3= 



Your beitRroom equipped wi 



Porcelain ErvoLmeled Baiks 

 oj\d Oi\e Piece LaVia.'tories 

 IVKearvs Com/brt ejjd HeaJljk ~to your H< 



' s 



E^r 



(jF=H.^ 



To woman particularly — the maker of the "home ideal" — the perfec- 

 tion, beauty and comfort of "gtamted" Enameled Baths and One-Piece 

 Lavatories appeal with intense interest. The installation'of "StftudawT 

 ware is the most economical aid to your own comfort, the safest 

 guarantee of health to your family, and the cause of greatest pride in 

 possession. Its white, smooth, one-piece surface makes it alone 

 sanitarily perfect, and a constant pleasure to the sight and touch of the 

 owner. No home can be modern, healthful or comfortable without 

 it. The cost of installing "£tft»dW fixtures is low enough to satisfy 

 the most economical. 



Our Book "MODERN BATHROOMS " tells you how to plan, buy and ar- 

 range your bathroom, and illustrates many beautiful and inexpensive as well as 

 luxurious 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 

 ever issued on the subject and contains 100 pages. FREE for six cents postage, 

 and the name of your plumber and architect (if selected.) 



The ABOVE FIXTURES, No. P-33, can be purchased from any plumber atj 

 a cost approximating $94.75 — not counting freight, labor or piping — is 

 described in detail among the others. 



CAUTION: Every piece of Standard" Ware bears our 'SUvttuf "Oreenand 

 Gold" guarantee label, and has our trade-mark "Standard* cast on the outside. 

 Unless the label and trade-mark are on the fixture it is nor "Standard" Ware. 

 Refuse substitutes — they are all inferior and will cost you more in the end. 



Address .Standard ^aniiarj tRfj, Co. Dept. 23 Pittsburgh, U. S. A. 



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

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



- •• 



$2Q9 



The House Beautiful <§> 



Many modest homes reveal far better taste, possess r higher 

 artistic atmosphere and give more actual comfort, than man- 

 sions that have cost fortunes. 



ITS PURPOSE 



It is the purpose of "The House Beautiful" to lead the way 

 to such homes; to discuss and illustrate the architectural possi- 

 bilities of the home that is to cost say from #300 up ; to take up 

 the scope of landscape gardening; totreaton decorative schemes 

 of effective though economical character; to familiarize its 

 readers with the value and proper uses of things old — Colonial 

 furniture, old china, silver, pewter, and to guide them safely in 

 the selection of things new. 



ITS CONTRIBUTORS ARE AUTHORITIES 



Every detail of every room and comer of the house is specifi- 

 cally considered by unquestioned authorities, in the pages of 

 "The House Beautiful," the keynote of its policy being to show 



Wherein Ta9te Goes Farther Than Money 



If you are a lover of Home and Things Beautiful you will 

 quickly discover this magazine to be indispensable. 



HISTORIC STYLES IN FURNITURE 



and HOW TO KNOW THEM 



By Virginia Robie 



This is an invaluable handbook to those who appreciate the 

 debt we owe to furniture makers of the past. It contains the 

 precise knowledge in clear, lucid form, that has enabled many 

 a man and woman to pick up a gem in old furniture for a mere 

 song, opportunities by-the-way that grow scarcer day by day. 

 It shows how to distinguish the styles of the old Masters, 

 Sheraton, Hepplewhite, Chippendale and the others, and in- 

 fallibly guides one in discriminating between the pure style and 

 the faulty imitation. 



PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED 

 AND COVERS THE SUBJECT 



Each period of decoration is fully taken up and conspicuous 

 examples of the furniture pertaining to it are beautifully illus- 

 trated. Of especial value are the chapters on the great French 

 styles, on English furniture of the 16th and 17th Centuries and 

 on the Colonial Period. There are in all fourteen chapters, 

 covering the subject from the early middle ages to the first 

 quarter of the 19th Century. 



Ten Million Bathers 



use the modem sanitary bathtub. Nine 

 millions are active and vigorous, and need no 

 safeguards against slipping. 



One Million are crippled by illness or 

 handicapped by old age. Thousands of 

 this million injure themselves every year 

 simply because they need a first-class bath 

 mat and do not know it. Have you one 

 of the million in your family ? 



The Cantslip Bath Mat 



makes any tub — no matter how slippery — 

 safe ; and is so comfortable that we have 

 known bathers to go to sleep on it in the 

 tub. It is soft and grateful to the tenderest 

 skin — like cloth, but with the germ-proof 

 quality of pure white rubber. 



Made in six lengths and two widths. 

 The average tub takes a 36x I 5 inch mat ; 

 price at your dealer's, $3.00. For some 

 bathers the Rim Grip (lower cut) is de- 

 sirable ; price, $2.00. 



If you find any difficulty in getting mat 

 or grip, write us direct, and goods will be 

 forwarded anywhere east of Omaha at 

 prices named. 



The Cantslip Bathtub Appliance Co. 



56-58 Pine Street, New York 



<tO Ari /"\B"IM?D The yearly subscription price of "The House Beautiful" is $2.00; the net cost of "Historic Styles 



<P& .\J\J V/r P Ji-K. i n Furniture and How to Know Them" is $1.60— we will give a copy of the book with every new 



subscription to the magazine. The book is handsomely printed and the supply will not last long. If you contemplate having it 

 kindly send at once. 



HERBERT S. STONE, Publisher, 1326 Republic Building, Chicago 



Phoenix 



Sliding 



Blind 



Co. 



Phoenix 

 N. Y. 



