Page:Blackwood's Magazine volume 152.djvu/919

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Index.
909

Church, General Sir R., his capture and execution of the famous brigand chief, Ciro Annichiarico, 717 et seq.

Clothes, 655.

Cookery, ignorance of, prevalent among the British, 190—meaning of, 191.

Co-operation, its effects on the worker, 446—what is implied in the term, ib.—wide extent of the principle of, ib.

Cotton goods, large consumpt of, in America, 10—export of, to European countries, 12—and to Australia, 13—reason assigned by the Manchester manufacturers for the decreasing demand for, in the East, 610—the real cause stated, ib.

Cotton manufacture, the, prosperous condition of, in Lancashire, from 1850 to 1860, 2—disastrous effects of the American war of 1862-65 on, ib. —present state of, 3 et seq.—condition and outlook of, in British India, 13 et seq.

Cotton trade, the, its worth to our country, 284—protective tariffs and, 286-288—and foreign competition, 288.

Criminals in Modern Greece, the Treatment of, 54.

Crown Princess Stephanie's ‘Lacroma,’ notice of, 121.

Curzon, the Hon. G. N., ‘Persia and the Persian Question,’ by, reviewed, 615.

Cyclone of April 29 in Mauritius, 342.

Davis, John, his polar explorations, 842 et seq.

Dead, the Restless, 789.

Decline of Lancashire, the Prospective, 1.

Defoe quoted regarding the great plague and the great fire of London, 739, 742.

Diet of the Lowland Scots in the last century, 483, 484.

Divination-Stone of Kâli, the: Love and Crime in India, 372

Dress, affectation in, 661—anecdote regarding, 662—beauty of colour in, 663—sudden variations in feminine, 664, 665—absurdities of feminine, 666.

Dress in Scotland in the last century, 481 et seq.

Eglinton, Lord, and Sir David Baird, pitted against each other in a champagne contest, 644.

Egypt, dislike of the French to the British occupation of, 316, 888.

Eight Hours Question, the, and the Agricultural Interest, 432.

Eight hours question, Lord Salisbury and the, 147—Mr Gladstone and the, 148.

Election expenses, extraordinary, 42.

Election squibs, specimens of, 689, 691, 695.

Election, the coming, duty of electors at, 154.

Election Week in America, 892.

Electioneering literature, samples of, sixty years ago, 38, 39, 41, 44-46, 51.

Elections, Old, II., 38—III., 348.

Elections, More Old, IV., 688.

Elections, the Results of the: the Situation at Home, 293—the Danger Abroad, 308.

Elections, the result of the, a national disaster, 293—cheerful view which may still be taken of their result, 294 et seq.

Elizabeth, Queen, the spirit of exploration and colonisation during her reign, 841.

English Officer, an, among the Apulin Brigands, 704.

English representation, a glance at the state of, 303, 304.

Enlistment in the army, Sir Linton Simmons’s proposal regarding, and its effect, 271.

Experiment in Holidays, an, 364.

Factories and workshops, American, rigorous discipline prevailing in, 558, 559.

Female Emancipaton, Manners, Morals, and, 463.

Fire, ceremony of walking through the, in Mauritius, 219, 220.

Fire, London after the Great, 736.

Food, our Foreign, 175.

Food, great increase in the import of, in Britain, 176, 184, 185—foreign countries opposed to the importation of, 177—cheapness, variety, and excellence of our foreign supplies of, 180 et seq.

Fortune, Byways to—by Sea, 839.

Fruit, great consumption of, in America, 186, 187.

Games, 406.

Games, Acts of Parliament anent, 411, 412.

Gardiner, Dr, the Long Parliament and, 804.

German alliance, the, Prince Bismarck and, 313—Great Britain’s uneasiness regarding, ib.—Italy and, 314, 315.

Gladstone, Mr, and Irish affairs, 138, 139—his inaccuracies exposed, 298, 299—danger to be anticipated in our foreign relationships with his return to power, 310-312—possibility of his non-interference in foreign affairs, 318—his Home Rule Bill, 452—the difficulties of his position, 456 et seq.

Gladstone, Mr Herbert, his complaint about the waste of time over Irish affairs in the House of Commons, 142, 143.

Gladstonians, votes given for, in Scotland at the elections in 1886 and 1892, 297.