OBITUARIES. AMI IMt AN 



tad mo* worthy fraud patriarch of the national divi 



-. \ -,'-..- I'. .; .V.r 



fceabo joined the Independent Or 

 pUrm and *uUoquenUyhe wa- twice cloctod frrand 

 br the Grand Temple of New York. 



- .. I.- ; 



in 186ft, n7 



. N. 



and pub. 

 till lifs death. I 

 _ President of the Now 

 Society, ami in 1898 had general ehar 

 "_--! '* in Chicago d 



*t! 



ETwoHd* Tperanoa Congress in 



. . . - M. ;;,,;, 



IMLofUte 



'"emp* 



since 1849; and publiahed 



ranee Advocate " ; waa 



. 



<" (New York, U 



; .I.-.- 



, VotaM" (1876): "The Prohibition Song- 

 ster* (ISM); and "One Hundred Yean of Temper- 



llssrea, Jioiek Baiker, electrician, born in 



...leu. Me., Julv 2,189ft. 



\ . '. M , : 



erne superintendent of the Boston fire-alarm Tele- 

 graph Company in 1865, and held the office till 1867, 

 when he weaeTeoted President of the Franklin 

 graph Company, operating lines between Boston and 

 WashingtorV Whfle in charge of the fire-alarm tele- 

 graph in Boston he made numerous inventions, by 

 which the system reached its present hiirh state of 

 In 18*S he invented a duplex system 



Of telegraphy, for which he received a United States 

 patent and royalties from the ! n< -h, Italian, 



KuMtan, and Spanish government*, from several in 

 Central and South America, and al-o from -nl. marine 

 leietiapb oompanie*. He was employed as an elec- 

 trical engineer in making, laying, and putting into 



........ .- ; - ,;.: , ,. ?. ... 



end Vera Crux, Mexico, and between the Ixthmus of 

 w in Mexico and Calls-. -. the 



of his last work he made his home in 

 where he gathered a collection of 

 carved ivories, said to be the largest ever made. 

 BUreaa. Joka Leavitt, journalist, born in ' 

 Veraon, Me., Aug. 1, l:;died in Auiru^r 

 Keb. 8, 189&. He was educated at the Main 



n Seminary and the Watervillc Liberal Institute; 

 led theology, and was ordained a minister of the 

 UniversalUt Church in 1844. After ten years failing 

 health compelled him to abandon the ministry, and 

 Junes O. Blaine. then one of the owners of The 



. ., ' >< ...- .' .:.,,. 



snip of that paper. Three rears afterward Mr. Bluine 

 renoted to Portland, and Mr. Stevens succeeded him 

 aa editor in chief, holding the place till 1870. He was 

 UMO appointed United Staten minister to Uruguay 

 Paraguay, which oountriea were in a disturbed 

 n. Ho wa influential in protecting American 

 and in aiding to re establish peace between 



: ' - / " : '.:.-.! 



yean afterward went to Sweden aa United States 

 there till 188$. While residing 

 . tthered materials for a history of 

 Adotphas and die Thirty Years' Wur 

 be wea appointed minister to the Hawaiian Is- 

 A revocation against the r .rncnt 



e* in Honolulu on Jan. 80, 1 898 ; die Queen's 

 *** y^othrown, and a provisional govern- 

 PiQoWiMHl (see article- HAWAIIAN ISLANDS 

 'Aiwoal Cyclopedia - for 1893). V 

 rna MahtUhed a protectorate over the islands on 

 I ~m an h ich wa pronpdy 



tntan oTKcate. Un Feb. 15 Preafdent 

 t * M Senate a mesaaM accompanied 



Initial 



connected with the .\ ni.r.-\v 

 vesting him with puruinotiiit authority, 

 nit witlio!n-w tin- PP.' 

 in May Minister s recallou an 



was ai|x>iii' in his plu> 



tunic.l t<> tlu- 1 1.1 tid Status aixl t<.l, i> turt> 

 ini'iil'li*- n: 1 



Stiles. Isaac Newton, law \.-r. >...rn in s 

 July H5. ls:s:; die.l in Chi.-a-o, 111.. .1. 



. 

 and was aUmittol t<> the l>ar in 



L86& BOOH a!: r\sur<l !, l.r.-aiin- J.PIM-. u! MI/ :itt..r- 



to the l.r^ihlutnn- : ami \\i 

 ;aki-r in 



,nin/ <.t' tin- civil \\ ;i - 



private. Inn tirhl as a-ljutni:' 



Itxliana Infantry, lie war taki-n ; 

 Hill, iitnl wa> confined 

 (>n being exchanged, he n-turnt-.l t th. 

 |.r"tii"ti-l nuijiT, lii-nti-nant -i.|m.. 

 the 63d Indiana Volunteers, and was br 



rn-ral f-T im-rit"! 



81, 18C.">. Att-r the war Inr M-ttl< .1 ii 

 pracl 



Stockbridge. Henry, lawyer, l-'-rn in N 

 Mass.. .' -: 'lie.l in Hal 1 



11. 1895. lie was irra<hmtc<l at Amhei 

 1846, and \MLS admitted to the lar 

 1,1848. During the civil \viir he wiu 

 l'ni.n ejiUM\ and wa appointed a Hp. 

 attorney in the Wur Department. In 



: /Mature, he drew up ' 

 vidin^r f<>r a Constitutional eon\ 

 slavery in that State, li 

 tion, and Hubscquentl. 

 framed by it txjforc the court of 1: 

 (iiiently he instituted a- 

 the United Statex cou 

 the indentures of appronnceHh i p. through w ) 



had Keen made t<> evade the 

 clause. K;. ---.-ured th 



mcnt of more than 10,000 colored ehildjv; in Mun 

 larxl. In 1 



Hultimore Count v. lie was Viee-Pre- 

 Maryland I: 



years editor of the fund pul.;' 

 Part XXII to "The An-hives of M 

 more. 



Stone. David Marvin, jonrnali-t. l.on 

 Conn.. L7; died in Brooklyn 



2,189o. He reeeiveil a eoinrii 



. in teaehiriL' ud in n 



till 184'J. when lie heeame a men-hunt in I' 1 

 phia, and in 184'J removed to New V/.r 

 came editor of the " T 

 December following he became eommer 

 w The Journal of c..miner.-e." Ii. 

 tion with William C. Trimc, he ]>ureha--. the : ;IHT, 

 and live y.-arn af .-eded Mr. : 



tor in chief He held this plaee till June 10, l<tp 

 he pa]M-r wus eon-olidat-d with "The C0fe- 

 mercial Bulletin." A notable incident in 1 

 editorial ean-er wa the Hupprension of 

 the United States (iovertimcnt in May. . 

 lishintf a spuriotiH draft proclamation purp. 

 have '' 

 the alleged proclamation were sent to 



: IIJKTS in the eity. 1 

 mcrce" and the " Worl.l" 

 pnUUlod it in full. Thef.nl\ j.er.-on in 

 Joseph Howard. Jr.. air 

 was a lover of 1! 



garden an<l eon-.f-rvat'iry. triviritr fn ly of h 

 treasu- k. He |K-J 



Brook: putable Agtd 



Indigent Women * 



Story. William Wetmore. senlptor. 

 born in Salem. M. 

 brosa, Italy. 



Story, the famous jurist, and after irradi. 

 vard University ntudied law with hi.s father ai 



