INDEX OF CONTENTS. 



861 



men of Missouri, 656; telegram to Admiral Dnpont, 676; 

 replies to Gov. Seymour, C84, 685; letter relative to 

 the Pino street church in St. Louis, 757; order relative 

 to colored prisoners, 762 ; order establishing a provisional 

 court for Louisiana, 770 ; message to Congress and am- 

 nesty proclamation, 77-7; correspondence with the com- 

 mittee at Albany, 799 ; correspondence with the Ohio 

 committee in the same case, 808; letter to the Spring- 

 field convention of unconditional Union men, 803; his 

 proclamation of emancipation, 831 ; letter to Fernando 

 Wood, 841. 



Literature and Literary Progress, Number of works, 

 573; works on military science, 573; sketches of the 

 war, 574; military journals, 576; histories, 575 ; reprints, 

 576; biographies, 576; religious works, 577; polemical 

 works, 579 ; moral and intellectual science, 580 ; philol- 

 ogy, 5S1 ; agriculture, 581 ; medical works, 581 ; works 

 on law, 582; geography and travel, 582; essays, 583; 

 poems, 583; novels, 583; juvenile books, 584". 



LONOWORTH, NICHOLAS. Birth, 535; death, 585; pursuits. 

 585. 



Loztisian a. Organization of the provisional judiciary, 585; 

 provost court, 586 ; district courts, 686 ; provisional 

 court, 537 ; supreme court, 588 ; movements for a re- 

 organization of the State government, 589 ; plan com- 

 menced, 589 ; registry, 589 ; delegates to "Washington, 

 590 ; answer of President Lincoln, 590 ; constitutions of 

 Louisiana, 590 ; two parties, 590 address of Central Ex- 

 ecutive Committee, 591 ; correspondence with Free State 

 committee, 591 ; petition of colored people to be regis- 

 tered as voters, 591 ; proclamation of Gen. Banks to the 

 people, 592 ; election, 593 ; views of the Free State Gen- 

 eral Committee, 593; nominations for governor, 593; 

 no State Government created by the election, 593 ; Con- 

 federate election, 594; regulations of Gen. Banks rela- 

 tive to the labor of freedmen, 594, 595. 



LOVHJOY, OWEX, Representative from Illinois, 233; on the 

 relation of the seceded States to the Union, 264. 



Lutheran Church. Synods, churches, and communicants, 

 596; theological seminaries, 596; proceedings of the 

 Church In the Confederate States, 597; Scandinavian 

 synods, 593; churches in Germany, 593. 



LYNDHTTEST, JOHNS. C. Birth, 598; death, 598; career, 598. 



LOWEIE, Chief Justice of Pennsylvania, opinion on the En- 

 rolment Act, 866; do. case of Marshal Milward of Phila- 

 delphia, 521. 



Madagascar. Revolution in, 599 ; notes, 599 ; Hova dy- 

 nasty, 599 ; internal affairs, 600 ; doath of the queen, 600; 

 her successor, 601 ; his actions, 601 ; constitution adopt- 

 ed, 601 ; its provisions, 602 ; the French company, 

 602. 



Magnesium. Improved method of obtaining it, 603; its 

 properties, 603. 



Maine. Conventions and resolutions, 603-604 ; nominations 

 and election, 604 ; votes, 604 ; soldiers sent to the army, 

 604; draft, 604; opinion of the courts on the right of 

 towns to raise money for bounties, 605 ; seaboard defence, 

 605; crops, 605. 



Martial Law. Case of Joseph Griffin, 606 ; opinion of the 

 Supreme Court of Indiana, 606; facts of the case, 606; 

 conditions under which martial law is exercised, 607. 



