404 



TASMANIA. 



TELEICONOGRAPHY. 



of, 672 ; whole revenue of each tariff, 672 ; 

 warehousing system, and Independent Treasury 

 plan of finance adopted, 672 ; tariffs of 1857 

 and 1861, 672 ; orders of the Treasury Depart- 

 ment, 673 ; do. of Collector of New York, 673 ; 

 protest against the payment of duties, 673 ; 

 comparative rates of duty for twenty years, 

 673 ; difficulties in the operation of the old and 

 new tariff, 675 ; revenue at New York, 675. 



TASMANIA. XII. (See Australia.) 



TATNALL, JOSIAII. XI. Birth, 714; naval 

 career, 714; death, 714. 



TAUSIG, KARL. XI. Obituary of, 598. 



TAUSSIG, JAMES. III. Report of an inter- 

 view with President Lincoln, 653. 



TAXATION. VI. (See Finances.) 



TAXES. I. In the Confederate States, 164. 



XII. Reduction in national, since the close 

 of the war, 290; aggregate amount of taxes 

 returned from the several sources of revenue 

 -from the organization of the Internal Revenue 

 Department, 290 ; articles and occupations now 

 taxable, 290 ; articles and occupations exempt 

 from tax, 290 ; number of persons who paid 

 the income-tax in 1871 and 1872, 291. 



TAY, General CHARLES H. XI. Obituary of, 

 582. 



TAYLOR, Rev. EDWARD T. XI. Obituary of, 

 572. 



TAILOR, EMMONS. XIV. Decease of, 631. 



TAYLOR, FORT. I. Its location, 675 ; arma- 

 ment, 675. 



TAILOR, Rey. HORACE S. XL Obituary of, 

 569. 



TAILOR, JAMES B. XL Birth, 715 ; as a cler- 

 gyman and author, 715; death, 715. 



TAYLOR, Lieutenant-Colonel. I. Bears a letter 

 from Jefferson Davis to President Lincoln, 150. 



TAILOR, SAMUEL H. XL Birth, 715 ; career 

 as teacher and scholar, 715 ; death, 715. 



TAILOR, WILLIAM B. XL Obituary of, 570. 



TEA AND COFFEE. XII. Duties on, abolished, 

 216. 



TEGETHOFF, WILHELM. XL Birth, 715; 

 naval career, 715 ; death, 715. 



TEHUANTEPEC. XL Survey of isthmus of, 

 535. 



TELEGRAPH, ELECTRIC. I. Progress in 1861, 

 675 ; communication with San Francisco, 675 ; 

 on the Lower Amoor, 675 ; connection between 

 Europe and America through Russia, 675 ; by 

 the Atlantic Ocean, 676 ; smaller enterprises, 

 676. 



III. Route by Behring's Strait, 828 ; grants 

 of Russia, 828 ; progress of the work, 828 ; 

 action of the British Government, 828. 



IV. Principal great lines, 758; Anglo-In- 

 dian line, 758; Russian Atlantic line, 759; 

 main branches, 759; Collins's overland line, 

 759, 760 ; Atlantic submarine line, 761 ; the 

 cable, 761 ; weight and construction, 762. 



V. History of the second attempt to lay the 

 wire across the Atlantic, 777. 



VI. Atlantic submarine line, 719 ; various 

 cables used, 720, 721 ; laying the cable in 1866, 

 722; International, or Russo- American Line, 

 723 ; important submarine line, 726 ; miscel- 

 laneous, 727. 



VIII. On the European Continent, 718; 

 treaties relative to, 718; points agreed on, 

 718; charges, 718; how operated, 719; rules 

 for calculating the number of words, 719 ; 

 special regulations, 719; cost of dispatches, 

 720 ; number of dispatches, 720. 



IX. Organization of the French Cable Com- 

 pany, 659 ; provisions of the charter, 659 ; de- 

 scription of the cable, 659 ; physical character 

 of the ocean-bed along the route, 659 ; ques- 

 tion as to right of foreign countries to land 

 cable upon United States territory, 659 ; po- 

 sition of United States Government thereon, 

 659 ; action of Secretary Fish, 660 ; action of 

 the Massachusetts Legislature, 660 ; opinion of 

 Attorney-General Hoar, 660. 



XL Submarine cables laid in twenty years, 

 715 ; list of cables, length, depth of water in 

 1870 financial results of transfer of telegraphs 

 to the British Government, 716 ; progress, 716 ; 

 cables laid in last two years, 717 ; new cables, 

 717 ; Atlantic cables, 717. 

 XIV. American and German inventors, 786 ; 

 magnetic copying apparatus, 786 ; details of 

 the improvements, 786. 



XV. The more recent improvements, 721 ; 

 duplex telegraph, 721 ; explanation, 721 ; quad- 

 ruplex telegraph, 721 ; instruments used, 721 ; 

 illustrations, 722 ; American automatic system, 

 722 ; explanation, 723 ; electricity as a lubri- 

 cator, 724. 



TELEGRAPHIC DISPATCHES. I. Their seizure 

 a violation of the Constitution, 230. 



TELEGRAPHY. XII. (See Electricity; also, 

 Electric Waves.) 



TELEGRAPH!, POSTAL. XII. Debate on, in 

 Congress, 121. 



TELEICONOGRAPHI. IX. Principle of the 



