Page:Collier's New Encyclopedia v. 06.djvu/407

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MUNGOOS 345 MUNHALL anian Church, Williamsburg, Pa., in 1895, MUNHALL, a borough of Pennsyl- and later chancellor of the diocese. Ap- vania in Allegheny co. It is situated on pointed domestic prelate in 1906, and the Pennsylvania railroad. It contains titular bishop of Loryma and auxiliary a Carnegie Library and important manu- MUMMY CASE AND MUMMY OF EGYPTIAN KING bishop of Brooklyn in 1909. He has been archbishop of Chicago since 1916. MUNGOOS, or MONGOOSE, Herpestes griseus, an ichneumon, common in many parts of India, and closely akin to the Egyptian species, H. ichneumon. The mungoos is a weasel-like animal, tawny yellowish-gray, the head with reddish and yellow rings, the colors so disposed as to produce an iron-gi'ay hue. Length of body 16 or 17 inches, of tail 14. It kills numerous birds, sucking their blood and leaving the body uneaten Pop. (1910) factories of steel products. 5,185; (1920) 6,418. MUNHALL, LEANDER WHITCOMB, American evangelist; born in Zanesville, 0., in 1843; graduated from Chattanooga University; served in an Indiana regi- ment during the Civil War, becoming adjutant of the regiment. Joined the Methodist Episcopal Church and became an evangelist after the war. It is esti- mated that he has preached on an aver- age of two sermons a day for forty years, and that his audiences have to-