Page:Collier's New Encyclopedia v. 10.djvu/69

This page needs to be proofread.
LEFT
51
RIGHT

TUTICORIN 51 TWACHTMAN is delicate green in color, with brush- like tufts of yellow hairs on several of the segments. It feeds on leaves through- out the summer, becomes a hairy chrys- alis about September, and emerges as a moth in the following spring. A hard syringing is recommended if the cater- pillars are present in large numbers. TUTICORIN, a town in Madras, Brit- ish India; near the S. extremity of the peninsula; 70 miles N. E. of Cape Co- morin, and 513 S. W. of Madras. In the roadstead here, where ships ride safely 2% miles from the shore, is conducted all the sea-borne trade of the district. There is a pearl-fishery in the neighbor- hood. Tuticorin has acquired increasing importance as the terminus of the South Indian railway. Pop. about 40,000. TUTTIETT, MARY G., pseudonym Maxwell Grey, an English novelist; born in the Isle of Wight. She wrote: "The Broken Tryst" (1879) ; "The Silence of Dean Maitland" (1886) ; "The Reproach of Anneslev" (1889) ; "In the Heart of the Storm" (1891) ; "Sweet- hearts and Friends" (1897) ; "The House of Hidden Treasure" (1898) ; "The Forest Chapel" (1899) ; "The Great Refusal" (1906); "The Black Opal" (1918); etc. TUTTLE, DANIEL SYLVESTER, an American Protestant Episcopal clergy- man, born in Windham, N. Y. in 1837. He was educated at Columbia University and the General Theological Seminary, and received honorary degrees from the University of the South and from Wash- ington University. He became a deacon in 1862, and a priest in 1863. After serving as assistant rector and then as rector at Morris, New York, from 1862 to 1867, he was consecrated Missionary Bishop of Montana, Utah, and Idaho in 1867. He was translated to the Diocese of Missouri in 1886, and in 1903 became Presiding Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church. TUTUILA, an island of the Samoan group, belonging to the United States under the treaty of Dec. 2, 1899, between the United States. Great Britain, and Germany. For several years the United States was anxious to acquire possession of the harbor of Pago Pago, on this is- land, for a naval and coaling station. In 1872 the local authorities ceded the harbor for this purpose, and in 1878 a treaty was signed in Washington by which the United States was given the right to establish at that harbor a sta- tion for coaling, naval supplies, freedom of trade, commorcial treatment as a favored nation, and extra-territorial con- sular jurisdiction. This harbor was occupied by the United States in 1898, with the purpose of utilizing its advan- tages as a coaling and supply station. Tutuila, the island upon whose coast this harbor is located, has a population (1916) of 6,185, and an area of 77 square miles. TVER, a province of Russia, sur- rounded by the provinces of Novgorod, Jaroslav, Vladimir, Moscow, Smolensk, and Pskov; area, 24,975 square miles; pop. about 2,500,000. From the Vol- chonski Forest, a range of thickly wooded limestone hills in the W., offsets run- ning betv/een lakes and swamps intersect almost the whole of Tver. In the Ostashkov district are the headwaters of the Volga, Diina, and Msta. Tver is drained by the Volga and its affluents. The Volga is connected with the Msta by the canal of Vishnij Volotchok, and by the Mologa and the Tichvin canal with the Tichvinka and Sias, which run into Lake Ladoga. There are 100 lakes in Tver, of which the largest are Seliger, Ochvat- Shadenje, and Steresh. One-fourth of the surface is forest. Potatoes and flax are increasingly cultivated. The chief occupations are the cutting and floating of wood, and the preparation of tar, pitch, and turpentine. TVER, a city and capital of the Rus- sian province of the same name, is on both sides of the Volga at its confluence with the Tverza and the Tmaka, 110 miles N. W. of Moscow. It has fine streets and squares, a former imperial palace, a cathedral, and many churches, several monasteries, a priests' college, a gymnasium, a technical school, a cavalry cadets' school, a teachers' seminary, a ladies' college, several benevolent institu- tions, and a theater. There were before the World War many factories. Its position on the Petrograd-Moscow rail- way and on the river Volga gave Tver great transit traffic, which was chiefly in corn and metal wares. Entirely burnt in 1763, Tver was speedily rebuilt by Catharine II., who has here a monument. Pop. about 65,000. TWACHTMAN, JOHN HENRY, an American landscape painter, born in Cincinnati in 1853. He studied art at the Cincinnati School of Design under Duveneck and at Munich and at Paris, becoming one of the leading exponents in the United States of the impression- istic school of painting. His landscapes were distinguished for their color and for their harmony of form and masses. As subjects for his paintings he chose chiefly the neighborhood of Greenwich, Conn., where he lived, although he painted one series each of Niagara Falls