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Alaska-Continued.

1903, and on March 3 ratifications were ex-
changed between the two governments. The
commission sat in London and on October 17,
1903, made a decision mainly in favor of the
United States, granting Canada access to
the Pacific only near the southern end of the
boundary and giving her Wales and Pease
islands, in Portland Canal. In June 1904, a
survey of the boundary thus determined was
begun by engineers of the United States and
Canada. Alaska is under the direct control
of Congress, and not having the regular ter-
ritorial organization, it has no delegate in
that body. In 1884, Congress provided a
civil and judicial government. There is a
Governor, Surveyor-General and Collector.
The territory is valuable for its extensive
seal and salmon fisheries. Recent discover-
ies of rich and extensive gold deposits in the
Klondike region of the Yukon River have
added greatly to the wealth and population
of the territory and to its importance to the
United States. Its commerce for the fiscal
year ending June 30, 1903, was more than
$21,000,000, and its production of gold for
that year, $8,614,700. There are large depos-
its of coal and iron, and the country's agri-
cultural prospects are deemed good. Sev-
eral railroads are in process of construction.
The population in 1900 was 63,592.
Alaska:

Attempted occupation of portion of, by
Great Britain and Canada, IX, 665.
Attempts of Great Britain and Canada to
establish post routes in, IX, 665.
Boundary line with British possessions--
Commission to determine, recommended,
VII, 187.

Discussed, VII, 187; VIII, 332, 400, 500,
781, 815; IX, 526, 631; X, 145, 204, 644-
646, 678.

Report regarding, referred to, VIII, 400.
Cession of, to United States-

Discussed, VI, 580, 688.
Referred to, VI, 600.

Treaty regarding, referred to, VI, 521, 524.
Appropriation for payment under, rec-
ommended, VI, 521, 580.
Chinamen in, cruel treatment of, VIII, 498.
Collection district established at Sitka, VI,
667.

Condition of, X, 543, 544, 644, 651, 826, 827;
XI, 1178.

Delegate to Congress from, X, 828; XI, 1177.
Education in, appropriation for, recom-
mended, VIII, 80; IX, 48; X, 228.
Encroachments of Hudsons Bay Company
upon trade of, VI, 700.
Government for-

Act providing for, VIII, 292.

Discussed by President Benj. Harrison,
IX, 325;

Municipal governments recommended by
President Benj. Harrison, IX, 48, 206.
Recommended by President-
Arthur, VIII, 64, 144, 184.
Hayes, VII, 570, 621.
Importation of breech-loading rifles and fixed

ammunition into, forbidden, VII, 328.
Instructions regarding, modified, VIII, 124.

Lands in-

Proclamation modifying order reserving,
IX, 696.

Set apart as public reservation by procla-
mation, IX, 360.

Legislation, recommended,VI,524; X, 44, 175,
Light-house on coast of, point to be selected
for, VI, 704.

Military arrests in, VII, 358, 359, 360.
Military Department of, VI, 632; X. 44.
Mineral wealth in, discussed, IX, 631.

Port of entry in, establishment of, recom-
mended, IX, 49.

Privileges of hunting, trading, and fishing
in, referred to, VI, 631, 632.

Property rights of natives, X, 828, 829.
Public Lands of, X, 513, 651.
Referred to, VI, 620, 631; X, 44, 127, 228.
Report of governor of, VIII, 390.
Report of Lieut. Emmons, X, 849.

Seal fisheries within limits of. (See Bering
Sea.)

Seal islands in, sale of, recommended, VII, 40.
Alaska Salmon Commission, mentioned, X,
712.

