastern review. Manila. June, 1910. 1°. v. 7, p. 1-4.) tBBA The struggle for an empire, map. (Far Eastern review. Manila, May, 1909. i\ V. 5, p. 421-422.) tBBA Secretary Knox's diplomatic game. ( Cur- rent literature. New York, April, 1910. i\ v. 48, p. 366-373.) * DA Simpson, Bertram Lenox. The coming struggle in eastern Asia. Bj' B. L. Putnam Weale. London: Macmillan and Co., Ltd.. 1908. xivp., 1 1., 656p. illus. 8°. *R-BE Our solution of the Manchurian problem. (American Academy of Political and Social Science. Annals. Philadelphia, Jan., 1912. 4°. v. 39, p. 39-55.) SA Singh, Saint Nihal. The Asiatic view of Japan's world menace. (Overland monthly. San Francisco, 1909. 4°. new series, v. 53, p. 327-328.) * DA The South Manchuria Railway, illus. (Far Eastern review. Manila, April. 1909. i". V. 5, p. 372-375, 376-383.) t BBA South ilanchuria Railway Co.. Ltd.. and Japan's railway problems in Manchuria. (Far Eastern review. Manila, July. 1906. f°. V. 3, p. 47-49.) t BBA The Struggle for the Manchurian rail- ways, illus. maps. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, March, 1915. i\ v. II, p. 375- 393.) t BBA The Taft policy in China. (Current lit- erature. New York, Feb., 1910. i". v. 48, p. 135-138.) * DA Tricks of the Japanese trade in Manchu- ria. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai. July. 1917. i\ V. 13, p. 550-552.) tBBA Violating the "open door" in Manchuria. (Millard's review. Shanghai, July 20, 1918. l\ V. 5, p. 294-296.) * DA Weale, B. L. Putnam, pseud. See Simp- son, Bertram Lenox. 32 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Far Eastern Question, continued. China, continued. Lansinc-Isuii Agreement Agreement with Japan. (The Xation. Xcw York, Xov. 15, 1917. f°. v. 105. p. 527-528.) * DA American opinion on the Lansing-Ishii agreement. (Nlillard's review. Shanghai, Dec. 15, 1917. {°. v. 3, p. 74-76.) * DA China objects to our Japan pact. (Lit- erary digest. New York, Nov. 24, 1917. f°. V. 55. p. 16-17.) * DA Chung, Henry. China's distrust of Ja- pan. (Asia. New York, March, 1918. f. V. 18, p. 225-226.) t* OAA The Oriental policy of the United States. With introductory note by Jere- miah W. Jenks. New York: Fleming H. Revell Company icop. 1919j. 306 p. map. 8^ BE Crow, Carl. We complete the Chinese wall; an interpretation of the Ishii-Lansing agreement, by which the United States recognizes Japan's "special interests" in China. (Sunset magazine. San Francisco. Jan., 1918. f°. v. 40, p. 10-11, 72.) * DA Far Eastern opinion on the Lansing- I.^hii agreement. (Millard's review. Shang- hai. Nov. 17, 1917. f°. V. 2, p. 336-340.) *DA Investigations of the Senate Foreign Re- lations Committee on .-Xmerica's relations with Japan. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Sept."27, 1919. f°. v. 10, p. 129-130.) * DA Ishii, Kikujiro, viscount. Japan's new pledge regarding China. (Current history magazine. New York Times. New York, Nov., 1917. 4°. V. 7, part 1, p. 35r>-357.') *R-BTZE Ishii-Lansing agreement between Japan and the I'nitcd States. (Review of re- views. New York, Jan., 1918. 4°. v. 57, p. 88.) * DA Japan and .Xmerica. (The Bellman. Minneapolis, March 9, 1918. f°. v. 24. p. 258.) * DA Japan and .\merica: exchange of notes concerning China. (Herald of Asia. To- kyo, Nov. 10, 1917. f°. V. 5, p. 198-190.^ tBBA Japan and .America in China. (Herald of .Asia. Tokyo, Nov. 10, 1917. f°. v. 5. p. 196.) tBBA Japan and the United States and China. (I-"ar Itastcrn review. Shanghai, Dec. I'M". i". V. 13, p. 777-778.) t BBA Japan and the L'nited States reach an agreement. (Banker's magazine. New York, Dec, 1917. 4°. v. 95, p. 766-768.) THA Japan's plans to become China's guard- ian. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Feb. 9, 1918. f°. V. 3, p. 330-331.) * DA Japan's special interests in China. (Her- ald of .Asia. Tokyo, Nov. 17. 1917. f". v. 5. p. 228.) tBBA The Japanese agreement. (North .Ameri- can review. New York, Dec, 1917. 8°. V. 206, p. 834-837.) * DA The Japanese- American agreement. (Cur- rent historv magazine. New York Times. New York, Dec, 1917. 4°. v. 7. part 1, p. 547-550.) *R-BTZE Lansing, Robert. America's policy in tile Far Hast. (Asia. New York. Sept.; 1919. f°. V. 19, p. 873.) t* OAA The Lansing-Ishii agreement: an analy- sis from the Chinese and other points of view. (.Asia. New York, Dec, 1917. f°. V. 17, p. 784-787.) t* OAA The Lansing-Ishii agreement with some thoughts for Christian.^ at Christmas. (New East. Tokvo, Dec. 1917. 4°. v. 1, p. 1-4.) *DA The Monroe and Tshii doctrine. (Inde- pendent. .New York, Nov. 17, 1917. f°. V.92, p. 309.) *DA Scudder, Doremus. .America's paramount intere.'it in China. (Millard's review. Shang- hai, Nov. 10, 1917. f°. V. 2. p. 299-301.) *DA What does Japan think of the Lan- sing-Ishii agreement? (Millard's review. Shanghai. Dec. 15, 1917. i'. v. 3, p. 72-74.) *DA Speeches at the Ishii banquet. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, Dec. 22, 1917. f°. v. 5, p. .^90-391.) ■ tBBA Torpedoing the yellow peril. (Literary digest. New York, Nov. 17. 1917. {". v. 55. p. 15-16.) * DA U. S. government's statement on the notes. (Herald of .Xsia. Tokvo, Nov. 17, I'Ur. f°. v. 5. p. 230-231.) ■ tBBA Vinacke, Harold Monk. The proper in- terpretation of the agreement. (The Na- tion. New York, Nov. 22, 1917. f°. v. 10.5, p. 563-565.) * DA Chinese L^ans America and Japan: an economic alli- atue. ( Kcview of reviews. New York, Feb., 1904. 4°. v. 29, p. 214.) * DA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 33 Far Eastern Question, continued. China: Chinese Loans, continued. America and the quadruple loan syndi- cate. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Aug. 3, 1918. i\ V. 5, p. 561.) tBBA America's new financial policy for China. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Aug. 3, 1918. 8°. V. 5, p. 373-375.) * DA The American Chinese loan. (Far East- ern review. Manila, Dec, 1910. i" . v. 7, p. 241-243.) tBBA American development of China. (Her- ald of Asia. Tokyo, Sept. 8, 1917. i". v. 3, p. 746.) tBBA American finance in China. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, Sept., 1918. f°. v. 14, p. 371.) tBBA American money and Japanese brains. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, March 18, 1920. i\ new series, no. 950, p. 309-310.) tBERA The American $30,000,000 loan to China. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Jan. 10. 1920. f°. V. 11, p. 249-254.) *DA B., A. Dangers of American-Japanese co-operation. (Millard's review. Shang- hai, Nov. 24, 1917. i". V. 2, p. 361-362.) *DA Baker, J. E. The League and China's railwavs. (New republic. New York, May 10,1919. i\ V. 19, p. 45-47.) * DA China and her loans. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, June 5, 1919. f. new series, no. 909, p. 838-839.) t BERA The China loan situation. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Sept., 1912. i". v. 9, p. 163-165.) tBBA China and the six power group. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, March. 1913. i\ v. 9, p. 435-141.) tBBA China's financial condition. The Crisp loan and China's credit, illus. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, Oct., 1912. i". v. 9. p. 199-208.) tBBA China's foreign railway agreements. ("Far Eastern review. Manila, Nov., 1909. i". V. 10, supplement, p. 1-34.) tBBA China's political and financial plight. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Nov., 1913. i\ v. 10, p. 208-221.) tBBA China's reorganisation loan, illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, May, 1913. {\ V. 9, p. 525-535.) t BBA Chinese loan agreements. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, June, 1919. f. v. 15, p. 479-481.) t BBA The Consortitmi. (Japan weekly chron- icle. Kobe, May 20, 1920. f°. new series, no. 959, p. 569-571.) t BERA Consortium for China. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, April 10, 1920. f^ v. 9, p. 35-36.-) tBBA Consortium disunity. (Japan wcoklv chronicle. Kobe, May 27, 1920. i". new scries, no. 960, p. 599-600.) t BERA The Consortium and its aims. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, .-^ug., 1919. f°. v. 15, p. 551-552.) tBBA Financing China. (Herald of Asia. To- kyo. Nov. 8, 1919. i\ v. 8, p. 171-173.) tBBA Eraser, David. Foreign loans of China and their securities. (Trans-Pacific. To- kvo, April, 1920. i". v. 2, p. 63-66.) t* OAA How Japan finances China. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, Sept., 1918. i°. v. 14. p. 362-364.) tBBA Independent .American loan to China. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Jan.. 1920. f°. v. 16, p. 44-46.) tBBA Japan and China loans. (Far Eastern re- view. Shanghai, Feb., 1917. f°. v. 14, p. 65-66.) t BBA Japan and China's foreign indebtedness. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, .-Vpril, 1916. f°. V. 12, p. 423-424.) tBBA Japan and the Chinese consortium. (Cur- rent history magazine. New York Times. New York, July, 1920. 4°. v. 12, p. 638- 640.) *R-BTZE Japan and the consortium. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Aug. 30, 1919. f^ v. 7. p. 619-621.) tBBA Japan and the Hanyehping loan. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Feb. -March, 1914. f°. V. 10, p. 361-362, 396-399.) tBBA Japan invites us to China. (Literary di- gest. New York, Sept. 2, 1916. i\ v. 53, p. 551-552.) * DA Japan's fear of America. (Literary di- gest. New York, April 15, 1916. i". v. 52, p. 1051.) *DA Quotation from a Japanese newspaper. Japan's fear of a Chino-.American en- tente. (Literary digest. New York, July 25. 1914. f °. v. 49, p. 144.) * DA Quotations from Japanese newspapers. Japan's loans to China and future conse- quences. (Millard's review. Shanghai. Aug. 10, 1918. f°. V. 5, p. 412-413.) 'DA 34 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Far Eastern Question, continued. China: Chinese Loans, continued. Japan's new Chinese policy. (Literary digest. New York, May 5, 1917. f°. v. 54, p. 1323-1324.) * DA Japan's opportunity. (Far Eastern re- view. Manila, .'Kpril, 1912. 1°. v. 8, p. 371- 381.) tBBA Japanese and American financial co- operation in China. (Banker's magazine. New York, June, 1917. 4°. v. 94, p. 653- 655.) THA Japanese-American cooperation. (Mil- lard's rcvit w. Shanghai, Jan. 19, 1918. i°. V. 3. p. 249-250.) * DA From the Peking Evening Times. Kawakami, Kiyoshi Karl. The assur- ance to Japan. (New republic. New York, Feb. 17, 1917. 4°. v. 10, p. 71-73.) * DA Li, T. L. Cooperation of Japan and .America in China. (Millard's review. Shanghai, July 21, 1917. f°. v. 1, p. 179- 180.) • DA The Loan craze in China, port. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Aug., 1918. f^. V. 14. p. 335-338.) t BBA McCormick, Frederick. .America and the China loan. (Scribner's magazine. New York, Sept., 1911. 4°. v. 50, p. 349- 355.) ■* DA Millard, Thomas Franklin. Should .Amer- ica "cooperate" with Japan in China? (Mil- lard's review. Shanghai, June 23, 1917. f°. V. 1, p.63-67.) ♦DA Mr. G. B. Rea and the consortium. (Ja- pan weekly chronicle. Kobe, Feb. 12. 1920. f°. new series, no. 945, p. 173.) f BERA Mr. Lament explains what the consor- tium docs not intend to do in China. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Mav, 1920. f°. v. 16, p. 246-247.) tBBA More Japanese loans to China. (Mil- lard's review. Shanghai, Sept. 28, 1918. i°. V. 6, p. 138-139.) • DA New loan consortium for China. (Her- ald of Asia. Tokyo, April 24, 1920. f°. v. 9, p. 93-94.) tBBA Ngan, Chang Kia. The present condi- tion of the Bank of China. (Millard's re- view. Shanghai, April 26, 1919. f°. v. 8. p. 330-339.) 'DA Overlach, Theodore William. Foreign financial control in China. New York: The Macniillan Company, 1919. ix, xiii, 295 p. 12°. TAH P., J. B. New loan forecasts extension lofj China-.American trade. (Millard's re- view. Shanghai, Sept. 7, 1918. 1°. v. 6, p. 4-6.) * DA Points of friction with Japan. (Literary digest. New York, Dec' 18, 1915. f°. v. 51, p. 1417-1418.) *DA Powell, J. B. -Are China and Japan going into financial partnership? (Millard's re- view. Shanghai, Feb. 16, 1918. f°. v. 3, p. 356-358.) * DA Will China emerge from the war a subject nation? (Millard's review. Shang- hai, May 11, 1918. f°. v. 4. p. 380-382.) •DA The Progress of the consortium. (Japan weeklv chronicle. Kobe. .April 8, 1920. f°. new series, no. 953, p. 398-399.) t BERA Rea, George Bronson. Democratic dollar diplomacy. (Far Eastern review. Shang- hai, Jan., 1920. f°. v. 16, p. 12-14.) tBBA The inwardness of the new consor- tium. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Jan., 1920. f°. v. 16, p. 48-50.) tBBA Japan dominates China's finances. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Sept., 1917. f°. V. 13, p. 137-139.) tBBA Railway loan agreements and their relation to the open door. .A plea for fair play to China, illus. ( Far Eastern review. Manila, Nov., 1909. f°. v. 6, p. 215-227.) tBBA The Szechuan railroad loan and the State Department, illus. (Far Eastern re- view. 526.) Manila, April, 1910. f°. v. 6. p 5.'J- tBBA The Recent Sino-Japanese incident. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, March. 1''19. i\ V. 15, p. 304-305.) tBBA Remer, C. F. .An alternative. (Millard's review. Shanghai, .April 17, 1920. 4°. v. 12. p. 316, 318.) 'DA Shibusawa, Eiichi. baron. .America and Japan. (Cinturv magazine. New York, Feb.. 1916. 4°. "v. 91, p. 541-544.) * DA The Japanese commercial commis- sion. (.American .Academy of Political and Social Science. .Annals. Philadelphia, Julv, 1910. 4°. V. 36, no. 1. supplement, p. 6-9.) SA Should .America co-operate with Japan in China? By .A Briton. (Far Eastern re- view. Shanghai, Dec, 1916. f°. v. 13. p. 248-250.) t BBA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 35 Far Eastern Question, continued. China: Chinese Loans, continued. Tong, Hollington K. Alien forces work- ing against China's unification. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Feb. 1, 1919. f°. v. 7, p. 306-308.) * DA American money and Japanese brains in China. (Review of reviews. New York, April, 1916. 4°. v. S3, p. 452-455.) *DA American-Russian-Chinese co-opera- tion in Siberia ? (Millard's review. Shang- hai, Dec. 7, 1918. f°. V. 7, p. 8-11.) *DA China and the international bank- ing consortium. (Millard's review. Shang- hai, June 14, 1919. f°. v. 9, p. 50, 52. 54- 55.) * DA Efforts to raise China's "morato- rium." (Millard's review. Shanghai, April 13, 1918. f°. V. 4, p. 224-226.) * DA "Gold" scheme will make China a Japanese colonv. (Millard's review. Shang- hai, Aug. 24, 1918. f°. v. 5, p. 498-501.) *DA Has Japan agreed to the .American banking consortium proposal? (Millard's review. Shanghai, April 3, 1920. 4°. v. 12, p. 210, 212, 214-215.) * DA How the consortium may solve the loan problem. (Millard's review. Shang- hai, April 10, 1920. 4°. v. 12, p. 271-274, 276.) * DA Japan. China, and American money. (Harper's weeklj-. New York, March 25, 1916. f°. v. 62, p. 298-299.) * DA Japan completing financial control of China. (Millard's review. Shanghai, May 25, 1918. i° . v. 4, p. 457-459.) * DA Japanese efforts to gain control of the Chinese banks. