DONATI, PROF. 



DOUGLAS, STEPHEN A. 171 



fishery question, 228, 246; death of distin- 

 guished men, 246. 



XI. Annexation of British Columbia, 267, 

 268 ; railroads, 268 ; revenue, 268 ; banks, 268 ; 

 population, 268 ; immigration, 268 ; opening 

 of Parliament, 268; acts of, 269; feeling on 

 Treaty of Washington, 269 ; opening of Euro- 

 pean & North American Railway, 269 ; Joseph 

 Papineau, 269, 270. 



XII. Prince Edward's Island and New- 

 foundland, 264 ; railway to British Columbia, 

 264 ; other projected railways, 265 ; parlia- 

 mentary action on the Treaty of Washington, 

 265 ; local railways, 265 ; finances, 265 ; banks, 

 265 ; immigration, 266 ; change of administra- 

 tion in Ontario, 266 ; close of Parliament, 266 ; 

 elections, 266 ; obituaries, 266. 



XIII. (See Great Britain, Possessions of.) 



XIV. Further enlarged, 270 ; future extent 

 of the Dominion, 270 ; recent political pro- 

 ceedings, 270 ; construction of a Pacific Rail- 

 road, 270 ; charges made and investigation de- 

 manded, 270 ; reports of surveys, 270 ; legisla- 

 tion of the Dominion Parliament, 271 ; finances, 

 271 ; railways, 271 ; telegraph-lines, 271 ; ton- 

 .nage, 271 ; obituaries, 271. 



XV. Divisions, 241 ; area and population, 

 241; details of the census, 241; cities and 

 towns of over five thousand inhabitants, 242 ; 

 Government, 242 ; organization of the judi- 

 ciary, 242 ; receipts and expenditures, 243 ; 

 liabilities and assets, 243; commerce, 244; 

 shipping, 244; forest-products, 244; farm- 

 products, 245 ; products of fur-bearing ani- 

 mals, 245 ; products of fisheries, 245 ; mineral 

 products, 245 ; manufactures, 246 ; fisheries, 

 246. 



DONATI, Prof., Italian astronomer. XIII. 

 Obituary of, 600. 



DON CARLOS. XII. Protests against the 

 elections in Spain, 742 ; takes the field, 743 ; 

 Carlist defeats, 743 ; recrosses the frontier of 

 France, 743. 



DONELSON, A. J., LL. D. XI. Birth, death, 

 career, 270. 



DON MANUEL PANDO. XII. Obituary, 641. 



DONNER, JOHANN J. C., a German translator 

 of the classic poets. XV. Biographical sketch 

 of, 246. 



DONOVAN, CORNELIUS, M. D., Irish physician. 

 XIII. Obituary of, 591. 



DOOLTTTLE, CHARLES H. XIV. Decease of, 

 635. 



DOOLITTLE, JAMES R. I. Senator in Thirty- 

 seventh Congress, 166; on slavery restriction 

 in Arizona, 188 ; on the Mexican law, 189 ; 

 member of the Senate, 225 ; on the cause of 

 the war, 243. 



II. Senator from Wisconsin, 256 ; on the 

 seizure of railroads and telegraphs, 329. 



III. Senator from Wisconsin, 233 ; remarks 

 on arrests in Delaware, 236 ; on the discharge 

 of state prisoners, 257 ; on the conscript bill, 

 277 ; on a national currency, 295. 



IV. Senator from Wisconsin, 219 ; on col- 

 ored voters in Montana, 239. 



V. Senator from Wisconsin, 205; on re- 

 construction, 268, 269. 



VI. Senator from Wisconsin, 124 ; on the 

 reconstruction committee, 134-138 ; offers an 

 amendment on apportionment of representa- 

 tion, 149 ; on the exclusion of Southern mem- 

 bers, 180-190 ; on admission of Colorado, 234. 



VII. Senator from Wisconsin, 131 ; on 

 female suffrage in the District of Columbia, 

 139 ; on reconstruction, 225, 230 ; on suffrage 

 in Nebraska, 153. 



VIII. Senator from Wisconsin, 124 ; on 

 reconstruction, 147; on reconstruction, 151. 



IX. Senator from Wisconsin, 120 ; on the 

 fifteenth amendment, 151-153 ; on the bill to 

 repeal the tenure-of-oifice law, 178. 



XII. President of the Democratic Conven- 

 tion, 780. 



DOST MOHAMMED KHAN. III. Birth, 355 ; 

 death, 355 ; vicissitudes of his life, 356. 



DOTY, Colonel LOCKWOOD L., lawyer. XIII. 

 Obituary of, 559. 



DOUGLAS, Sir HOWARD. I. His birth, 280; 

 military career, 280 ; writings, 280. 



DOUGLAS, STEPHEN A. I. Senator in Thir- 

 ty-sixth Congress, 168; country before party, 

 168; nine-tenths of the complaints about the 

 non-execution of the fugitive-slave law are un- 

 founded, 171 ; speech on the state of affairs, 

 175 ; war means disunion, 175 ; further re- 

 marks, 181 ; there is a deliberate plot to break 

 up this Union, under a pretence of preserving 

 it, 219 ; one of two things must be done, 219 ; 

 his birth, 280 ; education, 280 ; public offices 

 held, 280 ; candidate for the presidency, 280 ; 

 vote of the people, 280 ; speeches in Congress, 

 see Congress ; speech at Wheeling, 280 ; ad- 

 dress to the Illinois Legislature, 280 ; sickness, 

 280 ; letter to the chairman of the Democratic 

 Committee, 280 ; death, 281. 