Albany, The, cruise of, referred to, V, 305.
Albany Convention.-One of the important
predecessors of the Continental Congress
and among the first definite steps taken to-
ward national union. Upon a call issued by
the Lords of Trade, commissioners from the
Colonies of New Hampshire, Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, Penn-
sylvania, and Maryland met at Albany, N. Y.,
on June 19, 1754, to arrange a treaty with the
Six Nations of Indians. Benjamin Frank-
lin proposed and the convention adopted a
plan for colonial union. It provided for a
president-general of all the Colonies, with
veto power, and a grand council to be com-
posed of from 2 to 7 delegates from each
Colony, chosen by assembly for a term of 3
years each. This grand council was to be
authorized to equip forces for the common
defense of the Colonies and to levy taxes for
their maintenance and have control of all
Indian affairs. The plan was rejected by
the Crown because it gave too much power
to the Colonies.

Albany Regency.-A combination of politi-
cians of the Democratic party. Prominent
among these were Martin Van Buren, Wil-
liam L. Marcy, John A. Dix, and Silas Wright.
This combination was, it was charged, or-
ganized to manage and control that party in
New York State from about 1820 to 1855.
Their organization was quite thorough and
complete, and its success was mainly due to
this fact. A majority of those in the combi-
nation resided in Albany or operated from
that city. The name arose from this circum-
Albemarle, The.-A Confederate ironclad
stance.
ram built on the Roanoke River, below Wel-
don, N. C., in 1863. She was destroyed with
a torpedo by Lieut. W. B. Cushing on the
night of Oct. 27, 1864 (VI, 256). Before her
destruction she did much damage to vessels
of the United States. In 1867 she was
raised, towed to Norfolk, and sold.
Albemarle, The:

Destruction of, VI, 256.

Referred to, X, 81.

Engagement of, with the Sassacus referred
Albion, The, seizure of, referred to, V, 100.
to, VI, 210.
Alburg, Vt., proclamation granting privileges
of other ports to, V, 326.

Alden, James, thanks of Congress to, recom-
mended, VI, 76.

Alert, The, convention between Nicaragua and Costa Rica signed on, X, 100. (See also Greely, A. W.)

Aleutian Islands.— A chain of about 150 islands extending from the western extremity of Alaska to near the continent of Asia. The area is about 6,000 square miles. The inhabitants, a half-civilized and declining race, about two thousand in number, are variously regarded as of Asiatic or American origin. Their trade is chiefly in fish and furs. The islands belong principally to the United States by reason of the acquisition of Alaska. They were discovered by the Russians about the middle of the eighteenth century.

Alexander, General E. P., settlement of question between Costa Rica and Nicaragua by, X, 202.

Alexander, James, crimes charged against, I. 417.

Alexander Archipelago Forest Reserve, proclaimed, X, 513.

Alexandria, Va.:

Act incorporating church in, vetoed, I, 489. Blockade of port of, removed by proclamation, VI, 170.

British retreat from, I, 547.

Property in, destroyed by British forces, I, 545, 547.

Alexandria County, D. C.:

Court-house in, unsafe and new one recommended, III, 404.

Jail erected in, II, 364.

Retrocession of, to Virginia by proclamation,
IV, 470.

Alfonso XII, The, mentioned, X, 53..
Alford, Benedict, act for relief of, discussed,
III, 134

Alger, R. A., thanks of President tendered
Gen. Shafter through, X, 349.
Algeria.-A country on the north coast of Af-
rica, about 154,000 miles in area and contain-
ing a population of about 4,774,042. The
chief native people are Berbers and Arabs.
Its capital and principal city is Algiers. It
comprises the ancient country of Numidia
and a portion of Mauritania. For many cen-
turies it was a nest of corsairs, who haunted
the coasts of the Mediterranean Sea and the
Atlantic Ocean as far as the North Sea, prey-
ing upon the commerce of all nations which
refused to pay them tribute. To pay this
tribute was deemed wiser by many European
powers than to wage war against them. Fol-
lowing the examples of other nations, the
United States signed a treaty in 1795 agree-
ing to pay the Dey $1,000,000 for the ransom
of American captives and promising an an-
nual tribute (I, 123, 182). Algeria made war
against the United States in 1815. Commo-
dore Decatur, with 10 vessels, sailed against
the Dey and met with such success that he
was enabled to exact indemnity from the Dey
himself, and also a treaty renouncing all
claim to tribute, presents, or ransom, and a
promise not to reduce prisoners of war to
slavery (I, 562). France has since reduced
Algeria to the dominion of her Government,
organizing it as a colonial possession in 1834,
of which it is now the most important.
The chief resource of the country is agricul-
ture. Since 1870 there have been a number
of extended revolts; and in recent years the
country has suffered from serious anti-Jewish
agitations.