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Oct. 19, 1918. f°. v. 6, p. 261- 263.) * DA — — Only economic pressure will bring Japan into the consortium. (Millard's re- view. Shanghai. May 8, 1920. 4°. v. 12, p. 476, 478, 480-482.) * DA Peking to issue $80,000,000 gold notes. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Tulv 13,1918. f°. V. 5, p. 253-255.) * DA Significance of Japan's refusal to join the consortium. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Oct. 4, 1919. f°. v. 10, p. 183- 187.) *DA The Unpopularity of the consortium. (Japan chronicle weekly commercial sup- plement. Kobe, April 29, 1920. f°. April 29, 1920, p. 225.) t BERA What China thinks of the consortium now\ (Millard's review. Shanghai, .\pril 24, 1920. 4°. v. 12, p. 396, 398-401.) ♦ DA Japan and the European War Ackerman, Carl W. Japan's ambitions in Siberia. (Current history magazine, New York Times. New York, April. 1919. 4°. v. 10, part 1, p. 109-112.) *R-BTZE Allies on the Pacific. (World's work. New York, Nov., 1918. 4°. v. 37, p. 68-82.) *DA Allies urge Japan to intervene. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, March 9, 1918. f°. v. 5, p. 742-743.) t BBA America and Japan. (New republic. New York, March 2i, 1918. f°. v. 14. p. 223-224.) * DA America, Russia and Japan. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, April 13, 1920. f°. v. 5. p. 72.) t BBA America and Siberia. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, Jan. 29, 1920. f°. new- series, no. 943, p. 109-110.) f BERA Barrows, David P. Japan as our ally in Siberia, illus. (Asia. New York, Sept., 1919. f°. V. 19, p. 927-931.) f* OAA Bryan, J. Ingram. Japan astir. (The Nation. New York, Oct. 18, 1919. f°. v. 109, p. 518-519.) *DA Japan in China and Siberia. (The Nation. New York, Aug. 9, 1919. V. v. 109, p. 183-185.) * DA Can Japan successfully gag China at the European conference? (Millard's review. Shanghai, Feb. 15, 1919. 8°. v. 7, p. 377- 382.) * DA Chamberlin, William Henry. Japanese imperialism in Siberia. (The Nation. New York, June 12, 1920. f°. v. 110, p. 798-799.) *DA Chi-Chao, Liang. Causes of China's de- feat at the Peace Conference. (Millard's review. Shanghai, July 19, 1919. i\ v. 9. p. 262-266, 268.) * DA China and Japan. (Herald of Asia. To- kyo, Feb. 15, 1920. f°. v. 6, p. 563-565.) tBBA China and Japan at the peace table. (Outlook. New York, May 14, 1919. 4°. V. 122, p. 60-62.) * DA Colcord, Lincoln. Japan in Siberia. (The Nation. New York, Jan. 10, 1920. f°. v. 110, p. 36-38.) *DA An unpublished document from the State Department relating to the policy of 36 THE NEW" YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Far Eastern Question, continued. Japan and the European War, continued. Japanese intervention in Siberia. (The Xa- tion. Xcw York, Feb. 21, 19J0. 4^ v. 110, p. 243-244.) * DA Dewey, John. Japan and .\mcrica. (The Dial. New York, May 17, 1919. 4°. v. 66. p. 501-503.) • DA On two sides of the Eastern sea. (New republic. New York, July 16. 1919. i°. V. 19, p. 346-348.) * DA Fleming, Jackson. Japan and the world organization. (Asia. New York. .Xug.. 1918. f". V. 18, p. 634-637.) t* OAA Gallagher, Patrick. China at the Peace Conference. (Asia. New York, April, 1919. f^ V. 19, p. 349-352.) t* OAA Japanese and tlie Peace Conference. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe. Jan. 15. 1920. f°. new series, no. 941, p. 66.^ tBERA Ishii mission reviewed. (Herald of .\sia. Tokvo, Dec. 1, 1917. f°. v. 5. p. 294-295.') tBBA lyenaga, Toyokichi. Japan and .America in the world war. (Engineers Club of Philadelphia. Proceedings. Philadelphia. 1917. 4°. v. 34, p. 351-353.) VDA Japan. — Special Finance and Economic Commission. The Imperial Japanese gov- ernment's Special Finance and Economic Commission to the I'nitcd States, headed bv Baron Tanetaro Megata. September. 1917 -April, 1918. [Tokyo, 1918.) 215 p. 8'. BTZE Japan alarms our Pacific coast. (Lit- erary digest. New York, .April 15. 1919. r. v. 61, p. 20-21.) *DA Japan, .America, and the East. (Outlook. Kcw York, Oct. 10, 1917. 4°. v. 117, p. 200.) *DA Japan and .America in Siberia. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Aug. 10, 1918. £°. v. 5, p. 582-584.) t BBA Japan and peace. (Herald of Asia. To- kvo, Oct. 26, 1918. i\ v. 6, p. 118-119.1 tBBA Japan and peace: a symposium of views bv prominent thinkers. (Herald of .Asia. Tokvo. Nov. 16-23, 1918. i\ v. 6. p.201- 203. '231-232.) t BBA Japan at the Peace Conference. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Jan. 11, 1920. i°. v. 6, p. 423-427.) t BBA Japan at the Peace Conference. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, Jan. 23, 1910. f . new scries, no. 890, p. 106-107.) t BERA Japan and the peace settlements. (Cur- rent historv magazine. New York Times. New York,' Oct., 1919. 4°. v. 11, part 1. p. 141-146.) *R-BTZE Japan and Siberia. (Japan weekly chron- icle. Kobe. .April 3, 1919. i'. new scries, no. 900, p. 490-491.) f BERA Japan and Siberia. (New republic. New York, Jan. 14, 1920. i\ v. 21, p. 187-188.) *DA Japan in Siberia. (Herald of .Asia. To- kyo, July 31, 1920. i\ V.9. p. 482-48?.) tBBA Japan in the South Seas. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, July, 1919. i'. v. 15. p. 515.) tBBA Japan still held back: America withholds her assent. (Herald of .Asia. Tokvo. March 16. 1918. i". v. S, p. 775.) tBBA Japan and the tonnage question. (Japan wecklv chronicle. Kobe. Dec. 6, 1917. i". new series, no. 831, p. 897-899.) t BERA Japan and the war. (Herald of .Asia. Tokvo, March 23, 1918. f^ v. 5, p. 804.) tBBA Japan and the war. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, Sept. 13, 1920. f. new series, no. 819, p. 401-403.) tBERA Japan and the world. (Herald of .Asia. Tokvo, Jan. 26. 1918. i\ v. 5, p. 550.) tBBA Japan's alleged isolation in the war. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, May 19, 1917. f=. V. 3, p. 228-229.) ' t BBA Japan's chance in Russia. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Dec. 22, 1917. f°. v. 3, p. 108-109.) * DA Japan's dilemma in Siberia. (Literarv digest. New York, Nov. 15, 1919. f°. v. 6.\ p. 21-22.) 'DA Japan's integrity. (Literary digest. New York. July 28, 19r7. i\ v. 55, p. 25.) * DA Japan's peace terms. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Dec. 14, 1920. f°. v. 6, p. 313.) tBBA Japan's policy. (Herald of .Asia. Tokvo, April 17, 1920. f°. V. 9, p. 58-60.) tBBA Japan's position in the war. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, Oct. 13, 1917. (\ v. 5, p. 72.) tBBA The Japanese also want Fukien province. (Millard's review. Shanghai, May 17, 1910. l". V. 8, p. 435-436.) • DA Japanese demand retention of Pacific islands as naval bases, illus. map. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, May, 1917. i'. V. 13, p. 408-471.) tBBA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 37 Far Eastern Question, continued. Ja/'an and the European War, continued. Japanese troops to Russia? (Millard's review. Shanghai, Dec. 1, 1917. f°. v. 3, p. 9-10.) *DA Japanese troops to Siberia? (Millard's review. Shanghai, March 9, 1918. {°. v. 4, p. 42-44.) *DA Jernigan, T. R. Why the allies are co- operating in Siberia. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Aug. 31, 1918. i° . v. S, p. 541- 542.) *DA Kawakami, Kiyoshi Karl. Japan and world peace. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1919. xv, 196 p. 12°. BET Japan's difficult position. (Yale review. New Haven, Oct., 1918. 4°. new series, V. 8, p. 54-70.) * DA Kinnosuke, Adachi. Why Japan's army will not fight in Europe. (.Asia. New York, Feb., 1918. f°. v. 18. p. 117-120.) t*OAA M., G. W. Siberia. (Millard's review-. Shanghai. March 23, 1918. i° . v. 4, p. 114- 115.) *DA McMahon, T. J. Japan and the Marshall islands. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Nov. 8, 1919. f°. V. 8, p. 183-184.) t BBA Man, Saito. Le Japon et le probleme des races. (Nouvelle revue. Paris, 1919. 8°. serie 4, tome 41, p. 109-113.) * DM Marquis Okuma on current topics. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, March 29, 1919. f^ V.7, p. 5-6.) fBBA Marsh, Arthur Richmond. The Japanese imperial mission and the relations between the United States and Japan. (Economic world. New York, 1917. f°. series, v. 14], p. 471-472.) V. 100 (new tsic of China; (Outlook. V. 122. p. *DA Mason, Gregory. The case interview with Dr. C. T. Wang. New York, June 25, 1919. 4° 324-326.) Japan and the peace; interview with Marquis Kimmochi Saionji. (Outlook. New York, July 2, 1919. 4°. v. 122, p. 377- 379.) * DA . • Spirit of Japan: a vindication of Ja- pan's foreign policy by Marquis Okuma. (Outlook. New York, Jan. 16, 1918. 4°. V. 118, p. 92-94.) *DA Millard, Thomas Franklin. China's case at the Peace Conference. (Millard's re- view. Shanghai, April 5, p. 200-206.) The Monroe doctrine, chronicle. Kobe. May 1, series, no. 904, p. 642-643.) 1919. f *DA (Japan weekly 1919. f°. new tBERA Moore, Frederick. The purpose of the Ta|)ancse mission to the United States. (Asia. New York, 1917. l\ v. 17. p. 625- 628.) f* OAA More detractions of Japan. (Japan wccklv chronicle. Kobe, Jan. 2, 1919. i\ new series, no. 887, p. 2-3.) tBERA Nanking, Shanghai or Tokio? (Millard's review. Shanghai, Jan. 4, 1919. f°. v. 7, p. 170, 172.) * DA News reports. . .carried various and con- flicting reports as to what Great Britain, France, Italy, America, and other nations expected to get at the Peace Conference. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Dec. 14, 1918. f°. V. 7, p. 44-46.) * DA The Objects of the Japanese mission. (Current history magazine. New York Times. New York, Aug., 1917. 4°. v. 6. part 2, p. 276-277.) * R - BTZE Oudin, M. .'\. When China sits at the Peace Conference. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Nov. 17, 1917. f°. v. 2, p. 328- 332.) * DA Our feelings towards Japan. (World's work. New York, Dec, 1917. 4°. v. 35, p. 125-126.) * DA Pelley, William Dudley. Siberia, with the lid off. illus. (Sunset. San Francisco. July, 1919. i". V. 43, p. 17-20, 85-87.) . *DA Powell, J. B. Yap island, America, and Shanghai. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Sept. 6, 1919. i\ V. 10, p. 18, 20.) * DA The Premier of Japan to the American people: a message from Count Okuma. (Independent. New York, Aug. 31, 1914. 4°. V.79, p. 291.) *DA The Quarrel over Siberia. (Japan week- ly chronicle. Kobe, Jan. 8, 1920. i\ new- series, no. 940, p. 26-27.) f BERA Racial antipathy and war. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, June 29, 1918. i°. v. 5, p. 418.) tBBA Reid, G. China and the peace settle- ment. (The Nation. New York, June 28, 1919. f°. v. 108, p. 1023-1025.) * DA Roosevelt, Theodore. What the Japa- nese have stood for in the world war. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Feb. 7, 1920. i". V.8, p. 517-520.) tBBA Rosett, Joshua. The Prussians of the eastern world. (The Dial. New York, Aug. 9, 1919. {'. V. 67, p. 103-110.) 'DA Shastri, H. P. Japan and .\llied interven- tion in Siberia. (Millard's review. Shang- hai, June 29, 1918. f°. V.5, p. 171-173.) Why Japan is apprehensive regard- ing the Peace Conference. (Millard's re- view. Shanghai, Nov. 23, 1918. f. v. 6, p. 473-475.) * DA 38 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Far Eastern Question, continued. Japan and the European War, continued. Siberia in the Japanese press. (The Na- tion. New York, Dec. 27, 1919. i". v. 109, p. 8.57.) *DA Simpson, Rtrtram Lenox. Why England is watching the Ishii mission. By Putnam Weale ipseud.i. (Millard's review. Shang- hai. Sept. 22, 1917. f°. V. 2, p. 94-96.) 'DA Sokolsky, George E. The Japanese occupation of Siberia. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Tan. 4, 1919. i°. v. 7, p. 174. 176.) 'DA .\ Thorn in the olive branch. (Sunset magazine. San Francisco, Sept., 1917. f^. V. 39, p. 10. 94.) * DA Tong, Hollington K. Bolsheviks and the Chinese Eastern Railwav. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Feb. 14, 1920. f°. v. 11, p. 522-525.) *DA China and .Allied intervention in Siberia. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Aug. 3, 1918. i°. V. 5, p. 370-373.) ■* DA China, Japan and the Siberian ques- tion. (Millard's review. Shanghai, March 6, 1920. 4°. V. 12, p. 12-14, 15.) * DA China's conditions at the Peace Conference. (Millard's review. Shanghai, April 27, 1918. f°. V. 4, p. 305-307.) * DA Japan must cooperate with .Mlics in Siberia. (Millard's review. Shangliai, Aug. 31, 1918. i\ V. 5, p. 539-541.) 'DA Truth about the Peace Conference. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo. May 15-22. 1920. i°. V.9, p. 174-175, 203-204.) t BBA United States. — Congress. Visiting war missions to the United States. Proceed- ings in the Senate and House of Represen- tatives, Congress of the United States, on the occasion of the receptions tendered to the war missions of France, Great Britain, Italy, Russia, Belgium, and Japan. Wash- ington: Gov. Prtg. Off., 1917. 3p.l.. 5-102 p. 8°. (United States. 65. cong., 1. scss. Senate doc. 87; serial 7258.) * SBE United States. — Senate. Visit of Im- perial Japanese Mission to Washington's tomb. .Ncldresses delivered at Mount Vernon on .\ug. 26. 1917. during a visit of the Japa- nese War Mission to the tomb of Wash- ington, by Josephus Daniels. . .and Vis- count Ishii. Presented by Mr. Pomerene. Sept. 11. 1917. Washington: Gov. Prtg. Off., 1917. 4 p. 8°. (United States. 65. cong., 1. sess. Senate doc. 85; serial 7265.) ♦SHE United States. — State Department. To study political, social, and economic condi- tions in the I'nited States... Dispatch from .American charge d'affairs at Tokyo, Japan, together with copies of inclosures therewith, reporting that on the 18th of October. 1917, a party of five members of the lower house of the Japanese Diet would sail from Y'okohama for the L'nited States for purpose of studying political, social, and economic conditions in the United States. Oct. 6. 1917. iWashington. 1917. i 3 p. 8°. (United States. 65. cong., 1. sess. House doc. 378; serial 7300.) * SBE Views of .American press on Japanese intervention in Russia. (Millard's review. Shanghai, April 27, 1918. f°. v. 4. p. 310.) *DA Viscount Ishii's mission. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, Aug. 18, 1917. f°. v. 3. p. 644.) tBBA Voice of .Asia. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, April 5. 1919. f°. V. 7, p. 31-33.) t BBA Watson, James E. Japanese interests in China. (Congressional record. Washing- ton. Aug. 5, 1919. f°. V. 58, part 4. p. 3633- 3645.) *SAE Weale, P.. L. Putnam, pseud. See Simp- son, Bertram Lenox. Welcoming Japan's envoys. (Literary digest. Xew York, Sept. 1, 1917. f°. v. 55, p. 14-15.) *DA What does Japan want? Japanese believe the Ishii mission will find .America ready to commit herself on thorny questions. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, .Aug.. 1917. f°. v. 13, p. 615-616.) tBBA What is secret diplomacy? (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Sept. 22, 1917. f°. v. 3, p. 805.) t BBA What Tapan asks. (Literary digest. Xew York, March 8, 1919. f°. v. 60, p. 22.) *DA What should we do now? (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, July 27, 1918. f°. v. 5, p. 527-528.) tBBA Where Japan stands now. