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THE SUNDAY CALL. p—— & v cne NINETEENTH CENT URY 3 Owe [0 Them e e LN wishes to understand the present state of modern artists, and among them it is not the science. Mill's “Political Economy” always easy to say which are the ay in a € !s also no small contribution to the treas- GREAT COMPOSERS —None will fall as the represent o s stitut account of ad- ury of thought. He took a decided stand io place Ludwig von Beethoven (1770- THEOLOGTAN is John Henrv Ger - # for the emancipation of woman, demand- 1827} among ihe greatest. This father of Newman (i01-15%). prssesscd nf one ¢ t e the it Tanee hter but a INg her recognition as the absolute equal the symphony and sonata, reformer of the majestic minds of - 1 Jay dow o . " t as logical ©f man. the orchestra and theory of musie, one of w b heen [ by 1 Sy 11-’“‘]‘ \L'lwflfl and ah Fas with — the most froitful -of all composers and every cread. for thi the Chure m W teg M var was [t may seem strange to class Thomas most widely tmitated, is easily master in of England for the Roman Catholie rar among the philoso- his fleld of endeavor. It was still the powerful thinker the de- falis directly into t It was he who made every instrument votel "patrfo!. oad-mind: - although he can claim no in the orchestra, a force unknown before mapn who donned the eatdinal's eap T his own. That be was lacgely Influenced his day, ‘poimting the yway to Webbr. “mr teliglos hobiis ° are sons . in nhilosophy is elear, & 1 he did for Englisa bi hr, Schumann, Brahms, iiaff and Ru- toin. 21l denominatians. and his es- work in his ¥ and sermons are read by thousands SO S s artor Resartus,” fh-t Even Rachard Wagner (13- 20 o Wit otimmatsl. Pte ,.'\m,“mn",m g his AT R BERE GB B ted on this side of the Atlantic, trays some influence of Beethoven, Vita Sua.” defense of Mis conversion, is as- of Simpson Grant (182-15%), the man wWho ,ng 1y his other books, such as “Heroes in him & tew it ‘original music-drama g S rel for po- ose 1easoning, written in tyle. and Hero Wor: ' and the a marvel of rench Rev- was created. He was the reformer of Cidsainel olution,” ained him recognition as opera, the revolutionizer of emerutic tra- of tr teachers of the age. aitlons. It was at Dresden. in 1343, that inscendentalism could he produced his first revolutionary opera s suf- endad that the list given carry off h nd his deep ing Dutchma of At men -of G virtue - dis- 4 / AT ome of ¢ F: rror of scorn of the crit defending his po: '_ HES frsfhn 2% and ise. have tion with 2 powerfui pen and an increase . trolling {nfluence upo him the prophet of the century. the produc of his operas. € age. ki 4 £ four relat wught and F closest friend fn Americ: . though n confined giory of his life. St ive been some t last he found s in the bu uring the past th Opera-house, wh Sand was, per en precizely as to him the » Waldo Emerson (180318 f Concord. Here, too, ther , for 1 the development, GRAPHY.~The pei method by whic ? ined permanent'v an A plat er n G Louis Jacg Diguerre (17H-1550). fHe the (mmera ogoura, inv y» Ga Vinel, and now devoted his : o (9e Mlate. Tt was by @ lucky a nt tRat he discovered the J chempicals witd which to treat the pl h was v the The leader among many feminine ts of the axe was Eliza t wning. whose romantic attachment to Ropert Brov most tifut love stor * realized In life. Was app vork that v Iover to the valld’s admiration of each writings was founded the deep hich ripened into and he first great stop in photography wes tak détah. The rest was only a matter of other special inven of the cen- en at work trying to d of stitching by mae! erus are geperally more - mctaphysical produe- bat natarally she mong the greatest n of the woman on Lhe o. Among il the Amcrican Eling Howe he xoon found thé method of putting the peers of edle near the point, and be- In Re ng a model had Leen successfully with more ths art found expression masculine force. She is R probably the great animal painter of No + the time—a al h is the very d e ¢t of & woman. If g, Ners must ge fa~ the direction of the of her genius. The “Horse Fair” is one of her largest and most popular can- vases, well worthy of its place in the Met- Topolitan Mus Art. ot fuift atricad . 