House and Garden 
STAINED GLASS WINDOW 
Willett Stained Glass Company 
versity of Pennsylvania, by Frank Miles Day, 
of Philadelphia, presented by two photo¬ 
graphs. 
In the field of churches, Cram, Goodhue 
and Ferguson, of Boston contribute, as usual, 
the most interesting drawings, both in point of 
design as well as rendering. Their chapel for 
the University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn., 
is a free and individual 
interpretation of modern 
Gothic, of which Mr. 
Cram is such an able 
and enthusiastic expo¬ 
nent. 
1 he drawings for the 
new St. Paul’s Chapel of 
Columbia University, N. 
Y., by Howell & Stokes, 
is altogether a very inter¬ 
esting solution of the 
problem of designing a 
church without columns, 
but then the style of the 
church lends itself admi¬ 
rably to a domical build¬ 
ing. This chapel ought 
to be a very noteworthy 
addition to the present 
college group and also 
to American Ecclesi¬ 
astical Architecture. 
1 he church at Fair- 
haven, Mass., by Chas. 
Brigham, is one partic¬ 
ular case where the 
architect has had almost 
unlimited funds at his 
disposal, and the result, 
while above the ordin¬ 
ary, is very far from 
being highly commend¬ 
able. 1 he corner tower 
is too high for its width, 
the fenestration is quite 
poor, and the texture of 
the stone wall is some¬ 
what hard and mechan¬ 
ical. The interior is far 
more successful than the 
exterior. 
Montfort Hill Smith, 
of Boston, exhibited his 
design for a village 
church entered in the competition instituted 
by the “ Brickbuilder.” For originality and 
freedom of treatment, this Gothic design is 
unique. 
Reed & Stem’s perspective sketch for a 
railroad terminal and office building is an 
unusually well-proportioned and admirably- 
balanced design for such a high building, and 
86 