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Sept., 1917. f°. v. 13, p. 659-660.) t BBA The SiiANTi'xr. Qetsriox Ackerman, Ernest R. Remarks of Er- nest R. -Ackerman on observations made on visits to Japan. China, and Shantung. (Congressional record. Washington. Sept. 27, 1919. f°. y. 58. appendix, p. 9052-9053. ■) *SAE Aftermath of the Shantung settlement; contemporary events "in both countries. (Current history magazine. Xew York Times. Xew York. Dec, 1919. 4°. v. 11, part 1, p. 526-532.) * R - BTZE The American Senate and the treaty. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Nov. 1. 19U» i". v. 8, p. 153-154.) tBBA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 39 Far Eastern Question, continued. Japan and the War — Shantung, continued. An American in Shantung. (Review of reviews. New York, Jan., 1920. 4°. v. 61 p. 78-80.) * DA Appeal to Japan. York, July 26, 1919. (The Nation. New f°. v. 109, p. 100.) *DA Aut Caesar aut nullus. Editorial from the Christian science monitor. (Congres- sional record. Washington, July IS, 1919. i°. V. 58, part 3, p. 2612.) * SAE Baron Makino and the return of Kiao- chau. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, Feb. 20, 1919. f°. new series, no. 894, p. 261-263.) t BERA Baronti, Gerve. The so-called student movement. (Far Eastern review. Shang- hai, March, 1920. f°. v. 16, p. 170.) f BBA Beutz, G. The Shantung controversy. (Living age. Boston, Jan. 24, 1920. 4"'. v. 304, p. 207-208.) * DA Borah, \\'illiam Edgar. Remarks by Mr. Borah on Shantung. (Congressional rec- ord. Washington, July 15, 1919. f°. v. 58, part 3, p. 2610-2612.) * SAE (Congressional record. Wash- ington, July 21, 1919. f°. v. 58, part 3. p. 2925-2926.) * SAE Brace, Alfred AL Tsingtau and the ris- ing sun. (Sunset magazine. San Fran- cisco, April, 1915. 8°. V. 34, p. 732-737.) *DA Brown, .Arthur Judson. What about Shantung? (Independent. New York, Aug. 2, 1919. f°. V. 99, p. 152-153.) * DA Cady, Chauncey M. Japan, Germany, and the United States. (Outlook. New- York, Feb. 10, 1915. 4°. v. 109, p. 337-338.) *DA The Case of Japan vs. China. (Independ- ent. New York, May 31, 1919. f°. v. 98. p. 318, 335.) *DA China and Shantung. (Review of reviews. New York, Sept., 1919. 4°. v. 60, p. 311- 312.) *DA China and the Shantung settlement. (The Nation. New York, Aug. 9; 1919. f°. V. 109, p. 185-186.) * DA China and the war. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, Mav 8, 1919. f°. new series, no. 905, p. 681-682.) t BERA The Chinese boycott at Shanghai, illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, July. 1919. f°. V. 15, p. 503-505.) tBBA Chinese praise for Senate objectors. (Literarv digest. New York, Jan. 24, 1920. f°. V. 64; p. 26.) * DA Close, Upton. Getting worse before it gets better. uMiHard's review. Shanghai, Aug. 30, 1919. l\ V. 9, p. 506-507.) ♦ DA The Japanese occupation of Tsinan. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Jan. 18. 1919. f°. V. 7. p. 236-241.) *DA — — Should China negotiate with Japan over Tsingtao? (Millard's review. Shang- hai, March 13, 1920. 4°. v. 12, p. 62-64.) *DA The struggle continues in north China. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Feb. 7,1920. f°. V. 11, p. 464, 466-467.) * DA Who will be the sufferer? (Mil- lard's review. Shanghai, Nov. 22, 1919. f°. V. 10, p. 489-492.) * DA Dewey, John. Shantung, as seen from within. (New republic. New York, March 3, 1920. f°. V. 22, p. 12-16.) * DA The Economic rights secured in Shan- tung by Japan, illus. map. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, 1919. f°. v. 15, p. 427- 434.) t BBA Einstein, Lewis David. Japan at Tsing- tau. and .\merican policy. (Asia. New York. 1914. f°. V. 14, p. 359-362.) f* OAA Exchange of notes between Japanese, British, and French governments relating to Shantung. (Congressional record. Wash- ington, luly 15, 1919. f°. v. 58, part 3. p. 2596-2597.) * SAE Exhibit A: Shantung. (New republic. New York, Tuly 30, 1919. f°. v. 19, p. 405- 407.) *DA Fairbairn, Forbes. Great Britain warned of Japanese menace to Ignited States in Shantung. (Congressional record. Wash- ington. Oct. 20, 1919. f°. V. 58, part 7, p. 7157-7158.) *SAE Reprinted from the Manchester Guardian, Aug. 28, 1919. Fall, Albert Bacon. Statement of the Chinese delegation to the Peace Confer- ence relating to Shantung. (Congressional record. Washington. Tuly 15, 1919. f°. V. 58, part 3, p. 2607-2608.) * SAE Foster, Charles Hancock. The flingers of Shantung. (Overland monthly. San Francisco. Nov., 1919. 4°. new series, v. 74. p. 343-345.) * DA Gallagher, Patrick. China's defeat at Paris. (Asia. New York, July, 1919. f°. V. 19, p. 633-636.) t* OAA Gannett, Lewis S. China and Japan; a Chinese view. (The Nation. New York, May 24, 1919. i". v. 108, p. 828.) * DA General Ma and the boycott in Shantung. (Millard's review. Shanghai, .-Xug. 23, 1919. f °. V. 9, p. 466-468.) * DA Goto, Shimpci. China and Japan; a Japa- nese view. (The Nation. New York, May 24, 1919. f°. v. 108, p. 828-829.) * DA 40 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Far Eastern Question, continued. Japan and the War — Shantung, continued. Hale, William Brown. Japanese de- mands. ( N'ew republic. New York, Mav 3, 1''19. f. V. 19, p. 18-19.) ♦DA Harrington, John Walker. Japan and China at odds. (Herald of .■Xsia. Tokvo, April 12, 1919. l\ V. 7, p. 71-72.) t BBA Hitchcock, Gilbert Monell. China bene- fits bv the peace treaty. (The Public. New York, Inly 26, 1919. f°. v.22, p. 792- 793.) ■ *DA The Honor of the American people is at stake. (Congressional record. W'ashing- ton. Oct. 15, 1919. f°. v. 58, part 7, p. 6924^ 6925.) * SAE From the Living church. .\ug. 30, 1919. How do we get into this Shantung affair and whv? (Current opinion. Xew York, Sept., 1919. f°. V. 67, p. 137-142.) * DA How Japan plans to "return" Tsingtao to China ! map. (Millard's review. Shang- hai. Jan. 4, 1919. f. v. 7, p. 160-164.) * DA Ichihashi, Yamata. The industrial plight of lapan. (.\sia. Xew York, Sept., 1919. i°. ' V. 19, p. 906-908.) t* OAA Ishii, Kikujiro, viscount. ."K fair transac- tion. (Independent. Xew York, Mav 31. 1919. f°. V.98, p. 318.) *DA lyenaga, Toyekichi. Both sides of the Shantung issue, illus. (World outlook. Xew York, Xov., 1919. f°. v. 5, p. 4-6.) tKAA Japan and the mess of pottage. (Japan wccklv chronicle. Kobe, Mav 8, 1919. f°. new scries, no. 905, p. 682-683.) t BERA Japan and the Shantung nuestion. (Over- land monthlv. San Francisco. Xov., 1919. 4°. new series, v. 74, p. 346-347.) * DA Japan and the Shantung Railway. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Oct., 1914. i° . v. 11. p. 149-150.) tBBA Japan's claims in China conceded, map. (Current historv magazine. Xew York Times. Xew York, June, 1919. 4°. v. 10. part 1, p. 441-448.) *R-BTZE Japan's economic interests in Shantung. illus. (Review of reviews. Xew York, Oct.. 1919. 4°. V. 60, p. 424-425.) 'DA Japan's intentions in Shantung as seen bv an .\nierican observer. ( Literarv digest. New York, Aug. 30, 1919. i\ v. 62, p. 65.) *DA Japan's relations with China. (Current historv magazine, Xew York Times. Xew York, May, 1919. 4°. v. 10, part 1, p. 340- 357.) •R-BTZE Japan's responsibilities. (The Bellman. Minneapolis, June 15, 1918. f°. v. 24. p. 651-052.) »DA Japan's sentimental demands and mate- rial gains. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, May 15, 1919. f°. new series, no. 906. p. 721-722.) t BERA Japan's victorv at Paris, map. (Literarv digest. Xew York, May 17, 1919. i\ v. 61, p. 16-17.) *DA Japanese press attacks on the .American Senate. (Literarv digest. Xew York. Oct. 4, 1919. f°. v. 63, p. 19-20.) * DA Jefferis, Jesse Willis. Why China refused to sign; interview with Chao-chu. (Out- look. Xew York, July 30, 1919. 4°. v. 122, p. 502-503.) * DA Jenks, Jeremiah Whipple, lapan in China. (Outlook. Xew York, May 12, 1915. 4°. v. nn. p. 83-85.) *DA Johnson, Hiram Warren, .\merican na- tional honor and Shantung. (Sunset. San Francisco, Dec, 1919. f°. v. 43, p. 15-16.) *DA Jones, Jefferson. The fall of Tsingtau; with a study of Japan's ambitions in China. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1915. xviii. 215 p. illus. 12°. BTZE Jones, Paul. The students' revolt in China, illus. (Independent. Xew York, Sept. 20, 1919. i\ v. 99, p. 398-399.) * DA Jowe, Peter S. The Chinese boycott movement and Japan. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Jan. 3, 1920. i\ v. 11. p. 208- 212, 214.) • DA Kaneko, Kcntaro, baron. Japan and the United States: a proposed economic alli- ance. (International quartcrlv. Xew York, Dec, 1903. 4°. v. 8, p. 399-404.) * DA Kawakami, Kiyoshi Karl. Japan's eco- nomic interests in Shantung. (.-\sia. Xew York, Sept., 1919. i°. v. 19, p. 903-906.) t*OAA Kuang-Ti May. China's reaction to the Shantung settlement. (The Review. Xew York, Aug. 2, 1919. 4°. v. 1, p. 251-252.) t*DA Latourette, Kenneth Scott. Unpopular view of the Shantung question, (.\tlantic monthlv. Boston, Xov., 1919. 4°. v. 124. p. 708-713.) * DA Law and equity in Shantung. (Japan weeklv chronicle. Kobe, Feb. 5, 1920. f. new series, no. 944, p. 137-138.) t BERA Lazear, Edward T. Letter of Edward T. Lazear protesting against clause of peace treaty giving Japan control of Shantung. (Congressional record. Washington. luly 14, 1919. f. V. 58, part 3, p. 252.S-2526.-) *SAE Liang Chi-Chao. China and the Shan- tung settlinu'ut. (Living age. Boston, July 20, 1919. 4\ v. 302, p. 205-207.) • DA JAPAXESE-AMERICAxX RELATIONS 41 Far Eastern Question, continued. Japan and the War — Shantung, continued. Lodge, Henry Cabot. Remarks of Atr. Lodge on Shantung. (Congressional rec- ord. Washington, July 15, 1919. f°. v. 58. part 3, p. 2606.) * SAE M., G. W. Tsingtao. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Jan. 12, 1918. i\ v. 3, p. 202- 204.) * DA McCormick, Elsie. The close-up of Shantung. (Xew republic. Xew York, June 9, 1920. l\ v. 23, p. 55-57.) * DA McCumber, Porter James. Remarks of Mr. McCumber on the transfer of Shan- tung to Japan. (Congressional record. Washington, Aug. 26, 1919. f°. v. 58. part 5, p. 4345-1349, 4356-4362, 4410, 4416-4417.) *SAE Macklin, W. E. Shantung and opium. (Congressional record. Washington. Oct. 14.1919. i". V. 58, part 7, p. 6878.) * SAE Makino, baron. Japan and China: an official view. (Living age. Boston, May 3,1919. 4°. V. 301, p. 268-272.) * DA Mason, Gregory. Spirit of Japan; a vin- dication of Japan's foreign policy, by Mar- quis Okuma. (Outlook. New York. Tan. 16.1918. 4°. V. 118, p. 92-94.) *"DA Merz, Charles. The illusory promise of Japan. (.■Xsia. New York, Sept., 1919. f°. V. 19, p. 912-914.) t*OAA Millard, Thomas Franklin. Democracy and the Eastern question: the problem of the Far East as demonstrated by the great war, and its relation to the LTnited States of America. New York: The Century Co., 1919. i.x, 446 p. 8°. BE The great war in the Far East, with special consideration of the rights and in- terests of China and the LTnited States of -America. [Shanghai: Mercantile Prtg. Co., 1915.) 109, .xi p. 8°. BTZEp.v.l26 The Shantung award to Japan. (The Nation. New York, Sept. 20. 1919. f°. V. 109, p. 418-420.) * DA The LTnited States and the Shan- tung question. (Congressional record. AVashington, Oct. 21, 1919. f°. v. 58, part 7, p. 7238-7239.) * SAE Norris, George William. Remarks of Mr. Norris on the transfer of Shantung to Tapan. (Congressional record. Washing- ton, Oct. 13, 1919. f°. V. 58, part 7, p. 6790- 6826.) * SAE Our diplomacy and Tapan. (World's work. New York, Dec, 1916. 4°. v.ii. p. 121-122.) *DA Otir problems in Shantung. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Sept. 14, 1920. l". v. 5. p. 728.) tBBA The Passive revolution, illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, July, 1919. i" . v. 15, p. 485-489.) f BBA Peffer, Nathaniel. Shantung once more. (Unpartizan review. New York, July, 1920. f°. V. 14, p. 142-149.) * DA Powers, Fred Perry. The Shantung question. (Unpartizan review. New York, Jan., 1920. 4°. v. 13, p. 155-169.) * DA Practical considerations at Shantung. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, Feb. 12, 1920. f°. new series, no. 945, p. 171-172.) tBERA Rea, George Bronson. Neutral thoughts on the neutralization of Shantung, illus. maps. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Nov., 1914. f°. V. 9, p. 168-184.) f BBA The status of the Shantung railway. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Nov., 1914. f°. V. 11, p. 185-186.) tBBA Reid, Gilbert. Does might make right? (Independent. New York, May 31, 1919. f°. V.98, p. 318, 335.) * DA Japanese diplomatic tactics. (Jour- nal of race development. Worcester, Mass., 1916. 4°. v. 6, p. 270-276.) QOA Reid, Hugh. The Senate and the smoke screen. (The Public. New York, --Xug. 23,1919. r. v. 22, p. 900-902.) f* DA Remarks in the Senate on provisions of peace treaty giving to Japan control of Shantung. (Congressional record. Wash- ington. Oct. 13, 14. 16, 1919. i\ v. 58, part 7. p. 6788. 6872. 6879, 6880, 6883. 6934, 6938, 6940, 6944, 6949, 6989, 7002, 7010, 7011.) *SAE Robinson, Joseph Taylor. Remarks by Mr. Robinson on the Shantung question. (Congressional record. Washington. July 24, 1919. i\ V. 58, part 3, p. 3084-3087.) *SAE Scudder, Doremus. Tapan and China. (Outlook. New York, Oct. 1, 1919. 4°. V. 123, p. 190.) * DA Seaman, Louis Livingston. Shall the treaty of peace be one of justice or one of infamy? (Congressional record. Wash- ington. Oct. 15, 1919. f°. v. 58, part 7, p. 6937-6939.) * SAE The Senate and Shantung. (The Review. New York, July 26, 1919. 4°. v. 1, p. 223- 224.) * DA "Shall the strong do as they will and the weak suffer without regrets?" illus. map. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, June. 1919. f°. V. 15, p. 435-441.) tBBA Shantung amendment rejected by the .American Senate. (Herald of .Asia. To- kyo, Oct. 25, 1919. f°. V.8, p. 119-120.) tBBA 42 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Far Eastern Qucslion, continued. Japan and the War — Shantung, continued. The Shantung break. (Literarv digest. New York, Sept. 6, 1919. f°. v. 62, p. 17- 18.) * DA The Shantung controversy, map. (Cuf- rent historv magazine. New York Times. New York,' Sept., 1919. 4°. v. 10. part 2. p. 539-545.) *R-BTZE Shantung; the eastern Alsace-Lorraine. (Asia. New York, Sept., 1919. f. v. 19, p. 873-945.) t* OAA Shantung once more. (Congressional record. Washington, Oct. 14, 1919. f°. v. 58, part 7, p. 6879-6880.) * SAE From the Christian Science monitor, Oct. 7, 1919. Shantung, pledge or conquest? (Inde- pendent. Xew York, July 26, 1919. i\ v. 99, p. 112-113.) *DA The Shantung problem. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, June 10, 1920. f. new series, no. 962, p. 681-682.) t BERA Shantung question. (Herald of .\sia. Tokvo, June 5, 1920. f°. v. 9, p. 261.) tBBA The Shantung question. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, Ian. 29. 1920. f. new series, no. 943, p. 127-128.) t BERA The Shantung question. