'.' 



< >iu i I'ARIKS. A M i:i;ir A N. (SiiLTB Sura.) 



ik l mini stale* 



IBw % Mii^i. "^s^*^*" 



Ho 



UM Howard Prssi 



1865-71 he wm pu~ 



hllicic 



K. V : MM n 







. an.i in, .lu. 



nimiiUn 



^. Eta 



rill* la Japan. llm-n... 

 fcrittur U.no in IV^-lni... al .. ' 

 lived Ul Wtochastrr I If puMinln 



...;,.-, M.,.ir.iVlndiu. 



Bazaar Book, or the Vernacular Teach- 



,,*nioo"(186)r : Sweet Savon of Divine 



Tr-h.- J catrehUm (IMS); and -Spiritual Teach- 



. educator, born in II. 



-'5* and at 

 . raj otdaJatd i-\ th.- 



CliofScheoecU.lv in 1858: and was pastor of the 

 . iMitohChorob In Boat Bert a i\. N. V . 

 In 1 a* yi .. B< iru l< : -i Professor 

 of Mental and Moral Philosophy in A mhcrst College, 

 holding the chair till . was elected 



ID Oonfrmi Ma popular , -andidate. not having been 

 mimlnauid by any irty. NN ) re0 he acted 



iofeorral Wl 0M Republican party. tbOQgfa In- -,,- 

 .,.. . -i . n i ;i.. daclaratioi] 

 of UM election of Rutlu-rf..nl It. HUVCM t<> th. 

 dencv. In 1877 he WM electc-1 l'r.-';.l.-nt <>f AmlurM 

 Collecr, which offloe be rwi^n.-i in .Inn.-, l -.-". II.- 

 . .--,. |. h. in..,, I ni..n C,,l!,-r in 

 !..!. fp.m Coluiiihiu in ls7'.. I; 

 oaptad an invitation to deliver a oourtte of lecti. 

 Intiia in \*~i; wanameinberofaoomniiiisionto 

 v law* of MaMichuen: wan one of 8 \ 

 piiolBlaii to ovemee Andover Theological S -mi nary ; 

 .M a trartee of the Clarke In>titui<- t-r h.'at 



Mutes. of Smith College for Women, and of Mount 

 llolyoke Female Seminary. During hi* admini-t ra- 

 tion at Amherst the college received endowment! 



' taXMJOO, and he wan inMnim.-ntal 



in raisins; over $170.000 after the burning of Walker 

 Hall. H. rnli- radical <-hatiires in the 



of the oollege, al"!.-i..n.' tin- marking .-\ --t.-m aii-1 



. . . -.....'. 1 -....'.I'!.. .-.'I,. ': 



meat fwaker from upectal dcpartincntM 

 Uiy excelled. He alao brou. ,.- 



of role* for UM conduct of the student*, a 



wa* known the 



" college aenate." 

 themael v in all 





in 



abolition 



students, and form. -d 

 un-1-T which 



Dr. Seelye was a frcquer 

 . snd published a translation of 

 History of Philosophy 11 (N- v York, 

 18M);~- Lectures to Educated II .abay, 



19TS; republtshed aa -The Way, the Truth, the 

 . tram ated into Hindustani, 

 JaMMaa,aj 



a and edited Hickok's 



afcam. Motel at area, actor. born in Livernoo 

 to*. ' I in N . .--ink 11,-hlan.U, 



. J . Kept. It. IBM. She began her ca 

 *** st M'.ntmml. and made her first anneannM in 





alH.ut l.ss.'J. - -..- .:, 11,.,1 



IMT !< r. tin lr..ii. tlu- Htage. 



. 



Hjkaa i 



Wl AJ^O 



' l Ptr 

 old Wa 



0eonja, jurist, IMTII in 



:..:.! !.:. \ , ,-!:.- M.. .1. .ii.tlu-r :ii.'l J 

 alxl ... .th IHM pi 



.u\\ and \Nii.-> u.liiiilti-.; 

 1 iOD alt-Til. 

 and \\ 



in l-,". u was aK- 



rhnrl- 



I!*- put.l. 



""Sb, 



Robert WOwn. nuvul otl 

 Hook, 



..|'l".lltr.i Ji 



in tli< pasted 



,.hipinun. Ji. " ' ' ' ' >;1 1RM? 



Jtomrcal, and made her first appearance in 



.. !;.. ..--.. 



4.1*84. At that time she was the 

 ! Watts, author and scientist, who 

 h Commodore Perry's exped 



pie Theater, and five years after- 

 pularity in the character ot 

 lias Beware, 11 at the Broad- 

 rried John Sefton Jan. 15, 

 kppeared on the stage quite 

 telM*. While a member ot 

 i created the role of Sarah 

 sy "Kosedale." 

 ted Sutes of Tillie 





r 



L L04; 



temu. ~.'>8; 



comma] 



..plain, he,-. 

 :i] follow in- 

 motion-. Sept. -Jl, 



miral. M 

 21,1884 II- 



1 e'l^'llt- 



ira and one 



month ; <>n .shore <r 



other duty, eleven 



and three 



month.-*; and WU.H 



unemployed twenty- 



md tour 



month-. I.ein.' out of 

 th- -ervi.-e ; 



\.-n 



'months from July 20,1854, when he wo* OOm 

 with the inen-hant marine ami had <-li.. 

 \.-\in_' party on the i.sthrnu> i Tehi.. 

 the beginning of the eivil war h wa- in < 

 of a steamship plvinir l>etw. 

 vana, and soon afterward he wa> appointed 



States consul L'.-n.-ral at the latter -': 

 1868 he re-entered the navy un<i> 

 .-ommander, dated Nov. 19, 1862. II. \ 



command of the steamer "('cm. 



blockading dnfy at Charieaton, and took paf 

 engagement on M.-rri- Islat, 

 man-led the " I'r'-t.-u- " of tin- Ka>tern (iulf I 

 ingsquadr-.n. After the war he wax sueees,-i\ - i> in 



.m.l of the " Hartford " of th( 

 rn, the " Wa--husi-tt " of tl.- 

 the monitor " Miantonomoh. r| In 1-7" '71 

 .ty, l>oth on the 

 I'urintr 1 S 7 



ehi.-f ot' the Bureau of K.juipm. ' n ^K 



and in 1879- 1 80 was on a 8fH---ia to Afrapl 



and the K:i>t Indies, in 



of American .-ommi-reial relations. I )urii,. f '. '. . .- r n- 1 

 he was selected for arl-itrator hy the i 

 and I',- -.mcnt.K to * < un-l 



ary question, a?id rabaeQuentlv 

 agreement with the Kingdom of Korea for pr 



in life and property. In I 

 . rjiina. a.* - 



ti ill 



to the world and r-<-oirni/ed that ; 

 dependent nation. After ]n^ return t 

 States he wa 



that designed th<- h'n*t stw! 

 new navy, and was al- 



.' 

 time in Korea UK the gaestofthc nation. 



Sleeper. Solomon 8.. philanthropist, horn in i 

 N. H.. March 1- ad in Nort- 



Mass., Jan. 6, 18'.' 

 clergyman, and in 1848 engaged in the wholesale 



