Indianapolis Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 102, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 April 1885 — Page 16
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THE INDIANAPOLIS DAILY SENTINEL SUNDAY MORNING8 ATE J L 12 1885
Eat
The people appreciate I-ow Prices. Look at these figures ONE DOLLAE buys a nice light-colored stiff HatLatest style. TWO'dOLLARS buys a tine Stiff II at, either black or brown Latest style. FIFTY CENTS buys a line Silk Cap in almost any shape you may wish. We mention only these items at present but can say that all our fine Hats and Caps are offered in the same proportion. Call and see us.
BAMBERGER, No. 16 East Washington Street.
THE INDIANA BICYCLE COMPANY- . 108 North Pennsylvania St., Indianapolis, Indiana.
Drew
&
12 North Pennsylvania Street, ttholesala Shippers and Dealers in All Kinds of
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Trarsportation to all points. Prices, rates of freight and information furnished on appU cation, Correspondence solicited.
GEO OERIE
for I !!. kit Kami'.r White Fih. for I" 1'mtiy Unrkerel. :c for I Jb tfcolee Türken Prut es. for 1 3 lb. can Snar Corn, lor 13 lb can 1'rs-sh rp!'. fctr 1 rallon t'lio.? Honey Drip Svrap. f.r l Jt. Baking rowiler. for 1 gallon can Appks. for 1 lb. Aibnckle h I'ortVe. tor l Larze linn Genu an toap. for !o. I "earl srnrcli. for i lh. Mlver (ilovs starch. Ji.r 1U :). Atron Oat ileal. c 'J-V HC V: C c rr 1 -lb. cau Choice Table IVach ia tyiup. fcr 1 can OlifoirjJa Apricots, lor 6 Ihs. I'rud Mwtet Corn. 453 & 70, 72
EB'I
pecialties!
THE "MAKQUA," Heywood, Whitney, And Other Best Makes. Baby Buggies, A Single Baggy AT Wholesale Prices. HEADQUARTERS Children's Carnages. NWFIif Ml I IR STOAT. W.J WWWk-"" '
SIJ and 45 East Washington St.
Have in Stock a fall assortment ol the "Celebrated" 'Figs and Mil CoUiaiisyik ALSO THE Tho only first-class Boy's Bicycle made. Agents for tho Star, Club Sanspariel, Facile, Kangaroo, and al first-class wheels. Difficult repairng a nd nicklinsr a specialty. Old Wheels bought, sold or taken in exchange for new. Send 5 Cents for all of above catalogues, or 2 Cents for any ono of them.
Wa
sson 9 - V for C (jt. Navy I)Mn. -'o lor lbs. Ltin IVins. " 'o lor 1 k Holland Herring l ? or 1 eta App. 5 ' r lb. for ICinaa's Hum. 7!i-p?rlb for K4n" Hiio il lr M t'K' per pnuud for k'i i-u'.i BrjAXI'iil 1J .o j. . '; for a lbs. i'iioice Lmi. t f-r :i caui Kreh M?eiJe'. ;: -;..ra cuii Tom it . Corn, .:rii": IVi-n Joo- 'berrif 5, ("irrii, str uv 0?rr.i.-miasm I'.h'jh or Li.ioibrrlos. J ? for t can IVn, Sci'C ;si o" Linn T?n v e for l lt. criolea ts.npiwdr or lm, jr. 4l iV -;C far 14 liirs of Gcrmau ?jap. 457 Virginia Ave. & 74 Massachusetts Ave
A
TALMAGE.