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe. May 6, 1920. f°. new series, no. "i57, p. 519.) f BERA The Shantvmg question. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe. July 1, 1920. f. new series, no. 965. p. 12.) t BERA The Shantung question. (Millard's re- view. Shangliai. Aug. 16, 1919. f°. v. 9, p. 438, 440.) * DA Newspaper comment. The Shantung question, map. (Pan American magazine. New York, Aug., 1919. 4°. V.29. p. 209-210.) HAA Shantung question developments. (Her- ald of Asia. Tokyo, March 6, 1920. f°. v. 8, p. 0.^0-631.) tBBA Shantung question and the League of Nations. (Herald of .'Xsia. Tokyo, Mav 8, 1920. f°. V. 9, p. 149-150.) tBBA Shantung and the Senate. (The Nation. New York, Sept. 20, 1919. l\ v. 109. p. 3S8. ) * DA Shidehara, K. Speech of Mr. Shidchara, ambassador to .\merica. (Herald of .Asia. Tokvo, April 17, 1920. i". v.9, p. 69-70.) tBBA Snow, .Mpheus Henry. The ShantuiiR question and spheres of influence. (The Nation. New York, Sept. 20, 1919. f°. V. 109, p. 409, 411-414.) 'DA The Splendid spirit of the Samurai. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Dec, 1914. f". V. 11, p. 230-232.) tBBA The Student movement in China. (The Nation. Xew York, Dec. 27, 1919. i'. v. 109. p. 883-885.) * DA Taft, William Howard. .Article of Wil- liam H. Taft relative to the Shantung pro- vision of the peace treaty. (Congressional record. Washington, July 28, 1919. {\ v. 58. part 4, p. 3230.) * SAE Takamine, Jokichi. American and Japa- nese co-operation, (.\cademy of Political Science in the Citv of New York. Proceed- ings. New York, July, 1917. 4°. v. 7, p. 534- 537.) SEA Text of the Shantung treaty, 1898. (The Nation. Xew York. Oct. 11, 1919. i°. v. 109. p. 415-418, 506-507.) * DA Tientsin, Shantung. China, and America. (Millard's review. Shanghai, .Aug. 23, 1919. f°. v.9, p. 473-474. 476.) * DA Tong, HoUington K. Resurrection of the Shantung question. (Millard's review. Shanghai. Ian. 31, 1920. i\ v. 11, p. 414. 416. 418-420.) * DA The serious political situation in China. (Millard's review. Shanghai, May 17,1919. i\ V. 8. p. 429-431.435.) * DA Shantung, the ".Msace-Lorraine" of the Orient. (Millard's review. Shanghai, May 10, 1919. i\ v. 8. p. 388-390.) "DA Significance of China's refusal to sign the peace treatv. (Millard's review. Shanghai, June 12, 1919. f°. v.9, p. 216. 218-220.) *DA Treaties, conventions, declarations, loan agreements, customs and railway regula- tions relating to Shantung. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai. Nov., 1914. f. v. 11. supplement, p. 1-16.) t BBA Uchida, Yasuya. viscount. Plain facts on Shantung. (Independent. New York. Jan. 3,1920. i'. v. 101, p. 10-11.) 'DA The Uproar over Shantung, illus. (Lit- erarv digest. New York, Aug. 2, 1919. f°. v. 62', p. 28-30.) * DA The Waiting game in Shantung. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe. March 11, 1920. f. new scries, no. 949, p. 282-283.) t BERA What the Chinese think of the Shantung reservation. (Millard's review. Shanghai. Dec. 6, 1919. i\ v. 11, p. 6. 8. 10.) » DA Quotations from Chinese newspaper*. Wheeler, Everett Pepperrcll. China and Japan. (Outlook. New York. Jan. 7, 1920. r. V. 124, p. 41.) ♦DA Wheeler. Everett Pepperrell, and E. W. Wrii.mt. Sh.intung: should the peace treaty have given lapan a foothold there? (Out- look. XewYork, Aug. 20, 1919. A", v. 122. p. 601-604.) 'DA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 43 Far Eastern Question, continued. Jafan and the War — Shantung, continued. Wheeler, W. Reginald. China's attitude on the peace treaty. (Current history magazine. New York Times. New York, Sept., 1919. 4°. V. 10, part 2, p. 534-538.') *R-BTZE Why China did not sign. map. (Lit- erary digest. New York, July 19, 1919. {°. V. 62, p. 19-20.) * DA Why foreigners in China are perturbed. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, July. 1919. l". V. 15, p. 494-497.) t BBA Williams, Talcott. Shantung, China and justice. (Independent. New York, Sept. 6, 1919. {°. V.99, p. 317.) * DA Wilson, Woodrow. Transfer of Shan- tung to Tapan. (Congressional record. Washington, .Aug. 11, 1919. f°. v. 58. part 4, p. 3761.) *SAE Wong, Hin. The boycott at Canton. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Jan. 31, 1920. i\ V. 11, p.420-t23.) *DA Wood, G. Zav. The future of Kiaochow. (The Nation. New York, May 3, 1919. i" . V. 108, p. 708-710.) * DA The Writing on the wall. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Nov., 1914. f. v. 11, p. 188-189.) tBBA Young, Robert. Japan at Kiaochou and the Peace Conference. (Contemporary re- view. London, March, 1919. 4". v. 115. p. 277-288.) *DA J.\p.\xESE Resources Abbott, James Francis. Japanese expan- sion and American policies. New York: Macmillan Company, 1916. viii, 267 p. 12°. ICM Akimoto, Shunkichi. Problems of popu- lation and prejudice. illus. (Outlook. New York, Tune 16, 1920. i° . v. 125, p. 327- 328.) * DA Archer, William. Will Japan ever fight the United States? (McClure's magaznie. New York, 1913. 4°. v. 40, p. 38-45.) * DA Ballard, Walter J. Things Japanese. (Far Eastern review. Manila, April, 1907. f°. v. 3, p. 360.) tBBA Blakeslee, George Hubbard, editor. Japan and Tapanese-.Xmerican relations, edited by George H. Blakeslee. New York: G. E. Stechert & Co., 1912. xi, 348 p. 8°. (Clark University addresses.) *R-BET Brown, Arthur Judson. The mastery of the P'ar East. The story of Korea's trans- formation and Japan's rise to supremacy in the Orient. New York: Charles Scrib- ner's Sons, 1919. ix, 671 p. illus. 8°. * R — BE Cotton spinning in Japan. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Nov., 1918. f°. v. 14. p. 443-144.) t BBA Crow, Carl. Japan's progress. — Myth or marvel. (^IcBride's magazine. New York, Jan., 1916. 4°. v. 97, p. 62-77.) * DA Deichman, Carl F. Great industrial de- velopment of Kyushu, Japan, illus. map. (Far Eastern review. Manila, Feb., 1912. f°. V. 8, p. 274-280.) f BBA Economic progress in Japan. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, Oct., 1914. f°. v. 11, p. 151-152.) tBBA The Effects of the Japanese crisis — as seen bv Wall Street. (Literary digest. New York, May 29, 1920. f°. v. 65, p. 132.) *DA Financial and economic conditions in Tapan. ( Far Eastern review. Manila. Tulv, 1908. i\ V. 5, p. 37-38.) tBBA Hashiguchi, Jihei. The fisheries of Japan, illus. ( Far Eastern review. Shanghai. Aug., 1918. i\ v. 14, p. 313-322.) tBBA The Hokkaido timber industry, illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, March, 1916. f°. V. 12, p. 388-390.) tBBA Hyndman, Henry Mayers. Japan: impe- rial and capitalistic. (.\sia. New York. Jan., 1919. i° . v. 19, p. 24-27.) t* OAA Imperial government railways of Japan. illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Feb., 1916. f°. V. 12, p. 360-364.) t BBA Inouye, Junnosuke. Japan's international financial situation and her aspirations, illus. (Trans-Pacific. Tokyo, Sept., 1919. f°. V. 1, p.7-8.) tTLA Japan. — Imperial Japanese Commission to the Louisiana Pur'chase Exposition. Ja- pan in the beginning of the 20th century. Published by Imperial Japanese Commis- sion to the Louisiana Purchase Exposition (Tokyo: Printed at the "Japan Times" office., 1904. 2 p.l iii, 828 p., TAH Japan, illus. maps. (Far Eastern re- view. Shanghai, Feb., 1919. f^ v. IS. p. 205-218.) tBBA Japan's budget for 1915-16. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, Feb., 1916. f°. v. 12, p. 346-347.) tBBA Japan's development. (Far Eastern re- view. Manila, Aug., 1906. i". v. 3. p. 91, 96.) tBBA Japan's economic health. (Trans-Pacific. Tokyo, Nov., 1919. f°. v. 1, P- SO-Sl-) Japan's growing machinery trade. (Far Eastern review. Manila, Nov., 1906. i'. v.3, p. 176-177.) tBBA THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY 44 Far Eastern Question, continued. Japanese Resotirces, continued. Japan's industries show great growth. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Dec. 22 1917. f °. V. 3. p. 122-123.) * DA Japanese government steel works. '""|- (Far Eastern review. Manila, -Vug.. 1907. r. V.4, p. 71-73.) tBBA Japanese progress. (Far Eastern review. Manila, Feb., 1906. f. v. 2, p. 258.) t BBA Jeremiad from Japan. (Literary digest. New York. Oct. 20, 1917. i\ v. 53, p. 18^) * DA Kaneko, Kentaro. baron. Japan and the United States — partners. (North Ameri- can review. New York, 1907. 4°. v 184, p. 631-635.) * DA The Y'ellow Peril is the golden opportunity for Japan. (North .•\nierican review. New York, 1904. 4°. v. 1/9, p. 641- 648.^ * DA Kawakami, Kiyoshi Karl. Does America menace the advance of democracy m Japan? (Overland monthly. San Francisco._ Nov., 1919. 4°. new series, V. 74, p. 351-353.') * DA Kinyon, H.H. Japan's silk industry, a romance as well, illus. (Trans-Pacific. Tokyo, Oct.. 1919. f°. v.l, P.34-4U Latourette, Kenneth Scott, The develop- ment of lapan. New York: The Macmil- lan Company, 1918. xi, 230 p. map. 12 * R — SB'S Lowell. Pcrcival. The soul of the Far Fast New York: Macmillan Company. 1911. X. 226p. 12°. BEW McD., T. L. Japan's critical industrial situation.' (Millard's review. Shanghai, Jan lo! 1920. l\ v. U, p. 288-290, 292 ) * DA Mitford. E. Bruce. Japan's inheritance; the country, its people, and their destiny. London: T. Fisher Unwin icop. l^'-'i- •;*;•* p. illus. 8°. *R-BEW Miyakawa, Masuji. Life of Japan. New York: I'.aker & Taylor Co. iCop. 1907., 301 p.. 2 pi.. Iport. illus. 8°. BET Modern banking in Japan. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, July, 1918. f- v. U. p. 293-295.) t BBA Morris, I. .\dvance Japan, a nation thor- oughlv in'carnest, London: W. H. A''*'" & Co., 1S05. xix. 443 p. illus. 12°. BEK Nakashima, K. Development of Japan's iron industry, illus. (Trans-Pacific To- kyo. 1919. f°. y. 1. p. 1-7.) tTLA Nitobe, Inazo. The Japanese nation; its laiul, its people, and its life; with special consideration to its relations with the I'nitcd States. New York: G. P. Putnam s Sons. 1912. xiv. 334 p. 12°. • OSD Norman, Sir Henry. The peoples and politics of the Far East. London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1895. 3 p.l., vii-xvip., lU 3-608 p., 2 maps, 48 pL 8°. *R-BE Okuma, Shigenobu. count. Fifty years of new lapan. English version edited by Marcus K. Huish. New York: E. P. Dut- ton & Co., 1909. 2 v. 8°. »R-BES Pooley, .«\ndrew Melville. Japan at the cro>^-roads. London: George Allen & Vn- win, Ltd. ,1917.1 362 p. 8°. BER Porter, Robert Percival. The full recog- nition of Tapan; being a detailed account of the economic progress of the Japanese empire to 1911. London: Oxford Univer- sity Press, 1911. x. 789 p., 7 colored mao = go ■' BEW Tapan. the new world-power; being a detailed account of the progress and rise of the Tapanese empire. London: H. Md- ford, 1915. xxiv, 789 p., 3 maps. t2. ed., 8 ♦R-BES Japan; the rise of a modern power. Oxford: The Clarendon Press. l^'S. v'. 361 p. illus. maps. 8°. * R-BES Rea, George Bronson. Japan, the Eng- land of the Far East. (Far Eastern re- view. Manila. June. 1906. f°. v.3, p.^-4> fBBA Remarkable development of Japanese chipping. illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai. April, 1919. f°. v. L"-. "• >0- 355.) tBBA Seitz, Don Carlos. The Japanese over- load. (North American review. N'ew "^ ork. June. 1913. 4°. v. 197, p. 733-741. > * DA Shastri, H. P. Economic development of lapan. a lesson for China. (Millard's review. Shanghai. Sept. 7, 1918. f°- Y^'^- p. 12-13, 14, 16.) *DA Simpson, Bertram Lenox. The coming struggle in eastern .Asia. By B. L. Putnam \Veale ipseud.i. London: Macmillan and Co.. Ltd,, 1908. 2 p.l.. (i)vi-xivp.. 1 1,. 6-6 p. illus. map. 8°. •R-Bb, Stead. Alfred, editor. Japan by the Tapaiuse. A survey by its highest authori- ties edited bv Alfred Stead. London: \\iU liani lleinemann, 1904. 697 p. d'ae^s. 8 . * R — Br«o Takatoki, Hirata, The development of shipyards and ship-building of Nippon, illus! (Far Eastern review. Manila. Tiily. 1008, f°. V. 5. p. 46-48.) tBBA Watanabe, Toshio. The mining industry of lapan. its present condition and future prospects. illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai. March. 1917. f°. v. 13. p. 3/4- 380,) TodA Weale. B. L. Putnam, pseud. See Simp- son. lUrtram Lenox. JAPAXESE-AMKRICAX RELATIONS 45 Far Eastern Question, continued. Trade Relations America's Far Eastern policy announced, illus. (Far Eastern review. Manila. Oct., 1907. i". V. 4, p. 141-145.) t BBA America's Oriental trade. (Far Eastern 8 review. Manila, March, 1906. f°. v. J. p. 268.) t BBA American manufactured goods sliipped to the Orient are miserably packed, ilhis. ( Far Eastern review. Manila, April, 1906. f°. V. 2, p. 312-315.) fBBA American money for Siberia. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, Nov. 24, 1917. i\ v. 5. p. 260-261.) tBBA American steel and Tapan. ( Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Aug. 18. 1917. i°. v. 3, p. 644- 645.) tBBA Americus, pseud. Case of China and Ja- pan, illus. (Asia. New York. Aug.-Sept., 1919. f°. v. 19, p. 757-763, 836-841.) t* OAA Arnold, Julian H. The trade of Tsinanfu. illus. map. (Far Eastern review. Shang- hai, Dec, 1914. f°. V. 11, p. 263-271.) tBBA Training Americans to know Asia. illus. (Trans-Pacific. Tokyo, Sept.. 1919. f°. V. 1, p.2-4.) tTLA Bancroft, Hubert Howe. The new Pa- cific. Xew York: Bancroft Co., 1900. iv, 738 p., 1 map. 8°. ICI New York: Bancroft Co., 1913. viii, 549 p. rev. ed. 8°. ICI Brooks, Sidney. How England regards our Far East problem. (Harper's weekly. New York, Aug. 10, 1917. f°. v. 51, p. 1160.) *DA Brown, Arthur Selwyn. Silver produc- tion and price movements. (Millard's re- view. Shanghai, Feb. 9, 1918. f°. v. 3, p. 346-347.) * DA Campbell, P. Trade with China: a few hints to foreign manufacturers, illus. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Feb.. 1919. f°. v. 15, p. 82-83.) tBBA China vs. Tapan, England and .America. (Herald of -Asia. Tokyo, Feb. 14, 1920. f°. V. 8, p. 538-539.) t BBA Chinese-British- American co-operation at Peking. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Dec. 22, 1917. f°. v. 3, p. 103-104.) * DA Clement, Ernest Wilson. A cycle of Americo-lapanese commerce, illus. (Trans- Pacific. Tokyo, Feb., 1920. f°. v. 2, p. 79- 80.) tTLA Close, Upton. Eliminating "low-grade goods" from the Tientsin market. (Mil- lard's review. Shanghai, Jan. 24, 1920. f°. V. 11, p. 389-394, 396.) * DA Colquhoun, .-\rchibald Ross. The mas- tery of the Pacific. New York: The Mac- millan Co., 1902. ,\vi, 440 p. illus. maps. BH A Commercial efflorescence. (Japan chronicle wieklv commercial supplement. Kobe, Jan. 22. 1920. f°. Jan. 22, 1920. p. 2<>.) tBERA Commercial relations between the United States and Japan. Addresses by the honor- ary commissioners representing the cham- bers of commerce of Japan: Baron Eiichi Shibusawa and others, (.•\merican Acad- emy of Political and Social Science. An- nals. Philadelphia, July, 1910. 4°. v. 36. no. 1. supplement, p. 3-26.) SA Commercial supremacy. (Herald of .Asia. Tokyo, June 5, 1920. f°. v. 9, p. 256-258.) tBBA Connelly, James F. United States trade witli Japan. (United States. — Bureau of Statistics, State Department. Consular re- ports. Washington, 1896. 