364 



INDEX 



Grain, see Cereal production. 



Grain sacks, efforts to secure reduced 

 prices, 60. 



Grain trade, monopoly in California, 8; 

 regulation in Illinois, 130, 134. See 

 also Warehouse regulation. 



Grand State Alliance of Texas, 303. 



Grange (Order of Patrons of Husbandry), 

 inception, 40; degrees, 43; methods 

 of organization, 48; growth, 40-63; 

 financial advantages made prominent, 

 52; national character, 57; control 

 passes to farmers, 57; table of statis- 

 tics, 58 ff.; eligibility, 58, 62; negroes 

 excluded, 59, 74 notei; maps illus- 

 trating status, opposite 61, 65, 67, 69; 

 platform, 63-65; constitution revised, 

 65; culmination, 66; great enter- 

 prises, 67-69; decline, 67, 69, 122, 

 226, 230, 244, 260, 262; causes of 

 decline, 70-73; present membership, 

 70; features objected to, 74; influence 

 on: railroad regulation, 96 note 3, 

 144, 158, 160, 162 note 2, 168-170, 175, 

 181, 186, 190, 192-204, 218, 223-230; 

 state legislation, 102-108; national 

 legislation, 108-122; other agricul- 

 tural organizations, 302, 303; labor 

 organizations, 306, 307 non-political 

 character, 82, 108; attitude toward: 

 public education, 103, 291; financial 

 questions, 104-106, 114-117; currency 

 expansion, 114; tariff, 115; tobacco 

 tax, 116; agricultural colleges, 291- 

 293 advocates: political reform, 106, 

 120; reduction of transportation rates, 

 HI; canals, HI; increased railroad 

 facilities, 113; department of agricul- 

 ture, 117; patent reforms, 118-120 

 methods of influencing Congress, no; 

 cooperative enterprises, 238-278; local 

 business agencies, 239-241, 243, 244, 

 248; state agencies, 241-255; national 

 cooperative schemes, 256-259; coop- 

 erative stores, 250-267; manufactur- 

 ing, 269-271; banking, 271; insur- 

 ance, 273; failure of cooperation, 274- 

 277; original purposes, 279; fosters: 



social life, 280; reading, 287; agricul- 

 tural fairs, 293; immigration, 297 

 position of women in, 281; removes 

 sectional prejudices, 281-283; relief 

 work, 283-285; arbitration of disputes, 

 285; character of local meetings, 

 285, 286 note i ; newspapers, 288-290, 

 321-329; schools, 291; crop statistics, 

 294-296; attempts to limit cotton 

 crop, 296; interest in temperance, 297; 

 lessons of ritual, 299; helps build 

 Washington monument, 299; encamp- 

 ment at Centennial exposition, 300; 

 later career, 302; bibliography, 317- 

 341. See also National Grange, and 

 under separate states. 



Grange (Terra Haute, Ind.), 324. 



Grange Advance (Red Wing, Minn.), 326. 



" Grange and the Potter Law," 349. 



Grange Bulletin (Cincinnati, O.), 327. 



Grange Bulletin (Wellborn, Fla.), 322. 



Grange Correspondent and Dry-Goods 

 Reporter (St. Louis, Mo.), 326. 



Grange Journal (Humboldt, Tenn.), 328. 



Grange Monitor (Mo.), 326. 



Grange Outlook (Knoxville, Tenn.), 328. 



Grange Record (Louisville, Ky.), 290, 325. 



Grange Reporter (Tyler, Tex.), 328. 



Grange Review (Salem, Neb.), 326. 



Grange Standard (Detroit, Mich.), 325. 



Grange Visitor (Schoolcraft, Mich.), 289, 



325. 



Grange Visitor and Farmers 1 Monthly 

 Magazine (Springfield, O.), 327. 



Granger (Brownville, Neb.) , 326. 



Granger (St. Anne, III.), 323. 



Granger cases in United States Supreme 

 Court, 143, 152, 161, 206-214; prop- 

 ositions established, 211; effect of 

 decisions, 237. 



" Granger Collapse," 346. 



" Granger Decisions," 346. 



Granger laws, referred to, 82, 85, 96, 99, 

 loo, 123; Illinois, 123-158; Minne- 

 sota, 159-166; Iowa, 166-179; Wis- 

 consin, 179-194; Missouri, 194-196; 

 general principles, 204; tested in Su- 

 preme Court, 206-214; effect on rates, 