Algeria:

Consuls of United States in, I, 177, 392, 521. Banished, I, 518.

Change in pay of, III, 99.

Powers of, should be increased, I, 248. Salary of, should be increased, I, 248. Unjustifiable proceedings toward, by Dey of, I, 453.

Declaration of war against, recommended, I, 554.

Hostile attitude of, toward United States, I, 440, 554, 575.

Imprisonment of American citizens in, I, 88, 98, 123, 148, 177, 200, 205, 207, 554. Reference to, I, 152, 153, 210. Treaty of peace with, 1, 569; II, 110. Treaty with, transmitted and discussed, I, 123, 182, 186, 192, 205, 569; II, 110. Annulled by Algeria, with alternative of war or renewal of former treaty, I, 575. Tribute to be paid by United States to, I, 123, 182.

Payment of, I, 337. Vessels sold to, I, 247.

War with United States. (See Algerine war.)

Algerine War (see also Algeria):

Declaration of war by Congress recommended, I, 554

Dey of Algiers commences war against
United States, I, 440.

Information of amicable settlement, I, 440.
Termination of, I, 562.

Threatened by Algiers, I, 575.

Treaty of peace concluded, I, 569; II, 110. Algonquin Indians.-A tribe of the Algonquian stock of Indians. At the time of the advent of white settlers into America the Algonquian linguistic division occupied by far the largest area of any of the Indian nations. The name means "those on the other side of the river "-that is, the river St. Lawrence. They were spread over the territory from Labrador to the Rocky Mountains and from Hudsons Bay to Pamlico Sound. Though this territory was not exclusively peopled by Algonquian Indians, some of their tribes had wandered to the west and south through hostile nations and established their family beyond the limits of the present stock. The Cheyennes and Arapahoes had strayed westward to the Black Hills and finally into Colorado, and the Shawnees had penetrated into South Carolina and Tennessee. There were hundreds of divisions of these Indians into tribes and confederacies, the principal of which were the Abnaki, Illinois, Pennacook, Powhatan, and Siksika confederacies and the Cheyenne, Arapaho, Sac, Fox, Conoy, Cree, Delaware, Kickapoo, Mahican, Massachuset, Menominee, Miami, Micmac, Misisaga, Mohegan, Montagnais, Montauk, Munsee, Nanticoke, Narraganset, Nauset, Nipmuc, Ojibwa, Ottawa, Pamlico, Pequot, Piankishaw, Pottawotomi, Shawano, Wampanoag, Wappinger, and Algonquin tribes. The latter tribe, from which the stock takes its name, occupied the basin of the St. Lawrence and its northern tributaries in Canada. They allied themselves with the French in the early wars. About 5,000 of this tribe are now located in the Provinces of Quebec and Ontario. The Algonquian stock numbers about 95,000 at this time, of whom some 60,000 are in Canada and the remainder in the United States.