8°. v.51, p. 1- 12.) TLG Crow, Carl. Our surrender of the Pa- cific. (Sunset magazine. San Francisco, April, 1916. i\ v. 36, p. 13-15, 46, 48.) *DA De Haviland, W. .\. Patents and trade- marks in Tapan. (Trans-Pacific. Tokyo, Nov., 1919. f°. v. 1, p. 29-30.) tTLA Developing .American commercial inter- ests in China. (Far Eastern review. Shang- hai, Oct., 1916. f°. V. 13, p. 164-165.) tBBA Direct trade. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, Dec. 13. 1919. f°. v. 8, p. 311-312.) tBBA Douglas, Archer Wall. Inland .America and the Orient. (Trans-Pacific. Tokyo, Sept., 1919. i". V. 1, p. 45.) tTLA Durden, H. P. Transportation a prime factor in Oriental trade. (Far Eastern re- view. Manila, March, 1909. f°. v. 5. p. 351-352.) tBBA Fields of enterprise abroad. (Herald of Asia. Tokvo, Nov. 22-29, 1919. f. v. 8. p. 230-231, 259-260.) tBBA Foreigners and foreign trade. (Japan weekly chronicle commercial supplement. Kob6,"july 8, 1920. f°. July, 1920, p. 'LI tBERA Fraser, David. Will British, .Americans, Japanese, or Germans lead in China? illus. (Trans-Pacific. Tokyo, Jan., 1920. i\ v. 2, p. 32-35.) tTLA Garrett, Caret. The snarl of waking .Asia ( Everybody's magazine. New York, May, 1915. 4°. v. 32, p. 587-600.) * DA 46 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Far Eastern Question, continued. Trade Relations, continued. Gary, Elbert Henry. For cordial rela- tions in the Orient. (World outlook. New York, Dec, 1916. i". v. 2, p. 9.) t KAA Goettling, Will. Trend of Japan's trade in 1919. illiis. (Trans-Pacific. Tokyo, March, 1920. f°. v. 2, p. 71-76.) t TLA Huang, F. H. The problem of American investments in China. (Millard's review. Shanghai, March 23, 1918. i". v. 4, p. 112- 114.) *DA Hulbert, Homer B. American interests in the Pacific. (Ohio .Archaeological and Historical Society. Publications. Colum- bus, O., 1913. 8°. V. 22, p. 91-101.) lAA Inouye, Junnosuke. Japan's trade with America. (Outlook. New York, June 16, 1920. i\ V. 125, p. 318.) * DA International intrigues in Chinese rail- ways, maps. ( Far Eastern review. Shang- hai", Ian., 1914. i\ v. 10, p. 290-310.) tBBA Japan and China... |\ew York: Japan Society of New York, and .-\mcrica-Japan Society, Tokyo,, 1917. 28 p. 8°. BETp.v.4 Japan and the China market. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, Dec, 1917. f°. v. 13, p. 780-781.) tBBA Japan invites us to China. (Literary digest. New York, Sept. 2, 1916. f°. v. .^3, p. 551-552.) ♦DA Japan and the United States — partners. (Review of reviews. New York, .\pril, 1907. 4°. V.35, p. 495-497.) * DA Japan's economic dependence on China. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Sept. 1, 1917. i\ v. 3. p. 708.) t BBA Japan's shipping conquest. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, June, 1916. f°. v. 13, p. 16-17.) tBBA Japan's "special interest" in eastern Asia. (Trans-Pacific. Tokyo, Dec, 1919. f°. V. 1, p. 48-49.) tTLA Japanese enterprise abroad. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe, May 15, 1919. i\ new scries, no. 906, p. 723-724.) tBERA Japanese imitations of established I'. S. goods. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Oct. 4,1919. l\ V. 10, p. 211-213.) 'DA The Jones Act. (Japan weekly chron- icle. Kobe, July 15, 1920. f°. new scries, no. 967, p. 75-76.) tBERA Kahn, Ida. .\ defense of Chinese patrio- tism. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Feb. 2,1918. i\ V. 3, p. 296-297.) 'DA Kaneko, Kentaro, baron. Japan and the L'nited States — partners. (North Ameri- can review. New York, 1907. 4°. v. 184. p. 631-635.) * DA Japan and the United States: a pro- posed economic alliance. (International quarterly. New York, Dec, 1903. 4°. v. 8, p. 399-404.) * DA Kauffman, James Lee. How to conduct business in japan. (Trans-Pacific To- kyo, Oct.. 1919. f=. V. 1, p. 17-18.) tTLA Keegan, Joseph J. The value of Ameri- can consular reports, illus. (Far Eastern review. Manila, March, 1908. i". v. 4, p. 303-304.) tBBA Kinoshita, Yoshio. Railway problems of the Far East, illus. map. (Trans-Pacific. Tokyo, Dec, 1919. i". v. 1, p. 1-7.) tTLA Lubarski-Debalta, S. Tasks for the for- eign trade convention, ports. (Trans-Pa- cific Tokyo, April, 1920. i\ v.2, p.81- 82.) tTLA Maxey, Edwiu. Our relations with Ja- pan. (Forum. New York, July, 1907. 1". V. 39, p. 141-146.) * DA .\ Menace to Japanese trade with .\mer- ica. (Herald of .\sia. Tokvo, Feb. 13, 1918. i\ V. 5, p. 676.) tBBA Miller, H. B. [The struggle for commer- cial supremacy of the Japanese empire.) (L'nited States. — Manufactures Bureau. Monthlv consular and trade reports. Wash- ington,'l906. 8°. no. 304, Jan., 1906, p. 114- 123.) TLG Mills, William It. Influence of Japan upon tlie industries of .Vmerica. (Over- land monthlv. San Francisco. June, 1896. 4°. new series, v. 27, p. 587-610.) * DA Mitsu Bishi and other Japanese ship- building enterprises. (Far Eastern review. Manila, Ian.. 1907. f°. v. 3, p. 270-271.) tBBA Munro, Dana G. Prospects in Manchu- ria, illus. (Far Eastern review. Shaiii;- hai. July, 1913. f°. v. 10, p. 61-66.) tBBA The New vellow peril. (Herald of .\sia. Tokv.., Mav'lO, 1919. f°. v. 7, p. 170-171.) tBBA Nind, J. Newton. .V study of trade con- ditions in the Orient. (Far Eastern review. Manila. lulv, 1910. f°. v. 7. p. 40, 51.) tBBA Obstacle to development of .America's Oriental trade. (Far Eastern review. Ma- nila. Nov., 1907. i". v. 4. p. 163-164.) tBBA Oudin, M..\. The trade possibilities of the Far East. (Millard's review. Shang- hai, June 1. 1913. t°. V. 5, p. 32-33.) 'DA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 47 Far Eastern Question, continued. Trade Relations, eontiuued. The Permanency of Japan's influence in the Pacitic trade. (ilillard's review. Shanghai, May 8, 1920. 4\ v. 12, p. 508- 510, 512-516.) *DA Playfair. Report of the trade of Naga- saki for the year 1907. (Far Eastern re- view. Manila, Jan., 1909. f°. v. 5, p. 267- 268.) tBBA Powell, J. B. Chinese business men — and some others. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Sept 22, 1917. i°. v. 2, p. 91-94.) * DA Dangers of "hyphenating" America's foreign trade. (Millard's review. Shang- hai, Oct. 27, 1917. f = . V. 2, p. 232-234.) *DA First experiment in American-Chinese Japanese cooperation. (Millard's review. Shangliai, July 6, 1918. f°. v. 5, p. 208- 209.) * DA ■ Japan's plan to control Pacific ship- ping. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Sept. 1,1917. f°. v.2. p. 6-11.) *DA Japanese-American co-operation on a new basis. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Dec. 22, 1917. f = . v. 3. p. 105-108.) * DA Profits of the banking business in China. (Millard's review. Shanghai, March 9, 1918. f^ V. 4, p. 38-39.) * DA Rea, George Bronson. American trade sacrificed to ideals. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, March, 1920. f°. v. 16, p. 144- 146.) tBBA Read, Thomas T. The mineral produc- tion and resources of China, illus. maps. 4p. 8°. ICp.v.22 • Nippon ucber alles? (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, July, 1916. f°. v. 13, p. 47-50, 61.) ■ tBBA Shall .America fight for China or co-operate with Japan? (Far Eastern re- view. Shanghai, March, 1920. i" . v. \u. p. 151-153.) tBBA Russia egging on Japan against us. (Lit- erary digest. Xew York. .April 4. 1914. f. v. 48. p. 750. ) • DA Self-assertive attitude of .America toward Tapan. (Herald of .Asia. Tokvo, April 3. 1920. f°. v. 9. p. 8-9.) ■ tBBA Spartali, John. .Amerique et Japon. Pre- face de M. le vice-amiral .A. Bicnaime. Paris: "Le Yacht" (1908,. 318 p. illus. 4°. VYY Stead, .Alfred. Racial prejudice against lapan. (Fortnightly review. London, 1907. r. V. 88, p, 637-651.) 'DA Stirring up trouble. (Independent. Xew York, Aug. 16, 1919. i\ y. 99. p. 222.) •DA Takamine, Jokichi. Japan and .America, bulwarks of peace. (Forum. New York. Aug.. 1916. l". V. 56, p. 223-228.) 'DA JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 53 MisccJIancous Tol>ics: War Talk, continued. Treatment of foreigners by Japan. (Cur- rent literature. New York, 1909. f°. v. 46, p. 255-258.) * DA Trying to embroil the United States and Japan. (.Literary digest. New York, Nov. 28,1914. i\ V. 49, p. 1056.) * DA Typical anti-American article. (New York Tapan review. New York, Aug.. 1913. 4°. .\ug., 1913, p. 100-101.) BERA Uncle Sam through Japanese spectacles. (Literary digest. New York, Dec. 13, 1919. f°. V. 63, p. 22.) *DA "The White peril." A Japanese military writer urges Japan to prepare to fight the world. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, May-June, 1916. l\ v. 12, p. 453-459; v. 13, p. 5-9.) t BBA Why Japan is distrusted. (Literary di- gest. New Y'ork, Dec. 6, 1919. f°. v. 63, p. 24.) *DA The Yellow peril in California. (Cur- rent literature. New Y^ork, March, 1909. f°. V. 46, p. 251-256.) * DA The Yellow peril for white prejudice. (Literary digest. New Y'ork, March 16. 1912. f°. V.44, p. 525.) * DA Quotations from a Japanese newspaper. Pan-.\sia Abdullah, Achmed. The armed yellow fist. (Sunset magazine. San Francisco, Jan., 1915. l" . v. 34, p. 96-101.) * DA Asia for Asiatics. (Herald of Asia. To- kyo, Dec. 1, 1917. f°. V. 5, p. 292.) t BBA "Asianism and Japan's mission." (Her- ald of Asia. Tokvo, July 6, 1918. f°. v. 5. p. 446-447.) tBBA Bush, J. D. Japan's nibbling policy. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Oct. 20, 1917. f°. V. 2, p. 206-208.) *DA "Culttiral pan-Asianism." (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Dec. 15, 1917. i". v. 5, p. 361.) tBBA Ferguson, J. C. Pan-Nipponism. illus. (Asia. New York, Sept., 1919. f°. v. 19, p. 889-893.) t* OAA Hodges, G. Charles. The Asiatic Mon- roe doctrine and the League of Nations. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, July. 1919. i\ V. 15, p. 520-521.) tBBA Intellectual and moral leadership of .\sia. (Japan weekly chronicle. Kobe. May 2/, 1920 f°. new series, no. 960, p. 598-599.) tBERA lyenaga, Toyokichi. Japan's mission in the Far East. (Forum. New York, 1902. i". V. ii, p. 459-468.) * DA Japan's pan-.^sian dream. (Literary di- gest. New York, Oct. 11, 1919. i" . v. 63, p. 20-21.) * DA Jenks, Jeremiah Whipple. Japan's "par- amountcy" claim in China. (Millard's re- view. Shanghai, Aug. 26, 1917. f. v. 1, p. 317-319.) *DA Jernigan, T. R. What Japan's Monroe doctrine really means, (^lillard's review. Shanghai, Oct. 6, 1917. 1°. v. 2, p. 146- 148.) *DA Kaneko, Kentaro, baron. The yellow peril is the golden opportunity for Japan. (North .\merican review. New York, 1904. 8°. V. 179, p. 641-648.) * DA McKenzie, Frederick Arthur. The un- veiled East. London: Hutchinson & Co., 1907. viii, 347p. illus. 8°. *R-BEW Modern pan-Asianism. (Millard's re- view. Shanghai, Aug. 4, 1917. f°. v. 1, p. 233-235.) * DA The Monroe doctrine and Japan. (lapan weekly chronicle. Kobe. Feb. 13, 1919. i" . new series, no. 893, p. 221-222.) t BERA Morgan, Gerald. Japan's intentions. (New republic. New York, Feb. 5, 1916. f°. V. 6, p. 10-11.) *DA Mussey, Henry Raymond. Neglected realities in the Far East, (.\cademy of Political Science of New York Citv. Pro- ceedings. New York, Tuly, 1917. 8°. v. 7, p. 538-547.) SEA Newest -Asianism. (Herald of Asia. To- kyo, July 20, 1918. f°. V. 5, p. 502.) t BBA Occidental paternalism. (Herald of .Asia. Tokvo. Aug. 9, 1920. f°. v. 7, p. 535-537.) tBBA Oriental Monroe doctrine. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, May 3, 1919. f°. v. 7, p. 143- 144.) tBBA The Pan- Asian movement. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, May, 1917. f°. v. 13, p. 446-451.) tBBA Pan-Asianism now a practical scheme. ("Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Aug. 10. 1918. f°. V.5, p. 585.) tBBA Shastri, H. P. Pan-Asianism in Japan. (Millard's review. Shanghai, June 1, 1918. f°. V. 5, p. 6-8.) * DA What the rest of .Asia thinks of Tapan. (Jifillard's review. Shanghai. July 27,1918. f°. v. 5. p. 333-335.) * DA Singh, Saint Nihal. The Asiatic view of Tapan's world. (Overland monthly. San Francisco, 1909. 4°. new scries, v. 53, p. 327-328.) * DA 54 THE \E\V YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Miscclhiticoiis Topics, continued. War Talk: Pan-Asia, continued. Tong, Hollington K. Pan-Mongolism threatens China. Russia, and England. (Millard's review. Shanghai, March 29, 1919. f°. V.8, p. 157-160.) ♦DA Usher, Roland Greene. The challenge of the future. .V study in .\mericari foreign policy. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Com- pany, 1916. xxi. 350 p. 8'. IC Whelpley, James Davenport. East and West; a new line of cleavage. (Fortnightly review. London, 1915. 4°. v. 103, p. 883- 895.) * DA Yellow world versus white. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, Sept., 1917. f°. v. 13, p. 672.) t BBA COXTROL OF THE PACIFIC Bancroft, Hubert Howe. The new Pa- cific. New York: Bancroft Co., 1900. iv. 738 p., 1 map. 8°. ICI New York: Bancroft Co., 1913. viii, 549 p. rev. ed. 8°. ICI Barrett, John. America in the Pacific. (Forum. New York, Dec, 1900. f°. v. 30, p. 478-479.) * DA The status of the L'nited States in the Orient. (Independent. New York. April 23, 1903. 4°. v. 55. p. 952-953.) * DA The United States in the Pacific and the Far East. (Harper's magazine. New York, Nov., 1899. 4°. v. 99, p. 917- 926.) * DA Callahan, James Morton, .\merican rela- tions in the Pacific and the Far East, 1784- 1900. Baltimore: The lohns Hopkins Press, 1901. 177 p. 8°. (Johns Hopkins University studies in historical and politi- cal science, series 19. nos. 1-3.) IC Capen, Edward Warren. Sociological appraisal of western influence, (.\merican journal of sociologv. Chicago, May, 1911. 4°. V. 16, p. 734-755.) SA Clement, Ernest Wilson, .\merican in- fluence in Japan. (The Nation. New York, Nov. 9, 1918. f°. V. 107, p. 553-554.) * DA Colquhoun, .-\rchibald Ross. Greater .Nnicricn. New York: Harper & Brothers. 1904. ix. 436 p. illus. 8°. ICI Fletcher, Charles Brunsdon. The prob- lem of the Pacific. Preface by the Right Hon. Sir William MacGregor. London: William Heinemann, 1919. xxix, 254 p., 1 1.. 1 map. 8°. BH New York: Henrv Holt and Company, 1919. xxix, 254 p., 1 1., 1 map. 8°. BH Fox, Frank. Problems of the Pacific. Boston: Small. Mavnard and Company |1913|. Ip.l.. 294 p., imap. 8°. BE French, Willard. Japan and to-morrow. (North American review. New York, .\pril 19, 1907. 8°. v. 184, p. 825-832.) * DA Griffis, William Elliot, .\merica in the East. .A glance at our history, prospects, problems and duties in the Pacific ocean. New York: A. S. Barnes & Co., 1900. x. 244 p. illus. 12°. BBH Hammond, John Hays. American com- mercial interests in the Far East. (.Ameri- can .-\cademy of Political and Social Sci- ence. .-Xnnals. Philadelphia, Julv, 1905. 4°. v. 26, p. 85-88.) * DA The menace of Japan's success. (World's work. New York, 1905. 4°. v. 10. p. 6273-6275.) * DA Hughes, William Morris. .\ustralia, .America, and the Pacific question. (Mil- lard's review. Shanghai, Jan. 3, 1920. f°. V. 11, p. 206-208.) *DA Japan's fear of .America. (Literarv digest. New York, April 15. 1916. f°. v. 52. p. 1051.) •DA Japanese view on opening of the Panama canal. (Far Eastern review. Manila. Oct., 1911. l\ v.8, p. 157-158.) tBBA Kasai, Jiuji G. The mastery of the Pa- cific: with a foreword bv H. P. Judson. (World outlook. New York, March. 