434 



INDIA. 



Republican. 



De 



1 Aldrich, 1-V230 



2 Davis, 10.:J47 

 8 Barber. 9,574 

 4 Shenvin, 12.75:3 

 6 Hawk, 11,042 



6 Hendersonl0.9t>4 



7 Haves, 10,712 



8 Fort, 11,271 



9 Boyd, 10.543 



10 Marsh. 11,814 



11 Diinmitt, 6.956 



12 Cook, 9,146 

 18 Tipton, 12,058 



14 i Cannon, 18,698 



15 Forsythe,*13,106 



Smith, 

 Baker, 



9,946 

 10,605 



Thomas, 12,636 



Bell, 



8,190 



Doolittle, 7,232 

 Kehoe, 6,111 

 Free, 5,280 



Stoughton, 4,260 

 Hathaway, 4,828 

 Dunham, 3,257 

 Brooks, 5,795 

 Shaw, 4,822 



Wilson, 9.802 

 Phelps, 11,238 

 Singleton, 11,961 

 Springer, 12,542 

 Stevenson, 13,870 

 Jones, 11,527 

 Decius, 12,942 

 Sparks, 11,493 

 Morrison, 12,436 

 Allen, 12,074 



Townshend 12,603 



Barr, 



Smell 

 Adams,' 



gy, 



1,854 



1 'ss4 

 3,636 



e$6 



Campbell, 6,512 



r * q 

 SSSSf^ $6 



Mather, 

 Harper, 



4,611 

 4,65i 



Moberty, 1,598 

 Davis, 2,464 

 Crews, 2,847 



In the First District, McAuliffe, Socialist, had 

 2,322 votes ; in the Second, Condon, Indepen- 

 dent, 250, and Schilling, Socialist, 2,473 ; in the 

 Third, Sibley, Independent, 2,306 ; in the Elev- 

 enth, Payne, Prohibition, 3,034 ; in the Thir- 

 teenth, Bickamore, Prohibition, 134; in the 

 Nineteenth, Anderson, Independent Democrat, 

 7,663. 



For State officers the vote was as follows : 

 for Treasurer J. C. Smith, Republican, 215,- 

 283 ; E. L. Cronkite, Democratic, 169,965 ; E. 

 N. Bates, National, 65,673 ; J. R. Gavin, Pro- 

 hibition, 2,192. For Superintendent of Public 

 Instruction J. P. Slade, Republican, 206,624; 

 S. M. Etter, Democratic, 171,451 ; F. R. Hall, 

 National, 65,507 ; K. L. Hopkins, Prohibition, 

 2,056. 



The State Legislature was divided as fol- 

 lows: 



The heat of the 16th and 17th of July was 

 unprecedented in Chicago and St. Louis, and 

 through the Northwest. Many lives were lost 

 by sunstroke. 



INDI A,t a British viceroyalty in Asia. Vice- 

 roy and Governor-General of Bengal, Lord 

 Lytton, appointed in 1876; Commander-in- 

 Chief of the Army, Sir Frederick P. Haines. 

 The Executive and Legislative Council is com- 

 posed as follows: The Viceroy, the Com- 

 mander-in-Chief, Major-General Sir E. B. John- 

 son, Sir John Strachey, Whitley Stokes, Sir 



Andrew Clarke, Sir Alexander J. Arbuthnot, 

 and A. Rivers Thompson. The lieutenant- 

 governors of the provinces are honorary mem- 

 bers of the Council, when it meets in their 

 respective provinces. Government Secretaries : 

 for the Interior, Sir Stuart C. Bayley ; for the 

 Finances, R. B. Chapman ; for Revenue, Agri- 

 culture, and Commerce, A. O. Hume ; for For- 

 eign Affairs, A. C. Lyall; for Military Affairs, 

 Colonel H. K. Burne ; for Public Works, Major- 

 General W. A. Crommelin. The lieutenant- 

 governors and chief commissioners of the dif- 

 ferent provinces are as follows : Bengal, Lieu- 

 tenant-Governor, Sir A. Eden ; Northwest 

 Provinces and Oude, Sir G. E. W. Couper, 

 Bart. ; Punjaub, Lieutenant-Governor, R. E. 

 Egerton; Central Provinces, Chief Commis- 

 sioner, J. H. Morris ; British Burmah, Chief 

 Commissioner, C. U. Aitchison; Assam, Chief 

 Commissioner, Colonel R. H. Keatinge ; Mad- 

 ras, Governor-General, Duke of Buckingham 

 and Chandos ; Bombay, Governor-General, Sir 

 Bart. 



of British India, 

 5, was as follows: 



The public debt of India on March 31, 1876, 

 was as follows : 



I. CONSOLIDATED DEBT. 

 1. Payable in India : 



Total, March 81, 1876 134.058,644 



" " " 1875 



The budgets for the years 1874^'76, and 

 timated for 1876-'78, were as follows : 



t *?& a 'Sf p? P nia?io e n of the difffere, The values of the P^cipal articles of import 



lutribntion y*i33^^ and export for the years 1876-77 were as fol- 



and population of cftics, see Annual Cyclopedia" for 1876. lows : 