ASIsccarse oaE&ster as the (Jaeen of Religious Fe&st8. Death Pletarcd Kocpine the Cloak. Boom Whence Christian Gneiti Go Ut tbe DlTln DrawlsgBoonw Brooklyn, N. Ym April 5 At the cervices in the Brooklyn Tabernacle tnis morning, tne Easter festival, there were G.000 people inside the bnilding and 6.003 more outside Tfclnly saeking entrance. The platform and galleries were one great scene of floral decorations. Mrs. E7eyn Lyon Hegman rendered two appropriate pieces, and Professors Brown and All aCorded a special programme of miiaic Dr. Til mage's text was: "Death is swallowed a p la rlctorj." I Corinthlani zt., M. Following is the sermon in fall: About 1S51 Easter mornings hare awakened the earth. In France for about three centuries the almanacs mad 9 the year begin at Easter until Charles IX. Etarted the year at January 1. In the Tower of London there is kept on the Royal pay-roll of Edward I. an entry of X18 for 400 colored and pictured Easter eggs, with which the peopla sported. In r.usaia slaves were freed and alms distributed on Easter. Ecclesiastical councils met at Font us, at Galles, at Rome, at Acaaia to decide the particular day, asd after controversy more animated than gracious, decided it, and now all through Christendom in some way the first Sunday after the full moon, which happens upon or next after March 21, Is filled with Easter rejoicings. The rojal court of the Sabbaths is made up of fifty-twe. Fifty-one of then are princesses, but Easter is qieen of ths royal household. She wears richer dl&dems and swings a more jeweled scapter than any cf our courts, and In her smile nations are irradiated. Unusually welcome this year because of the harsh winter and late spring, she seems to step out of the snow bank rather than from the conservatory, to come out of the North instead of ihe South, from the Arctic instead of the tropic, demounting from an icy equinox. But welcome this queenly day, that holds high up in her right hand the wrenched otf bo. ts of Christ's sepulcher, and in her left the key of all the cemeteries of Christendom. My text is an ejaculation. It is span oat of hallelujahs, i'anl wrote on deliberately in his great argument, observing all the laws of ogic until he came to the words of the text, and then his fineers and his pan and the parchment on which he wrote took fire, and he shouted: "Dsath is swallowed up in victory !" It ia an exciting thing to see an array routed and Hying. The run each other lown. They scatter everything valuable m their track. Unwheeled artillery! Hcofof hme on breast of wounded and dying men! Yon hare read of the French falling hack frcm Sedan, or Napoleon's track of GO GO) corpef 8 in the tnowbsnks of Rossi a, or the retieat of our forces from Manassas, or tb rive kings tamblicg down from the rock rf Beth'Hexon with their armies, whi'e the hailstones of heaven and the swerds of Joshua s hosts strack thtxn with their I nry. I t ray text is a worse discomfiture. It seems that a blsck giant proposed to conquer tne earth. Be gathered for his host all toe aches and pains and malaiiasand distempers and epidemics of the ages. He marched them oown, drilling them in the northeast wind and amid the slush of tempests. Ha threw up barricades of grave moand. He pitchai tents of charnal houses. Some of the troops marched with slow tread, commanded by Consumptions; some by double quick, com manded by Pneumonias; some he took by lot g btbitgement of evil habit, and some by one stroke of the battle axe of Caiuality. With bony hand he pounded at the dor of hospitals and sick rooms acd woa all the victories in all the great battlefields of the five great continents. Forward, conqueror cf conquerors! And all the generals and commanders In chief, and all the presidents ad kings and sultans and czars dropped under the feet of the war charger. Bat on Cari8imas night his antagonist waa born. As roct of the plagues a no sicknesses and des potisms came from the East, it wsj appropriate tüat the new conqueror should come out u the fame quarter. Tower is given him to waken all the fallen of all the cemeteries and of all land and martial them against the lack Giant.' Fields have already.been won, bat the last day cf the world's existence will r the decisive