Wi/ts Illustndions. 235 



Salisbury Cathedral. The new Frontal for the High Altar, illus- 

 trating the "Te Deum," designed by S. Gambler Parry and worked in 

 seven years by Mrs. Weigall and Mrs. Aldworth, is described with an 

 excellent photograph in The Treasury, Feb., 1904, vol. ii., p. 495. 



Salisbury, St. Thomas' Church, s.e. view, on appeal for 



Restoration Fund, 1905. 



StOnehenge. Plan to illustrate " The Attorney General v. Antrobus." 

 The Times, April 20th, 1905. 



Comic cut of Arch Druid chopping off a victim's head on the altar 



stone, from " Humours of History," A.Morland, Star Newspaper Co. 1905. 



Trowbridge. George Crabbe's Eectory. The Sphere, Oct. 24th. 1908. 



The Methodht Recorder, May 11th, 1905, illustrates an account 



of the Trowbridge circuit with the following process views : — Town Hall; 

 Wesleyan High School ; Wesleyan Chapel ; The Old Lock Up ; First 

 Preaching House in Frog Lane, opened by Wesley ; the Old Wesleyan 

 Chapel ; Market Place and Parish Church ; Wesley Road Chapel ; The 

 Rectory •, as well as by portraits of the Trowbridge ministers and circuit 

 stewards. 



Shaw Church. a fine drawing, exhibited in the Royal Academy, 

 1905, by C. E. Pouting, of the interior of Christ Church, Shaw, as entirely 

 re-modelled (the former Church was built in 1838) by him, at the expense 

 of Mr. Charles Awdry, is reproduced as a double-page illustration in The 

 Building News of May 12th, 1905, with a short notice of the work done. 



Stockton House is at last worthily illustrated in Country Life, Oct. 

 21st, 1905, in a series of splendid photographs : — The Entry ; Entrance 

 Hall ; W. Front ; S. E. Angle ; Shadrach Room (mantelpiece) ; Stone- 

 work in the Hall ; In the Drawing-Eoom (mantelpiece and ceiling) ; 

 The White Parlour ; The Old Drawing-Room ; Ceiling of the Drawing- 

 Room ; Window of the White Parlour ; Window over the Porch ; Garden 

 Architecture. These large illustrations of the beautiful interior of the 

 house are a distinctly valuable addition to the topography of Wiltshire. 



StOCktOU Almshouses, and five views of cottages either in Stockton 

 or Codford St. Mary '? are also illustrated in the same number of Country 

 Life. 



"Wylye. " a statue standing in the middle of a river is seen at Wylye. in 

 Wiltshire. It stands near the bridge, in the centre of the village, the 

 figure of a conductor of a coach blowing his horn rising from the water 

 in the middle of the stream. It marks the spot where the conductor of 

 the old stage coach was drowned whilst the coach was passing through 

 the river, which ran across the road at that time, before the bridge was 

 built. The passengers of the coach erected the statue in his memory." 

 Strand Magazine, Dec, 1905, p. 797. 



