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Titre :
The Standard.
Éditeur :
  • Montreal :[The Standard],[1905]-1916
Contenu spécifique :
samedi 20 avril 1907
Genre spécifique :
  • Journaux
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chaque semaine
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    Successeur :
  • Standard. Illustrated section
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The Standard., 1907-04-20, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" | ILLUSTRATED SUPPLEMENT VOL.III.No.16.MONTREAL, CANADA.The Standard The Annual Spring Breaking Up of the Mighty River St.Lawrence; SECTION NUMBER ONE 171 ST.JAMES STREET.An Ice Shove NA ra | _, i ; k< SNe gees A Sl a SR te ra ee m5 darts Fro gas RÉ a 2 0 ve LS Das.2 Qi.° mie nL ii \"Me, # _ AN ICE SHOVE ON THE RIVER ST.LAWRENCE\u2014In April or each year the ice in the River St.Lawrence breaks up, and is carried by the current to the sea.The illustration shows a shove that recently took place at Montreal, when several square miles of the broken ice were piled up in huge mounds in front of the guard pier.To witness an ice shove is to behold a convulsion of nature both beautiful and terrifying.s t ==» CE SHOVES ON THE RIVER ¢ ST.LAWRENCE\u2014These are , features of the month of April in each year, and af- y ford, perhaps, the most inter- 8 esting and, at the same time, the it most stupendous demonstrations of - the power of the sun over the elements le of ice and snow\u2014elements which hold 10 THE FIRE AT McGILL\u2014In declaring tha building open in 1901, the Prince and Princess of Wales sat where the men are seen in the illustration.+3., oy lake and river and brooklet, city and town and village, farm and vineyard and orchard, in their grip for several months in each year.During the past week a number of these tremendous convulsions of nature have taken place at various points between Montreal and Quebec.They have proved attractive to many people, and their crunching, weird noises are certainly unique.Canadians who have not witnessed ice shoves, such as those which take place in the St.Lawrence each year, can form no idea of their magnificence and grandeur.They are like a mighty earthquake in their sudden upheavals \u2014they are like an avalanche in their resistless onward march.Sometimes they assume tremendous proportions; sometimes they form huge hills of honey-combed ice, across which the sun casts its rays in such a way that every color of the rainbow is reflected THE FIRE AT McGILL\u2014Scene in the interior of the ruined wing on the morning of the fire.Note the girders, which were twisted out of shape by the intense heat.So SELENE SE trs BRE ae THE FIRE AT McGILL\u2014The ruined medical building, erected in 1901 through the beneficence of Lady Strathcona and the Hon.Mrs.Howard.tion on the left was damaged by water, but not by fire, from their crystal sides.Often they are many square miles in circumference, for the St.Lawrence is one of the largest rivers in the world, and, at Montreal, is practically two miles wide.To watch an ice shove is to watch a stupendous natural phenomenon\u2014an unheaval of nature something akin to that which occurs when the hidden forces of the earth burst forth in volcanic eruption and earthquake.The warm rays of the spring sun gradually honeycomb the massive fields of ice; fissures then occur, which further weaken the \u201cbridge\u201d under which the water has flowed seawards during the winter months, and over which short cuts have been made by the travellers from shore to shore.At last, the rents become larger and wider and more numerous; the ice disintegrates, and then the river current carries it onward and upward and downward.In narrow portions of the river, where the ice is much thicker and where the work of disintegration has not proceeded as rapidly as in the wider sections, it strikes a snag, as it were, In the twinkling of an eye its progress is arrested, and it piles itself up into a mas- sive mountain, beautiful to the eye at all times, but perfectly bewitching when the sunlight