OBITUARIES, FOREIGN. 



- kfl . -..- aV tod to 1 i 

 ial and to the Federal 

 voHuuthe one that made the moat st 

 ^^ a^u SttDeniitioB* 1 * a fierce potomie. against 

 WoooT itUfkma authority as a * 



ti|rations into Animal 

 ,-.:.,, .. aad 

 of modern civilisation. Another 

 _fc was - Man ai 

 a^d the History of the Earth 

 * work on the - MammUerC and a widely read 



TTioaiat FraacU, sn Kngluh scholar, horn 



.i.il.ri.lK- 

 Ma*k at list 



...... ., ;. : rlth nil 



.. .uthority on Chi- 

 tofiica, and his service* in the nemtiat 

 es'wer* of great aasiaunce to the furtherance 

 Kaflfch trad. i<- became i. 



, : llritili trade 

 1*71. and retired on a pension in 1488. I 



.:.. ; , ...;,, ., ..- , :im 



Jofea BJTM Leiowter. Baron dc Tablcy, an 

 t, born at Tahley House, Kn 



SA. 1885; died Nov. jsa, IMO. II- 

 at Eton and ceded 



hfe father as the thin i Kanm -I- TaM.-v in 1-7. II.- 



- . .. . i -./.->. poato, bol 

 vas sensitive and diffident. Hb wriOngs were by no 

 mean* ao widely known aa they deaervod to be, but 

 the drde of readen to whom hb name was familiar 

 him a* a genuine poet Perhaps hb 1 



b reached in the serious dramas 

 - Philoctetes," but all hi* work re- 

 claasical sympathies, a delicate, refined 

 ut* and freat wealth of imagery. HIM flrwt book, 

 the pseudonym .Mm I'. Lancaa- 

 (18S). Hb subsequent works 

 >: - Eelofoes and Monodramas " ( 18W ); - S t u 1 

 ies in Veiw ** ( 186&) ; - Philoctetea " ( 1866) ; ** ()n- 

 s Loose: A Novel " (1868); 



-Ropes of Sand: A Novel" (1870); Rehearsals: A 

 BoofcofVer* 



n (187-" i 



** (187O; -Study of Book Plates" (1880); 

 -oems: Dramatic and Lyrical 11 <2d series, 1895). 



Wmaavsm. Wlfflaai Orawford. an Kn^lish naturalist, 

 born la Scarborough, N . ; ; died in 



baa*, Jane S8, 18t6. Hb flmt scientific monograph 

 was jmbliabed when be waa but eighteen. He prac- 

 tised medicine for many years at Manchester, l.ut 



,'..- ...-.;..- . .-.,., . 



Jaitllii parsuita. Between 1845 and 1847ho pub- 

 lielMd a notable scries of papers on the develor>,m nt 

 ef labcV teeth and aoales. Tib moat impoitantinvee- 

 ticatioos b) bier rears related to the stru 

 ail pteau. hb -(/nrsniation of the Fossil Plants of 

 tb. rosJ Measures" taking high rank as an authority. 

 lie bscasM PMbasor of Natural Ilbtory snd Goology 

 M Oellcf* ill 1851, and held the chair of Hot- 



MitlMMsjMaliat. 



. . *'* f**tai a Frroch dressmaker, born in Bourne, 

 ^Mhm,. Kna-land, in IMS; died in Paris, March 

 *x HbteW,aaolieitor,whohadbeooineim. 



i i:., ., -i. 



f *U,iftoe to a dnr foods'llnn. 



i wea to Park at the age of t ,.,,^ . un.l 

 be was employed by a silk house, 

 .. added the branch of mak in* 



When hi* time 

 for 



of making up 

 refused a partnemhip. 

 in the Ru. 

 a Swede, for his 

 SO persons, hut 

 ' *s cnstom. and 

 when 



eventually the 



"Jail .Uw European capitals and 

 orked t him EWiployed 1.200. 

