KXRAMIC STUDIO 
QUJB The New York Society of Keramic Arts 
NOTES held itS March meeting at the Waldorf- 
Astoria, when several revisions in the consti- 
tution were made, one being the change of time for the 
annual elections from January until April. 
The Poughkeepsie Keramic Art Club has been wonder- 
fully active this past season. The membership is twenty- 
eight and they have employed for weekly classes the services 
of three New York teachers, Mrs. Rhoda Holmes Nicholls, 
Miss Horlocker and Mrs. Leonard. 
The regular monthly meeting of the Brooklyn Society of 
Mineral Painters was held on Wednesday, the 2d of April, 
Miss Tagliabue, 97 Bainbridge street, acting as hostess for the 
day. The subject for the afternoon was " Artistic Table 
Ware," and Mrs. Gove read the article on this subject, which 
Mr. E. A. Barber gave at one of the sessions of the National 
League of Mineral Painters at Buffalo last June. Other brief 
articles were contributed. During the business session the 
forthcoming competitive exhibition of the National League 
of Mineral Painters, to be held in New York early in May, 
was discussed, and arrangements were completed for an exhi- 
bition to be given by the Brooklyn Society at the Dutch Arms 
on Mav 6th. 
s 
The Mineral Art League of Boston has just met with an 
irreparable loss in the death of Mrs. Grace F. Beebe. She 
was one of the foremost workers in the formation of the 
League; and has continued an earnest, zealous worker in its 
interests during the decade of its existence. She has held 
office during the entire time, being president for the first two 
years and subsequently for another period of the same length ; 
all of which duties she discharged with credit to herself and 
benefit to the League. 
S 
JN THE Miss Jeanne M. Stewart of Chicago will be 
STUDIOS in California during the month of May and part 
of June, making studies of roses and small fruit. 
Mrs. Frances E. Kraft of Brooklyn will have charge of an 
attractive trip to Europe this summer, with special terms to 
artists. 
FLEUR DE LIS BONBONNIERE 
Ethel Pcarce Clements 
THE flowers should be two shades of pale Copenhagen 
Blue, the ground a delicate grey, the leaves a darker 
grey, outlines white. 
FLEUR DE LIS BONBONIERE— ETHEL PEARCE CLEMENTS 