strikes it.The hideous, grinding, tearing noise which accompanies a shove such as this is the weird and uncanny part of the phenomenon.It reveals, however, as nothing else can portray, the tremendous energy of the natural forces that are at work in April of each year in the river discovered by Cartier, The water-front of Montreal forms an interesting objective point for hundreds of the city\u2019s residents during that period of the year when the icy fastnesses imprisoning the waters of the river yield to the ever-strengthening rays of the sun.For days the almost limitless expanses of ice are watched with intense eagerness by those whose curiosity takes them to the streets adjacent to the harbor, and every movement of the ice is noted.When the practised eye of the veteran river-man detects the imminence of a shove, the word is quickly passed about, and at once every vantage point is seized on by those who have gathered to witness the picturesque grandeur of the im- impending shove.Fie a 1 1 # 1 6 k BY a > > LY ¥ no gh Lk : E ,4 cn 4.3 * i 73 i 4j 0?5 a The addi- That on the right was badly gutted in the upper story, and will have to be re-built.RECORD CANADIAN WINTER\u2014Scene on Sherbrooke street, Montreal, near Drummond street, just after the big snowstorm of April 10, from a photograph taken for The Standard by Mr.N.Knowles, These mounds in some places, were six and eight feet in height.Similar conditions might not recur for half a century. 2 THE STANDARD, MONTREAL, CANADA.i, \u201cHATFIELD HOUSE\u201d-\u2014The ancestral home of the Cecils, Marquises of Salisbury.This striking illustration shows the south front of one of the most historic country seats in England.A \u2014 iw \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 - * À \u2014 _ _ \u201cKNOWSLEY HALL,\u201d the residence of the Earl of Derby, formerly Governor-General of Canada.His Lordship is best known to Canadians under the name of Lord Stanley of Preston.The Colonial Premiers will be entertained by the Earl.er lr i Bh A W Usa Mit yd nny Ton Pi % be VE « \u201cCHATSWORTH HOUSE.\"\u2014The country seat of the Duke of Devonshire, the prominent Liberal-Unionist statesman, who is against the taxation of foodstuffs en : a à \u201c \u201d ; .tering Great Britain eve to benefit the Colonies.This is one of the most notable of the \u201cStately Homes of England,\u201d and the King and Queen have frequently been entertained within its walls, n Bo Bo Bo Bo Ve Ve Ve Ve-Ve-Ve-Ve-Ve Ve Bo Bo Bo Bo Bo Bo Bo Bo Bor Bo Bo Bo Bo Br Boo Bo Bo Bo Bo Bo Bo Br Bo Bi Bo Bo Yo BB Bo Br Bo Bo Boo Fo Yo Bo Fo Le Le-Le Le Le Le Le Le Le Le Le Fo \u2014 + Le 4e Le Bt tT Bt Be I ns ee Ve THE DRAWING-ROOM AT \u201cKNEBWORTH CASTLE,\u201d THE ENG4 OF LORD S ton, the brilliant author and novelist.In this magnificent apartonial Premie RE The Standard last week published in its Illwplement pic around London which would be visited by the Cobers while in Colonial Conference.The amount of attention aroused by the publchese illustr the series.On these pages, therefore, will be fou of some of famous everywhere on the face of the Globe, and which the C they return to their respective homes.I.Solemn, 3 The Stately Homes of England! Floats th How beautiful they stand, All other Amidst their tall ancestral trees, Of breeze O\u2019er all the pleasant land; The deer across their greensward bound The Cott: Through shade and sunny gleam, By thous And the swan glides past them with the sound They are Of some rejoicing stream.And roun II.Through The Merry Homes of England! Bach fro: Around their hearths by night, And fearl What gladsome looks of household love As the bi Meet in the ruddy light.There woman's voice flows forth in song, The fair Or childish tale is told; Long; lon Or lips move tunefully along May hea Some glorious page of old.To guard III.And gree: The Blessed Homes of England! And brig] How softly on their bowers Where fir Is laid the holy quietness Its counts That breathes from Sabbath hours! a 9e nw 5 PE REF FELL + 7) [A [oy [2 , se, 3 RTC TN rads, & ITE FOR PRICES, METALLIC ROOFING Co TORONTO, CANADA.SUBURBAN GYMNASTS AND WHAT THEY LOOK LIKE\u2014The above picture illustrates what is being done for the young people of St.Paul, P.Q., in the way of gymnastics.This photograph was taken expressly for The Standard at a recent meeting of the St.Paul Gymnasium Club.Mr.Roland Gomery, well known in athletic circles in Montreal, is the instructor.