-r 



262 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



June, 1906 



A Laihrooin equipped wifl-i 



'Standard" 



Porcelain Enameled Ba£hs 



&• One -Piece Lavatories 



is ihe mos^ satisfactory 



room in "£Ke Kouse 



" 



;■■.■■■■;■■■■ ! . ■.:■.■:...'.■ ■ :,\Z"^:, 



An 







W-*" 



I 



Health, cleanliness and luxurious comfort environ 

 every home equipped with the beautiful Standard" porce- 

 lain enameled ware. 



Its artistic, simple beauty holds a decorative charm that adds the final touch of 

 elegance to the modern home. Its white purity makes its every use a joy. "Stavdesd? 

 Ware is sanitarily perfect, yet underneath its smooth china-like surface is the inde- 

 structibility of iron. Its cost is moderate; its installation the most economical — its 

 comfort-value inestimable. No home can be sanitary, convenient or even modernly 

 pleasant and healthful without "Standard" Porcelain Enameled Ware. 



!''■■'■■ 



The famous slant seat I 



closet is now supplied in "Standard" Ware. 



Our book "MODERN BATHROOMS" tells you how to 

 plan, buy and arrange your bathroom and illustrates many 

 beautiful and inexpensive rooms, showing the cost of each 

 fixture in detail, together with many hints on decoration, 

 tiling, etc. It is the most complete and beautiful booklet 

 on the subject and contains ioo pages, 



THE ABOVE FIXTURES NO. 'SteadM* P-29, cost approximately 

 $187.00— not counting freight, labor or piping. 



CAUTION : Every piece of 'SU&iaxtf' Ware bears our 

 Stafford* Green and Gold" guarantee label, and has 

 our trade-mark IStaudftfif cast on the outside. Unless the 

 label and trade-mark are on the fixture it is not *<Staildftp<f 

 Ware. Refuse substi*utes — they are all inferior and will 

 cost you more in the end. The word ^Slam^ird' is stamped on 

 all of our nickeled brass fittings ; specify them and see that 

 you get the genuine trimmings with your bath and lavatory , etc* 



Sta«dard<Sanitats1t)fo.C<y, Dept. 37, Pittsburgh, U. S. A. 



Offices and Showrooms in New York: 'Standard* Building, 35-37 West 31st Street 

 London, England, 22 Holborn Viaduct. E. C. 





w 



READY BY JUNE 10th 



HOW TO MAKE A FRUIT GARDEN 



By S. W. Fletcher 



An eminently practical work on the subject of fruits for the home, the best and most beautifully illus- 

 trated book on the subject ever published. Nearly 200 photographs by the Author. ($2.20 postpaid.) 



CotrNncr LD5E 



IN AMERICA 



TheWokld'sWohk 

 Farming 



The Garden 



Magazine 



Doubleday, Page &Co. New York. 



Mark Twain 



in HARPER'S WEEKLY: 



"A year and a quarter ago Mr. 

 Foley began to do school-boy poems 

 in a fire-new and blood-curdling and 

 criminal fashion of spelling which 

 no self-respecting eye could endure." 

 . . . . Yet the "public kept on 

 reading the poems in order to curse 

 the spelling, and of course the natural 

 thing happened ; familiarity with the 

 spelling modified the reader's hostility 

 to it, then reconciled him to it, and 

 at last made him fall in love with it ; 

 and now — weil, now Mr. Foley's 

 school-boy is a pet." 



Songs of 

 Schooldays 



By J. W. FOLEY 





These inimitable 

 poems chronicle 

 various romantic and tragic 

 episodes in the life of "hennry 

 beamus." For instance: 



"Of the Upper Class Girl" 



"she gradjewaits tooday ann says goodbi to 

 skooldaze fore she nose it all ann i 

 must sea her go far owt upon the way 

 uv life aloan wile i kan onley stay 

 fore jeers ann yeers until i reech the spott 

 weare she stands now. ann then ile be fourgott 

 fbi hur hoo i have wurshipt awl these yeers 

 in sileunce." . . . etc. 



Illustrated with silhouettes by 

 Katharine G. Buffum. 

 ($1.38 postpaid) 



Another Book of Laughter 



A Few Neighbors 



By HENRY A. SHUTE 



A book of irresistible humor by the 

 author of "The Real Diary of a Real 

 Boy." Uniform with "A Few Re- 

 marks." ($1.10 postpaid) 



TheWoeld'S'Wohk 

 Farming 



TheGahdew 



Magazine 



Doubleday Page &Co. New York. 



