SlSiP •• •- : v-" 7 " .v : ÿ V' E' : . vM£ fÆMêfë ml > BSKB® ;*«■ ,®e £ÎIcl¥t:iS"ïîMsS: WÈÊ$$ÊÈmSÊÊÈmfëMm . 1 1 T - L' .'V 1 • '■yïï &}■&;;:£:&$£■ y IlfiiS IBéé r ■ i • ::: : ïSsfi6gsgssea r.j-ilr L '■/t.* '-,k l'=A^ iimwim «SSIi sim iSISIfl mÊËÊÊÊÊÊBÊÈBÊm '■'■■■ .'ï..-':...""y.; J. fiï'; vmmêÈmmêÊsmàm ïr- •: V;.". ï:,;.' ■ ®P y v:/:v;.v Save up to Ign VOIE water bill 3&&:£çëîi É:: ; vlE'âvyv;l , 3 -- H -- ■ rfSE*, * - ; "Siil J VSKBBsBVS e e ipis gstiii J ... : : B fcl - lyÿyE, r V DURHAM REGION together," stated Olive Millson. "The set up is beautiful, beautiful, and the lighting is good." "A Heritage of Landscape" at the Clarke Museum and Archives in Kirby is on till November 3,2002. Great rates & Bonus Shares 6 month closed 3 years closed 5 years closed Variable Rate 4.50% 5.25% 5.95% 4.00% • mil's subject in chimi'x witlwiti nniirr Financial Services Whitby Branch: 1818 DuncJas St. E. M (005)728-4058 Manager: Mr. Paul Muller Bowmanvlllo Branch: 200 Kino SI. E. Tel. (005)023-0343 Manager: Mr. Tom Broadfoot E-mail: (lucn.lnlo@duca.com Wehiillo: www.duca.com Over the past seven years, Durham Region has been *| helping its water and sewer customers in installing ? 6 litre toilets. The average water bill savings per household household is 20%. This is an average for over 6,400 households right across Durham. Switching to Ultra Low Flow || 6 litre toilets is a proven way to reduce your water bill. If ijW%r\AH our toilets performed well in O Canada Mortgage and Housing § Hie Corporation's (CMHC) "Indépendant Toilet Testing Program". For your free copy, call Glen Plcasancc at: A23 1-800-372-1103 ext. 5391 Orono Weekly Times - Wednesday, September 25,2002 - 6 > Drummond exhibit ■ "A glimpse of the past" The paintings in the Arthur A Drummond exhibit currently currently showing at the Clarke Museum and Achieves so reflect and express his person, said Mrs. Olive Millson. "When I walked through the door into the room and |j saw all those Drummond paintings," said Mrs. Millson, "my first instinct was 'Mr. Drummond is here'." Oil on canvas, titled Late October The world The Afternoon, owned by Don and was so rich M i 11 s 0 n s Susan Brown of Newcastle he just were very -- -- wanted to to think he would have approved of this exhibition," Lofthouse said she feels he was a real romantic painter concealed under a formal exterior. "I have seen other landscape paintings that don't draw you in like his painting do," she stated. "His paintings make you want to be right there." H e had high standards, she said. many works are in the exhibit, some 23 paintings from private private collections, and 32 sketches from Alex Drummond, Arthur's only child, who now lives in Thornhill, Ontario. The exhibit features a number number of intimate sketches of the Drummonds at home, of Alex and his mother in the house and outside. It also includes a number of larger water colours, "ones you don't see around town much," stated Lofthouse. "Mary has done an excellent excellent job of putting this exhibit close neighbours to the Drummonds when they lived on Main Street in Orono. The exhibition curated by Mary Lofthouse of Kendal, celebrating the Orono artists' career, was three years in the making. At the show's opening opening reception last Sunday, at the Clarke Museum Alex Drummond, only child of Arthur A. and Luella Drummond said, "She's done it. Not only should the exhibition exhibition been done, she did it." Lofthouse tried to select mainly paintings of local scenes for this exhibition, which was three years in the making. Many local residents own a piece by the prolific painter who Lofthouse believes was a painter first, and a bank executive executive second. "He was far more devoted to painting," said Lofthouse in an interview Monday afternoon. "I regret I never knew him," said Lofthouse. "I Like get it down. He also kept his prices reasonable so people could afford to buy them. A Drummond painting purchased purchased from the artist himself was often given as a gift on special occasions. Arthur A Drummond came to Orono in 1925 as the bank manager of the Standard Bank of Canada, later to become the CISC. The Drummonds built their home on the south west corner of Main and Sommerville in 1931 and lived there for the next 46 years. Though he painted nearly every day, after he retired from the bank in 1946, Drummond devoted the rest of his life to his painting. Arthur A. Drummond died in 1977. Lofthouse prepared the exhibit with two objectives in mind. She wanted first of all local scenes and secondly works from local collectors, "People that bought work from the artist." Lofthouse says she had to leave out as