Maryland. Important events, 609 ; invasion of the State, 

 609 ; martial law declared by Gen. Schenck, 609 ; move- 

 ments of the Confederates, 609 ; finances, 610 ; schools, 

 610 ; Imports and exports at Baltimore, 610 ; arrests of 

 citizens during July, 610-611-612 ; number of arrests, 



612; interference with a funeral, 612; suppression of 

 the " Republican and Argus," 613 ; suppression of the 

 Maryland Club, 613 ; do. Gennar.ia, 613 ; do. Alston As- 

 sociation, 618 ; seizure of arras in the houses of citizens, 

 618; FOurth of July, 614; assaults on enrolling officers, 

 614: enlistment of colored troops, 614; official opinion 

 of Judge-Advocate Holt, 614; order of the War Depart- 

 ment appointing recruiting stations, 615; the ques- 

 tion of emancipation, 615 ; proceedings of State Central 

 Committee, 616 ; Union League Convention, 616 ; State 

 Central Committee Convention, 616; refuse to unite, 

 616; resolutions of each, 616 ; division of the Union men, 

 616; address of the State Central Committee, 616; do. 

 of the Unconditional Union State Committee, 617 ; res- 

 olutions in the Fifth District, 613; letter of Thomas 

 8 wann to the President, 618 ; reply of President Lincoln, 

 618; letter of Governor Bradford, 613 ; reply of the Pres- 

 ident, 618 ; order of General Schenck, 619 ; proclamation 

 of Governor Bradford, 619 ; despatch of President Lin- 

 coln, 620 ; statement of the editor of the " American," 6-21 ; 

 suppression of the Governor's proclamation by General 

 Schenck, 621 ; reply of General Schenck to the procla- 

 mation ; 621 ; reply of Governor Bradford to President 

 Lincoln, 621 ; issue at the election was emancipation, 

 623 , votes, 623 ; message of the governor relative to the 

 election, 623. 



Massachusetts. Legislature, 624 ; finances, 624 ; resolutions 

 of the Committee on Federal Relations, 624; Demo- 

 cratic Convention, 624; nominations and resolutions, 

 624 ; resolutions, 625 ; Republican convention and reso- 

 lutions, 625; election, 626; votes, 626; men furnished to 

 the army, 626 ; draft in the State, 626.; board of educa- 

 tion, 627; State institutions, 627; banks, 627; railroads, 

 627. 



MASTEEMAN, STILLMAN. Birth, 623; death, 628; pursuits, 

 623. 



MALLOET, ROBERT, Representative from Ky., 233 ; on the re- 

 lation of the seceded States to the Union, 261 ; on the 

 Conscript Bill, 282. 



Mauritius. Its population, 1. 



MAYNABD, HORACE, Representative from Tennessee, 288 ; on 

 the relation of the seceded States to the Union, 261- 

 262; relative to African soldiers, 268 ; on the admission 

 of members from Louisiana, 823. 



MAT, HKNBY, Representative from Maryland, 233; on the 

 transfer of certain suits to the United States' courts, 

 252. 



MoCLELiAN, Gen. GEORGE B., letter on the Pennsylvania 

 election, 740. 



MEADE, Gen., assumes command of the Potomac army, 102 ; 

 address before battle, 102 ; despatch of "Wednesday's 

 battle before Gettysburg, 106; despatch on Thursday, 

 107 ; address to his army, 107 ; despatches, 109 ; contra- 

 dicts despatch of Gen. Lee, 109 ; address to the inhab- 

 itants along the Orange and Alexandria railroad, 111 ; 

 report to Gen. Halleck on movements of the enemy, 

 182. 



Men AX, JAMKS, case of, 491. 



Methodists. Numbers, 623; contributions and publications, 

 628; question of lay delegation, 629; order of the "War 

 Department relative to Southern churches, 629; Ger- 

 man Methodists, 680; numbers, 630; seminaries, 680; 

 other branches of Methodists, 630; union of the several 

 Methodist bodies, 680; French Conference, 631; Ger- 

 man, do., 631. 



Mexico. Progress of events, 631 ; Mexican Church, 631 ; first 

 revolution, 681 ; course of the clergy, 631 ; energy of the 

 Church party, 632; Liberals and Church party, 633; in- 

 tervention not a new scheme of the Church party, 683, 

 numbers and wealth of the clergy, 633; French and 