battle. When Christ shall l?ad forth his two brigades the brigade of tbe risen dead and the brigade of the celestial armies the Black Giant shall fall back, aud the brigade from the riven sepulcher? will take him from beneath and the brigade of the dpscendiug iruruortals will take hltn from above, and Dt-ath shall be swallowed up in victory. The eld braggart that threatened the con quest acd demohticn of theplaofct has lost Lis throne, baa lost his scepter, has lost his palace, has lost his prestige, and the one word written over all the gates of the m&usolemi a nd catacomb and necropolis or cenotaph or larcochagus or the cairn of lone Arctic expu rer or catafalque of cathedral, written iu Mters cf calla lily, written in musical cadence, written in doxolcgy or great as.e nfcly, written oa scalptured door of fam y V8 nit is Victory!'' Coronal word, erabn nered word, apocalyptic word, chief w -d on triumphal arch under which cooqtero -4 retern Victory ! "Word shouted ai B.Uc ave, at Iokermann, at Megiddo, at Bi n reim, at Marathon, where the Athsau s drove back the Med?s, and at Foictier, wh-e Cbarlea Martel broke the ranks of the Si-i cens, and the Salamis, where Fhemistocle in tbe great et-a fight confounded the Fersia.s. and at the door of eastern cavern of chlaii. 1 rock where Christ came out of the darS r cces and throttled the Kins of Terror and pot htm back in the nicne from wh ci celestial conqueror had just emergeJ. Hi! ha! When the jaws of ths Eütern mvj -lf um tcok down the Black Giant, deati 3wsl!owfd up in victory. I proc 'aim the abolition o! deith. T.i old antagonijt must ba put back into tnythc.'cgy with all tbe lore about Ferry and Charon ith oar and hjat. Me'.?ctp Abbey and Kenilonh Castle ra no lv ore in ruin3 than the Joalcber. We ?hsl; rav no more to do wit a deaih thin ws h&v iihthe clcak-ro'-mi at a Gavarnor'j or Fr dent's leree.We ctopth?re ai euc'i chii loomand le.va in charge of servant! o-ir vej coats and overshoe tint miy rVn 'mj-eced ia ths roandi of the b:Ui:a it ! viokr OQ', Whsn we go arvay frou tnis k-c .JJ we are sjjioj to a K.in'a b.nqn-it a:l Ü i ..f oa cf v?q ar:hi, and a- ti- djv tb t' n:b we t te 1I13 chai et ii nn i t :e rg r. '! v i w ,ri hirh ne i.it II. n't-n ir At t'l'.' c!t'e of an t j-tit, rcv j iim! - tt.. Krhani bfn i o! ti" lr'f r th i t (I ht mv b rn 11 to D4 tettr ttai siea ? ( gUfd Hj-uu Ari ti'f e'eak rf hurraoi'.y wsi li.iA'lf tn tcri.td. iu. proved, .e:.e i aui par:itl.
Yon and I do not want nnrbod'es restored to us juat aa they are now. We want to get rid cf all their weaknesses and their susceptibility to fatigue and their slowness of locomotion. They will be put throne h a chemistry of the soil, and heat and cold and changing reason out of which God will reconstruct them aa much better than thay are bow as tbe body cf the rosiest and healthleft child bounding J:e lawn on Prospect Park ia better than tha body of the aickest pat'eat in Bellevue Hospital. But aa to our iouI we will cross rizht over, not waiting for obtequles, independent of obituary into a state every way better with wider room and velocities beyond computation, the dullest of us into companionship with the very best rplritsintbe very best mood in ths very parlor of the universe, the four walls burnished, panel-pictured and glorified with all the splendors that the infinite God durine all the ?,es has been able to invent victory! This view, of course, makea it f but litv'e importance whether we are cremated or sep nltnred. If the latter i dust to dust the formr ia aabes to ashes. If an v prefer incinerat cn let them have it without caricature. Tna world may become so crowded that cremation may be universally adopted by law a well as general consent. Many of the Dest of men and women have been cremate!. F. F. Bliss and wife, the singiDg evangelists, cremated by accident at Aeatabala, John Rogers, cremated by persecution; Latimer acd Ridley, cremat?d at Oxford; Pothlnua BDd Blandina, a slave, and Alexander, a physician, and their comrades, cremated at the order of Marcus Aureiins. If the wor d lata as much longer ai it ha? already baaa built, there might be no room for the large acreage set apart for resting-places. Bat that time has not come. Plenty of room yet The race