1916. f°. V. 2. p. 18.) t KAA Nitobi, Inazo. .American influences in the Far East. (University of Chicago magazine. Chicago, Feb., 1912. 4°. v. 4, p. 103-109.) STG Scholefield, Guy Hardy. The Pacific, its past and future and the policy of the gnat powers from the eighteenth century. London: John Murray, 1919. xii, 346 p. maps. 8°. BH Schw. , F. Die beiden Grossmiichte im Stillcii Ozean. (Streffleurs militarische Zeitschrift. Wien. 1907. 4°. Jahrg. 48, Bd. 2, p. 1177-1185.) VWA Simpson, Bertram Lenox. The coming struggle in eastern Asia. By B. L. Put- nam Weale rpseud.|. London: Macmillan and Co., 1908. xiv, 656 p. illus. 8°. •R-BE Stevens, D. W. The relations of Jap.m to other nations. (Forum. New York, Doc, 1898. f°. V. 26, p. 427-433.) 'DA The Strategic importance of the Pacific ocean. (United service. New York, Nov.. 1905. 4°. scries 3, v.8, p. 401-406.) VWA Wanted a new Oriental policv. (Inde- pendent. New York, Nov. 9, 1914. 4°. v. 80, p. 188-189.) * DA I JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS 55 Miscellaneous Topics, continued. Control of the Pacific, continued. Weale, B. L. Putnam, pseud. See Simp- son, Bertram Lenox. What Japan expects of Mr. Wilson. (Literary digest. New York, March IS, 1913. f°. V. 46, p. 565.) * DA J.\PANESE IN Mexico and South America America — Mexico — Japan. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Jan. 10, 1920. f°. v. 8, p. 398- 399.) t BBA American ambassador sees tlie Mikado in Tokyo. (Current opinion. New York, Nov., 1913. f°. V. 55, p. 315-316.) * DA The Birth rate and the Monroe doctrine. (Sunset magazine. San Francisco, Oct., 1915. f°. V. 35, p. 651-653.) * DA How Japan views our Mexican troubles. (Literary digest. New York, Sept. 16, 1916. i\ V. 53, p. 662.) * DA Japan and Magdalena bay. (Literary digest. New York, April 20, 1912. f°. v. 44, p. 796-797.) * DA Japan on the Magdalena bay scare. (Lit- erary digest. New York, June 1, 1912. f°. V. 44, p. 1150-1151.) *DA Japan and the Monroe doctrine. (Living age. Boston, luly 6, 1912. 4°. v. 274, p. 48-50.) ■ * DA - Japan's invasion of South .'American mar- kets. (Far Eastern review. Manila, Jan., 1906. f°. V. 2, p. 201.) tBBA Japanese designs on the Monroe doctrine. (Current literature. New York, May, 1912. f°. V. 52, p. 510-512.) *DA The Japanese spectre. (Independent. New York, April 11, 1912. 4°. v. 72, p. 797- 798.) * DA United States. — State Department. Land at Magdalena bay. Message from the president of the United States, transmit- ting in response to Senate resolution of April 2, 1912, a report of the secretary of state relating to the purchase of land at Magdalena bay by the Japanese govern- ment or bv a Japanese company. May 1. 1912. [Washington, 1912., 3 p. 8°. (United States. 62. cong., 2. sess. Senate doc. no. 640; serial 6177.) * SBE Lands on Magdalena bay. Message from the president of the United States, transmitting in response to Senate resolu- tion of May 16, 1912, copies of correspon- dence relative to the American syndicate interested in lands on Magdalena bay. Mav 23. 1912. Washington, 1912. 1 p.l., 3-6 'p. 8°. (United States. 62. cong.. 2. sess. Senate doc. 694; serial 6177.) * SBE Japanese in Hawaii and the Philippines American capital in the Philippines. (Far Eastern review. Manila, Feb., 1911. f°. v. 7, p. 315-318.) t BBA Damon, Francis W. Hawaii's example to California. (Independent. New York, Feb. 14, 1907. f°. v. 62, p. 363-368.) * DA Dimn, .^rthur. Keeping the coast clear: the Japanization of Hawaii, a warning to the West. (Sunset magazine. San Fran- cisco, July, 1913. 4°. v. 31, p. 122-127.) *DA Edmunds, C. K. The Japanese problem in Hawaii. (Millard's review. Shanghai, Sept. 6, 1919. f°. V. 10, p. 13-15.) * DA Ford, .■\lexander Hume. Our Japanese territory, (Collier's weekly. New York, July 24, 1909. f°. v. 43, p. 12-13.) * DA Gallagher, Patrick. End the Philippine muddle. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Jan., 1916. f°. v. 12, p. 291-292.) f BBA Griffiths, A. F. The Japanese race ques- tion in Hawaii. (Journal of race develop- ment. Worcester, Mass., 1916. 8°. v. 6. p. 422-440.) QOA Highly interesting official correspondence, from the government of the emperor of Japan, received through .. .Townsend Har- ris, resident minister of the United States at Jeddo. broadside, f^ ft BES Reprinted from the Polynesian of Honolulu, Dec. 7, 1861. Explanation of the inability of the Japanese gov- ernment to conclude a treaty with Hawaii. Honolulu, Hawaii. — Citizens. Exclu- sion of Japanese and Chinese from .Ameri- can territory. Petition from 319 citizens of Honolulu. H. I., praying for complete e.x- clusion of both Japanese and Chinese, or their descendants, from .American territory. April 8, 1902. (Washington, 1902., 3 p. 8°. (United States. 57. cong., 1. sess. Senate doc. no. 292; serial 4239.) * SBE Inglis, William. Hawaii's lesson to head- strong California. (Harper's weekly. New York, 1907. f°. v. 51, p. 226-228.) * DA Irwin, Edward P. The Japanese peril in Hawaii. (World to-day. Chicago, 1909. 4°. v. 17, p. 1038-1041.) * DA Japan and the Philippines. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, Feb. 14, 1920. i" . v. 8. p. 536-538.) t BBA Japan's expansion southward. (Far East- ern review. Shanghai, Sept., 1916. f^. v. 13, p. 128-132.) t BBA Japan's protest against Hawaiian annexa- tion. (Literarv digest. New York, 1897. f°. v. 15, p. 333.) '»DA 56 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Miscellaneous Topics, continued. Japanese in Hawaii, etc., continued. Le Roy, James S. Japan and the Philip- pine islands. (Atlantic monthly. Boston, Jan., 1907. 4°. v. 99, p. 24-34.) 'DA May the Japanese he naturalized in America ? (Outlook. New York, Nov. 29, 1916. 4°. V. 114, p. 698.) * DA Perkins, George C. The Pacific coast and the Orient. (Independent. New York. Feb. 21, 1907. 4°. v. 62, p. 429^34.) * DA The Philippine islands, illus. (Far East- ern reviiw. Shanghai, Feb., 1919. f°. v. 15, p.227-_',5,).) tBBA The Philippines as Pacific trade base. (Herald of Asia. Tokyo, May S, 1917. f'. V.3, p. 171.) tBBA Pitt. Harold M. The Philippines and American opportunities for trade expan- sion, illus. (Far Eastern review. Manila, Oct., 1909. i". V. 6, p. 194-196.) f BBA Prautch, A. W. Helping Philippine farmers help themselves, illus. (Trans- Pacific. Tokyo, Jan., 1920. l\ v.2. p.55- 57.) tTLA Rea, George Bronson. The Philippine problem. port. (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Oct., 1913. i". v. 10, p. 161-164 ) tBBA Rousseau, V. Japan and the Philippines: a neid ot abandoning the archipelago. (Harper's weekly. New York, June 7, 1913. f°. V. 57, p. 12.) *DA The Sale of the Philippines to Japan. (Far Eastern review. Manila, Oct.. 1907. f°. v. 4, p. 130-131.) tBBA Story, Russell McCulloch. Oriental im- migration into the Philippines. (.American -Academy of Political and Social Science. Chinese and Japanese in .America. Phila- delphia, 1909. 8°. p. 168-174.) lEA -Annals, V. 34, no. 2. United States.— Senate. Treaties be- tween Japan and Hawaii. (Washington. 1898.) 5 p. 8'. (United States. 55. cong., 2- sess. Senate doc. 64; serial 3592.) * SBE Text of the treaties of 1871 and 1886. Will Japan purchase the Philippines and Netherland Indies? (Far Eastern review. Shanghai, Aug., 1916. f°. v. 13, p. 97-98.) tBBA INDEX OF AUTHORS Abbott, J. F.: Japanese expansion and American policies, 43, 51. Abdullah, Achmed: Armed yellow fist, 53. Ackerman. C. W. : Japan's ambitions in Siberia, 35. Ackerman, E. R.: Remarks on observations made on visits to Japan, China, and Shantung, SS. Adams, E. F. : Japanese in America, 15. Adams, F. O. : History of Japan, 3. Adams, T. S., and Helen L. Sumner: Problem of immigration, 8. Addison, J. T.: Value of Japanese promises, 21, 29. Aiken, C. S. : San Francisco's Japanese, IS. Akimoto, Shunkichi: Problems of population and prejudice, 43. Alcock, Sir Rutherford: Capital of the Tycoon, 7. Aldridge, Francis: New menace in Far East, 29. American Academy of Political and Social Science: Chinese and Japanese in America, 12. American Association of Japan: Modification of seamen's act, 48. American Chamber of Commerce of China: Japanese interests in China, 21. American Peace Society of Japan: Report of inaugural meeting, 49. Resolutions, 48. Americus, pseud.: Case of China and Japan, 45. Japanese tactics in China, 29. Anraku, Veiji: Oriental immigration, 12. Aoki, S.: Japanese immigration, 8. Archer, William: Will Japan ever fight the United States? 43, 51. Arnold, J. H.: Trade of Tsinanfu, 45. Training Americans to know Asia, 45. Asia, 1. Asiatic Society of Japan: Transactions, 1. "Asiaticus": China: colony or nation? 21. Aubert, Louis: Americains et Japonais, 8. £tats-Unis et Japon, 51. B B.. A. ,, Dangers of American-Japanese co-operation, 33. Baker, J. E.: The League and China's railways, 33. Baldwin, S. E.: Schooling rights with Japan, 18. Ballard, W.J. : Things Japanese, 43. Bancroft, H. H.: New Pacific, 45, 54. Barnes, James: Our first mission to Japan, 3. Baronti, Gerve: So-called student movement, 39. Barrett. John: America in the Pacific, 54. Status of the United States in the Orient, 54. United States in the Pacific and the Far East, 54. Barrows, D. P.: / Japan as our ally in Siberia, 35. Bennett. J. E.: , "Japan's message to America,** 49. Japanese on the Pacific coast, 15. Bent, Silas: Japan and the open door, 22. Beutz, G.: Shantung controversy, 39. Bigelow, John : Peace given as the world giveth, 24. Blakeslee, G. H., editor: Japan and Japanese-American relations, 2, 43. Borah, W.E.: Remarks on Shantung, 29. Brace, A. M.: Tsingtau and the rising sun, 39. Bramhall. J. T.: Orient in California, 15. Braun, Marcus: How can we enforce our exclusion laws? 12. Brinkley, Frank: Japan, 2. Britannicus, pseud.: American policy in the Far East, 27. Japan and China, 29. Brooks, Sidney: .■\merica and the Anglo-Japanese alliance, 29. American in the Far East, 29. Aspects of American-Japanese agreement, 21, 29. England's view of a possible American war with Japan, 15. How England regards our Far-East problem, 21, 45. Japan and the United States, 15. Real Pacific question, 12, 15. Brown. A. J.: Mastery of the Far East, 21, 26, 43. What about Shantung? 39. Brown. A. S.: Silver production and price movements, 45. Brown, Alice M.: Japanese in Florin, 19. Bryan. J. L: Japan astir, 35. Japan in China and Siberia, 35. Situation in Japan, 19. Bullard. Arthur: Expanding Japan, 21. Burgess, G. P.: Speech, 12. Burnett, A. H.: Misunderstanding of eastern and western states regarding Oriental immigration, 12. Bush, J. D.; Japan's nibbling policy, S3. [57] 58 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Cady. C. M.: Japan, Germany, and the United States. 39. California. — State Board of Control: California and the Oriental, 15. Callahan, J. M.: American relations in the Pacific and the Far East, 4. 54. Campbell. P.: Trade with China. 45. Canada. — Royal Commission on Chinese and Japa- ■ nese Immigration: Report, 8. Capen, E, VV. : Sociological appraisal of western influence. 54. Carnegie Kndownient for International Peace. — Division of Intercourse and Education: Imperial Japanese Mission. 1917, 49. Cascales y Munoz, Jose: Los Estados Unidos y el Japon, 51. Chamberlain, B. H.: Things Japanese. 4. Chamberlin, W. H.: Japanese imperialism in Siberia, 35. Cheney, Annie E.r Japan and her relations to foreign powers, 8. Chi-C'hao, Liang: Causes of China's defeat at the Peace Confer- ence, 35. Chidell. Fleetwood: Menace of Japan, 29. Child, R. W.: Japan, the peace and the destiny of Asia. 21. China review, 1. China year !>ook, 1. Chinese social and political science review, 1. Chung. Henry: China's distrust of Japan, 32. Oriental policy of United States. 22, 26, 32. Clark, E. \V.; International relations with Japan, 4. Clarke. Mildred A.: Working with the Japanese, 15. Clement, E. W.: American influence in Japan. 54. Cycle of Americo-Japancsc commerce, 45. Expatriation of Japanese abroad. 12. United States and Japan. 12. Close. I'pton: Eliminating "low-grade goods" from tlu- Tii-nt^iin market, 45. Getting worse before it gets better, 3'A Japanese occupation of Tsinan, 39. Living over the crater. 22. The Nipponese slant, 22. Should China negotiate 'with Japan over Tsing- tao? 39. Struggle continues in north China, 39. Who will be the sufferer? 39. Colcord, Lincoln : Japan in Siberia. 35. Making diplomatic correspondence public, 27. Unpublished document from the State Depart- ment, 35. Coleman, F. A.; Far East unveiled, 22. Collier, Price: West in the East, 2. Collins. C.W.: Will the California alien land law stand the test of the fourteenth amendment, 19. Colqubnun, A. R.: Greater America, 54. Mastery of the Pacific. 45. Commons, J. R.: Races and immigrants in America, 8. Connelly, J. F. : United States trade with Japan, 45. Connors. J. W. : With Perry in Japan in '53, 6. Coolidge, A. C: United States as a world power. 2, 8. Cordicr, Henri : Bibliothcca Japonica, 1. Bibliotheca Sinica, 1. Coryn.S. G. P.: Japanese problem in California. 15. Cowan. J. L. : Japanese question, 15. Crewdson, W. : Japanese emigrants, 8. Crow, Carl : Japan and America. 8, 27. Japan's progress — myth or marvel, 43. Our surrender of the Pacific, 45. W'e complete the Chinese wall, 32. Cuppy, E. P.: Argument, 4. Curtis. W. E.: United Slates and foreign powers, 4. Damon. F. \V. : Hawaii's example to California, 55. Davis. G. L.-L.: Paper upon origin of the Japan expedition, 4. Davis. Horace: Japanese wrecks in American waters, 4. Davis, O. K.; Whose open door? 29. De Haviland, W. A.: Patents and trade-marks in Japan, 45. Deichman. C. F.: Great industrial development of Kyushu, 43. Dempster, Arthur: Secretary Taft's mission to Japan, 22, 26. Dewey. John : China's nightmare, 27. Far Eastern deadlock. 22. Japan and America, 22, 36. On two sides of the Eastern sea, 36. Shantung, as seen from within, 39. Dickey. F. W.: Sanctity of contracts, 19. Dillon, E. J.: Dual alliance for the Far East, 30. Ex Oriente lux, 30. Dollar. J. H.: American trade in China now — and in the future, 22. Douglas. A. W.: Inland -America and the Orient, 45. Douglas. H. C: What may happen in the Pacific, 12. Dubois, Patterson: Great Japanese embassy of 1860. 4. Duffus. R. L.: California irredenta, 15. Dunn. Arthur: Keeping the coast clear, 15, 55. Durden. H. P.: Transportation, a prime factor in Oriental trade, 45. £ Eastern commerce, 1. Edmunds, C. K.: Japanese problem in Hawaii. 