G40 



OBITUARIES, FOIMH.N (JOERGENS OLM.) 



Gael in Gwrnedd" (18-V iipus 



Tyrannus" (1862): of numerous pub: 

 mons 

 and Ann. j 



JOCRTI-IIMMI. Adolf IHtle\ .1 nan. 



born swig..Iu. 



in Ik-tuber. 1897. He was educated at Flensburg 

 and at the fnivor>ny of Copenhagen, and I.. 

 a teacher in tin- grammar school at Plensbui 

 1868. When the German* occupied th- 



missel him fr.-m his post. II. then 



rv, re- 



ap|M,int ment iii INV.i in I he royal ar- 

 , of which he was made keeper a few years 



and win. ' 



3 N. the II; 



rounding 

 and I -' !' .:::; i. : <>f the Scandin 



KM- inn xchasi jan itist, born 



: di.-d in 



.,bia..lune 17. 1 s '.':. II. \\as trained 

 as a weaver, and followed the trade till hi- 



..when he prepared himself for tin- Catholic 

 priesthood and stu<: i* r to de- 



velop the system of water run- that ho had tried 

 experimentally in his own CAM- and under which 

 he had brought himself into a vigorous state of 

 after having been weakly and apparently 

 implive from early youth, lie began to apply 

 his treatment to the country ; -he neigh- 



borhood in l*i s with such success as to ln-in_ 



from far and wide and extend his reputation 

 her Kneipp took no pay 



for ! ment. but lived 



simply mi nd as a prieM. ||, ; ,:t,-nded 



personally case, and administered the 



baths with his own "hands until, after the publica- 



ii his methiNl of hydrotherapy. the 

 crowds of patients that flocked to the village to 

 seek his cure necessitate.! t he employment of ;i 

 ants. 11* . Meipp \ i rein was established 



to carrv on the work. It has been supported by 

 charitable contributions, and has grown into a large 



ng for 1,200 patients or more, in 

 1894 Fall. was called to Rome to treat 



Pope Leo, to whom lie brought relief in serious 

 gastric troubles. A sanitarium, based on the Kneipp 

 system, was established in New Jersey in 1806. The 

 main element- of the treatment consist in (heap- 

 plica 1 resh air, and water. Its 



most striking feature is a walk in the early morn- 

 ing, barefoot, through the dew or snow. ( >f her im- 

 portant features are baths of certain kinds taken at 

 stated times, the use of clothing that admits light 

 and air, total abstention from alcohol, and limita- 



l on the eating of n. 



Kni-ht < h.irle* Parson*, an Knglish arti-t. 

 born in Bristol. 1-Yb. ]'>. 1829; died in London. 

 Jan. 22. 1897. He was educated by hi- father. 



-.f Bristol Cathedral, and began his 

 career a* n midshipman, but left the sen* ice at the 

 end of his first voyage. Hi- short experien 

 the sea was of much service to him in his later pro- 

 feeii. f his ,;. surpassed him 



in drawing waves, depicting light effects in v, 

 and representing ships* hulls and rigging. His 

 studies were pursued at the life school of t h- 

 tol Academy, as well as along the coasts and 

 of Somerset and Devon, and the first pi 

 exhibited by him were of the harbor of Bristol and 

 the windings ' . Hi* fir 



London Academy, - Durham from tin- North," was 

 exhibited in l v :<! j n Ixmdon 



in 1861,' Is of Old Spee- 



ton Cliffs, Yorkshire," is one of hi? rm*t brilliant 

 works. As a general thing, the public did not 



greatly care for his pictures, while arti-t- admired 



; raised them. His themes in the main 

 drawn from Kngland. Scotland, and South \\ 

 and were often views of the coast 



l.e-i:e. .lames, a Sootoh --h. -lar. b. -rn in llunt- 



-:. : di.-d n 

 He was graduated at the 



1'lUV. i subseijuelitly 



stmlied at the Hi^hbur\ lle^e. In 



1889 he went to China, living in II from 



:id Was pastor of the i :,,|i;il 



< hurch ti 'he greater part of the time. 



tafeator of 



Chinese at Oxford. He was a profound 

 industrious scholar, and raoeifed from i 

 histi 1 -;" the -lull, n Pn/.c for In- tran-la- 



i I and 



other \\ ril ilia's include "The Not ion- of t he ( hinese 



ician 



Anal. d and iraiislat. 



1 and tran-late.i dstlli; "The Shu 

 ( Hi-torieal hociimenl-." edited 

 and translated 



"The Shi Kn 



iited and tran-late.i The (Vim 



' With the '!'- < liwan." < dil.-d and tran 



"The I'.ook of Ancient Chim-. n Kn-li-h 



red 1 looks of Cliina." trans- 



lated (Oxford, 1 "The |{-ligions of ( 'hina : 



< 'onfu. -ianism and Taoism, de-.-ribrd and compared 



with Christianity" (1880); Ke.-ord of I'.u.ldhi-tic 



Kingdoms." tran-lai ;md " Th- 



:nelit of ll-i-an-fu in Sheii-llsi. Chi: 



I.ocku ..... I. Sil 1'nnik. an Knglish law\, r. b..rn 

 in Manche-ter in Is-UJ ; died in London. 1> 

 1897. He \\a- the son of a bu-iness man. I! 

 tered Caius < 'oll-ge. Cambridge, in IM;: ( . and \sa- 

 called to the bar at Lincoln's Inn in l s i 1. He was 

 one of the most successful of Knglish adv. 

 especially in the defense of j.n-oners. and 

 the mOM popular member- of the bar possessing 



ile talents and a sparkling wit. Hi- In 

 ability would ha\e made him famous <>n the stage. 

 He had a genii! .it ure. \vhich he tun. 



account in drawings published in "Punch" and 

 illustrations for one or two books. No 01. 

 him as a merry after-dinner speaker and 

 teller. At the bar he was impressive. severe, denun- 

 ciatory, ironical. witty, suave. a- the . <.f tin- 



Case demanded, and' his cross--\aminatioii- 



blj dreaded by witm . H> WM elected to 

 Parliament in 1885 as a Liberal for York <-it _. 

 ilelighted the house with his bright and ingenious 

 speeches. In October, 1894, he was appim 

 hcitor-deneral, and was knighted. 



I. IMS. .lean Bernard. I n neh alieni.-t, born in 

 in August, 1807. He was 



phy-ician in chief to ti -ylum and the 



author of important works on the nervous -\ 

 including .iphie |e- 



" Physiologic et Pathologic Cerebrales," and " llyp- 

 noti-me K \ p. ri mental." 



.Malcolm ~ <.e.,i r< :.--ral. born 



in Bombay in . 



Bewai in India merchant's son. and 



hi- education a t Addi- 



the Bombay army in IS.'JO. In the Afghan <;,m- 

 :i of 1838 he served in the commi-sary gen- 

 department. and was present at the capture 

 of Ghu/ni and the occupation of Cabul. ! 

 1840 till 1842 he was constantly engaged again -t 

 the Beluchi- in (ommand of a detachment of the 

 Si nd horse in east ern Kutchi, in 1848 he participated 

 in operations against Mir Shah Mohammed, and in 

 1844 and 1845 served again in Kutchi in Sir Charles 

 Napier's campaign against the hill tribes. In the 