need not pass that bridge of till it comes to it. Most of us prefer the oJd Wij. Bat whether out of cremation or nitural disintegration we shall gat that luml ous, buoyant, iridescent, gladsome, transcendent, magnificent, inexplicable structure called the resurrection body. "Why suomd it be thought a thing incrsdioe with you that God should raise the dead? ' That far up c'oud, higher than the hawk flies, hfgher than the eagle flie, what is it naaeoi? Drops of water from the Uudsoo, acd other drops from tbe Eist River, aod oiher drops from antsgcact pool union Newark Hits. Up joudtr tby are en-bid e I ia a cloud and the sun kindle ic. If G d ctn make euch a lustrous cloud ont of water drop3, and some of them riled and icupare and fetched up from miles away, can he not transport fragments of bodies from toe earth and out ot them bnild in the :ky a radi&t body? Can the Gc d who owns all the material out of which bones andmusclcs and Hesh are made not set them up again after they have fallen? If a manufacturer ot telescopes drop an instrument on the floor and break it, can he not mend it again, fo it can be looked threngh? And if God dro thaea, which be originally faahioned, into da9f,cao he not restore it? Aye, if the manufacturer of the telescope by a change of the glass and the fecus may improve the teleeope, could not the fashioner of tbe eye improve tbe suht and multiply the natural eye by the thou ancMold additional facilities of the re urrection? Why should it be thought a thing incredible with jcu that God should raisa tr dead? Things all around us sucgeet it Tne radiant butterfly, where did it come frovu? The loathsome caterpillar. That albatrcsj smiting the tempeit with its plathed wing, where did it come from? A senseless shell. Ne&r Bergerac, Fiance, in a Celtic tomb under a block were found flower seed that had bei buried 2.000 years. The seed planted, they put forth tbe bloom of bluebell and heliotiore. Wilkirson, the traveler, found iu mummy pit in Egypt some garden peas that had been buried there some 3,000 years. On Judc 4, 1844, he planted them, and in thirty days they sprang up. Where did all this s )k cc me from the silk that adorns your per. sens acd your homes? In the hollow of a staff a Greek missionary brought from Caina to Europe the progenitors of those worms that now supply the silk of many nat'ons. The pageaDtry of bannered host and the luxuriant articles of commercial emporium b'cceorriicg out from the silk-worms. And who shall be surprised if, out of this insignificant earthly life, cur bodies spread into something worthy of the coming eternities? Put silver in diluted nitre and it dissolves. Is the sUver gone forever? No; put in some pieces of coppes and the silver reappears. If cne force dissolves, anothar force rejraai zee. Tie insects flew and the worms crawled Jastauiuinn feebler and feebler and then stopped. They have taken no food. Thev want none. They lay dormant and insensible. But coon the asnth winds wi 1 bio tbe resurrection trumpet and the air and the earth will be full of them. Do you not thiak that God can do as much for our bodies as He does for the wasps and spiders and snails? Within a month there will be a resurrection in ail our gardens. Why not some day a resurrection in all tbe graveyards? Th s mornlrg ato o'clock there was a resarrection. Oat of the night a day. Ever and anon thera are instances of men and women in a trance. A trance is death followed by resurrection after a few days. Total suspension o' mentil power and voluntary action. Rev. Mr. Tnnetts, the great evangelist of the pit, O.Archibald Alexander.the most unsentimental of men, his eulogist, lay in a trance f r mauy days, but ths departed soul that hat ssea wocders in iU absence came back agiin and recited what it bad seen. It will bs found Eometime that what is called suspended animation or comatose state is briet death, giving tbe foul time for an excursion into the Ltxt world from which it comes bact a fnrlnugh of a few hoars granted from the c.iiti:ct of life to which it returns. Dms not this waking up of man from trance, and this wckiDg up cf insects from winter lifelessrtefp, and thia waking up, of grains buried ö CCU years ago. make it e icier for us to be liee that