(Flashlight photograph by Homier.) Æ ~ + 4 4) 7, 1 Office Clock Story T'S the office clock that can tell the = Closing-up story \u2014knows ju§t how many tiresome The Ce nd.hours are spent at night over the books Chatterson In a vain endeavor to get them up to date; or can tell of a System cheerful Staff leaving on the hour with all work completed.What Story will your office clock tell ?= A Copeland-Chatterson System will adjust the hands of the office clock; will make closing up time right, and will enable you to say just how your business is progressing or to find quickly the record you require and despatch promptly your customers\u2019 accounts, It doesn\u2019t matt er whether it\u2019s wh cl .ol fessional business, esale, manufacturing, retail, financial or a pro- we ha ; P Ye Systems for any one of them that will simplify and make methodical the accounting\u2014facilitating the general work of handling business details.Write us \u2018to-day \u2014 one of our Experts is somewhere near you, and he knows the Systematizing business down to the ground.™ Copeland-Chatterson Co.Devisers and Manufacturers of Closing- Systems for Business vaine General Office: Toronto Works: Brampton, Ont.with the Montreal Liv 1, Lond d Globe Bldg.old system Qunnipez - Pa Bannantyne Ave.East The crowd of 20,000 people who assembled on election night in the Market Square, Johannesburg, to hear the returns of the first election to the Transvaal London, Eng.- 1 4 Canton Sù EC Cannon St.E.C.8 ve, Legislature.European Factory .Stroud, Glou., England ir 12 ll THE SCORCHED AND BATTERED SIDES OF THE FRENCH BATTLESHIP \u201cIENA\u201d AFTER THE RECENT TERRIFIC EXPLOSION AT TOULON\u2014The view shows the port side of the battleship.She was described as looking like a mass of old iron\u2014her ports and casemates were all blown out and great blistered patches show in the illustration where the blinding flame of the explosion stripped the paint from the curving sides of the \u201clena.\u201d The foremast was broken off by the force of the explosion.THE EXPLOSION ON THE IENA.The series of explosions which occurred on board the Iena, while she was lying in dry-dock at Toulon, is said to be due to the decomposition of old powder.The disaster cost the lives of over 100 men, and the ship is a total loss.The funeral of the victims was attended by President Fallieres, M.Thomson, the Minister of Marine, -M.Clemenceau, and General Picquart.M.Fallieres first visited the hospital, and decorated some of the injured men, and after the funeral he proceeded to the dock, where he interviewed the survivors and inspected the damage to | the lena.ol TP THE DUKE OF PORTLAND.The Duke of Portland is, as everyone knows, a considerable English landowner, but it ig not generally realized that he is alsg one of the greatest of Scottish landlords.His Mld- ings north of the Tweed, as a matter of fact, are only surpassed by those uf the Duke of Sutherland and the Duke of Richmond.His predecessor and eccentric kinsman was the largest proprietor in Ayrshire, and his income from mineral rights was about £60,- 000 a year.But a large portion of this land, together with the valuable London property, went to his sister, Lady Howard de Walden, on his death.The present Duke inherited Fullarton House, Ayrshire, and has from time to time acquired land near by, one of his earliest purchases being the estate of Grougar, near Kilmar- nock, for which he paid £69,000.enormously ESPRRV HERMES TY XL 0 TAN Piet FIRST NEGRO TO WIN A RHODES SCHOLARSHIP.Alain Le Roy Locke, whose home is in the city of Philadelphia, is the first negro to win a Rhodes Scholarship.He will join the colony of scholars at the historic Oxford University te ALAIN LE ROY LOCKE, of Philadelphia, the first negro to win a Rhodes Scholarship at Oxford.