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note) Mahone, General William, 232 Manufactures, _see_ Industries Maryland, as Southern State, 5; Grange in, 32; fertilizer industry, 100; manufactures, 104; free from lynchings, 154-55; school fund (1813), 158 (note); foreign born in, 193; surplus of wheat (1917), 199; Catholics in, 214; churches, 214 Massachusetts leads in cotton products, 98 Meharry Medical College, 179 Methodist Church, 214, 215-216 Mills, R.Q., of Texas, 29 Mining, 102 Minnesota, manufactures, 104-05 Mississippi, negro majority in, 10; new constitution (1890), 49; suffrage, 49-50; lumbering, 100; lynchings in, 155; school fund, 158 (note); mixed schools in, 160--61; bonds as part of Peabody Fund, 167; industrialism, 193; foreign born in, 193-194; Catholics in, 214; debt, 227 Missouri, not included in South, 5; Grange in, 32; election (1896), 44; tobacco industry, 103; woman suffrage, 202 Missouri Compromise and sectionalism, 16 Morrison, W.R., 29 Mountaineers. 14-16 Nashville (Tenn.), Peabody Normal College, 169; Me-harry Medical College, 179; Vanderbilt University, 188 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, _Thirty Years of Lynching_ (1919), 154 (note) National Farmers' Alliance and Cooperative Union of America, 34 Negroes, suffrage, 2, 18-19, 21,45, 48, 49, 50-55, 202-03; distribution of, 10; in mountain counties, 15; support Federal officials, 17; sent to Congress, 20; relation of races, 22, 129 _et seq_.; fear of domination wanes, 30; not admitted to Grange, 32; politics in North Carolina, 45; segregation, 57; use of drugs, 59; as share tenants, 67; opportunity for, 71; in furniture factories, 122; in tobacco factories, 124-25; in textile industry, 126-27; personal characteristics, 126-127,135; occupations, 127, 133-37; unorganized, 127-128; increase in numbers, 130-32; migration to North, 132-33, 156,197; farm owners, 134; illiteracy, 137-139, 166; treatment in North, 139-40; treatment in South, 140 _et seq_.; "old-time negro," 142-43; "new negro," 142, 143-44; educated, 144-47; and Great War, 149; mulattoes, 150; and lower classes of whites, 150-51; lynchings, 151-55; plans for solution of problem, 155-156; problem in South Africa, 156; education, 160-63, 164, 171-72, 173-84; criminals and dependents, 204-05, 220-223; bibliography, 238-40 New England, mill machinery from, 90; mills build Southern branches, 92; Southern wages compared with, 110-111 New Orleans, Exposition
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