Alien and Sedition Laws.-Two important
acts of Congress passed by the Federalists in
1798. Their importance consists not so much
in their essential character and the fact that
they largely caused the downfall of the Fed-
eralist party as in their position in American
history as a landmark beyond which it is un-
safe for the law-making power to go. During
the French Revolution American feeling
was high and bitter. Many public speakers
and writers openly advocated intervention
by the United States in favor of the one side
or the other, denounced the neutral attitude
of the Government as cowardly and ungrate-
ful, and heaped invectives upon the Admin-
istration. The fact that many of the newspa-
pers in which the Government was so bitterly
assailed were in the hands of foreigners had
much to do with the passage of the alien act.
This law authorized the President to order
out of this country all such aliens as he might
judge to be dangerous to the peace and safety
of the United States or engaged in plotting
against them. The sedition act provided
heavy fines and imprisonment for any person
who should conspire to oppose the United
States Government or laws, or who should
print or publish any false, scandalous or ma-
licious writings against the Government,
Congress, or the President intended to bring
disrepute or hatred upon them or to stir up
sedition. These laws were regarded by the
Republican party of that day as unconsti-
tutional and were denounced by the Ken-
tucky and Virginia resolutions as subversive
of the liberty of speech and the press. They
expired in 1800 and 1801 respectively. (See
also Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions.)
Alien Contract Law, amendment of, recom-
mended, X, 123, 230.

Alien Laborers discussed IX, 633.

Aliens in United States (See also Naturalized
Citizens):

Abduction of foreigners claiming protection
of United States should be made a crime,
V, 12.

Allegiance of, to Government discussed and
orders regarding, VI, 117.

Claims of, court to try, recommended, VII,
237, 289, 343, 406.

Liability of, to perform military duty-
Discussed, VI, 180.

Proclaimed, VI, 168.

Number of, employed in Executive Depart-
ments, report on, transmitted, IX, 670.
Offenses against treaty rights of, should be
cognizable in Federal courts, IX, 183.
Allabach, Nancy G., act granting pension to,
vetoed, IX, 671.

Allatoona (Ga.), Battle of.-In the hope of
drawing Gen. Sherman's army out of Geor-
gia, the Confederates, 36,000 strong, under
Gen. Hood, threatened his railroad com-
munications with Nashville, Oct. 5, 1864, a
division of Hood's infantry appeared before
Allatoona Pass, where were stored about
1,500,000 rations. The post was held by
Col. Tourtelotte, who was reenforced by
Gen. Corse, thus increasing the Union force
to 1,944 men. The attack was made on the
6th. The conflict lasted from 8. 30 a. m. un-
til night, when the Confederates withdrew,
leaving 231 dead and 411 prisoners. Corse
lost 707 men and was himself wounded.
Hood crossed the Coosa Oct. 10, and Sher-

man's army followed him to Gaylesville by
way of Rome, and then returned to Atlanta.
Allegiance.-According to Blackstone, alle-
giance is "less the tie which binds the subject
to the sovereign in return for that protection
which the sovereign affords the subject."
Natural or implied allegiance is that obliga-
tion which one owes to the nation of which
he is a natural-born citizen or subject so
long as he remains such, and it does not arise
from any express promise. Express alle-
giance is that obligation which arises from an
expressed oath or promise. Local alle-
giance is that obedience and temporary aid
due by an alien to the State or community
in which he resides. Local allegiance is
temporary and expires with residence.
Allegiance, Oath of, army officers directed to
subscribe anew, VI, 18.

Allen, Andrew H., member of Board on Geo-
graphic Names, IX, 212.

Allen, Ira, claims of heir of, against Great
Britain, III, 49.

Allen, Walter, member of Ponca Indian
Commission, VII, 630.

Allentown, Pa., act for erection of public
building at, vetoed, VIII, 658.
Allianca, The, firing upon, by Spanish vessel
disavowed by Spain, discussed, IX, 636.
Allotment of Lands. (See Lands, Indian.)
Almirante Oquendo, The, mentioned, X, 92.
Almodóvar, Duke of, communication from,
regarding Spanish-American peace negotia-
tions, X, 95.

Alta Vela Island, claim of citizens of United
States to guano on, VI, 629.

Altamaha Řiver, canal from Tennessee River
to, referred to, II, 464.