(Copyright P.J.Press Bureau, New York.) THE STANDARD, MONTREAL, CANADA.in a month or two.Locke is a senior in Harvard University.He won the honor that entitles him to study at Oxford at a competitive examination held at Boston, and was one of seven aspirants who passed.The conditions under which the scholarship was given included a provision to the effect that neither race nor color should bar a candidate; that merit alone should count.Had any provision been made for a physical weight limit, Locke might have been barred, for he is of the featherweight class.He is 21 years of age, the son of Pliny I.Locke, who practised law in Philadelphia.* His mother is a téacHëf Tri\" thé Public school of Mount Vernon, N.J.After passing the qualifying examinations for the Rhodes scholarships, each of the candidates had to appear before the Selection Committee, where, scholarly attainments having been proven, manliness and inherent qualities counted.When the qualifications of five candidates had been considered, the honor was given to Locke.THE RIGHT HON.JAMES BRYCE, British Ambassador to Washington, from a photo taken on the steps of \u201cThe Grange,\u201d Toronto.\u201d \u201cThe Grange\u201d is the residence of Prof.Goldwin Smith, and is probably the most typical English home in Canada.(Photo by Pringle & Booth, Toronto.) THE LATE HON.J.W.ST.JOHN, Speaker of the Ontario Legislature, who passed away recently after a brief illness.This is the only photograph in existence of Mr.St.John in his official robes in the Speaker's Chair, (Photo by Pringle & Booth, Toronto.) (Established 1879.) \u201cCures While You Sleep.\u201d Whooping-Cough, Croup, Bronchitis, Coughs, Influenza, Catarrh.= Confidence can be placed in a remedy which for a quarter of a century has earned unqualified praise.Restful nights are assured at once, Cresolene Is a boon to Asthmatics.ALL DRUGGISTS.Send postal for Descriptive Booklet Cresolene Antiseptic Throat Tab- >) lets for the Jirritated throat, of your druggist or from us.10 cts.in stamps, THE VAPO-CRESOLENE CO.Leeming, Milles Bidg., Montreal, Canada.WINNERS OF THE YATES BASKET-BALL TROPHY IN THE ViC- TORIA RIFLES\u2014This group is made up of members of No.6 Company of the Vics, their names being:\u2014Top row: Pte.I.P, Rexford, Col.- Sergt.H.R.Holland (manager), Pte.J.S.Kay.Bottom row: Pte.W.J.Davison, Sergt.C.P.Ross (captain), Pte.E.S.Taylor.THE PROFESSOR AND THE ELEPHANT.An amusing story was recently recounted by Professor Boyd-Dawkins at the Manchester University.A friend of the professor's found a fossil elephant\u2019s tooth among some boulder clay at Blackpool.Professor Boyd-Daw- kins lectured on it before the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society.It that body's proceedings the report was headed: \u201cProfessor Boyd-Dawkins on a fossil elephant found on the foreshore at Blackpool.\u201d This got to a Liverpool newspaper office in such a form as to lead to a poster being put out in the words, \u201cProfessor Boyd- Dawkins on an elephant on the foreshore at Blackpool.\u201d The next the professor heard of it was when, a friend sending him a newspaper, he saw there quite lengthy grumbles at him for having disappointed a large crowd who had gathered on the Blackpool sands to see him ride the elephant! ld = WONDERS OF LONDON\u2019S WATER SUPPLY.Even to those who \u201cdo not understand figures\u201d there is something staggering In the statistics of London\u2019s water supply given in the annual report of the Metropolitan Water Board.A little calculation reveals the startling fact that the water supplied every day to Greater London would fill a reservoir a quarter of a mile long and wide to a depth of over 20ft., the average allowance to each person exceeding 3 1-3 cwt, BEAUTIFIER This is the only te preparation ANSI at NE INT known to medi- es) cal science that creates good, firm, healthy flesh, and clears the complexion of every blemish such as pimples, blackheads, etc., without internal medicines.For removing