182 the first sewing mac A built, in Bridgeport. i tr> world voice. his pulpit and’ the press hi There have been many painter: age abflity in this pe In no respect h made within the cen more progress been ury than in but f them stand out in relief as the By, B toF wiichihe eredtf s GREAT ARTISTS —Jean TLouis Fr EDUCATION, for which, the cr Vi b ot spirit of < has in- With no Yented 4 prce wo vears children of his own. he claimed the chil- Jf S|UAY und experiments, that will, if dren of the world as his. From Pestalozazi XN ‘I?dv“}‘t ;lr:lfumm the Le gathered new ideas on pedagogics, and eel. '1 l:le new pro- With his brother's children he began what any plece of steel largely due to the 7y Friedrich Froebel (17 t littie paintings that seem to have been done almest with a magnifii-g gl 5 so perfect are they in every detail. Clear, true and se. he gave the world more the inventor re A rf may have its t strength inc sed than four hundred paintings that have Was to,be o notable experiment in teach- [Ha¥ 0 1o per cent. . I¥ B ra added greatly to the artistic enjoyment of l"!:z' was 187 ‘however. before he had so S0 bard that no tool will scratch it, and in it. : i and the constant in the opinfon of those best capanie or the men wed his ad ¥ judging. E but all the —_— nst him, even in the fie developed his system that he could open ©RIY a diamond can be used to eut ; Yet it cannot be cracked or broken ®y e et kindeipaticn, 1y TISUREDUEIE: roipait. ' The' Murdet the: stk 16 st the greater its tensile strength becomes. ‘Chess Players” or or the historic ‘1807, . 2, 2 e ume skillitul drawing . Germany. From Japan to . n put in opera- : teenth ¢ i somp re and touch, Bt s O e onrry "ond pumvinc ~_ Railroad men,say that, accordfug to his & q n, apres ons, epoy s discovered tk veror, Arthur W\el] ments nobie list :]u "i“\‘lr Mm-xa:;o }“(‘:};ST_’V RGeS B Tatiors of Ste cfife; representations, Depoy has discovered the ngtor £52), hac them pecial claims upor v- i< very thing that railroads have bee. preciation of the art lover, because of his Tphe theater, with all its power, has not searching for In vain for years—a process originality, exquisite grace in posing his gajied to interest the people living during which \..,l., !Mlfl.l: n h:hh" dened 1 m of figures and the true, natural and spiritual tpe last hundred years, and among the o Benege & - S At Georg Wilhelm F 1) succeeded in 4 " out becoming so brittle as to cr P £ omprehensive- h with which his work is done. His greatest of all easily. Every opportunity will be given 1 % ichieving wide acceptance. To him is almost like that of Meissonier, ~ A\CTORS is Edwin Booth (1833-1833). him to make practical tests of hi t ¢ consciousness was the ential of the nspiration has been compared to that The son of Junius Brutus Booth, he and he will be aided & v world d goal of all things. of Gova. : learned his lesson In the hard but prac- bis experime Walsen He I this principle through Choice of the Model” is perhaps tical school of experience. Appearing for ploce of caat 4 £ t sciences to prove its perfect st known wark, though he is equally spe first ‘time in Bowton in JA5, ke sote 207, U= FECRG MR Shel ond sseurely 8 2 pre *henomenolo; e in countless canvases, ranging as substitute for his father in “Richard Norway or Sweden wrought iron, and any ‘ d f and dia of Philosophic Sc ‘The Carpet Merchant at Morocca™ 111" two vears later. tool formed from cast iron by the regular ght ences wonderful grasp of his mind The Serpent Charmer.” As an interpreter of Shakespearean char- casting process may be tempered so that it nd far eadir tect of his principle e Tepresentative sculptor of our time acters he has been pronopnced by the It will carry Lex-et, T T e v A A the world oves pr ¥ Albert Bert:l Thorwaldsen critics unsurpassed, and {n “Hamlet” up- DOW manufacturec he DrOCesses. This mean Is a feeling for equaled. He performed the unparalleled taoje that mum ,, ect opposite in theery beauty that is almost Greek in its class- feat of playing “Hamlet” for & hundred and the greatest tensile stre John Stuart Mill (1806-1873), icity, vet so human that it appeals to the gonsecutive nights, from November manufactured after having bee ment of modern utilitarfanism. most carcless observer and takes home 1sgi to March 2, 8. As a finished, in- the cheapest iron on thie market E (1970-184). In his work cast from author of the theo; the me: teiligent actor of high intellectual powers Oné of AMr. Depoy’s expériments was of J the e oeigy, = conv “Amor” ang great moral worth, he may well rep- oy, Tee"RACITE OF 5 rasor i s = good to the greatest number,” and arc among the best and resent his profession among the world’® first made into kni form, grou and In Helmuth von Moltke (1500-1591) of the morally good most popular of his sculptures, great men. #hen tempered, and it has been wused in ; ¢ t the man to carry out is s0.thorough a piece of work - Lo shaving with as much suceéss as ths * be studied by every one who In jnusic there is a notable array of That other powerful influence of the finest razor manufactured. gns of Bismarck. He that it