Alvarez, Manuel, acting governor of New
Mexico, V, 75.

Alvord, H. J., treaty with Indians concluded
by, VI, 259.

Amazon River:

Explorations of, by officers of Navy, V, 176,
188, 229; VII, 497.

Appropriation for, recommended, VII, 247..
Free navigation of, desired, V, 211.

Attempts to secure, unsuccessful, V, 280.
Opened to commerce, VI, 578.
Ambassador.-This term was long erroneously
used in reference to our envoys to foreign
countries. The United States did not ap-
point diplomatic representatives of higher
rank than envoy or minister until the year
1893, when by act of Mar. 3 of that year the
higher grade was established. Thomas F.
Bayard was raised to the rank of ambassador
to Great Britain, being the first to hold that
rank. Later, ambassadors were duly accred-
ited to France, Italy, Germany, Russia, Mex-
ico, Japan and Austria-Hungary (IX, 442;"
X, 110). In ancient times ambassadors were
appointed on special occasions. Medieval
republics, like Venice, both received and
sent ambassadors.

Ambassadors (see also Ministers):
Elevation of missions of-

Great Britain, France, Italy, and Germany
to grade of, and like action of United
States, IX, 442.

Russia to grade of, and like action of
United States, X, 110.
Announced, IX, 442.

Official residences for, recommended, IX,
640, 723.

Ambristie [Ambrister] and Arbuthnot, courts-martial of, referred to, II, 43. Amelia Island.-A coast island, N. E. of Florida, between St. Marys and Nassau rivers.

Colonial governments not responsible for unlawful conduct of persons in, II, 32. Governor Mitchell ordered to restore, to the Spanish, I, 508.

Possession of

Inquired into, II, 51.

Taken by Gen. Matthews, I, 507. Unlawful expeditions to, discussed, II, 13, 21, 23, 32, 40, 51.

Amen, šamuel D., mentioned, X, 800. Amendments.-One of the chief defects of the original Articles of Confederation was that they could only be amended by the unanimous consent of the thirteen States. Three needful changes having failed of ratification, a convention was called in 1787 to consider amendments. The result of the deliberations of this convention is the present Constitution, which provides for amendments in the following words: "The Congress, whenever two thirds of both Houses shall deem it necessary, shall propose amendments to this Constitution, or, on the application of the legislatures of two thirds of the several States, shall call a convention for proposing amendments, which in either case shall be valid, to all intents and purposes, as part of this Constitution when ratified by the legis latures of three fourths of the several States or by conventions in three fourths thereof, as the one or the other mode of ratification may be proposed by the Congress; provided," etc. (Article V: I, 31.) Many amendments to the Constitution have been proposed, but only 15 have been ratified. They relate to (1) freedom of speech, the press, and religion (I, 34); (2) right to establish State militia (1, 34); (3) quartering of troops in private houses (1, 35); (4) security against unreasonable search and seizure (I, 35); (5) capital crime (I, 35); (6) criminal prosecutions (I, 35); (7) trial by jury under common law (1, 35); (8) forbidding excessive bail or fines and cruel and unusual punishment(1,36); (9) relation of constitutional to natural rights (I, 36); (10) powers reserved to the States (1, 36); (11) suits of nonresidents against States in Federal courts (1, 36); (12) election of President and Vice-President (I, 36); (13) slavery (I, 37); (14 and 15) abridgment of the franchise, etc., by States (I, 37, 38). The first 10 of the amendments were submitted to the several State legislatures by a resolution of Congress which passed on Sept. 25, 1789, at the first session of the First Congress, and were ratified by a sufficient number of States on or before Dec. 15, 1791. The eleventh amendment was declared adopted Jan. 8, 1798; the twelfth Sept. 25, 1804; the thirteenth Dec. 18, 1865; the fourteenth July 28, 1868, and the fifteenth Mar. 30, 1870.

