3^0 



GENERAL INDEX 



Industry — Continued. 



Engineering in industrial works, 



(W. D. Ennis) Ill 257 



Fundamental concept of Ill 259 



Speed of, in U. S. and England. Ill 248 

 Engineers, and consolidation of 



capital Ill 258 



As managers Ill 257 



England, early dependence on. ...Ill 34 



Glory gone Ill 285 



Espionage, American system of . . .Ill 253 

 Foreign relations, early in- 

 crease of Ill 34 



Foundry scene, a typical Ill 264 



French- American school Ill 309 



Furnace, forge and shop, (Day 



Allan Willey) Ill 264 



Future of integration of Ill 74 



German view of American IV 55 



Girls employed in American Ill 295 



Gladstone on American VII 271 



Government control favored, 



early Ill 43 



Government, and early Ameri- 

 can Ill 10 



Growth, early, of insurance Ill 35 



Hereditary class, no Ill 308 



Independence, national, in Ill 311 



Individual citizenship and Ill 319 



Industrial future of U. S., (F. A. 



Vanderlip) Ill 475 



Integration of, (W. F. WUlough- 



by) Ill 63 



Three phases of Ill 64 



Intelligence, dependent on Ill 305 



Iron and steel, uncertainty of Ill 279 



Kentucky, settlement of Ill 12 



Labor organizations, future of. ...Ill 326 



Part of, m Ill 94 



American, unskilled Ill 250 



Laborers and land Ill 288 



Leaders, American, hard workers. .Ill 247 



Legislative remedies Ill 319 



Locomotives, British and Ameri- 

 can Ill 296 



London Spectator on Ameri- 

 can IV 54 



Times on American IV 53 



Lumber, American Ill 383 



Machinery, American advantage 



in Ill 294 



Replacing new with newer Ill 297 



Manager, typical American Ill 245 



Manufacture as an engineering 



proposition Ill 259 



Manufacturers, boldness of Amer- 

 ican Ill 288 



American, the first generation. .Ill 286 

 Evils of the second generation. . Ill 286 



Moral rights in Ill 312 



Mulhall on American VII 271 



Napoleonic wars, and American.... Ill 29 



Industry — Continued. 



Nationalities in American Ill 254 



Oil, consolidation of Ill 72 



Order, need of, in all depart- 

 ments Ill 273 



Organizers, American, due to Ill 248 



Character of American Ill 246 



Our industrial position in the 



world, (Henry Gannett) Ill 1 



Paris exposition, industrial edu- 

 cation at Ill 306 



Patent office, superiority of 



American Ill 290 



Pennsylvania, settlement of 



western Ill 12 



Pioneers of American, (G. S. 



Callender) Ill 8 



Policies, early American Ill 9 



Political supremacy, American 



and Ill 302 



Production, general, increased. . ..Ill 301 



Individual Ill 312 



Promoter, work of, in, (E. S. 



Meade) Ill 231 



Railroads backward in consolida- 

 tion Ill 74 



Development of early American. Ill 26 



Planned, early western Ill 27 



Republic, dangers of the Ill 310 



Rights, legal and moral Ill 313 



Rolling mill, drama of the Ill 265 



Rosebery, Lord, on American IV 54 



School, American supremacy 



and the public Ill 303 



Schools, French commercial .. ..Ill 306-7 



Servants, good, in American Ill 249 



Share in, of capital, superintend- 

 ence and labor Ill 93 



Shirking prevented Ill 253 



Shoes, British and American Ill 296 



Social improvement, importance 



of Ill 346 



Social remedies Ill 320 



South, post-bellum growth of 



in Ill 372 



Speculation in, early Ill 39 



State aid after civil war Ill 41 



Steel consolidation, history of Ill 65 



( See also production) 



Steel corporation and integra- 

 tion Ill 64 



Steel trust and Carnegie com- 

 pany Ill 69 



Expansion of Ill 09 



Future of Ill 71 



Last phase of HI 68 



Schwab on the Ill 68 



Strike, coal, of 1902. general 



demoralization following. . . Ill 323 



Losses in 1902 Ill 323 



Strikes accomplish nothing Ill 315 



And treason Ill 324 



