INDEX 



359 



Cleveland (O.), Greenback convention, 

 98 note 3; branch of Cincinnati 

 Grange Supply House, 262. 



Clinton (Pa.), grange organized, 51. 



Cloud, D. C., Monopolies and the People, 



330- 

 Clubs, organized by farmers, 73-79. 



See also Farmers' clubs. 

 Cochrane, John, address on Potter law, 



190, 192. 



Cokesbury (S. C.), 55- 

 Coleman, Southern Minnesota railroad 



V., 211. 



Coleman, J. A., " Fight of a Man with a 

 Railroad," 343. 



Coleman, N. J., corresponds with Kelley, 

 49. 



Coleman' 's Rural World (St. Louis), ad- 

 vertises Grange, 46; bibliography, 326. 



Collins, Lewis, Kentucky, 325. 



Colorado, Grange statistics, 58 ff., 61; 

 railroad provisions of constitution, 

 198; donation to state grange, 284. 



Colorado Grange (Greely), 322. 



Col ton, E. P., master Vermont State 

 Grange, shows good-will to South, 

 282. 



Columbus (Miss.), grange organized, 51. 



Columbus (O.), attempt to establish 

 grange, 45. 



Coman, Katharine, Industrial History, 



330- 

 Commercial class, triumph in politics, 



34- 



Commission men, California to Liverpool 

 grain trade, 8; opposition to Grange 

 in South, 55; organize granges in New 

 York and Boston, 62; join Grange, 

 171. See also Merchants, Middlemen. 



Commons, J. R., Labor Movement, 1860- 

 80, 317. 



Competition, as a means of regulating 

 railroads, n; between farmers, 61. 



" Condition of Agriculture in the Cotton 

 States," 330. 



Congress, Credit Mobilier, 13; war tariff, 

 21 ; occupation of members, 35; in- 

 fluence exerted by Grange, no, 122; 



appropriates for internal improve- 

 ments, 112; creates department of 

 agriculture, 118; considers regulation 

 of interstate commerce, 214-217; 

 Windom committee investigates trans- 

 portation, 217, 220-222; urged to 

 regulate railroads, 218-220, 223, 226, 

 228, 229; McCrary railroad bill, 222, 

 224-226; Reagan railroad bill, 227- 

 230; interstate commerce act, 230; 

 bibliography, 315. 



" Congress and the Railways," 345. 



Connecticut, Grange statistics, 58 ff., 

 70; Grange cooperative stores, 266; 

 Sovereigns of Industry, 307. 



Connecticut Granges, The, 340. 



Constitution of National Grange, adop- 

 ted, 42; revised, 65; changes demanded, 

 71; provides for visiting the sick, 

 285; enforces kindness to animals, 

 299; bibliography, 317. 



Constitution of Sovereigns of Industry, 

 306. 



Cook, B. C., Brief in Wisconsin vs. 

 Northwestern Railway, 348. 



Cook, H. C., Illinois railroad commis- 

 sioner, 145 note 3. 



Cook, W. W., Corporation Problem, 343. 



Cook County Alliance No. i, 305. 



Cooper, T. V., American Politics, 330. 



Cooperation, beginning of, in Grange, 

 46, 52, 53; advantage of secrecy, 60; 

 needed by farmers, 238; business 

 agencies, 239-259, 276; Rochdale 

 plan, 259, 261-267, 275, 307; stores, 

 260-267, 276, 307; manufacturing, 

 267-270,274; banking, 270; insurance 

 271-273; difficulties, 274-277; ad- 

 vantages, 277; Farmers' Alliance, 

 303; significance, 310; bibliography, 

 316, 349-351. See also under sepa- 

 rate states. 



Cooperative News (New Orleans), 325. 



Corbett, W. W., editor Prairie Farmer, 

 48; letter on railroads, 53. 



Corn, burned for fuel, 14; statistics 

 (1866-80), 28-34. See also Cereal 

 production. 