wrinkles it is without an equal.FOR DEVELOPING THE BUST or restoring a wasted breast lost through nursing or sickness, mak ing thin cheeks plump and filling the hollows of a scrawny neck there is no other preparation in the world that has any comparison.SPECIAL OFFER\u2014 The, Fepulsr Charles\u2019 Flesh Food is $1.00 a box, but to introduce it into thousands of new homes its proprietors hsve decided to sell it for the pressant at 50 cents a box.Mail orders will also be filled at this price.and recommended by W.H.SCROGGIE, MONTREAL.On sale A sample box, just enough Free to convince you of the great merit of Dr.Charles\u2019 Flesh Food, will be sent free for ten cents, which pays for cost of mailing.We will also send our illustrated book, \u201cThe Art of Massage,\u201d which contains all the proper movements for massaging the face, neck and arms, and full directions for developing the bust.For Sample packages address, DR.CHARLES CO., 108 Fulton St, New York.DALE & CO\u2019S HOCKEY TEAM, CHAMPIONS OF THE INSURANCE HOCKEY LEAGUE FOR 1906-07\u2014The names of the players are:\u2014Top row: E.L.Miller, Tom Belts, J.W.Smith.Middle row: D.W.McRae, G.A.Fleet (captain), P.R.Law.Bottom row: F.J.Kavanagh, H.M.Campbell.YOUR Oriental Rugs Wherever you go you see the Oriental Rug displacing the carpet.For centuries no floor covering has equalled the antiques of the East for beauty, color, usefulness or durability.Half the value of an Oriental Rug depends on its being genuine, and on the harmony and blending of the colors.Nowhere in Canada is such a complete, varied and genuine assortment of Antique Rugs and Oriental Art Goods as are shown at our large show rooms.: HOME NEEDS We will send you Rugs on approbation, just the rugs you want in size and shape and in the color effect to harmonize with the furnishings of any room.Send for Price Catalogue.COURIAN, BABAYAN & (CO.Importers of Oriental Dry Goods, 40 King Street East.(Opposite King Edward Hotel,) TORONTO.e\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 mm QU A Murray Aou WOMEN'S CORRECTLY == TAILORED SUITS Special $20.00 = These Suits are from our own workrooms ; in style they're exact copies of those New York models which we\u2019d have to ask you a half more, and mind you, even then the New York article at a half more isn't as well tailored, nor are the materials as good as what you get in these home productions of ours.Jaunty Eton Coat effects, new plaited skirts: Coat full silk lined, in fancy mixtures, greys.fawns, tans and browns.Special - - - - - $20.00 Our Mail Order Department will give you perfect service.Murray isa ii, CAT umm ed | ot ft = atom oY ne.Sate or] hands, Rough red skin, sore lips, chapped and all facial blemishes caused by wind or weather, cured by CAMPANA'\u2019S ITALIAN BALM (In use over 25 years by a delighted public.) 25C per Bottle\u2014all Druggists.F.L.Benedict & Co., Agents, 144 Craig St.W., Montreal.Photographs The Standards Engravings and Parties wishing to purchase any of the STANDARD\u2019S exclusive Engravings, or the original photographs, that appear in this section, will please address the Business Manager HOVARD SHITE 4, 6, 8 Cote St, MONTREAL.WHOLESALE PAPER DEALERS, Send for Samples of our English Linen Finish Paper, all colors.A high class paper for Letter Heads and Note Paper\u2014Envelopes to match PAPER C0.LTD, 84 Wellington St.West, TORONTO Precaution is Mother to Safety When placing orders for PRINTING Book-Binding be sure they are given to a concern who will avoid you disappointments in quality of the work G Prices given, when requested, on Catalogues, Booklets, Office Stationery, Loose Leaf and all kinds of Labor Saving Forms Also Ruling and Binding | The Guertin Printing Co.PRINTERS OF THE ILLUSTRATED SECTIONS OF \"THE STANDARD\" 20 Notre Dame St.W., MONTREAL AN RC iw ES 8 THE STANDARD, MONTREAL, CANADA.Canadian Progress in the Realms of Art; Many Interestin if + Hal, Ps d FA SE eR hin.\u201cLA CHASSE-GALERIE.