our body and mind after th vacation cf the grave ehal) rise and rally, thouch there bs 3 000 years between our la-t breath atd the sounding of the archan eltc reveille. Physiologists tell us that while the most of our bodie s are built with such wouderfat fconomy that we can spare nothing, and ih loss of a little finger is a hlndercaeat and tbe irjsry of a tos joint maces us lara", ttill that we have two or three useless phys fcal asparatA. and no anatomist or physI'logist has ever ben ab'e ti te'l u whit they are good for. They are, no doubt, the foi- -cTatlcn cf the res.irecti-jn body, w nh noth iDg to us in this state, to cf Indispensable valne in the next etate. Tha Je:ch ralbini
r had only a hint of thi3 s ne?estäcn wi-eu tv faid that in tbe huruan fram th-r wu h nxall bne. which they called 4 Inz. ' and F. Jcthua Bfn llaiiaajh end tba ; that was '. be the tars cf the resurrection b-dy, A-i.l tboagh there may have nc-n n th-.u:ntht idea, the Cbrit;n scientist f mr d- hart found in two cr three snp'rduit.'es o; -"i cn:etbiE2: gloricusly su-itive of aa ths construction. I called at ray friend's house cm Eunme'. I foucd his front yard pi'td up with tbe rn hish cf maar-ns and carpeattrs' work. Ihe doorofT. The pluuibra had torn up iu tl or. The rocf an biu. lifted aid cup -la'J. Thfl "vails hd Uet'fbeir j.ic'tirs and the p.apr hargrs were getting r?dy and all the nicdern improvements er io 0 introduced. There was rot a r 'O-.n 't-liv in, althcci'h t few weeks tefore wh-r. I stoppe l there it was to be&utn'al tLn it did not reim to me that tiv imprvnaot w3 posiM. Vy frind Lad sr.ne with hit Mmtlr to tlt IlC' Land and would tot fc& back uatilalo.it
Scrofulous
Eruption, such a Tetter or Salt i:i-mn, arc the result of a discaxil ronditNui of the blood, and may be c ured by Um um of Ayer'n San-apari'da. 8clly farter, NahiIlo, Tcnn., was, in his own word. f--.il-uratctl with Scrofula, and cohered with eruptions; but a few bottle of Ayer's Sar saparilla efl ted a innanri.t eurr. iTrpsrcKl l.y J. C. Aye r Co., Ixjw. il, lla. tlx months, at which time the bouse would be complete, and what a time aa they did have when they got back to tbe old place nd found It so wonderfully reconstructed. That is jourbody. It looks well now, all the rooms tilled with health, and I could hardly ruake a suggestion. But, after a while, your soul will go to tbe Holy Land and while you aro gone the old house of your tabernacle wU be entirely reconstructed from cellar to attic. Every nerve, muscle, bone, tissue and artery must be hauled over, and tbe old structure will be burnished asd adorned, and raised and cupolaed and enlarged, and all the improvements of Leaven introduced, and then you will Kova in on Kesurrecticn Day. If the house of this tabernacle be diesolved. we have a building cf God, a house not made with hands.eternal in the heavens." What a time body and soul meet again. They are fond of each other. Did your body ever have a pain and your soul not pity it? Did your body ever have a joy and your soul not ie echo it? Or, changing the question, did your eonl ever have a trouble bat yoar bedy sympathized with it, growing waa and weak order the depressing infiaenca? Or did yonr Eonl ever have a ladnes3 but yoar body celebrated it with kindled love aid cheek and elastic step? Sorely God never inttrded two such Rood friends to be forever permitted And so when on ths wjir'd's lat Faster morcinz the soul shall descend it will cry "WKere is my body?" and the body ascending will cry u vVhere is my soul?" and the Lord of the Besurrection will bring the n together, a perfect soul in a perfect body, intrtdncedbva perfect Christ into a perfect heaven. . Victory! Do you wonder that we swatho this house with girlands tc-day ? Do 3 ou wonder that we celebrate with the most consecrated voice of eong thit we can invite atd with tbe defte-t fingers on org in and cornet and with doxologies that beat these grand arches above us with the biilsws of pound as tne sea 8 mitts the bai< at Giant' 3 Can sew ay? Only the bad dospis? the resurrection. Macaba, a cruel hearted warrior, heard Mr. JioSat, tfee :n1p8'onry, preach about the rf snrrection. Then the chiefton cried out: "Will my father rise?" "Yer," aaid tba miftionary. "Will