Amendments. (See Constitution.) America. The entire Western Continent or grand division of the world, including North, Central, and South America and the adjacent islands. It was named in honor of Amerigo Vespucci, an early explorer, whose accounts of the country received wide publicity. It was visited by Norse navigators as early as about 1000 A.D., and there are myths of Chi

nese and Irish discoveries, but it was not until after its discovery by Columbus in 1492 that it became generally known to Europeans. In a treatise on the new country published in 1507,called Cosmographiæ Introductio, by Waldseemüller, a teacher of geography in the college of St. Dié in the Vosges, the name of America was proposed. On the north the country includes the unexplored regions of the Arctic Ocean, and extending south all the land between the Atlantic and Pacific. The northern portion of America consists of a central basin divided by a watershed and marked by Hudsons Bay and its feeders on the north and drained by the Mississippi, Missouri, and Ohio rivers and their tributaries flowing into the Gulf of Mexico on the south. This great basin is separated from the ocean on each side by ranges of mountains in the general form of the letter V, having the Rocky Mountains for one arm and the Appalachian system for the other, the latter being shortened by the depression of the St. Lawrence River, which runs transversely to the general course of other rivers of the great basin. In South America the Andes-a continuation of the Rocky Mountain system-skirts the Pacific coast, and the general course of the rivers is to the southeast, except those north of the valley of the Amazon, which run north to the Caribbean Sea, an arm of the Gulf of Mexico. All America, from the frigid zone of the north through the torrid Tropics to the icy extreme of the south, is rich in either mineral or vegetable products or the flesh and furs of native animals. The original inhabitants of the country, called Indians (q. v.), have now almost entirely disappeared in most regions before the advance of the Caucasian race. The several political divisions of America are treated under separate headings.

America, Four Hundredth Anniversary of Discovery of:

Celebration of. (See Madrid, Spain; World's Columbian Exposition.)

Observance of, enjoined by proclamation,
IX, 289.

America, Russian. (See Alaska.)
American National Red Cross :

Aid furnished Cubans by, discussed, X, 59, 83. Work accomplished by, in Spanish-American War, discussed, X, 95. American Nations, Congress of. (See Panama, Isthmus of.)

American Protective Association.-While disclaiming to be a political party, this association, popularly known as the A. P. A., has influenced results in many localities. Its principles, as set forth in a platform adopted at Des Moines, Iowa, in 1894, are (1) protection of our nonsectarian free public-school system; (2) no public funds or property to be used for sectarian purposes; (3) preserving and maintaining the Constitution and Government of the United States; (4) restriction of immigration, and (5) extension of time required for naturalization. The association was organized in 1887, and soon had well-attended councils in nearly every State of the Union.

American Republics, Bureau of the International Union of.-A bureau established upon the recommendation of the Pan-American Conference of October, 1889, for the

American Republics, Bureau of the International Union of-Continued.

prompt collection and distribution of information concerning the American Republics. Its first report was transmitted to Congress in 1891 (IX, 212). In 1902 it was reorganized and placed under the control of a governing board composed of the diplomatic representatives of the American republics, at Washington, with the Secretary of State of the United States as chairman. The Bureau publishes a Monthly Bulletin and answers questions concerning the American republics and their commercial conditions. The Bureau also established in 1902 a Latin American Library to be known as The Columbus Memorial Library. The Bureau is supported by the several republics composing it, according to their population. The information supplied by the Bureau is of much commercial value. (See also International American Conference.)

American Republics, Bureau of:

Buildings of, X, 676.

Bulletins of, transmitted, IX, 243, 350.
Discussed, X, 113, 124, 156, 211.

Report of, transmitted, IX, 212, 334, 475, 569, 667, 751; X, 124.

American Seamen. (See Seamen, American.) American Society of Mechanical Engineers, memorial of, relating to Ericsson transmitted, IX, 130.

