E.
Education, Blair Bill, [27]; in South Carolina, [42]; Populist attitude toward, [46]; negro schools, [57]; agricultural colleges and experiment stations, [75]; county demonstrators, [75]-[77], [184]; boys' and girls' clubs, [76], [78]-[81]; General Education Board, [76]-[77], [183]-[184], [186], [189]; college students, [83]; mills aid schools, [119]; progress, [157] et seq.; country schools, [164]; academies, [164]-[165], [171]; colleges, [165]-[166], [187]; graded schools, [166]; taxation for, [170], [172], [185], [186]; opposition to public schools, [171]-[172]; normal schools, [172]; better buildings, [172]; small districts, [173]; length of school term, [173], [184]; funds for negro, [182]-[183]; secondary schools, [186]; preparation for college, [188]; bibliography, [240]-[241]; see also [Negroes].
Education, Bureau of, Report on Negro Education, [174], [178].
Elections, intimidation of negroes, [18]-[19]; frauds, [19]-[20]; North threatens Federal control, [21]; (1896), [44]; (1900), [45]-[46]; primaries, [47], [199]; "Force Bill" (1890), [48].
Episcopal Church, [215].