180 



EMORY, W. H. 



EMORY, General W. H. XIV. In command 

 at New Orleans, 481, 482 ; report, 483. 



EMPEROR OF GERMANY. XII. His decision 

 of the Northwest boundary, 773. 



XIII. His letter in reply to the Pope, 327. 



ENFANTIN, BARTHELEMY P. IV. Birth, 367; 

 socialistic views, 367; pursuits, 367; death, 

 368. 



ENGINEERING IN SOUTH AMERICA. X. Rail- 

 roads in Chili, 277 ; in Peru, 277 ; across the 

 ^jides, 277 ; value of guano-crop, 277 ; steam- 

 ship-lines, 277. 



ENGLAND (see Great Britain). XI. Alarm 

 at Russian approach to India, 43, 103 ; influ- 

 ence in Afghanistan, 100. 



ENGLE, Rear-Admiral FREDERICK. VIII. Birth, 

 247 ; death, 247 ; career, 247. 



ENGLES, WILLIAM MORRISON. VII. Birth, 

 296 ; career, 296 ; literary labors, 296 ; death, 

 296. 



ENO, WILLIAM. XIV. Decease of, 658. 



ENROLLMENT AND DRAFT. III. Its leading 

 features, 361 ; plan for the execution of act, 

 361 ; provost-marshals, 361 ; exemptions under 

 the act, 361 ; who to be enrolled, 362 ; extent 

 of the enrollment, 362 ; opinion of the Solicit- 

 or of the War Department on the duty of mar- 

 shals, 362; obstructing officers, 362; difficul- 

 ties in preparing accounts, 362; number en- 

 rolled, 363 ; quota to be drafted, 363 ; who 

 become deserters, 363; causes of exemption, 

 363; $300 payment, 363; physical disability, 

 363 ; list of causes, 364 ; ratio of rejections in 

 various countries, 365; number obtained by 

 the draft, 365 ; amount of commutation, 365 ; 

 practice of officers relative to writs of habeas 

 corpus, 365 ; organization of an invalid corps, 

 366 ; disbursements, 366 ; proceedings in the 

 Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 366 ; case be- 

 fore the court, 366 ; opinion of Chief-Justice 

 Lowrie on the constitutionality of the enroll- 

 ment act, 366; dissenting opinion of Justice 

 Strong, 368 ; opinion of Judge Hall, of New 

 York, 369; case of David Crichton, 369 ; opin- 

 ion on the finality of decisions of enrollment 

 boards, 369. 



IV. Acts of Congress relative to, 39 ; pro- 

 ceedings under, 39, 40 ; principles upon which 

 conducted, 40, 532-549. 



EO'TVO'S, Baron JOZSEF. XI. Birth, death, 

 288 ; career, 289. 



EPIDEMICS, I. The principal, that prevailed 

 in 1861, 285 ; cholera, 285 ; typhus fever, 285 ; 



EUROPE. 



yellow fever, 285 ; small-pox, 285 ; sanitary re- 

 form, 285 ; steppe murrain, 286 ; remedy for 

 small-pox, 286. 



EPIZOOTIC. XII. (See Horses.) 



ERICSSON'S BATTERY. I. (See Navy.) 



ERRAZARIZ, FEDERIGO. XI. President of 

 Chili, 115, 116. 



ESPARTERO, JOAQUIN BALDOMERO. XII. Of- 

 fered the title of Prince of Vergara by King 

 Amadeus of Spain, 741. 



XIV. Birth, 262 ; civil and military career, 

 282 ; death, 282. 



ESTERHAZY, PAUL ANTOINE. VI. Birth, 283 ; 

 career, 283 ; death, 283. 



ETHERIDGE, ROBERT, Chief Clerk of Port of 

 New York. XIII. Obituary of, 575. 



ETHNOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY. III. Im- 

 portance of questions relating to man and man- 

 kind, 371 ; these questions, 871 ; evidences 

 sought for in relation to these questions, 371 ; 

 works and periodicals in relation to these sub- 

 jects, 372; fossiliferous strata of the earth, 

 872 ; instances of human remains, 873 ; chem- 

 ical changes of long-buried bones, 374; classi- 

 fication of crania, 374; antiquities of North- 

 umberland, 374; ancient shell-mounds of Scot- 

 land, 374; lacustrine habitations in Scotland, 

 875 ; geological position and era of the re- 

 mains, 876 ; the Neanderthal man, 377 ; the Ab- 

 beville jaw, 377,378 ; successive eras of depos- 

 it, 379; recent date of the Somme deposits, 

 379 ; evidences of man in Pliocene strata, 379, 

 380 ; question of the variability of man, 881 ; 

 intelligence of the primitive races, 381 ; dis- 

 tinctions holding between man and the anthro- 

 poid apes, 382; St.-Hilaire's classification of 

 mankind, 383 ; Gratiolet's do., 383 ; is race de- 

 terminable by language ? 384 ; anthropological 

 bearings of language, 384 ; Schleicher on natu- 

 ral relation in language, 384; commixture of 

 races, 385 ; is man cosmopolite? 385; Bollaert 

 on the populations of the New World, 386; 

 North American climate and its effects, 386; 

 causes of the peculiar action of the North 

 American climate, 387. 



EUROPE. III. States and population, 388 ; 

 changes in the territorial division, 388 ; out- . 

 break in Poland, 388; Congress in Germany, 

 389 ; democratic tendencies, 389 ; difference of 

 the countries*n density of population, 389 ; 

 estimates a century hence, 389. 



IV. Territorial division, 368 ; Polish insur- 

 rection, 368 ; Dano-German War, 368 ; war in 



