xx LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Continued 



PAGE 



Portion of a bathroom .......... 215 



A double lavatory . . . . . . . . .216 



A simple porcelain lavatory . . . . . . . . .217 



Fig. 37. Horizontal section of a wooden tank . . . . .217 



Portion of a small bathroom .... ... 218 



Tin-lined copper sink . . . . . . . . .219 



Fig. 38. Section of basin ......... 220 



Fig. 39. Section of a modern syphon closet . . . . . .221 



Fig. 40. Section showing trap forms ....... 223 



Fig. 41. Types of the non-syphoning trap ...... 223 



A shower bath ........... 224 



Fig. 42. Section showing the installation of the back-vent system . . 225 



An enamelled kitchen sink ......... 226 



House at Merion, Pa. .......... 227 



HEADING, CHAPTER XIII. Nearly concealed by cedars .... 228 



Detail of rustic well ........ . 230 



A rustic-well house . . . . . . . . . 231 



Fig. 43. Sectional diagram showing a well ...... 232 



Windmill on farm of Thomas W. Lawson, Esq. ..... 233 



The hacienda of Mrs. Hearst ........ 235 



The outlay best fitted to sand stretches ....... 235 



The Girard Foster House, at Lenox, Mass. ...... 237 



Inner court of house at Bryn Mawr, Pa. ...... 237 



Cottage at Grindstone Neck, Winter Harbor, Me. . . . . . 237 



Elizabethan house of Allen H. Reed, Esq. ...... 237 



Supply tank and lookout ......... 238 



Door to tank house (above) ......... 239 



Water tank of Mrs. Hearst ......... 240 



Fig. 44. Section of hydraulic ram ....... 240 



Old powder house .......... 241 



A water tower at Roxbury, Mass. ........ 241 



Fig. 45. Blind and combination drains ....... 243 



A tank at West Hampton Beach ........ 244 



Tank and windmill at Southport, L. I. .... . . 245 



Hiding an iron standpipe ......... 246 



A windmill that is not unsightly ........ 247 



Fig. 46. Showing the flush tank ........ 248 



Windmill and tank combined ........ 249 



