144 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1914. 
De Witt M. Lockman. Portrait group, “At the Ball,” and Portrait 
of Mr. Sidney G. De Kay. 
George Luks. Portrait. 
Ellen Emmet Rand. Portrait of M. Gilibert. 
S. Montgomery Roosevelt. Portrait of Miss J. H., and Portrait 
of M. A. de la G. 
William T. Smedley. “The Shipbuilder.” 
Irving R. Wiles. “ Laughing Girl.” 
The exhibition of marine paintings by Mr. William F. Halsall, 
of Boston, consisted of 56 pieces, the most conspicuous and important 
being a large canvas, about 10 feet high by 20 feet long, entitled 
“Our Glory—Battleship Oregon,” which represents this famous 
man-of-war in pursuit of the Spanish cruiser Cristobal Colon dur- 
ing the naval engagement off Santiago de Cuba, in 1898, and for 
the purchase of which for the Government a bill is now pending 
before Congress. At the close of the exhibition, on June 15, three of 
the paintings were retained on more extended loan. One of these 
was the picture of the Oregon, the others being “'The Ocean Rover ” 
and “Like a Sheeted Ghost.” Following is a complete list of the 
paintings shown: 
Our Glory—Battleship Oregon. 
The Ocean Rover. 
Cloudy Day—Highland Light, Cape Cod. 
Coronado Beach. (Owned by Mr. H. E. Baker, of Niagara Falls, 
N.Y.) 
Surf—Easterly Weather. 
Square and Fore-and-Aft Rig. (Owned by Mr. Theodore Hast- 
ings, of Boston, Mass.) 
Clouds. (Owned by Miss Elizabeth Cheney, of Boston, Mass.) 
Point Loma. (Owned by Mr. H. E. Baker, of Niagara Falls, 
N. Y.) 
An Opalescent Sea. 
Provincetown Harbor. 
A Morning Breeze. (Owned by Mr. Theodore Hastings, of Bos- 
ton, Mass.) 
The Sentinel. 
Sand Dunes—Cape Cod. 
On the Georges. 
St. Johns—Wood Boat. 
Easterly Weather. 
A Winter Knockabout. 
Haul Out to Windward. 
A Lee Shore. 
In Pursuit. (Owned by Mrs. Louise Hughes, of Washington.) 
Too Rough to Fish. (Owned by Mr. H. H. Fay, of Boston, Mass.) 