\u201d By Henri Julien (Montreal), This weird and powerful picture illustrates a legend popular among the French-Canadian shantymen of the Upper Ottawa.It is to the effect that by selling their souls to the devil on New Year's Eve the men are enabled to travel through the air in a canoe, a distance of many hundred miles, to visit their sweethearts, returning to camp before daylight.A \u201cmirage\u201d showing a canoe apparently travelling through the air was probably the origin of the fantastic legend.The picture is an important contribution to Canadian art, and no one is better qualified than Mr.Julien to deal with a composition of this class, Royal Canadian Flcademy of Elrts Xrbibition.IL WATER-COLORS, PASTELS, ETCHINGS, BLACK-AND-WHITE, ETC, ETC.N addition to the portraits, 3 landscapes and other pictures on canvas which form the main body of the Twenty-Eighth Annual \u201cBREAKING THE SOD.\u201d Exhibition of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, and which were reviewed in our last issue, there is much to interest the visitor in the section of Water Colors and Pastels, also among the Etchings, and Black-and-White Drawings, Crayon and Charcoal in the is SUS BRS RE Architecture and Design Group, and in a Small but not very important exhibit of sculpture.Notable among the water colors are two by Mr.G.A.Reid, P.R.C.A., \u201cA and \u201cThe Brook,\u201d both charming compositions; also four by Mr.F.M.Bell-Smith, Harmony in Browns\u201d By Owen Staples (Toronto).R.C.A.(Toronto), \u201cA Grey Day, Fraser Canyon,\u201d \u201cSunset on the Hermit,\u201d \u201cA Bit of Old Chiswick,\u201d and \u201cOldtime Tobogganing.\u201d This artist\u2019s broad, sure style and delicate gradation of soft tones are always much admired.Mr.W.E, Atkinson, A.R.C.A,, of To- AR OYAL LADY WHO LIVED FOR MANY YEARS IN CANADA\u2014H.R.H.Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll (formerly Marchioness of Lorne), from a photograph by Mendelssohn.It was through the efforts of Her Royal Highness and her husband that the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts was founded.ronto Junction, has three very pleasing subjects, \u201cHomewards,\u2019\u201d \u201cDutch Moonlight,\u201d and \u201cThatch Cottage, Devonshire.\u201d A spirited composition by Mr.Robert F.Gagen is entitled \u201cOff for Boulogne.\u201d It shows the packet just leaving the pier in rough weather.\u201cIn the Grampians,\u201d \u201cNorth Devon Hills,\u201d and \u201cCalm Before Storm,\u201d are by the same artist, Mr, T.Mower Martin, R.C.A., of London, England, exhibits two, \u201cSheep Shed, South Devon,\u201d and \u201cSunset, Dartmoor.\u201d The first, especially is one of the best specimens of this artist's work that we have seen, The perspective is fine and the contrast between the bright sunlight and deep shadow is cleverly rendered.A number of other water colors have come from England, and though most of these are by Canadian artists, the pictures reveal the influence of the English style, which is in the direction of greater delicacy and finish as compared with the bold, often rough treatment which is perhaps called for by our more rugged scenery and brilliant atmosphere, A picturesque \u201cFishing Village, River Yealn, Devon,\u201d is by Mr.Thomas Dingle, of Plymouth, England.\u201cEvening Mists, Dartmoor,\u201d by Charles E.Hannaford, London, England, is treated with tenderness, Mr.G.E.Treweek, Plymouth, England, has some effective Cornish scenes, \u201cSundown, Cornish Coast,\u201d \u201cNear New Quay, Cornwall,\u201d and \u2018Lizard Head and Kyhance Cove \u201cA Peep from a Cornish Cavern\u201d is by J.C.Uren, Plymouth, England.Mr, F.A, Verner, R.C.A., of London, England, has but one picture, \u201cNovember Evening,\u201d a clever composition in minor tones.Miss Constance Etheridge, of London; England, has three dainty subjects, \u201cThe Picnic,\u201d \u201cThe Daisy Chain,\u201d and \u201cSummer Days.