letter from G. B. Raum to, [67];

campaigns in Minnesota, [68];

attends Republican National Convention of 1856, [69];

colloquy with Mason, on destruction of the Union, [70];

letter of, to J. B. Turner, on conditions in 1857, [71];

divers reports to, on effect of Douglas's Anti-Lecompton stand, [74], [75];

demolishes Buchanan's message on Kansas affairs, [76], [77];

letters to, on possible alliance of Douglas with Republicans, [79], [80];

Democratic overtures to, [80], [81];

speaks on Buchanan's claim that slavery lawfully exists in Kansas, [81], [82];