reëlected lieutenant-governor, [177];

elected to Congress (1862), [248];

aspires to U. S. senatorship, [262];

attack on Representative E. B. Washburne, [262];

fails to receive nomination for U. S. senator, [264];

withdraws from senatorial contest, [297];

nominee for Congress (1878), [316];

contests W. D. Washburn’s election, [317];

turns to authorship, [318];

champions free school-books, [321].