the slain in battle rise?' 4 Ves," ia;d the mitsionary. Then the chieftain cried ont: 'I don't want to hear .this boot the rising deed. The dead can't rise. The dead tball Kot rise I have slain my tboutar.dt; sball ttey rise?' On the day of which I speak too mnch shall rise for those wbCES published cr hidden crimes saall bs expesf d. But for all ethers who allow Christ to be their pardon and their life and tae-.r re.'urrectlcn it will be a day o! triumph. The thunders of the last day will only be the talvo that greets you into tne harbor The Fghfnings will only be the torches of triumphant procession marching doxa to etcort yoa. The burning words tossed through immensity, the rocket celebrating yonr coronation on the :hrownes of power, where you will re gn forever and evr. As yourjruined body and 8f?ul swing off from this planet, jo will ee deep gashes all up and down the hills ar.d valleys of tbe earth, end they will be the em;ty graves, and th abandoned sepulchres, with rouzh ground tcrsed ou either s de cf theni. and slabs lying uneven oo the round hillocis, and there will be fallen monnmenls and cenotaphs, and then for tbe first time yon will understand the full exhilaration of my text. "Death Is e wallowed np in victory!" H ail j the Lord of earth and Heaven! PraUe to Thee by both be Riven. Tbee we greet, triumphant now. Uail the resurrection, Thoa! LIMCOLN'8 MESS IGE. The Heartfelt Bleastnc Ue ent General Sherinan and fits Army. In relating some reminiscence by Colonel Mack and of his employment in the post! service In the armv during the war of ths rebellion the Waihington correspondent of tbe Cleveland, (Ohio) Leader tells the following: "General Grant told ms to go New York b7 way of Washington and see if the President, öecretary of War or General Halleck hau any message to send to Gccal Sherna The Pres dent was the only one who had anything to send. When I cent my cad in to him he ha 1 me admitted at unce. He was Bitting at h'a table In the largo room then occupied a th Presiden- h'io .hi at the Wmte House, which Is now occupied as the private Seretaiy's room. Several gentlemen were sitting around the table as if in private convertat on. Aa I e dere i the door Mr. Lincoln arose and met mo near the centre of the rooax He exteaded his hand to ms. saving, Well, Colonel, I got k mesge from Grant teHing me that yoa were goia to find Sherman. I am sure you will bring us cood newr, for we always get good nws frota you. In this be do-ibtiess had reference to the fact that wheaertr the army moved the commanding officer was so cinlideat of the eeenrity of his position that hs established a Tost Ofiice. As he fcaid this Mr. Linco n neld ny hand and looked me intently in the eye. I shall never fcrgst the expre3sioa o' his countenance o ths tine ot hin voice a? he taid, with trembling lipe, whi'e ths mois urj gathered in kis eves: '8y to Geieri Öhermanfcr me, whenever and waerever you n eet biro, God b'ets him, an I God blet-s his army! This is as much as I cia say. atd more thin I can write ' He aga n shock my band as I bade him good nioroiDg. When I had reached the door and had partially o ened it to go away, ha called to nie-from tl e place I had left him staodiog nd ea:d. Ftemeiaber, now, I eay God bl9s General SIerman! acd God bless his ärmv! These were the las: words I ever heird M . Linteln mter, and they were spoiea ia euch i-n eerrert, heartfelt, pathetic tone iht I rati nci fidget them. He wis 8siii ni"1 'Lerir.t) returned to Washington. Mr. Lirc. la w as a very crtat man, and a'! tte i rfattr r cacts he did nrt kno ir. I hvi ever bet id ar y cue who Lid p-rsMJ.V'y .-m:? Jp coitc with 2Jr. LIucj n r.Yle Loxuptd the White Hous that did n5t r.n-h in tern 8 of kieükess of h'n;. lie was all kir.r-i e-e, integrity, and p.r;;p iv !tihI rirrrron t-rije -ri's o city, and cua-cter were lv jp lofd by tKr i.r-ss cf the vo tie. Fort M?Al.i?tr bcn firnred tl e fri'i' bef rr, Gro:aI F'ermar. Lai ?o c:i t. nri tre- f! J L 7 A tte 1 Und Citr. '1 natl f-UHxvcr, .p; ii'sinj thr"'i;Ii the O'tAt'tW Sou? d ht- 'i-fial t ti.l-T Sfi"i t0 vetiels e.way rir o it e larr ;atd. i rJOllr '"f mid: "T.hy rp nu!ir n. It is th liinMp. v -i?p GT)ers-l j-'hrnr-n on ba-d ' Lie ittcuiu eye lud Ci'Jgat the s -a!
