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THE PHOTOGRAPHIC NEWS. LOcTOBER 12, 1883. of Sheffield, sends a most interesting picture of a huge ice berg ; Mr. P. Burgis, of Bristol, has some views in Gloucestershire; Mr. J. A. Kay, Bolton, a series of land scapes ; Mr. A. Common, Ealing, a picture of the Nebul of Orion; Messrs. T. and K. Annan exhibit examples of photo-gravure; and Mr. E. Fayphew a view in Kew Gardens. Messrs. IT. and E. J. Bale, Ludgate Hill, send photo graphic apparatus; Mr. Edward Darke, 16, Rochester Terrace, Camden Road, exhibits studies; Mr. W. Davies, Greaves Street, Ripley, Derby, shows landscapes and studies; Mr. W. Dawson, The Cedars, Chiswick, sends boating studies; Mr. W. E. Debenham, Massingham House, Haverstock Hill, is represented by two frames of excellent portraits ; Mr. W. Denham, 54, Briggate, Leeds, forwards landscapes; Mr. Alfred Dismore, Gravesend, has several studies; Mr. Adam Diston, Leven, Fife, N.B., exhibits three fine compositions ; Mr. Henry Dixon, 112, Albany Street, Regent’s Park, sends two frames of pictures, and Mr. T. J. Dixon, also of Regent's Park, forwards several animal studies ; Mr. A. Donald, Welling ton Street, Dundee, shows landscapes ; Professor W. F. Donkin, Malvern Lodge, Upper Tulse Hill, has a magnificent series of Alpine pictures ; Mr. F. Downer, 97, High Street, Watford, has two worthy frames; Mr. A. R. Dresser, Dresser Oak Villas, Beulah Hill, Norwood, shows views in Goodwood Park ; Mr. J. Renton Dunlop, Thirlmere Terrace, Streatham, exhibits some village scenes. Mr. G. Hadley, 36, Castle Hill, Lincoln, has several studies; Mr. G. W. Hale, M.A., Trinity College, Cam bridge, shows “Exmouth Sands,” and other pictures ; Mr. G. E. Hall, Jun., St. Mary’s Hospital, Paddington, has marine views; Mr. H. T. Hall, Manor House, Alton, Hants, shows portraits, &c.; The Hon. Mrs. Holden Hambrough, Pipewell Hall, Kettering, has two views of Haddon Hall ; Lieut. E. C. Tyrell Hawker, R.E., Fort Monckton, Gosport, has a photograph of Fort Monckton taken at night; Mr. A Hendrey, Godmanchester, exhibits many fine winter scenes; Mr. Arthur Hill, Hayes Common, Kent, has an interior of Ely Cathedral; Mr. W. J. Holle- bone, Lynwood, St.John’s Road, Putney Hill, sends views of Scotland and Cumberland; Mr. Fred Hollyer, 9, Pembroke Square, Kensington, has many charming panels, portraits ; &c., Mr. J. G. Horsey, The Elms, Catford Hill, Catford, sends many fine coast views; Messrs. Houghton and Son, 89, High Holborn, exhibit photographic appliances ; Mr. W.D. Howard, Lordship Lane, Tottenham, shows two Cathedral views; Mr. Edmund Hyde, Hill Crest, Castle Bar, Ealing, forwards views in Devonshire and other pictures ; Mr. R. Murray Lawes, 33, Grosvenor Street, shows both portraits and landscapes; Messrs Lemere, Bedford, and Co., 147, Strand, exhibit a series of interiors; Mr. Abel Lewis, Douglas, Isle of Man, exhibits a fine portrait of Dean Stanley; Messrs. Lombardi & Co., 12, Pall Mall East, show many portraits; The London Stereoscopic Company, 57, Cheapside, is represented also by portraits; M. Albert Lugardon, Promenade du Pin, 1, Geneva, has instantaneous studies; Mr. J. W. Lumley, Cumberland, shows landscapes, and The Luxograph Company, 39, North End, Croydon, a series of portraits by artificial light. Mr. Frank Salter, 20, Christchurch Road, Streatham Hill, shows “ Herring Boats ” and other studies ; Mr. Thomas Samuels, Monken Hadley, Middlesex, has two exhibits; Mr. Lyddell Sawyer, Newcastle-on-Tyne, shows half a dozen studies; Messrs. B. Scott & Son, 18, Devon shire Street, Carlisle, have enlargements on opals ; Mr. A. Seaman, Chesterfield, has a cattle-market scene, and others ; Mr. George Shaw, Bruntsfield Links, Edinburgh, is repre sented by two portrait studies; Messrs. J. F. Shew & Co., 88, Newman treet, Oxford Street, have photographic appliances ; Mr. Robert Slingsby, Lincoln, shows several studies ; Mr. Arnold Spiller, 