Yin Chang, General, [62]
Young China Party, [242-3], [245]
Yu Hsien, massacres missionaries, [272]
Yuan-Ch'ang, executed for saving Europeans, [271]
Yuan-Shih-Kai, [39-40], [75-7], [93]; his letter to General Li, [94-5]; promises a Constitutional Government and abolition of the Manchu princedoms, [95]; his army, [97]; Li's appeal to him, [103-06]; [117-18], [125]; his plea for a monarchy, [135]; official statement, [159-61]; negotiations at the Peace Conference, [113-15]; [190], [196]; proclaimed President, but loses hold in Pekin, [213]; character-sketch of, [221-2]; "Yuan the Reformer," [223]; forms the Model Army, [224]; betrays the Emperor, [225]; the first man in China, [226]; his fall, [227]; recalled to Pekin as Prime Minister, [228]; to form a Reform Government, [229]; in favour of limited monarchy, [229], [233]; an enigma, [234]
Yunnan, Mohammedan rebellion in, [248], [267]
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