340 



GENERAL INDEX 



Cotton marhiuery— Continued. 



History V 129 



Lint, preparing V 133 



Cotton seed V 115 



Allied industries V 124 



Appreciation of V 35 



By-products V 119 



"Calte" V 120 



"Calce," value of V 121 



Capital invested V 1 23 



Cliemical analysis V 120 



Consumption, American V 120 



Consumption, foreign and Amer- 

 ican V 127 



Control of, American V 125 



Distribution, geograpliical, of 



industry V 122 



Exports V 123 



Exports of products V 121 



Fertilizer V 1 23 



Food for cattle V 119 



Food, as human V 118 



Forei^rn buyers, special, of V 126 



Growth of industry V 116 



History, early V 115-16 



Hulls, value of V 120 



Industry, C. M. Daugherty V 115 



Abroad V 125 



Oil a substitute for lard V 118 



Oil, manufacture of V 120 



Percentage of crop utilized V 124 



Products of, uses of V 117 



Stability of industry V 123 



Statistics of industry V 122 



Wages ui industry of V 123 



Cows (see dairying) 



Courtright, Mortimer W 



Telegraplis, on recent progress 



of IV 480 



Court. Supreme 



American System of, the, and 

 what it acomplishes, (Simeon 



E. Baldwin) II 76 



Constitution, and members of, 



in II 62, 91 



Sugar trust decision Ill 208 



Coimtryman, Wm. A 



Watchmaking VII 351 



Crampton, Charlotte I 309 



Crawford, Marion I 365 



Cream (see dairying) 



Creelman, James 



New York's subways IV 451 



Crime 



Jails, scliools for X 256 



Legal aspect of, m cities, in state. 



In nation II 109 



Lynchings X 134 



Minor, too severely punished X 256 



Negroes and X 133 



Pauperism, percentage of. to 

 criuie X 137 



Crime — Continued. 



Prisons, good done by X 260 



piu-pose of X 258 



Races and X 134 



Railroads and IV 245 



Reformatory methods, evolution 



of, (L. D. Drake) X 262 



Statistics of in Cliicago and 



Illinois Ll i09 



(See also cities) 



Criminals 



Manual training and VIII 424 



Normal men and X 41 



Crockard, Frank H 



Blast furnaces VI 87 



Crocker, F. B 



Advantages of electric motive 

 power VII 228 



Crops 



Value of Ill 480 



(See also agricultiu-e, farmers) . . 



Crothers. Tliomas Davidson 



Drunkenness X 176 



Crown Point horror VI 21 



Crowell, Jno. Franklin 



American primacy in iron and 



steel VI 112 



Sliipbuilding, present and future 

 of American IV 129 



Crozat, AntoLne 



Louisiana charter granted II 268 



Crozier. Alfred O 



Expansion of organized cliarity . . .X 18 



Cruger, Mrs. Van Renssalaer I 366 



Cruisers (see navy, the) 



Crystal, rock VI 339 



Cuba 



American, machuiery, in VII 201 



As means to Latm trade IV 63 



Cause of Spanish war IX 65 



Charities II 309 



Commerce of II 311 



Cotton and IV 14 



Death rate, changes in II 304 



Education II 306 



Improved in II 305 



Foreign policy, effect of on II 127 



Foreign relations and II 199 



Hospitals II 310 



Industry of, revived II 307 



Prisons II 306 



Railroads II 310 



Rations distributed to poor of II 303 



Rights of II 202 



Sanitation II 303 



Soldiers, relief of Cuban II 303 



Spain notified to vacate II 200 



Tariff reduced II 308 



Tobacco and sugar II 307 



What U. S. has done for, (C. R. 



Edwards) .II 302 