55. Edwards. P. L. : Industrial side of the alien land law problem, 19. JAPAXESE-AMERICAN RELATION'S - INDEX OF AUTHORS 59 Einstein, L. D. : Japan at Tsingtau, 39. Eliot, E. C: Treaty-making power with reference to the reserved power of the states, 19. Eliot. T.L.: Moral and social interests involved in restricting Oriental immigration, 12. Elliott. \V. S. : What Japan resents, 15. Estournelles de Constant, P. H. B., baron d*: Inevitable war between United States and Japan, 49. Evening Post. New York: Japanese supplement, 1, Fairbairn, Forbes: Great Britain warned of Japanese menace to United States in Shantung, 39. Fall. A. B.: Statement of Chinese delegation to Peace Confer- ence relating to Shantung, 39. Far East. 2. Far Eastern political science review, 2. Far Eastern review, 2. Ferguson, C. E. : American embassy in Tokyo, 2. Ferguson, J. C. : Japan's use of her hegemony, 27. Pan-NJpponism, 53. Firkins, Ina T. E. : Tapanese in the United States, 1. Fish. C. R.: American diplomacy, 3. Fisher. F. B.: What Japan wants, 26, 31. Fleming, Jackson: Japan and the world organization, 36, 49. Fletcher, C. B.: Problem of the Pacific, 54. Flower. B. O.i Justice for Japan, 8. Why America sympathizes with Japan, 24, Flowers, Montaville: Japanese conquest of American opinion, 3. Foord. John : History of the movement, 15. Japanese in America, 4. Ford. A. H.: Our Japanese territory, 55. Foster. C. H.: Flingers of Shantung, 39. Foster. J. W. : American diplomacy in the Orient, 3, 4. Japanese war scare, 51. Fox. E. L.: Menaces to American peace, 51. Fox, Frank: Problems of the Pacific, 54. Fraser, David : Foreign loans of China and their securities, 33. Will British, Americans, Japanese, or Germans lead in China? 45. Eraser, Mary C. : Our relations with Japan, 3. Free. J. E. : War cloud, 16, 27, 51. French, B. L.: Shall the United States exclude Japanese and Ko- rean laborers? 13. French. Willard: Japan and to-morrow, 51, 54. Frodsham, G. H. : British empire and Japanese racial aspirations, 9. Froelick, L. D.: Democracy collides with imperialism over Shan- tung, 22. Fulton. C. \V.: American schools and Japanese pupils. 18. Gadsby, John : Japanese "Law relating to foreigners' rights of ownership in land," 19. Galbreath. C. B.: Japanese exclusion and the Pacific coast, 13. Gallagher, Patrick: America's aims and Asia's aspirations, 22. China at the Peace Conference, 36. China's defeat at I^aris, 39. End the Philippine muddle. 55. Japanese and the Peace Conference, 36. Gannett, L. S. : China and Japan, 39. Garrett. Garet: Snarl of waking Asia, 13, 27, 45. Garvin, J. L. : Mr. Knox and Manchuria, 31. Gary, E. H.: For cordial relations in the Orient, 46, 49. Gibbons, H. A. : Xew map of Asia, 22. Giddings, F. H. : Two Japans, 49. Gilman, D. C. : Japanese indemnity fund, 7. Glynn, Billee: Orientals and Portola, 9. Goettling. Will: Trend of Japan's trade in 1919. 46. Gompers, Samuel, and Herman Gutstadt: Meat vs. rice, 13. Goto, Shimpei: China and Japan, 39. Gowen, H. H. : Problem of Oriental immigration in Washing- ton, 13. Greene, D. C. : Anti-Japanese prejudice. 49. Japanese immigration, 13. Griffis. W. E.: America in the East, 3. 54. American makers of new Japan, 3, 4. American relations with the Far East, 4. China and Japan, 49. Japan and the United States. Are the Japanese Mongolians? 9. Japan's debt to Korea, 26. Japanese peace commission, 16. Matthew Calbraith Perry. 4. Millard Fillmore and his part in opening of Japan, 4. Our honor and shame with Japan, 49. Our treaties with Japan, 8. Our war with one gun, 7. Relations between Japan and United States. 4. Townscnd Harris, centre of Japanese drama, 4. Townsend Harris, first American envoy to Japan, 7. Griffiths. A. F.: Japanese race question in Hawaii, 55. Gul)bins. J. H. : Progress of Japan, 4, Gulick. S. L.: America and the Orient, 9, 51. America's Oriental immigration problem, 9, 19. American democracy and Asiatic citizenship, 9, 22. American Japanese problem; a study of the racial relations of the East and West, 16. American-Japanese problem: two addresses, 16. * X 60 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY (iulick, S. L. — Continued : Anti-Japanese war-scare stories, 51. Asia's appeal to America, 9. Comprehensive immigration policy apd program, 13. Evolution of the Japanese, 3. Japanese problem, 13. New immigration policy, 9. New Oriental policy, 13. Pacific coast and the new Oriental policy, 16. Problem of Oriental immigration. 9. Problems in American-Japanese relations, 9, 27. Teachers of America and the problems of Asia, 3. 49. Two addresses, 9. What Japan really wants, 9, 49. What program shall the United States stand for in her relations with Japan and China, 13. Where cast is west, 16. White peril in the Far East, 22. Guti^tadt, Herman. Sec Gompers, Samuel, and Her- man Gutstadt. H H..H. E.: Japan's hand in China, 22. H.. W. B.: Chance for statesmanship, 31. Habersham. A. W' . : American in Japan in 1858, 4. Hachita, Ann: Cry of Naomi, 49. Hale. E. E.: Perry's expedition to Japan, 7. Hale, W\B.: Japanese demands, 40. Hammond, J. H. : .Anierican commercial interests in the Far East, 54. Menace of Japan's success, 24, 54. Hanley, T. : Problem of the little brown man, 16. Harding. G. L.: *'Jai)ping'* American opinion, 49. I'eace in the Pacific, 22. Harrington, J. W.: Japan and China at odds, 40. Harris, Townsend. Memorial, 4. Hart. J. A.: Oriental problem as the coast sees it, 16. Harvey, George: Closing the door in China, 29. Harwood. W. S.: .Americanizing the Japanese, 9. Hashiguchi, Jihet: Fisheries of Japan, 43. Japanese point of view on the Sinojapanese ques- tion, 27. Hawks. F. L.. editor: See United States. — Navy Department: Narrative of expedition of American squadron to China seas and Japan. Hayashi, Tadasu. count: Political relations of Japan and America, 9. 49. Secret memoirs, 13, 25. Hayes, E. .'\.: Treaty-making power of the government, and the Japanese question, IS; Hnzeltine. M. W.: Would England aid Japan against America? 25. Hrnschcn. Samuel: What is behind the Japanese peril? 52. H^Il^baw. F. W.; Japanese point of view, 49. Hepburn. A. B. : United States and the Orient^ 9. Herald of Asia, 2. Hershey, .A. S. : Japanese school question, 18. Hicbborn. Franklin: Story of California Legislature for 1913, 16. Hildreth, Richajd: Japan as it was and is, 6. Hinckley, F. E.: American consular jurisdiction in the Orient, S. Hinman. G. W.: Christian work for Orientals in America, 9. Hishida, S. G.: International position of Japan as a great power, 22. Hitchcock. G. M.: China benefits by the peace treaty, 40. Hodges, Charles: Case from the documents, 29. Hodges. G. C. : Asiatic Monroe doctrine, 53. Honorable gentlemen's agreement, 16. Holman, C. V.: Our insult to Japan, IS. Holt. Hamilton: Japan and America. 49. Straining an historic friendship, 49. Honda, Masujiro: Diplomacy de luxe, 22. 31. Far Eastern diplomacy and .America, 27. Honolulu. Hawaii. — Citizen?: Exclusion of Japanese and Chinese from American territory, 55. Hornbeck, S. K.: Contemporary politics in the Far East, 22, 29. House, E. H.r Japan. 4. Simonoseki affair, 7. Howes, Osborne: W'hat Japanese exclusion would mean, 29. Huang. F. H. : Problem of American investments in China, 46. Hubhar.l. R. B.: I'ouris of the United States in Japan, 8. I'niteil States in the Far East. 4. Hughes. W. M.: .Australia, -America, and the Pacific question, 54. Hulbert. H. B.: .American interests in the Pacific, 46. Hungerford. Edward: California's side of it, 19. Hurd, Archibald: Racial war in the Pacific, 13. Hutchinson, Woods: Mongolian as a workman, 9. Hyndman. H. M.: ^^ Awakening of Asia. 22. ^* Japan: imperial and capitalistic, 43. Japan as mistress of China, 29. Rising Asiatic tide, 9. Ichihashi, Vamata: Industrial plight of Japan, 40. Japanese immigration, its status in California, 13. Japanese students in America, 9. Inglis. William: Hawaii's Icss4)n to headstrong California. 55. Japan's preference for peace with America, 49, 52. Playing with dynamite. 1**. Reasons for California's defiant decree against Japanese in her schools, 18. Innui, K. S. : Japanese education in America, 9. Inouyc. Junnosuke: Japan's international financial situation, 43. Japan's trade with America, 46. JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS — INDEX OF AUTHORS 61 Irish, J. P.: Orientals in California, 16. Reasons for encouraging Japanese immigration, 16. Irwin. E. P.: Japanese peril in Hawaii, 55. Ishii, Kikujiro, viscount: Fair transaction, 40. Japan's new pledge regarding China, 32. Japan's political intentions in Far East, 29. lyenaga, Toyekichi: Both sides of the Shantung issue, 40. Discrimination with reference to citizenship and land ownership, 16. Japan and America in the world war, 13, 36. Japan's mission in the Far East. 53. Japan's real attitude toward America, 50. Relations of United States with China and Japan, 27. James, T. L.: Revival of the Knownothing spirit, 13. Japan. — Department of Foreign Affairs: Correspondence regarding negotiations between Japan and Russia, 24. Japan. — Imperial Japanese Commission to the Louisiana Purchase Exposition: Japan in the beginning of the 20th century, 43. Japan. — Residency-General in Korea. Recent progress in Korea, 26. Japan. — Special Finance and Economic Commission: [Account of its work,] 36. Japan chronicle, 2. Japan current, 2. Japan daily mail. Weekly edition, 2. Japan financial and economic monthly, 2. Japan magazine, 2. Japan Society of London: Transactions and proceedings, 2. Japan year book, 2. Japanese-American commercial weekly, 2. Japanese and Korean Exclusion League: Japanese immigration, occupations, wages, etc., 13. Jefferis. J. \V.: Why China refused to sign, 40. Jenks. J. W.: Japan in action, 27. Japan in China, 40. Japan and her imperialistic ambitions, 23. Japan and her neighbor, 23. Japan's acts in China, 29. Japan's *'paramountcy" claim in China, 53. Remaking our Far Eastern policy, 23. Jenks, J. W., and W. J. Lauck: Immigration problem, 10. Jernigan, T. R. : American note to China, 29. What Japan's Monroe doctrine really means, 53. Why the allies are co-operating in Siberia, 37. Johnson. H. B. : Discrimination against Japanese in California, 16. Johnson. H. W. : American national honor and Shantung, 40. Johnson. W. F. : America's foreign relations, 3. Jones, C. L.: Legislative history of exclusion legislation, 13. Jones, Jefferson: Fall of Tsingtau, 40. Jones. Paul: Students' revolt in China, 40. Jordan, D. S. : Dream of invasion, 52. Japanese exclusion, 14, 20. Perennial bogey of war, 50. Jordan, D. S. — Continued: ' Relations of Japan and the United States, 50. War and waste, 50. When East meets East, 23. Jowe, P. S. : Chinese boycott movement and Japan, 40. K Kahn, Ida: A challenge to the students of China, 23. Chinese view cm Far Eastern politics, 23. Defense of Chinese patriotism, 46. Japan's iron clutch tightening on China, 30. Kahn. Julius: Japanese question from a Californian's stand- point. 16. Remarks on Shantung question, 23. Speech, 14. Kaltenborn. Hans von: Foundations for a durable peace between United States and Japan, 50. Land ownership by aliens, 20. Kamiya, T. : See Soyeda, Juichi, and T. Kamiya. Kaneko, Kentaro, baron: Christianity and internationalism, 17. Effect of American residence on Japanese, 10. For a better understanding between East and West. 50. Japan and the L'nited States — partners, 44, 46. Japan and the L'nited States; a proposed economic alliance, 40, 46. The yellow peril is the golden opportunity for Japan. 44, 53. Kasai, J. G. : Mastery of the Pacific, 54. Relations between Japan and United States, 10. Kauffman, J. L. : How to conduct business in Japan, 46. Kawakami, K. K.: America and the Russo-Japanese alliance, 31. American-Japanese relations, 10, 26, 31. Asia at the door, 10. Assurance to Japan, 34. Does America menace the advance of democracy in Japan? 44. How California treats Japanese, 17. Japan and the open door, 30. Japan and the United States, 10, 17. Japan and world peace, 37. Japan in world politics. 3. Japan's acts in China, 27. Japan's difficult position, 37. Japan's economic interests in Shantung, 40. Japanese on American farms, 10. Japanese in California, 17. Japanese in Canada, 14. Japanese in New England, 10. Japanese on our farms, 10. Naturalization of the Japanese, 14. Shall America prepare against Japan? 52. Keegan, J. J.: Value of American consular reports, 46. Kennan, George: Japanese in San Francisco schools, 18. Kincaid-Smith, M.: England, America, and Japan, 25. Kinnosuke, Adachi : America, Japan, and the Pacific. 52. Anglo-American arbitration and the Far East, 21. Attitude of Japan towards United States, 18. China and Japan ~ and America, 28. Japanese bugaboo, 52. United States, China and Japan: what the new understanding means to Japan, 28. Why Japan's army will not fight in Europe, 37. 62 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Kinoshita. Yoshio: Railway problems of the Far East, 46. Kinyon, H. H.: Japan's silk industry, 44. Klein, Felix: America of tomorrow. 10. L'Amerique de demain, 10. Knapp. A. M.: Japanese ambition, 23, 26. Kohlcr. M. J.: Un-American character of race legislation, 14. Komai, T. C: America and Japan: the Japanese case, 30. Komatz, Midori: Japan and I'nited States, 6. KuanK-Ti May: China's reaction to the Shantung settlement, 40. ■Ladd. G. T.: America and Japan, SO. La Motte, Ellen N.: Peking dust, 28. Lanman, Charles: Japanese in America, 4, 10. Lansing. Rol»ert: America's policy tn the Far East, 32, Latane. J. H.: .America as a world power, 17, 23. From isolation to leadership, 30. Our relations with Japan, 23. Latourette, K. S.: Development of Japan, 3, 44. Preparation for peace with the Orient by educa- tion, 50. Unpopular view of the Shantung question, 40. Lauck, W. J.: See Jenks. J, W.. and \V, J. Lauck. Lazear, E. T. : Letter protesting against giving Japan control of Shantung, 40. Lea. Homer: Legacy of Commodore Perry, 52. LeRoy,J. S.: Japan and the Philippine islands, 56. Lewis. \V. D.: Treaty powers, 14, Li, T. L.: Cooperation of Japan and America in ( hina, 34. Liang Chi-Chao; China and the Shantung settlement. 40. Lincoln, C. C. : American prestige in China. 23. Liscomb, W. S.: Japanese treaty revision, 8. Lodge. H. C: Remarks on Shantung, 41. Lowell, Percival: Soul of the Far East, 44. Lubarski-Debalta, S. : Tasks for the foreign trade convention, 46. Luce. S. B.: Commodore Biddle's visit to Japan in IS46. 4. Lusk. H. H.: Real yellow peril, 10. 52. M M..G. \V.: Siberia, 37. TsiiiRlao, 41. Mabie, H. W.r Americans and the Far East, 17. California and the Japanese, 17. Macarthur, Walter: Opposition to Oriental immigration, 14. MacCauley. Clay: Heusken memorial, 7. MacClintock, Samuel: Anti-Japanese legislation, 18. McCormick. Elsie: Close-up of Shantung, 41. McCormick, Frederick: America and the China loan. 34. How America got into Manchuria, 24, 31. Menace of Japan, 23, 30. McCormick, Medill: Remarks. . .on Japan and China. 23. McCumber. P. J.: Remarks on transfer of Shantung to Japan. 41. McD.. J. L.: Japan's critical industrial situation, 44. MacDonald. William: Internationalism and the Pacific area, SO. Macfarlane. P. C: Japan in California, 20. MacRowan, D. J. : Japanese foreign relations, 4. Machray. Robert: China. Japan, and the peace. 28. McKenzie. F. A.: Unveiled East. 26. 28, 53. Macklin, W. E.: Shantung and opium, 41. McLaughlin, Allen: Chinese and Japanese immigration, 10. McMahon, T. J. : Japan and the Marshall islands. 37. Mahan. A. T. : Japan among the nations, 14. Mahon. J. : Japanese question, 10, 20. Makino, Nobuaki, baron: Alien land legislation in California. 20. Japan and China, 41. Malcolm. Roy: .'\nti-Japanese legislation in California, 20. Man, Saito: Le Japon et le problemc des races. 