o secure
civil rights, 221.
GOVERNMENT, the need of the South, 516.
GRANT, General, on the Freedmen's Bureau, 119;
his order to protect officers from civil prosecution, 123;
his order setting aside black laws, 215;
his report, 563.
GREATNESS of America, 360.
GROUND-SWELL, danger of, after the war, 62.
GYPSIES, their birth and citizenship, 246, 255.
HABEAS Corpus, restored to loyal States, 123;
its suspension an evidence that the war had not closed, 177.
HAPPINESS of statesmen who died before recent legislation, 194.
HAYTI, her blow for liberty, 69.
HIGHWAYMAN, his weapons restored, 122.
HOMES for Freedmen, the purchase of, 115.
HOMESTEAD Bill, Southern, 553.
HOUSE of Representatives, scene at the opening of, 16.
HOWARD, General, placed at the head of the Freedmen's Bureau, 139;
his operations, 142.
HUNGARY, why revolutionary, 383.
IGNORANCE among colored people rapidly disappearing, 54;
the nation chargeable with, 62;
in the South, 146.
IMPEACHMENT proposed, 566;
report of Committee on, 567.
INDIANA, negro suffrage not necessary in as in the South, 77;
liable to be placed under the jurisdiction of Freedmen's Bureau, 110;
military rule in, 112;
civil-rights denied to negroes in, 117;
marriage in, 131;
not in rebellion, 125.
INDIANA and Massachusetts, prejudice against color and against
ignorance, 337.
INDIANS, appropriations voted to feed and clothe, 120;
excluded from civil rights, 201;
becoming extinct, 410.
INDICTMENT substituted for Writ of Error, 274.
INDIVIDUALS, not States, commit treason, and are punished, 316.
INDUSTRIAL interests promoted by negro suffrage, 494.
INTELLIGENCE should be required of the negro voter, 73, 81.
IOWA, zeal and patriotism of her colored people, 73;
vote on negro suffrage in, 74.
IRELAND, cause of her troubles, 383.
JAMAICA, insurrection in, cause of, 75.
JEFFERSON as quoted by President Johnson, 500.
JESUS CHRIST, the spirit of, 223, 224.
JOHNSON, Andrew, becomes President, 13;
his amnesty proclamation, 14;
how the odium against would be shared by Congress, 519;
"the late lamented Governor," 437.
JOHNSON, Senator, Andrew, his reply to Buchanan's veto, 255, 264.
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