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CONTENTS OF VOLUME XVI.

PAGE
[Equal Rights, whether Political or Civil, by Act of Congress. Letter to the Border State Convention at Baltimore, September 8, 1867]1
[Are We a Nation? Address before the New York Young Men’s Republican Union, at the Cooper Institute, Tuesday Evening, November 19, 1867]3
[Constant Distrust of the President. Remarks in the Senate, on the Final Adjournment, November 26, 1867]66
[The Fourteenth Amendment: Withdrawal of Assent by a State. Remarks in the Senate, on the Resolutions of the Legislature of Ohio rescinding its former Resolution in Ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment, January 31, 1868]69
[Loyalty in the Senate: Admission of a Senator. Remarks in the Senate, on the Resolution to admit Philip F. Thomas as Senator from Maryland, February 13, 1868]73
[International Copyright. Letter to a Committee in New York, on this Subject, February 17, 1868]86
[The Impeachment of the President. The Right of the President of the Senate pro Tem. to vote. Remarks in the Senate, on the Question of the Competency of Mr. Wade, Senator from Ohio, then President of the Senate pro Tem., to vote on the Impeachment of President Johnson, March 5, 1868]88
[The Chief Justice, presiding in the Senate, cannot rule or vote. Opinion in the Case of the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, March 31, 1868]98
[Expulsion of the President. Opinion in the Case of the Impeachment of Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, May 26, 1868]134
[Constitutional Responsibility of Senators for their Votes in Cases of Impeachment. Resolutions in the Senate, June 3, 1868]227
[Validity and Necessity of Fundamental Conditions on States. Speech in the Senate, June 10, 1868]230
[Eligibility of a Colored Citizen to Congress. Letter to an Inquirer at Norfolk, Va., June 22, 1868]255
[Independence, and those who saved the Original Work. Letter on the Soldiers’ Monument at North Weymouth, Mass., July 2, 1868]256
[Colored Senators,—their Importance in settling the Question of Equal Rights. Letter to an Inquirer in South Carolina, July 3, 1868]257
[Financial Reconstruction through Public Faith and Specie Payments. Speech in the Senate, on the Bill to fund the National Debt, July 11, 1868]259
[No Reprisals on Innocent Persons. Speech in the Senate, on the Bill concerning the Rights of American Citizens, July 18, 1868]297
[The Chinese Embassy, and our Relations with China. Speech at the Banquet by the City of Boston to the Chinese Embassy, August 21, 1868]318
[The Rebel Party. Speech at the Flag-Raising of the Grant and Colfax Club, in Ward Six, Boston, on the Evening of September 14, 1868]326
[Enfranchisement in Missouri: Why wait? Letter to a Citizen of St. Louis, October 3, 1868]331
[Issues at the Presidential Election. Speech at the City Hall, Cambridge, October 29, 1868]333