People's Pilot, Volume 4, Number 38, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 March 1895 — OBITUARY. [ARTICLE]

OBITUARY.

W. C. Coup, of circus fame, dhtl of pneumonia in a hospital at Jacksonville, Fla. He was 62 years old. Elisha E. Lloyd, ex-captain of police, died at his home in Chicago after an illness of several months. Joseph Hopkins Martin, one of Chicago’s early settlers, died at his home from tHe effects of a stroke of paralysis. John A. Dadd, a pioneer of Milwaukee and a well known pharmacist, died of congestion of the brain. Sir Geoffrey T. P. Hornby, admiral of the fleet and first a’d-de-eamp to Queen Victoria, is dead. Richard O’German, the Irish nationalist. -scholar and orator, died at liis home in New York city, aged 75 years. Mary Marshall, aged 103 years, dropped dead a- her liome in Port Fulton, Ind. She was born in Virginia in 1757. Adjutant General Charles L. Eaton of Michigan fell dead with apoplexy of the heart while attending a Detroit funeral. George D. Hoyden, a commission merchant and an active member of the Chicago board of trade, died at the Union League club. Gen. Mason Brayman, ex-governor of Idaho, one of the oldest masons in the United States, died at Kansas City,, aged Si. Roger Ryan, a pioneer of Christian county, dx»d from a stroke of apoplexy while sitting in his carriage at Pana, 111. Mrs. Lydia Ann Sinclair, nee Hicks, widow of James Sinclair, one of Chicago’s pioneers, died at Ravenswood, aged $9.