\u201d Montreal Artists.The Montreal artists are represented by Mr.J.B.Abbott, who has two night effects, \u201cShadowy Night\u201d and \u2018\u201cMoonlight,\u201d of which the first is particularly convincing; Miss Marguerite Buller, whose graceful studies of children and successful manipulation of bright color are making this young artist popular; Mr.Henry Carter, Mr.C.W.Dennis, Miss Harriette J.MacDonnell, Mr, G.Horne Russell, Mr, James Mitchell and Mr.Edward F.Boyd have each one \u201cSTREET IN WHITBY, YORKSHIRE.\u201d By F.McGillivray Knowles, R.C.A.(Toronto).picture; and Mr, W.S, Maxwell has two, \u201cBeaupre Wharf,\u201d and \u201cBeaupre at Ebb Tide\u201d; Mr, Jobson Paradis also has two.Mr.Charles Goldie, of St.Servan, France, has four interesting compositions, of which the \u201cAncien Manoir\u201d is perhaps the most pleasing.\u201cThe Valley of the Mira, C.B.,\u201d is by Miss Hetty D.Kimber, of Sydney, C.B.Mr.F.McGillivray Knowles, R.C.A.(Toronto), has a charming twilight scene, \u201cThe End of the Day.\u201d Mr.C.McDonald Manly, A.R.C.A.(Toronto), has an effective landscape, \u201cAbove the Valley.\u201d \u201cLake Louise, B.C., by W.A.Sherwood, A.R.C.A., is a popular subject treated in the artist\u2019s familiar style.Mr.C.J.Way, of Lausanne, has two drawings, \u201cRuins of Tourbillon, Sivre, g Pictures on Exhibition STE Na Suisse,\u201d and \u201cFishermen\u2019s Houses,\u201d are in his best manner.Mr.F.H.Brigden (Toronto) sends three, \u201cThe Brook,\u201d \u201cBy the River,\u201d and \u201cAt Low Tide.\u201d His work is unequal, some of it bearing marks of haste and lack of finish.i Among the Pastels, Mr, Frederick S.Challener\u2019s are the most striking, showing much originality and effective grouping of figures.The \u201cSketch for Mural Decoration\u201d is designed for the \u201cOFF FOR BOULOGNE.\u201d In Architecture and Design, about fifty drawings_are shown, mostly by Montreal architects, including Mr.A.F.Dunlop, R.C.A., Messrs.Finlay & Spence, Messrs, Edward & W.S.Maxwell, Messrs.Hutchison & Wood, Messrs.McVicar & Heriot, Messrs.Saxe & Archibald, Messrs.Peden & McLaren, etc.Mr, Gustav Hahn, A.R.C.A., Toronto, has two decorative panels, one of which, \u201cDawn Dispelling the Shades of By Robert F.Gagen, R.C.A.(Toronto), Tee coration of Christ Church Cathedral, Mr.E.Burke and Mr.Henry Spratt are other Toronto exhibitors, Only two miniatures are shown, They are by Miss Margaret L, Sanborn, Westmount, A plaster bust by Mr.Hamilton Mac- Carthy, R.C.A., and a bust of Sir wilfrid Laurier, by Coeur de Lion Mac- Carthy, both of Ottawa; a relief portrait of Dr.Osler, by Dr.J.J.Ross, of Montreal; a marble bust, \u201cMignonne,\u201d metre Nm new theatre, Toronto, and cleverly adapted to the purpose, Mr.R.G.Mathews has two of his interesting portrait sketches, Mr.Forbes-Robertson as \u201cCaesar,\u201d and Mr.H.B.Irving.Miss Alberta Cleland, Montreal, shows two portraits in pastel, both of children.One is the little son of Mr.Charles Holt, and is a charming reproduction of an interesting type of childish beauty.Mrs.Eastlake (Mary Bell), of London, England, has two pretty child studies, \u201cGirl with Doll\u201d and \u201cChild Feeding Hen.\u201d \u201cFrom My Window in Paris\u201d is a clever sketch by Miss Lorna Lomer, of Montreal, who is now studying i Paris, Mr.J.St.Charles, AR.CA, of n Montreal, sends some boldly executed heads, two of olg men, and one of a woman, Miss Ethel Seath, of Montreal, enjoys the distinction of being the only exhibitor of etchings, of which three are shown, \u201cGirl Reading,\u201d \u2018The Knitter,\u201d and \u201cToodles.\u201d A Pen-and-ink, \u201cWoman Weaving,\u201d is a very creditable piece of work, It looks like an old engraving.\u201cOCTOBER ON THE FRASER RIVER.\u201d By F.M.Bell-Smith, R.C.A.(Toronto).Night,\u201d is a design for the ceiling in the morning-room of the residence of Hon.Mr.Jones, Toronto.Professor Percy E.Nobbs shows a scheme for the proposed general de- 20 by Katherine E.Wallis, Paris; and two flgure studies, \u201cAthlete,\u201d and \u201cRound Up,\u201d by J.L.Banks, Toronto, compose sculpture, the very small exhibit of MADAME HELLEU by her husband, ' etching » wife of the famous French etcher, from an ows) (Illustrated London VIC "]
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