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A WEEKLY JOURNAL

DEVOTED TO

POLITICS, LITERATURE, SCIENCE & ART

VOLUME LXX

FROM JANUARY 1, 1900, TO JUNE 30, 1900

NEW YORK

NEW YORK EVENING POST COMPANY

1900

LIBRARY OF THE

LELAND STANFORD JR. UNIVERSITY.

A.46013

SEP 20 1900

INDEX TO VOLUME LXX.,

JANUARY TO JUNE, 1900.

The Week.

AT HOME.

of

appointments
Alabama, Montgomery conference over race prob-
lem, 871-Army brigadier
Gens. Young, MacArthur, and Ludlow, 22-
Armor-plate controversy in Congress, 369.
Boston's fallures in municipal ownership, 176, 469-
Buffalo strike of New York Central employees,
831-William J. Bryan sees gold standard at
work in Wall Street flurry, 23, listened to in
New England on anti-imperialism, 102, more
silverite than his party, 350-George S. Bout-
well on Filipino cheap labor and immigration,
233-Theodore Bacon, deceased, 63-John Bar-
rett draws circles round Manila, 81-E. G.
Bourne on taxing State exports to Porto Rico,
155-Boers, sympathizers with them opposed to
Philippine war, 63, Boer envoys arrive, 371,
rebuffed by the Administration, 391-Barnard
College merged in Columbia, 63-Beef investi-
gating committee's outlay, 330.
Colorado Republicans unite on gold standard, 370-
China, open door in, secured by Secretary Hay,
1, 156, Chinese Minister on the corollary-wel-
come of Chinese here, 81, on the golden rule,
119, on extending Monroe Doctrine to China, 156
-Chicago, drainage canal opened, 2, labor-
unions making concessions, 42, boycotting in
building trades, 176, machinists' strike un-
checked, 215, Mayor Harrison's connivance, 252,
253, 429, building contractors' statement, 292,
talk of abolishing sympathetic strike, 468-
Bourke Cockran ready to support Bryan, 83-
Charles H. Cramp's conflicting statements
about American shipbuilding, 214-Senator Clark
of Montana's resignation trick, 390-Jorge
Cruz's case, 272-Grover Cleveland's Princeton
lectures on the Executive, 292-Cotton yield and
price and Southern indifference to silver, 197-
Currency Bill in conference committee, 156,
defect pointed out by I. Seligman, 176, practi-
cal effect of refunding, 271, circulation per capi-
ta, 351-Chaplains, army, proposal to increase,
2-Census, must be printed in Government Of-
fice, 62-Consular reform bill burked by House
Foreign Affairs Committee, 138.
Congress, LVIth, first session: Pettigrew's call for
Philippine information, Beveridge's defence of
Administration policy, Foraker's plan of gov-
ernment for Porto Rico (Senate), 21-Aldrich's
speech in reporting House Currency Bill, Cul-
lom's bill to amend Interstate Commerce Law
(Senate), 22-Hoar's comment on Beveridge, and
Wolcott's; Beveridge on our noble party work-
ers and on holding Manila for the China trade
(Senate), 41-Vote on Currency Bill fixed, Sa-
moan treaty ratified and recalled, Morgan for
Canal
of Nicaragua
immediate construction
(Senate); McCall's bill regarding personal bag-
gage (House), 61-Debate on Pension Bill, on
supplementary Census Bill, reports on seating
Roberts of Utah (House), 62-Hoar on pro-Boer
resolutions (Senate); Roberts of Utah thrust
out (House), 82-Pettigrew denounced for trea-
son in offering to print Aguinaldo's statement
(Senate), 101-Caffery's speech against retention
of the Philippines (Senate), 102-The Hague
Treaty ratified (Senate), 119-Aldrich's amend-
ment to Currency Bill (Senate), 120-Cullom's
Hawaiian free-trade bill (Senate); Dalzell's
speech on Porto Rico tariff (House). 137, 155,
Littlefield's, Payne's, 155-Hep-
McCall and
burn's Nicaragua Canal report (House), 137-
Quay case taken up (Senate), 157-Porto Rico
tariff bill debate and passage, vote of $2,000,000
to President for the island (House); Davis's
plan to extend constitutional taxation to Porto
Rico (Senate), 175-Porto Rico relief bill passed
213-McClellan's bill to reorganize
(Senate),
army (House), 214-Pettus's chastisement of
Beveridge, Davis against the Porto Rico tariff
(Senate), 251-Army bill debate, cost of Philip-
pine war (House), 252-Morgan for the neutrali-
ty of the Nicaragua Canal, Foraker's Porto
Rican bill passed (Senate), amendments to Ha-
waiian bill (House', 271-Bill for Hawaiian
cable passed (Sen e); vote for constitutional

