R

Race friction between Filipinos and Americans, [438];
increased by Taft policy, [439], [447];
deplored by Gov. Smith, [493];
social equality muddle, [554] et seq.

Rebate system under export tax, iniquities of, [616] et seq.

Reconcentration in Batangas, 1902, [388]

Reconcentration Law, [416]–422

Reconstruction days in Ph., [238]–9, [381]–2

Refund of export tax, [616]

Reid, Whitelaw, Peace Commissioner, [122];
position, [132];
$20,000,000 hint, [136]–7

“Rid of Philippines,” Roosevelt-Taft private confession to Carnegie of desire to be, [612]–14

Rights of Man, [623]–632

Rios, Montero, at Paris, [136]

Road to Autonomy, [633]–646

Roosevelt, T., Vice-President, crass ignorance of 1900 about Filipinos, [10], [230];
presidential amnesty proclamation of 1902, [312], [375], [397]–8;
opinion of Taft in 1901, [406];
hypothetical interview, [409]–414;
supper-table confession to Andrew Carnegie about Ph., [612]–13

Root, Elihu, Secretary of War, ignorance of 1899, and uncandor of 1900, [188], [243], [327], [331], [413];
succeeds Alger, [223]–4;
political buncombe of 1900 and public admission of 1904, [279]–280;
Rio Janeiro speech, [652]–3;
intellectual greatness, [224]

Round robin of war correspondents, [219]–222