10, 37. Markino. Voshio: My experiences in San Francisco. 17. Marquis. Neela: Interracial amity in California, 17. Marsh, A. R.: Japanese imperial mission and relations between I'nited States and Japan, 37, 50. Martin. Newell : Democracy's crusaders in Shantung, 30. Masaoka. N'aoichi: Japan to America, 3, 30, 50. Mason. Gregory: Case of China. 37. Japan and the peace. 37. 'Possum and dinosaur. 17. Spirit of J.ipaii. 37, 41. Matsuyama, Makoto: Japan and the western powers, 8. Maxey, Edwin: Japanese-.Xmcrican relations. 20. Our relations with Jai)an. 46. Wlty we favor Japan in the present war. 24. Merz, Charles: • Illusory promise of Japan. 41. Michaiek, Anthony: Speech. 18. Millard. T. F.: .America in China. 31. America ami Far Eastern question. 28. China's case at the Peace Conference, 37. Democracy and the Eastern question, 4t. (treat war in the Far East. 4L • Japanese menace, 52. JAPANESE-AMERICAN RELATIONS — INDEX OF AUTHORS 63 Millard. T. F. — Continited : New Far East, 23. Our blundering diplomacy in the Far East, 31. Our Eastern question, 28. The powers and the settlement, 24. Shall China be permanently partitioned? 30. Shantung award to Japan. 41. Should America "cooperate" with Japan in China? 34. Cnited States and the Shantung question, 41. Millard's review of the Far East, 2. Miller. H. B.: [Struggle for commercial supremacy of the Japa- nese empire,] 46. Millis, H. A.: California and the Japanese, 17, 20. Immigrants in industries. 10. Japanese problem in the United States, 17. Some of the economic aspects of Japanese immigra- tion, 10. Millman, E. F.: Evils of paternalism, 10. Mills, W. H.: Influence of Japan upon industries of America, 46. Mishima. Taro: Korea's foreign trade development, 26. Mitford. E. B.: Japan's inheritance, 44. Miyakawa. Masuji: Life of Japan. 44. Moore, Frederick: Purpose of Japanese mission to United States, 37. Moore. J. B.: Digest of international law, 3. Morgan, Gerald : Japan's intentions, 53. Morris. J. : Advance Japan, 44. Morse. H. B.: International relations of the Chinese empire, 28. Munro, D. G. : Prospects in Manchuria, 46. Murray. David: Story of Japan, 3, 6. Mussey. H. R.; American bugbear, 50. Neglected realities in the Far East, SO, 53. Nakashima. K. : Development of Japan's iron industry, 44. N Nevada. • — Legislature: Petition. 14. New China review, 2. New East, 2, New York Japan review, 2. Newlands. F. G. : Western view of the race question, 10. Newton, J. K.: Japanese treaty revision, 8. Obligations of United States to initiate a revision of treaties between western powers and Japan, 8. Ngan, C. K.: Present condition of the Bank of China, 34. Nicholson, S. : How America opened Japan to trade. 6. Nind. J. N.: Study of trade conditions in the Orient, 46. Nitobe, Inazo: American influences in the Far East, 54. American-Japanese intercourse prior to the advent of Perry, 5. Intercourse between United States and Japan, 5, 6. Japan and internationalism, 50. Japanese nation, 3, 44. Noguchi, Yone: Naturalization of Japanese. 14. Stories of my western life, 17. Norman, Sir Henry: Peoples and politics of the Far East, 23, 44. Norris, G. \V. : Remarks on transfer of Shantung to Japan, 41. Nutting. H. C: Immigration from the Orient, 17. Ohira. Chugo: Does Japan menace the United States? 52, Okuma, Shigenubu, count: Fifty years of new Japan. 44. Japan's policy in China, 23. Gudin, M. A.: Trade possibilities of the Far East, 46. When China sits at the Peace Conference, 37. Overlach. T. W.; Foreign financial control in China, 34. Ozaki, Y.; Misunderstood Japan, 10. P..F. K.: Violation of open door by China, 30. P., J. B.: New loan forecasts extension of China-American trade, 34. P., L.: Die Vereinigten Staaten von Nordamerika gegen Japan, 52. Pages. Leon : Bibliographic japonaise, 1. Palmer. A. H.: Documents. . .illustrating origin of mission to Japan, 5. Paullin, C. O.: Diplomatic negotiations of American naval offi- cers. 5, 6. Peabody, F. G.: California and Japan, 17, 52. Nagging the Japanese, 20. Peffer, Nathaniel: Shantung once more, 41. Pelley, W. D. : Siberia, with the lid off, 37. Perkins, G. C. : Pacific coast and the Orient, 10, 56. Phelan, J. D. : Japanese evil in California, 17. Japanese question from a Californian stand- point, 17. Pio. Augusta H.: Exclude Japanese labor, 14. Pitkin. W. B.: Must we fight Japan? 10, Pitt. H. M.: Philippines and American opportunities for trade expansion, 56. Playfair : Report of trade of Nagasaki for 1907, 47. Poindexter, John: Menace of Japan, 25. Stamping out the sparks in Japan, 52. Pooley. A. M.: Japan at the cross-roads, 44. Japan's foreign policies, 23. Porter, R. P.: Full recognition of Japan, 44. Japan, the new world-power, 31, 44. Japan; the rise of a modern power, 24, 44. 64 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY Powell, J. B.: Arc China and Japan going into financial partner- ship? U. Chinese business men — and some others, 47. Dangers of "hyphenating" America's foreign trade, 47. First experiment in American-Chinese Japanese co- operation, 47. Japan's plan to control Pacific shipping, 47. Japancse-.Vmerican cooperation on a new basis, 47. Will China emerge from the war a subject nation? 34. Vap island, America, and Shanghai, 37. Powers, F. P. : Shantung question, 41. Prautch, .\. \V.: Helping Philippine farmers to help themselves. 56. Presbyterian Mission: Report on atrocities in Korea committed by Japan. 26. Prescott, C. L. ; Time for foreign intervention has arrived, 30. Prosser. \V. T. : Western view of the Japanese. 11. Rea. G. B.: .America's Far Eastern muddle. 23. .Vmerican trade sacrificed to ideals. 47. Deans. 31. Democratic dollar diplomacy, 34. Heart to heart talk with the editors of Japan, 23. Inwardness of the new consortium, 34. Japan dominates China's finances, 34. laiian, the F.ngland of the Far East. 44. japan's burden and China's opportunity, 23. Japan's place in the sun, 52. Neutral thoughts on neutralization of Shantung, 41. Neutralization, extension, or coercion? 31. New -Xmerican diplomacy in the Far East, 23. Nippon ueber alles? 52. Philippine problem. 56. Problem of the races. 11. Railway loan agreements and their relation to the open door. 34. Relation of China to war in Europe. 30. Shall .\merica fight for China or co-operate with Japan? 52. Status of Shantung railway, 41. Struggle for an empire. 31. Szechuan railroad loan and the State Depart- ment, 34. Violation of "open door" by China, 30. Read.T. T.: Mineral production of China, 47. ^ Need for coal and iron determine Japan's policy in t'bina. 2S. Redfield. W. C: America's export trade, 47. Rcid, Gilbert: China and the peace settlement, 37. Does might make right? 41. Japanese diplomatic tactics, 41. Reid, Hugh: Senate and the smoke screen. 41. Reinsch. P. S.: Japan and Asiatic leadership, 25. World politics, 23. Remer, C. F.: .•\n alternative, 34. American opinion and the Anglo-Japanese alli- ance, 25. Richard. Timothy: Some forces in modern China, 28. Ridge. W.S.: Is Anglo. .\merican trade with China threatened by Japan? 47. Ri.lgely. H. C. : .\re the Japanese unfriendly? 20. Rittcr. W. E. : Problems of population of north Pacific area. 11. Robinson. E. E.. and V. J. West: Foreign policy of Woodrow Wilson. 20. Robinson. J. T. : Remarks on Shantung question, 41. Roosevelt. Theodore: Japanese question, 11, President Roosevelt's message, 11. What the Japanese have stood for in the world war. 37. Root. Elihu: Real questions under Japanese treaty and the San Francisco school board resolution, 18. Rosett. Joshua: Prussians of the eastern world. 37. Rossiter. W. S. : First -\merican imperialist. 6. Rounsevelle. Royce: Japanese bugaboo, 50. Rousseau. V. : Japan and the Philippines. 56. Rowell. C. H. : Chinese and Japanese immigrants, 14. Japanese in California, 17. Orientophobia, 14. Russell, Lindsay, editor: America to Japan, 3, 50. Co-operation with Japan in China, 47. Satoh, Henry: Past and present of Japanese emigration policy, 11. Scanlan, J. M. : Japanese invasion, 11. Schcrer, J. A. B.: Japanese crisis, 11, 17. Scholefield. G. H.: Pacific, its past and future, 54. Scholz, E. M.: .\merican business meets keen competition in its rapid expansion. 47. Schw., F. : Die beiden GrossmSchte im Stillen Ozean, 54. Scidmore, G. H. : Reforms and progress in Korea, 26. Trade and industries of Chosen, 26. Scudder, Doremus: .Kmerica's paramount interest in China, i2. Japan and China. 41. What does Japan think of the t«nsing-Ishii agree- ment? 32. What is a "white"? 14. Seaman. I.. I-.: Shall the treaty of peace be one of justice or one of infamy? 41. Seitz. D. C: Japanese overload, 44. Selden, C. A.: California wants to expel Japanese even at risk of war. 17. Sewall. J. S.: Log book of the cnptain's clerk. 6. Sh.ickford. Martha H.: Japanese students at Wellesley College, 50. Shastri. H. P.: China and Japan, 50. China, Japan. Korea, and the war. 26. Economic development of Japan. 44. Japan and allied intervention in Siberia. 37. Japanese situation in north China and Korea. 26. Pan-.\sianism in Japan. 53. What the rest of .\sia thinks of Japan. 53. Why Japan is apprehensive regarding the Peace Conference, 37. JAPANESE-AMERICAX RELATIONS — INDEX OF AUTHORS 65 Sherrill. C. H.: Korea and Shantung versus the white peril, 23. Shibusawa, Eiichi, baron: America and Japan, 17, 34. Japanese commercial commission, 34, 47. Shidehara, Kijuro: Japanese American relations, 51. Speech, 42. Simmons, F. H.: Speech, 14. Simpson, B. L. : Background to the problem of China, 47. Coming struggle in eastern Asia, 31, 44, 54. If Japan refuses? 23. Our solution of the Manchurian problem, 31. Truce in the East, 24. Truth about China and Japan, 24. Why England is watching the Ishii mission, 38. Singh, Saint Xihal: Asiatic emigration, a world question, 11. Asiatic view of Japan's world, 53. Asiatic view of Japan's world menace, 26, 3l. Smith. Goldwin : World menace of Japan, 11. Snow, A. H.: Shantung question and spheres of influence, 42. Snow, Freeman: Treaties and topics in American history, 5. Societe franco-japonaise de Paris: Bulletin, 2. Sokolsky. G. E. : Japanese occupation of Siberia, 3S. Soyeda, Juichi. and T. Kamiya: Survey of the Japanese question in California, 20. Spartali, John: Ametique et Japon, 52. Stead, Alfred, editor: Japan by the Japanese, 44. Racial prejudice against Japan, 11, 52. Steffens. Lincoln: California and the Japanese, 17. Steiner. J. F.: Japanese invasion, 11. Stevens, D. W. : Relations of Japan to other nations, 5, 54. Stewart, C. W. : Early American visitors to Japan, 5. Story, R. McC: Oriental immigration into the Philippines, 56. Stowell. E. C: Policy of United States in the Pacific, 14, 30. Sumner. Helen L.: See Adams, T. S., and Helen L. Sumner. Sunderland. J. T. : Rising Japan, 51. Taft, W. H.: Article relative to Shantung provision of peace treaty, 42. Japan and her relations with the United States, 51. Takamine. Jokichi: American and Japanese co-operation, 42. Japan and America, bulwarks of peace, 47, 52. Takatoki, Hirata: Development of shipyards of Nippon, 44. Takeshita, Isamu: Problem of the Pacific, 51. Tardieu, Andre: Le Japon et les Etats-Unis. 17. Notes sur les £tats-Unis, 17. Taylor, E. E. : China's foreign trade in 1917, 47. Thomson, W. H.: San Francisco and the Japanese. 19. Tilden. Freeman: The little brown man in the golden west, 17. Tillotson, W. D.: Trade of Japan, 47. Tomes, Robert: Perry's expedition to Japan, 6. Tomimas, Sbutaro: Open-door policy and territorial integrity of China, 30. Tong. H. K.: Alien forces working against China's unifica- tion, 35. American money and Japanese brains in China, 35. American protests against Chinese trading monop- oly, 47. American-Russian-Chinese co-operation in Siberia? 35. Bolsheviks and the Chinese Eastern Railway, 38. China and allied intervention in Siberia, 38. China and the international banking consortium, 35, China, Japan and the Siberian question, 38. China's conditions at the Peace Conference, 38. Driving .American and European business out of Manchuria, 47. Efforts to raise China's "moratorium." 35. "Gold" scheme will make China a Japanese colony. 35. Has Japan agreed to the American banking con- sortium proposal? 35. How the consortium may solve the loan problem, 35. How Japan's policy is undermining her position in China. 24. Industrial development can save China, 47. Japan. China, and American money. 35. Japan completing financial control of China. 35. Japan must cooperate with Allies in Siberia, 38. Japanese efforts to gain control of Chinese banks. 35. Only economic pressure will bring Japan into the consortium. 35. Pan-Mongolism threatens China, 54. Peking to issue $80,000,000 gold notes, 35. Resurrection of Shantung question, 42. Serious political situation in China, 42. Shantung, the "Alsace-Lorraine" of the Orient, 42. Significance of China's refusal to sign the peace treaty, 42. Significance of Japan's refusal to join the consor- tium. 35. What Japan really wants of China, 30. Why not arbitrate the China trouble? 24. Trans-Pacific, 2. Treat, P. J.: Early diplomatic relations between United States and Japan, 5, 7. Japan and America, 51. Japanese in America, 17. Return of the Shimonoseki indemnity, 7. Tsushima. S. : Joaquin Miller and Japan, 51. Turner. T. F.: Chinese and Japanese labor in the Mountain and Pacific states, 11. Uchida, Yasuya, viscount: Plain facts on Shantung, 42. Uenoda, Setsuo: When East meets East, 24. Ukita: Sino-Japanese relations, 28. United States. — Census Bureau: Chinese and Japanese in United States. 11. United States. — Commerce and Labor Department: Regulations relating to coming of Japanese and Korean laborers, H. 66 THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY United States. — Commission on International £>• change: Stability of international exchange, 47. United States. — Congress: Visiting war missions to United States, 3S. United States. — Foreign Affairs Committee (House): Japanese indemnity fund, 7. L'nited States and the Orient, 24. United States. — Foreign Relations Committee (Senate): ^ Preservation and protection of fur seals, 47. United States. — Immigration Bureau: ImmiKration of Japanese, II. Importation of Japanese laborers, 11. United States. — Immigration and Naturalization Committee (House): Japanese immigration. 11. United States. — Navy Department: Imprisoned American seamen, 5. Letter... in relation to Japanese [in the Naval Academy], S. Message. . .transmitting. . .correspondence relative to naval expedition to Japan, 6. Narrative of expedition of American squadron to China seas and Japan, 6-7. United States. — President: Neutrality — Russia and Japan, 25. Special message., .on situation affecting Japanese in San Francisco, 17. United States. — Section of Foreign Markets: Treaty of Shimonoseki and our possibilities of trade. 48. United States. — Senate: Treaties between Japan and Hawaii, 56. Visit of Imperial Japanese Mission to Washington's tomb, 38. United States. — State Department: Frank Epps, 5. Information regarding appointments in student- interpreter corps, 48. Japanese indemnity fund, 7. Japanese pupils to West Point, 5. Killing of Frank Epps, 5. Land at Magdalena bay, 55. Lan