(Nos. 1801-1826.)

amendment to elect Senators by people (House),
291-Debate on extra compensation to army of-
ficers in Cuba and Philippines, 309-Adverse
report on Senator Clark of Montana (Senate);
Canal
to
amendments
Hepburn Nicaragua
(House), 310-Porto Rico bill passed (both
houses); Industrial Oriental Commission oppos-
ed (House), 329-Quay unseated (Senate), 330-
Nicaragua Canal Bill passed (House), 349-
Lodge makes war on Germany to insure high
prices for armor plate (Senate), 369-Oleomar-
garine debate (House), Grand Army Pension
Bill passed (both houses), 370-Clark of Mon-
tana resigns and is trickily reappointed (Senate),
390-Spooner defends Philippine policy (Senate);
Army Reorganization Bill defeated, Payne's
statement of war taxes and revenue (House),
407-Spooner's Philippine resolutions withdrawn,

427.

CUBA: Gen. Brooke's farewell proclamation dis-
credited, 1-Effort to repeal Foraker amend-
ment, 21-Senate Colonial Committee for an-
nexation, 42-Post-office employees mostly Cu-
bans, 349, frauds of American employees, 369,
889, 427-Havana railroad fraud, 389-Adminis-
tration withholds from Congress expenditures in
Cuba, 389-Allowances to army officers, 408-No
check on Bureau of Finance, 427.
Danish West India Islands, angling for, 176, 350-
Gov.-Gen. Davis revokes his free-trade senti-
ments for Porto Rico, 251-Admiral Dewey's
Presidential candidacy a criticism on McKin-
ley's Philippine policy, 291, withdrawal, 467-
Destiny and Duty dissolve partnership, 101.
Everett, William, neither for McKinley nor for
Bryan, 390-Dorman B. Eaton's bequests to
Harvard and Columbia, 43-Express companies'
receipt stamp, Supreme Court decision on, 293,
French reciprocity treaty's ratification limit ex-
tended, 233.

Griggs, Attorney-General, on our share in adminis-
tering the Orlent, 119-Secretary Gage's revenue
estimate, 271-Rev. P. S. Grant on the Philip-
pine question, 252-Gold "famine" caused by
war in South Africa, 8, gold-bar charges of
Assay Office reduced, 43, gold-standard settle-
ment a loss to Republican capital, 156, 157.
gold exported, 330.

GUAM: Gov. Leary abolishes slavery, 21, and op-
poses drunkenness and class distinctions, re-
turns to U. S., 252.

Hague Treaty ratified by U. S. Senate, 119-Secre-
tary John Hay and the, open door in China, 1-
Mark A. Hanna votes against seating Quay,
Convention in
330, presides at Republican
Philadelphia, 467-Perry S. Heath and the P.
O. deposits in the Seventh National Bank (N.
Y.), 41-Speaker Henderson's letter for Porto
Rican tariff, 251-John B. Henderson on power
of Congress to lay special taxes on Porto Rico,
155-Ex-President Harrison against Porto Rico
tariff, 195, speech at Oecumenical Missionary
Conference, 311-John R. Hazel sells yacht to
U. S., 427, nomination for U. S. judge, 407,
opposed by N. Y. Bar Association, 427-House
of Representatives may be made anti-Imperial,
488, 489.

HAWAII: Cable project in Congress, 291, bill for
government as regards high officeholders, 309,
Sanford B. Dole appointed President by Mc-
Kinley, 350, American voters warn Portuguese
to maintain the republic, 370.
Illinois anti-monopoly aot unconstitutional, 82-
Iowa House against Porto Rico tariff, 233-
on imperial
Indiana Republican Convention
policy, 329, Gov. Mount denies extradition to
Kentucky, 408, 469, Indianapolis Gold Demo-
crat movement, 214-Inheritance tax sustained
by Supreme Court, 369-Industrial Commission
reports on labor legislation, 408.
Japanese rush of immigration to Pacific Coast, 292,
Kentucky, Senator Goebel assassinated, anarchic
condition, 102, resort to courts, 138, 139, 157,
Gov. Taylor denounces courts, 196, Court of
Appeals decision, 272, Supreme Court of U. S.
disclaims jurisdiction, 389, Governor of Indiana
will not extradite Finley or Taylor, 408, 469-

