

. the nave. MM! very DMT the 



Kruv. . ..f hii ntiagviehed pftd - N Bfcffl 



I'll 

 glican |>rrli<-, born in IhiMin tn 1-.'- , 





College. I'Uultn, 111 I80o, 



! . < 



4in. fruin whom in 1858 be receive* t 

 Unoglaii and Cumin. 

 where he look a great interest in the missions for 



a movement which rtMtf^vl t 



Hej MM ..." :.- I'-'.' V 



Ill Kngland. \\'..-. (hi Iri.h Chur.h * 



lished in 1880. 1 



U..-0,,,,- preoentof of x ivn-k - 4hataL - , ., 



lri in t f reoonstrooting its 



macli the new basis <>f a vnluiitan 



with lay representation. 



Dublin when it wa- . the resignation of 



played an important (.art in the recent hist. 



relation* with the dissenting bodies. His bold 



. .r-..: 



i under Bishop Cabrera gave rise to 



:tn . |- :-.-.!, m m'. ma';. Bnl |- 1 '. -. II- vv.i- int4 



estedin the promotion .l 



lr 



sscretary in the Hungarian Ministry of F\ 

 but a* soon a* the i*%olu 



the_.^ 



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



menu Kossuth sent hin 



pry abroad. After the 1*1 



he reeisinirl ns an etife in foreign jm 



eomps^lCoa*.* on hi. travel, a^ojoar. in 



ra. was cme to te iar n . re- 

 or some years and wrote hooka on 

 pfOOa&m, mrn-hant shipping; the 



led the Church of 

 the Alexandra school. He 



terof all philantl. 



Edward. llaron. an Eng- 

 itsh jurist, born in uondon in 1888; died them 



-?. H.- was a son of t! 



liar*: MI| the grandson of a 



Scotch addl<T who was the leader in hut trade in 

 London in the last century, and whose numerous 

 descendan 



law. th. nr md official llfr. Ilr had 



t read law with hi* father 



and served as his private secretary when he was 

 . iey -General, was called to the bar in 1848. re- 

 ported ca-tct for 

 countv court 



i-n.v. and other sabiecta. HW practice 



!!> incrwMed. ami the ablest and most ain 



.t of law students sought to become his pupils. 



>:tt retained and emploved as arbitrator in 



many important rrferences. lie became a benobat 



lH6tt.ioine.ltl>efrat. 



of sergeants at law in !*?.. and rriumel to his old 

 inn , wan div 



was rained to the ben<-h in 1873, and knicht"!. As 

 ajudc'-h. .markal.l. 



especially in curious and antiuuarian phases of the 

 law. hut he wan too kindly and ym|*alhrtir to be a 

 had fallen uo much into 



I 'in/ Vnrel.a Huncanan patriot. 



horn: 



of sketches of travel in Kngland prucun-i 

 tion t.- -.. lluncarmn Academy at the ae of 



tic^andinimws* 



leet. natirc county of Saras In 



rian Cha- 1H48. while Hungary 



was still governed from Vienna, he was nominated 



w wrote a vol. 



th had oondMUsid him to death M, 7SS, 

 | M M<M^a,, r 



liao national iodepen 

 to the scene of I he a 

 UartbaldTslicion. HewnscpUredi 



, prisoner at Naf.U f,, r 

 then nliiiiir When the amnesty of 1888 

 aria rsnnensd to 



the gates of his country he returned to Hungary 

 and we. one of those who rallied to Dsak aadtne 



i ..'.. 



.. ' 



of his 



n , 



lions, and libraries . 



advanced age, he r*-nu 

 and gave proof, a* in the various other 



.-.- . ' 



flOlgableindi^g: A t 

 pen are an archaeological study 

 mgary and a volume of au 



iVr. Thierry Wllhelm. a German |*f*o*> 

 gist, U.rn in Manchester. England, in 1841. oled to 



\Vie*MMlen. July 1-V 1^7. II, ptedied .t, Itnn. 



d..ctorVd.- fc wi!i|.hil.~.phi ... I^iJ 

 rim- in |s6.and in l*U I,',- 1^ amr 

 Physiology at Jena. He 

 vestigations in ouantilative spectral 



quali 



' Other books of his ar. - Praseic AcM,* 



the Task of Natural Scienci 

 - 

 Of Oenrral 



1 



oJogist* died in i^onoon in Ocionar 18sT7. tie was 

 wman. aod pnbUehed some essays 

 iself to 



the staily of Oriental languages and to 



in Kgyptology. lib prSdpal works are a treatise 



I fMitvion of aAciMt KfTOL. tmblMfe^d in 1SJ?SJ 



and an edition of the papyrus of Ani. issaed in 



' >~ : 





with vigor 



in t) Mi 



Kichtrr Uhrrrht. an Austrian poUtidan, horn 

 in Bohemia in 1S45; died in Vienna, March t. 18W. 

 IT Richter was a prominent lawyer in Vienna, 

 as a member of the Municipal Council llsiUll 



t . . , . j .1 



us incimency. in ioe>f ne wm ejected 



grlu minielrv. dominated at the time bv Clerical 

 and *nt i- > tii It ic infloencee* vetoed the election on 

 the Around ti who had married a 



heCatbo- 



urch. belonged to no recognised religfaNHOon- 

 feeaion. Thb decision nveaniropetos to the ant i- 

 Semitic movement, end paved the way for the 

 eventual triumph of Dr. Lueprr. Dr. Richter was 

 one of the principal promoters of the various 

 scheme* for the extension and improvement of the 