2, St. Mary’s Road, Canon- bury, exhibits his photographs of a Dene hole; Mr. J. C. Stenning, Oakfield, Beckenham, sends “ Spring-time ” i Mr. Henry Stevens, Addlestone Lodge, Addlestone, Surrey, exhibits flower pictures, and many studies of peasant life ; Mr. A. Stewart, 16, Vanbrugh Park, Blackheath, shows several portraits ; Mr. Frank M. Sutcliffe, Whitby, has a fine collection of marine studies ; and Mr. H. P. Swaine, Broadbamf Manor, Guildford, Surrey, forwards two river side pictures. Mr. H. Wainwright, Jun., Hoe Place, Woking, has views from Devonshire; Messrs. Watson and Sons, 314, High Holborn, show photographic appliances; Mr. Mat thew Whiting, 1, Lavender Hill, Wandsworth, exhibits a fine series of landscapes, &c.; Mr. B. G. Wilkinson. Jun., 151, Bermondsey Street, shows “ Outward Bound,” and another picture; Mr. Augustus Wilson, 77, De Beauvoir Road, exhibits portraiture; Mr. Charles F. Wing, Tun bridge Wells, shows a group of two ladies; Mr. W. W. Winter, Midland Road, Derby, has two studies; Mr. H. Trueman Wood, Society of Arts, sends a frame of charm ing little landscapes; the Woodbury Company, 157, Great Portland Street, show many fine enlargements ; Mr. W. B. Woodbury, Java House, Manor Road, South Norwood, illustrates the new Stannotype process; Mr. C. Ray Woods, Percy House, Elthorne Road, Hornsey Rise, shows pic tures taken during his voyage to Caroline Island ; Col. H. Stuart Wortley, Rosslyn House, Grove End Road, for wards three of his fine studies. Dr. Morton, of Sheffield, exhibits a series of landscapes ; Mr. J. Milman Brown, of Shanklin, has several views from “ The Island ” ; Mr. W. Adkins, shows views in Norfolk ; Mr. W. Pouncy, Dorchester, has photographs of orna mental window's ; Mr. J. H. Knight, Farnham, sends some agricultural scenes; Mr. Thomas Griffin, of Weybridge, contributes some views from the Wey ; Mr. C. E. Abney, Derby, forwards a fine frame of landscapes ; Captain Tur ton, R.N., Florence, exhibits “ Bits from Italy ” ; Major J, Board, Westerham, shows some excellent landscapes and sea views ; Mr. J. W. Lumley, of Kirby, Moorside, sends a series of pictures from the Yorkshire Moors ; Mr. Chas. Reid, of Wishaw, exhibits hunting scenes ; Mr. G. E. Alder, of Croydon, “ The Artist and his Daughter ” ; Mr. Auty, of Tynemouth, sends several sea studies ; Mr. Cecil V. Shadbolt, Chislehurst, exhibits a series of Swiss views, and his famous balloon pictures ; Mr. A. H. S. Bailey has a river-side study ; Mr. James Malins, of Aberystwith, sends some scenes from the Thames, and Mr. W. Aubrey, of Horsham, a collection of studies. On the tables are several examples of foreign and British photography which have not yet been catalogued, while of the apparatus and appliances exhibited we speak in a special article. APPARATUS AT PALL MALL. Tub annual exhibition of the Photographic Society of Great Britain is primarily one of pictures, and not of apparatus, and it is seldom that anything like a representative collec tion of photographic appliances is shown. This may partly arise from the circumstance that but little encouragement is given to exhibitors to send in any thing but pictures. On the opening night, no mention of apparatus was to be found in the catalogue, although one of the tables was tolerably crowded with photographic appliances of various kinds, and not a few pieces of appa ratus were to be found collected together near the stove. The fact of the greater part of the exhibits being without any descriptive tickets, combined with the circumstance that perfect freedom of handling is the rule, rather tended to the disorganisation of some of the complex and delicately constructed changing and exposing arrangements. We shall not attempt to give any kind of systematic notice of the exhibits, but rather to discursively note down a tew matters which seem of especial interest and importance. It must be premised, however, that very few actual novelties