 universally 



aiul ja< KI I <>t (If 



Zorilla, Manuel Rail, a >i>ani>h i-lit; 

 .-I in r.tuv">. Juno 

 iced law ii, 



I' tx\rllt\ -ttti \va.H I'livUtl to tin- ( : . ^. \ , 





 . \ilr, hiivit. 



i\Tturni-.l in 1^' 

 Uic Parliament tl 



Aosta in 1^7". \\ li-n 



he math 1 X>rilla hi- 1'iin.. Min;- 



ii him thiM.r.i. r "Itl,. 



uauallyreaei . .>it\. Xorilla <-an 



tude nii'l a<lmirati<>ii of the Spanbh pen] 

 inu' tlu-ir liU-rtir.H and intro-hx-in:: swee] 

 n-li.nn.- ; Li/ |.m. nt ->\ i 



ru|iU-<l \\lu-n Amailco. U\\<T a troubled r- 

 years, abdicated a n< 1 \\-nt t<> l'-Ttu-_Ml. a--<.n 



. \\ h<. h.\\. 



to Spain an<l cmlirac-e<l rc|>ul>li<-aii. 

 took a <-..n-|.i,-ii"iis purl in allair> <lurii 

 in, aii'l lu-caini- a tln'rou^h^oiiiL' '' ; 

 a lca<l-r t' tin- a<i 



.rl.'-n- wrer in 1^7."- in ' 



Alt'"ii~ .\as M-tit i: 



Ho took up hi.- rr.-'xlrh.'i- ill 1 

 livi-.l in Kn^laml aixl S\\ it/.i-rlaixl. atxl xomt-ti 

 the Miuth ol 



f!L-ily with lii.- j.:trti.-aii.> in Spain. ll< 

 Spain only a It-w nx.nth.- l.i-t-r- he li.i. 

 on account Of failing health, any further 

 in iv.liti.-.s. While Ca.-telar and 

 \ ioleiice up accepted the ni'Hiarel,;. 

 a revolutionary republican al 

 against the monar 



OHIO, a Central Western Siatr. 

 the Union in IMCI ; jM.pulation, arrnn; 

 last census (1890), 3,660,71!). it I- in- foui 

 rank of the States ; area, according to the I 

 States Geol>u r ial Survey, 41,060 suuan- 

 of which 40,760 is land surface and 300 water 

 surface. Capital. ('<luinl>u-. 



Oovornment. The State ofl'n rs during 180 

 were: Governor, William .McKinlev 

 an: Lieutenant (Jovcnmr. Andr-\v 1-. II 

 Secretary of State, Samuel L. Tayli.r ; A 

 Ebenezer W. Poe; Tiva-mvr. William T. 



i of Public W 



Cluirlf.s K. (iroce. Edwin I A! 

 >iner <>f rmninnii > 

 Judges of the Supreme Court. I-' ran! 

 man until February 9, Tha<ld<-u^ A. M 

 Marshall .1. Williams. Jm-.,l, I'. Hurki-tt, 

 Ham T. Spear, Joseph I'. I'.radl.ui 

 Shauck from l'YI>. 9; Cl.-rk of ti 

 Court, .losiah II. Ali- 



nderirk I',. McXeal. 



Finances. The r< th. fiscal j 



1805, including balance from 1804, v. 

 888.04, which were u-"i l.y the f.,ll..w. 

 ttartments and institutions: l'"ard of 

 Works $KI.-,.:: 



Home, from fnitcd States ^!'.M^!.ll : 

 and K-.od Coiiuni ionr-r. from fin. 

 Commissioner of I; 

 from railroad companies, $15.855.8: ' 

 of Mines, from fines. $5; total recei) 

 Hal purpx>ses. x for ll 



purposes, including lialanco, 4,0 

 disbursements f ' . l-V I 1 



$3.7.V . dance in trwisurv Nov. 10, 18W, 



