110 Wilts Illustrations. 
Devizes Market Cross. ‘A Monument of Warning.” Short 
article, with photograph, - Miss J. Stone, in The King, 17th Feb., 1900, 
p. 212. 
‘‘The Parson’s Daughter: her early Becollections, 
and how Mr. Romney painted her. A Story. By 
Emma Marshall, with eight illustrations after Gainsborough and Romney. 
London , Seeley & Co., 1899. } 
“Much of the action takes place at or near Bradford-on-Avon and 
~ Melksham, and Orpin and other real characters figure in it. 
WILTS ILLUSTRATIONS. 
Bowood Park: is illustrated in a series of nine admirable process views 
in Country Life, April 7th, 1900, strung together with a few paragraphs 
of letterpress, in which, by the way, Derry Hill Church is noted as 
. ‘picturesque.’”” The illustrations are:—The Water Temple—A General 
View (the formal Garden, full-page)—The Grand Entrance—The Flower 
Garden—Central Terrace Steps—Fountain—A Fine Group of Cedars— 
The Terrace Steps—Waterfall. 
Castle Combe is also the subject of an illustrated article in Country 
: Life, May 5th, 1900, and that most picturesque of Wiltshire villages and 
residences shows well in the seven process views—all of them excellent :— 
The House from the Woods—A View in the Village (full-page)—The 
House from the North—The Terrace Steps—Picturesque Cottages—and 
a Village Home. The letterpress of the above article is reprinted in 
Devizes Gazette, May 17th, 1900. 
Iford. The Bath and County Graphic, Nov., 1898, contains, under the 
title “‘ Picturesque Village Rambles,” an article on Iford, by W. H. Slade, 
, pp. 81—83, with six process illustrations :—Iford Manor—The Weirs— 
Bridge - Bridge and River Ford—A Quiet Pool. 
Salisbury, Hob-Nob and the Giant, the former quite un- 
recognisable under his dust cloth in the Museum, are illustrated in 
Harmsworth's Mag., May, 1900, as ‘‘ The Hobby H orse of Salisbury used 
in civie processions.”’ 
Stonehenge, A Halt at, with four bicyclists. Process cut in 
Sketch, May 2nd, 1900. 
Cycling on Stonehenge, with illustration from photograph, showing 
two Canadians standing with their bicycles on the top of the Great 
Trilithon. Short article in The King, 3rd Feb., 1900, p. 148. 
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