j Consumption,
When not fully dcvc!o-d, uiav bo ennd ; by puriiin,Mlio l!Hd with Ayer's Sara!pariIJ.i. Mary I). Week. Lowell. who hml been, for years, afüieted with Scrofulous Consumption and i;iccnlion of ih Lung, says: "From the day I couiuiouceii taktu-' AvcrS .aruiy ii. alth and strength t( -dily ;IllpoHl.,' For Sal by all Druggie. CLARK'S EMI I III r AT TUE N4TIOVAL FlIOTOUCAPOIO CONVENTION, 1H8I. Now on exhibition at World's Fair, New Orleans. Opinions frora tbe leading photographic publications: rrhoto?iapby, Chlcaeo, Anenst, 1V4. D. It. Clark, Indianapolis, Ind. Tbis exhibit must certainly take hiea race anonm the work shown at Cincinnati. It wns tendered convplcaon by a namber of life size, three quarter length portraits direct prin s 1 rom uegative 26x 12 incac4 and force life size beads from 20x21 negatives. We are inclined to think there headt the care ot the collection, bet a "6x4.! pec re group, representing a came of chef, is especially contrrendible. The attitudes and expressions are in pprfeei harmony with the ubi ct depicted, whiie theliititing and technical execution are excellent. Photographic Time. New York, August. lsU Mr. D. IL Ci.jif.k, Indiantioüü, lud. - Fantrukin and a hich ideal ha left their Imprest on thin eolltction, wherein ws shown some excellent life-ize l.fRut. and photographs 25x 12 elzc, aiiie noteworthy lor tiukh id artlbtl: feeLmp. j ThJIadtlphia rhotozrjipher, 5epten"Ror. Hl.l Mr 1. K. Ot.Ar.K. ( lnd!anpiii, wtui in Je larncuk by his large pia e por traits. r:b Journal of l'r.o'.OKrophy, Loadon. Ear. In iti room are the )irgot pnou;raohs I hAfe everf-fen. When in Kngiund 1 lUoiuat a crcftt deal of rcanipulatiufr 20x24 plates, hut here are thrte-quarter lengths, oa pdites that must raeaure fiftv inefce. Hj lace. direct pict irj were, in icy opinion the best iu the whote collection. i Pbotocraphic Kre, rhlcj;. Antust, 11 1 Mk. Ci.ABic. of Indianapolis, has a eolieciiou wbieti stanOs very h-gh in the exhibits of the c uventicn. He exhibits tome ot toe lar;at and finen werk ou large necativei that were brou sht nere for coui petition or otherife. Mr. Clabk wm oue of the lucky men who cmiei off a prize Of his five negatives :x42 Inches we think hi threaquarter lengt' S the best eperinieas. rerhapthe inoht attractive ot the collection was the ceo re eronp playing ches. We are here shown thearusi with his family at home. Mr. Clark ba 1 eUnt or nJi.c Ufe-iise heads which were exceedingly fine. ft. me of general work was verygooL All ol i Mis erttst's work was executed oadry plates. Mr. i.aj k. Is to be congratulatea on liii success in nor mg how he can manipulate large p'.ates. All uis prints were on albumen paper aad contact prints. D. B. Clabk is a DhotograDher of creat experience, a man ot enlarel Me is. There in noihinR small about him or his por .ralts. Indianapolis is lncky in p de?