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DOVE for him. He was very exact in every detail in his paintings, it being said that he spent five days painting a hand, and his work was so fine that he had to make his own brushes. His best works are The Dropsical Women, The Evening School and The Village Grocer's Wife. He died in 1675.  Dove, a name commonly given to small varieties of pigeons, but no clear distinction can be made between doves and pigeons.  Do′ver, the capital of Delaware, and county-seat of Kent County, is about nine miles west of Delaware Bay. It has a state-house and a large state-library. There also are fruit-packing and evaporating-houses, flour-mills, glass, carriage and other manufactories. It is the center of a large fruit-growing district. Population, 3,720.  Dover, a port of England 70 miles from London, on the southeast coast of Kent, on the Strait of Dover. It is 21 miles from the French coast, and is the English seaport nearest to France. It lies in a low valley or basin between high chalk-cliffs, and is guarded by Dover Castle, which is built on the heights east of the town. The town is said to have been founded by the Romans. Elaborate fortifications are also built on the height to the west. Dover is the chief port which connects England and France, and steamers run daily from it to Boulogne and Calais. The city has many relics of ancient times, among which are several old churches. It has a salubrious climate, and is frequented as a health resort. The total tonnage, entered and cleared in 1910, was 3,665,705 tons. Population, 35,000.  Dover, N. H., a city of southeastern New Hampshire, close to the Maine boundary and about 12 miles northwest of Portsmouth. It is the county-seat of Strafford County and is situated on Cocheco River, from the falls of which it derives its water-power. Being founded in 1623, it is one of the oldest towns in the state. Its site is hilly. It possesses good schools, churches and an excellent public library. It has a number of cotton-mills and print-works, besides manufactories of woolen cloths, flannels, shoes, oil-cloth, hats, caps, sandpaper and glue. Population, 13,247.  Dover, Strait of, the channel which separates England from France and joins the English Channel with the North Sea. It is bordered by chalk-cliffs on the English side, and they also occur in places on the French coast. At the narrowest point its width is 21 and its length 24 miles.  Dow, Neal (1804-97), to whom is due the prohibition-law of Maine, was born at Portland in that state. He was famous as a temperance-orator and the founder of temperance-societies in Canada and England as well as in the United States. He fought in the Civil War, and for the greater

part of a year was a prisoner in the hands of the Confederates. In 1880 he was the prohibitionist candidate for the presidency.  Dowden, Edward, LL. D., D. C. L., an Anglo-Irish critic, man-of-letters and professor of English literature at Trinity College, Dublin, was born at Cork, May 3, 1843, and educated at Dublin University. He was one of the commissioners of national education in Ireland. His literary industry was very great, for he was author not only of the best Life of Shelley extant, but of perhaps one of the most informing as well as critical works on Shakespeare, as to whose works he was an accomplished scholar and editor. His other works embrace a Life of Southey, and editions of Southey's, Wordsworth's and Shelley's poetical works; New Studies in Literature; and a History of French Literature. He died in Dublin, April 4, 1913. <section end="Dowden, Edward" /><section begin="Dowling, The Right Reverend Thomas J." /> Dowling, The Right Reverend Thomas J., was born in Ireland in 1840, but was educated at St. Michael's College, Toronto. He was parish-priest at Paris, Ontario, for 22 years, administrator of the diocese of Hamilton in 1883, bishop of Peterboro in 1887, and was transferred to the bishopric of Hamilton in 1889. <section end="Dowling, The Right Reverend Thomas J." /><section begin="Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan" /> Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan, British novelist and physician, was born at Edinburgh, Scotland, May 22, 1859, and was educated at Stonyhurst, in Germany and at Edinburgh University, where he studied medicine, graduating in 1881 and taking his M. D. degree in 1885. While practicing at Southsea, he began to write for Chamber's Journal and other periodicals. He then essayed fiction at some length and published A Study in Scarlet, Micah Clarke, The Sign of the Four and The White Company. The success of these novels led to Dr. Doyle's abandoning medicine professionally. He then produced a clever series of detective stories, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, after which appeared The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard, The Tragedy of the Korosko and other tales. He has also written verse and a play, A Story of Waterloo, which was successfully staged by Sir Henry Irving. Dr. Doyle has been a great traveler. When he visited South Africa and the scenes of the struggles between Britain and the Dutch burghers, the result was a work entitled The Boer War. He was knighted in 1902. <section end="Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan" /><section begin="Draco" /> Draco, a Greek legislator and the author of Athens' first code of laws, was born<section end="Draco" />