INDEX 



369 



Kelley, O. H., conceives idea of Grange, 

 40; southern tour, 41; secretary of 

 National Grange, 42; starts organiz- 

 ing trip, 43; establishes granges on 

 way to Minnesota, 45; organizes 

 granges in Minnesota, 46; gets order 

 under way, 47-50; transfers Grange 

 headquarters to Washington, 49; 

 takes up anti-monopoly agitation, 53; 

 organizes Illinois and Indiana state 

 granges, 54; organizes South Carolina 

 and Mississippi State Granges, 55; 

 organizes Vermont State Grange, 56; 

 calls sixth session National Grange, 

 57; re-elected secretary National 

 Grange, 58; defends Boston Grange, 

 62; founds Degree of the Golden 

 Sheaf, 109; attitude on Grange 

 cooperation, 239, 241, 242 note i, 

 256; recommends fraudulent commis- 

 sion firm, 257; preserves Grange 

 correspondence, 317; death, 40 note 2; 

 "Early Struggles of the Grange," 

 338; " Grange History; Personal 

 Reminiscences," 338; Patrons of 

 Husbandry, 40 note i, 317, 338. 



Kentucky, benefited by free tobacco, 

 116; railroad legislation, 204; bibliog- 

 raphy, 319, 325, 335, 350. 



Kentucky Patrons of Husbandry, early 

 correspondence, 50; first grange, 51, 

 56; statistics, 58 ff.; growth, 59; 

 state grange organized, 63; business 

 agency, 253; manufacturing, 269. 



Keokuk (la.), meeting of Mississippi 

 Valley granges, 112. 



Kerr, Congressman, minority report on 

 interstate commerce, 215 note 4. 



Kewanee (Ill.)> farmers' convention, 



75- 



Kirk, T. H., Minnesota, 334. 



Knights of Labor, organized, 307; plat- 

 form, 308; bibliography, 337, 339. 



Koerner, Gustav, Illinois railroad com- 

 missioner, 136; charged with favoring 

 railroads, 137 note i. 



Kupka, P. F., Die Verkehrsmittel in den 

 Vereinigten Staaten, 345. 



Labor organizations, influence of Granger 

 movement, 306-308; bibliography, 



3i7, 324, 33i, 335, 337, 339- 

 La Follette, R. M., Railway Regulation, 



345- 



Lamar, Justice, upholds Granger deci- 

 sion, 213. 



Lamb, Brief in Wisconsin vs. North- 

 western Railway, 349. 



Lamb, D. C, Wisconsin railroad com- 

 missioner, 194. 



Land, grants to railroads, 10, 166; availa- 

 bility, 25; homestead law, 26; acreage 

 devoted to staples (1866-80), 28-34; 

 bibliography, 331, 332, 346. 



Langstroth, C. S., Railway Cooperation, 



345- 



Larrabee, William, comments on Iowa 

 Granger law, 173; 235; Railway 

 Question, 345. 



" Last Railroad Grievance," 346. 



" Latest Device for Fixing Rates of 

 Transportation," 345. 



" Latest Reform Movement," 345. 



Lawrence, C. B., chief -justice Illinois, 

 declares railroad law unconstitutional, 

 32, 142; candidate for re-election, 84; 

 defeated, 85, 144; attorney for rail- 

 road, 85 note 4, 188; Brief in Wiscon- 

 sin vs. Northwestern Railway, 348. 



Lawrence, Jonathan, organizes Grange 

 in Vermont, 51. 



Lawrence v. Chicago and Northwestern 

 railroad, 210. 



Lawyers, in politics, 35; join Grange, 71. 



Lea, C. W., The Grange Movement in 

 Wisconsin, 341. 



Leavitt, Samuel, Township Cooperation, 

 350. 



"Legal fares," fanners' attempt to 

 enforce, 144. 



Legislative Farmers' Club (111.), organ- 

 ized, 131; influence, 143, 145 note 3, 

 158. 



Legislative Farmers' Club (Mo.), 195. 



Leland, F. R., " Second Stage of Wis- 

 consin Railroad Legislation," 348. 



Liberal Reformer (Morris, 111.), 323. 