Kansas Court of R. R. Visitation pronounced
unconstitutional, 370-Kansas City street-rail-
way injunction, 390-John A. Kasson on the
French reciprocity treaty, 1, 42.

and

Louisiana, Coalition of regular Democrats

Sugar Republicans, 43-Lowell weavers' strike
recalled, 331-Secretary Long, order creating
navy general staff, 214, candidate for Vice-
President, 407-Gen. William Ludlow's service
Littlefield

E.

in Cuba ended, 235-Charles
unanimously renominated, 292.
Michigan, Pingree administration and war
tracts, 23-Montana Senatorships sold for cash,
42, 103, 138, reported maltreatment of Japan-
ese, 489 Massachusetts Republican
tion on the Philippines, 329, Governor Crane
vetoes attack on civil-service law, 350-Missis
sippi lynching of innocent and guilty, 468, 469
-Montgomery, Ala., conference on race problem,
371-President McKinley allows Assistant Post-
master-General Heath to work for his reëlection,
1, appoints a new Philippine Commission, 119,
knuckles to the protected interests in the case
of Porto Rico, 137, seesaw with Congress over
responsibility, 195, surprise at pressure for of-
fices in Porto Rico, message to repair Porto
Rican law's defects, 309, appoints Dole Governor
of Hawaii, 350, vetoes Navajo Indian Reserva-
tion bill with job in it, 350, nominates J. R.
Hazel U. S. District Judge, 390, 407, attacked
in Methodist General Conference and Presby-
terian Assembly, 408, will not convene Congress
for China crisis, 489-Prof. J. B. Moore on
Isthmian canal and Hay-Pauncefote treaty, 176
-A. O. McGiffert withdraws from Presbyterian
Church, 273-Ex-Gov. MacCorkle at Montgomery
conference, 371-Machinists' unions, N. Y. and
N. J., protests against, 234-Methodist General
Conference on decline of religious journalism,
391, on McKinley's attitude towards liquor-
selling, abolishes time limit in pastorates, ad-
mits women to future conferences, 409.
New York State: Mazet committee report, 43.
State Trust Co.'s loan to Lou Payn, 43, 62, 63,
Roosevelt's breakfast with Platt over Payn's
successor, 62, Francis Hendricks succeeds, 83,
Free Employment Bureau's report, 120, Letter
from W. H. Peckham to Legislature on taxa-
tion, 139, Stewart bill on publication of sui-
cide's papers, 157, Difficult application of tax
on corporation franchises, 196, Bill to regulate
New York's confession of judgments, 196, Bill
to enforce a written contract of marriage, 215,
Tax rate reduced by successive taxes, 273,
Croton dam strike, 311, D. B. Hill on central-
ization of power at Albany, 311, Commission
to revise N. Y. city charter appointed, 330, Ap-
pointment of State appraisers for inheritance
tax a job, 330, 350, cost of collection, 429, Bill
to release school trustees from buying prison-
made goods, 351, Counsel fees in transfer-tax
proceedings, 408; City: Trades unions dictating
employees on tunnel, 83, attempt to force re-
ceiver on Wharf and Warehouse Co., 121, Bar
Association action thwarted, 157, Molineux trial
and conviction, 121, Third Ave. Railroad wreck-
ed by Tammany, 177, Tammany Ice Trust, 428,
469, Reception to Comptroller Coler, 196, Board
of Trade and Chamber of Commerce against
tariff for Porto Rico, 233, Grand jury's present-
ment of District Attorney Gardiner, 253, Anti-
Imperial Conference postpones action, 488, N. Y.
American
"Tribune" on Central and South
trade, 234, certain Cuban and probable
Philippine maladministration, 389-New Jersey
franchise-tax bill, 235-Nebraska Democratic
State convention
platform, 214, Republican
makes Senator Thurston delegate to national
convention, 350, Supreme Court punishes Omaha
canal,
"Bee" for contempt, 468-Nicaragua
Hepburn's report, 137, bill to be postponed, 271,
estimates in
passed by House, 349-Naval
House, 196.
Ohio Republican convention on imperialism, 329-
Oregon goes Republican, 428-Gen. Otis says
everything is for the best in the Philippines,
349.

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