-ing two tuch arusta as re neie represented from thai city. 9 C. F. &1HMIDT, Orowor Aud licttler of LAGER 3BBB rutb ted I Mbama SU Xxx tljaxxMXO ollM XorxcS. when no other man on board noticed it. The signal came: 'General Sherman says come alongside.' The reply went back: 'All right.' When we got within halting distance General öaeruiaa called me by name, asked me how I was, and said: 'I am glad you are here.' As the boats neaied ench other the General plifd rre with the icquiriea about the new, friendr, etc., ia the North. W ten I could jump on the deck where he ttood I took his hand and delivered hhn tho mttsepe Mr. Lincolu Lad charged me to deiver.' NhiuIdc tit Children. Remember iD giving names that the children whu grown up may be in sitoa'.ioas where they will have frequently to sl?n their initials, and do not give names that might .n this situation provoke contemptuous remark. For intance, David Oiiver On en, the initials iuk "do;" Clara Ann Thompson, tbe Initials 5peircat." If the child is a boy it may be equally uncomfortable for him' to have a loog atringof names. ncpote that in adult life he becornea a merchant or banker, with plenty of bufrii ess to do, then h will not bs wl o!eaed to write "Gto'rt Henry Talbot F.ob-ins'-n" t or thre hundred time a dar. It is t,o a r:i t plau o gi7e g r! only ore bapt e :ial name, so that if they marry they ran leain their rt Vea name; as "Flizabsth Barrett Browning, Harriet Beecher ritowc." This in the practica among the Sic!ty of Friend, and is . wort' y of mere general adoption, for we shonM then know at once on se ng 1li3 name cf a lsdv whether klie was married, and if so, whit her family ra ue w8. Fome parents very wie!y yrfne f r toe'r children all camee s: sceptible of tie nlckirg process, thinking with Dr. Dri that 4 it is not a pood thing to b Tom'd or BbM. orjack'd o-Slrn'd, Pa'd, Will'd ,r Bill'd. Joe'd or Jerry'd as you go through the world " The euphony of onr nomenclaU'e would bcfre3tly imymved by a judicious adaptation of the Cbrstian t;am to tbe surname. When tl c surname i a moncsyilable the nnist.an name thou'd bi long. Nothing ca'i if coDcile the ear to su'h cartr.nnesa Mark Fox, Luke Hart. Ann Scott; bat Gil rert Fox. Alexand-r Harte and Cecilia 6.o:t are far more froai r'cplcibls. With hzch a variety cf excellent C ir s''an cttiiM. it is estonüliir! thit&y f-w ;uul e ;n ordinary r.fe. Ti e dictionaries r i i .. n lifts of about 21) rri i' d I'.O fm uk m hut cut cf th'e no, riio'f thrj tTe:iy cr tk rty for each tex con Ps Cilitd at a'.i coaiu fr. Vet tur litin-.te t-i niir.y :if'?I rian-e , both male and ferrile. xvortnro.a popnleritv they h?ve not yet a't!r;ed Arrogl- mt'.e for ir starve: A '.n, A-i rro e. I'tmerd. Clowt-nt. Chri-.t o'i-r Gil V rt, Ccd.'rey. liar Michiel. a-.v..'. O ivc-r. Fan!, Foiua'd Fi:rb, F.:p-.-t ' Lo:rd. r.vlvriter, Tüs jD.'M. I'r'--- ' J"-"-Vibcert. GaS-'-. tri-t a i:, i . P-rflval. X-,. e I.:o,.!, C :. X ;., !-:ute'e. S':biS'.:::n, l V.' ? 5 i Jr5u e'e all o' v. - ! n?Tf a"r.' : Alii tVltr: ir-fi tf r,c:a:oi ?. Ard Hilters fe ki'L r. o: a. ir rtr.a call--! ' ' rn et-pf I'atior3of At-a. T;-f "-:t - Cii Evelyn, K 'I-'Tr.-I. I L--'or, n.verce. Mi:dr-d sr-.iU-r.-. Fa; ivi'i ra-.line. Hilcn, C!nrc?. Ar l, Ire aSr. Tlrfa, Mft"c. A'i i '.a. Ca a dia. Kt'tlel, F.iianiCLii, t c.
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