GENERAL INDEX 



383 



Pineapples 



American industry V 247 



Florida V 248 



Pioneers 



American, early IV 270 



TarilV, and 1 V uts 



Pipe linos (see petroleum, Htamluid 

 oil, natural gas) 



Pipestone VI 338 



Pistols (see guns) 



Pitkins, tlie 



Watdi malvers VII 353 



Pitt, William (of Pendeford) 



Reaping macliine of V 73 



Pittsburg 



Center of the world of steel VI 166 



Pius, fund 



Hague, referred to II 222 



Plantations 



Labor and VIII 248 



Plaster of Paris VI 410 



Plaster (see gypsum) 



Plasterers 



Conditions of VIII 21 



Platinum 



(David T. Day) VI 297 



History and production VI 297 



Piatt. O. H 



Patent laws VII 384 



Players (see theaters) 



Plums 



Burbank's VII 108 



Pl\mger, submarine boat IX 300 



Pneumatic macliinery (see com- 

 pressed air) 



Poe, Edgar Allan I 357 



Poisons (see adulteration, and medi- 

 cines, patent) 



Police 



Appointment of, in cities II 430 



City, lot of policeman in 11 116 



Factory acts and VIII 77 



Foreigner aversion of, to II 117 



Regulations of, limit of II 120 



Policies. American political 



(Charles \V. Fairbanks) II 392 



Civil service, and 11 408 



Gold and sUver II 408 



Trade and industry, increase of 



under republican II 393 



Political corruption 



Grover Cleveland, on II 4 



Political economy 



America, in VII 93 



Jenks' work VII 95 



U. S.. rise of. in I 90 



Politics 



Nomination by direct vote of the 



people. (R. M. LaFollette) II 397 



Population 



Agriculture and IV 264 



Population— Contlnueil. 



American 



DeiLsity of IV IH 



tJriginjj of I u 



Heterogeneity «jf. .. I 11 



Area and. from I7«0 to luoo. . .11 L'«i7 



<"hicago. nii.MMl. of || ii:j 



Cliina, den.sity of. In. IV IH 



Cilifs. of X I2M 



Incrcaso ainrci 1804 IV 2i:j 



Kentucky. Pennsylvania. Vir- 

 ginia, and Now York, early of. Ill 12 

 Ixjuisiana pur<lia«4f territory, of . II 275 



Me.\ican territory in 1850, of II 2H3 



Peasants a distinct race I 8 



Inferiority of I 7 



Pennsylvania, early I 10 



Race and in U. S I i 



Definition of I g 



Superiority. (K. A. Ross) 1 4H 



Races 



And classes 1 5 



In U. S.. union of . 1 i;i 



Unification of 1 4 



Varieties of world 1 9 



Representation, basis of, in 11 35 



Suicide, race in U. S.. (W. F. 



Wiloo.v) X 207 



Tariff, and 11 316 



The American people, (J. R. 



Commons) I I 



U. S.. early, in 1 1 



Voting populati<jn X 136 



West, increase of , in the Ill 304 



Western cities, early incroaxe 



of. in Ill 21 



( See also suicide, race) 



Porter, Horace 



The American navy IX 268 



Porto Rico 



Charity in II 301 



Conditions of, in 1898 II 208 



Conqui"st of IX 71 



Kducation II 299 



Fruit industry of 11 29« 



Rights of II 202 



Roads of II 2«8 



Strategic value of IX 409 



Sugar and tobacco II 299 



Telegraplis H 298 



Trade, volume of H 299 



What U. S. has done for. (E. 



Maxey) II -«'' 



Post ofllces. high 



Rulfalo arcliitecture I -83 



Postal service 



American, greatest VII 272 



Railroads, and IV -'■»» 



Postmaster general 



Power to make treaties II 211 



Treat, emiHiwered to II 217 



