Philadelphia, Philobiblon Club of, [3] The Free Library of, [3], [4] its Finding lists, [3]

Philippina, historical character of earliest, [25] literary curios among, [8], [24]

Philippine archipelago conquered, 1565, [23] characters, diagrams of, first published, [26] dialects, and Capt. Cook, [6] some authorities on, [8], [16]

Philippines, Aeta a mother tongue in, [7] bibliography of, [5] Blanco’s Flora of, [10] books in Free Library, [3], [4] Concepción’s history of, [10] Fauna of, by Elera, [10] first printing outfit from Japan, [35] first publication discussed, [25] folk-lore in, [12] geology of, [11] historical geography of, by Velarde, [10] introduction of printing into, [8], [32] languages enumerated, [5], [6] manuscript history of, 1581–1606, described, [36] map of, [10] Martínez-Vigil states order of St. Augustine furnished first printers to, [36] most valuable works on, [9] periodicals, one hundred and sixty, [25] printing-presses in, [8], [27] religious missions in, [10] Retana’s catalogue of Philippine literature, [3] list of early presses, [31] list of printers, [31] rites, etc., of aborigines of, [13] sources of information concerning, [8] statistics relating to, [11] surviving forms of heathenism in, [12] total number of islands unknown, [7] Velarde published earliest topographical map of, [10] Vera, Juan de, first printer in, [35] works of reference bearing on, [8]

Philippinians, how far civilized, [8] kin with Central Americans, [22]

Philobiblon Club, paper read before, [3]

Pinpin, Tomás, a native Tagal printer, [27], [31] alleged printer of Arte y Reglas, [33] Devocion Tagalog, printed by, [21] Diccionario printed by, [31] first Spanish-Japanese Dictionary printed by, [27] Retana authority for work printed at Binondo, by, [28]

Polynesia, history of, by Combés, [9] its early civilization, [23] languages in Western, [6] many languages used in, [22]

Polynesians, rites practised among, [13]

Ponapé, a dialect of Yap, [6] used in Philippines, [6]