American System.-In his annual message, December, 1848, President Polk discussed what its authors and advocates called the "American system " (IV, 654). He insisted that this so-called system was founded on a departure from the earliest policy of the Government; that it depended on an enlargement of the powers of the Federal Government by construction and was not warranted by a just interpretation of the Constitution. One branch of the new system, it was claimed, was the establishment of a large national bank. The next branch was a high protective tariff, levied not to raise the revenue needed, but for protection merely; the next was a comprehensive scheme of internal improvements, and finally a plan for the distribution of the proceeds of the sales of the public lands among the States. But the term "American system," as most generally understood, is used to denote the policy of protection to home industries by means of high duties on imports. The term was probably first used by Henry Clay in the debates which preceded the enactment of the tariff law of 1824, when he called his plan of protective duties and internal improvements the "American system." American System discussed by President Polk, IV, 654.

American Wood Preserving Co., purchase of machinery from, referred to, VIII, 89. Americanism, President Roosevelt defines, X, 823.

Ames, Fisher:

Commissioner to treat with Indians, nomination of, I, 260.

1

On committee to conduct inaugural ceremony of President Washington, I, 47. Amin Bey, visit of, to United States referred to, V, 119. Amistad Case.-The case of the United States against the Spanish vessel Amistad. A cargo of kidnapped Africans, who had

been landed near Havana, Cuba, by a Portuguese slaver, was shortly afterwards placed aboard the Spanish vessel Amistad for shipment to Puerto Principe. On the voyage the negroes took possession of the vessel and ordered the crew to return to Africa; but the sailors brought her into American waters, where, off the coast of Long Island, she was captured by a United States war vessel and carried into New London, Conn., Aug. 29, 1839. On a libel for salvage the Supreme Court of the United States held on appeal that the negroes, having been kidnapped from a foreign country, were free men, and not bound by treaties with Spain. Amistad, The:

Appropriations for claimants in case of, rec-
ommended, IV, 551; V, 209, 446, 511, 561.
Claims arising out of, V, 98, 184.
Negroes taken on board, referred to, III,
639.

Reference to, IV, 275; V, 641.

Release of, demanded by Spanish minister,
III, 588.

Salvage due on, referred to, IV, 232. Ammunition. (See Arms and Ammunition.) Amnesty.-An act of pardon for political offenses. The effect of it is that the crimes and offenses against the State specified in the act are so obliterated that they can never again be charged against the guilty parties. When amnesty is proclaimed without restriction as to persons or localities it is called absolute. Numerous instances of qualified amnesty are found in ancient and modern history. When Thrasybulus overthrew the oligarchy at Athens he proclaimed an amnesty, excepting 30 tyrants and a few of their followers. President Lincoln's first amnesty proclamation excepted all officers or agents of the Confederate government, all army officers above the rank of colonel, all naval officers above the rank of lieutenant, all persons who left the service of the United States to participate in the insurrection, and all those who had resigned from the military or naval service and afterwards participated in rebellion; also all those who had treated colored persons or those in charge of them otherwise than as prisoners of war (VI, 213). Dec. 25, 1868, President Johnson proclaimed absolute amnesty (VI, 708). Amnesty (see also Pardons) : Proclamation of President Lincoln, VI, 213. Discussed, VI, 189, 254.

Persons entitled to benefits of, defined, VI, 218.

Referred to, VI, 310.

Proclamation of President Roosevelt, X, 496. Proclamations of President Johnson, VI, 310, 547, 655, 708.

Authority for, discussed, VI, 697.
Circular regarding, VI, 341.

Persons worth more than $20,000 to whom
special pardons issued, referred to, VI,
385.

Referred to, VI, 461, 471, 524, 581. Recommendations of President Grant regarding, VII, 153, 255.

Amphion, H. B. M. S., protects American interests, X, 587.

Amphitrite, The, mentioned, X, 93.
Amsterdam, Netherlands:

Accounts of bankers of United States in, rendered, I, 121.

Loan contracted by United States with, I, 128.

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