May, 1912 AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS Xxifi 
Tue Mopern Rarrroap. By Edward Hun- The Home of Wholesome Food 
gerford. Chicago: A. C. McClurg & 
ee oe nice BL. A Snow-White Solid Porcelain Compartment 
It does away with cracks, joints, 
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Book oF History (SHu-KING) oF Con- | un) AyrCi- FIXTURES 
Fucius. Rendered and compiled by W. | == 
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Price, 40 cents net. 
This little book was designed by its trans- 
lator and compiler to convey to the English- 
speaking reader a familiar view of the men 
who made Chinese history during the 
earlier age of the yellow empire. Upwards 
of twenty-five centuries before the dawn 
of light of Christianity and civilization in 
Britain and nearly twenty centuries before 
the founding of the city of Rome, China 
was possessed of a civil and criminal code, 
statute laws, nine departmental ministers 
of state under the emperor, extensive home 
industries, a large import and export trade, 
a systematized canal and river service, a 
standing army, an extensive agriculture, 
local governments and tributary taxation, 
and schools of literature, art, science, and 
music under the patronage and protection 
of hereditary dukes, earls, marquises and 
barons. 
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WoMEN AND WIspoM oF JAPAN. Introduc- 
tion by Shingoro Takaishi. New York: 
E. P. Dutton & Co. Cloth; 16mo.; 64 
pages. Price, 40 cents net. 
It may be said that the entire moral Pap HE bath is no longer an event = ye «£ >» 
teaching of Japan rests on the corner-stone in the household. The appeal of a EB 
of the spirit of unselfishness. Kaibara Ek- “Standard” Fixtures has supplanted ‘‘sense 
, = . . . 
ee LS Sid SES ae of duty’’ by a “‘desire for cleanliness.’’ Children love bath- 
et aay vane ee, ReWSe ing amidst the surroundings which “Standard” Fixtures form. 
in Chinese ethics, wrote the “Onna Dai- Th A q (aap! che hh a5 
waka” or (translated) “The Greater eir refining influence is as valuable to the home as their 
Learning for Women.” It is from this practical utility, their beauty and their defiance of age and use. 
text that the contents of “Women _ Genuine “Standard” fixtures forthe Home and demand “Standard” quality at less expense. 
and Wisdom of Japan” is translated. for School, Office Buildings, Public Institu- AJ] “Standard” fixtures, with care, will last a 
The well-known Bushido was the most tions, etc., are identified by the Green and jifetime. And no fixture is genuine wyless it 
salient feature in the Japanese moral- Grol! Weel, ‘ft Ue eae oF One Wreianl bears the guarantee label. In order to avoid 
ity, and one might translate it th of baths bearing the Red and Black Label, peas Sie fare re SS 
tee : putes. 2 ae Wee 2 which, while of the first quality of manufac- y SOU shale Si Se ee er LOSES Er cuy 
é areater Learning for Men. Here, then, ture, have a slightly thinner enameling, and » ‘otandard” goods in writing (not verbally) 
in “Women and Wisdom of Japan,” we thus meet the requirements of those who and make sure that you get them. 
have in the doctrine of “Onna Daigaku’ 
merely a different form of the Bushido Standard Sanitary Mig.Co. Dept. 23 PITTSBURGH, PA. 
spirit, but directed towards an ethical sys- New York ...... 35 Wee Street Nashvilles..o.c 315 Teal Nica So. London....53 eli Viaduct, E.C. 
Chicago ...... 415 Ashl New Orl , Baronne & St. Joseph Sts. ouston, Tex., Preston and Smith Sts. 
tem for the Japanese woman, The reader Philadelphia. .1128 Walnut Sica T eecanees soondad 215 Coristine Bldg. San Francisco. .Metropolis Bank Bldg. 
interested in Eastern culture will find the | ' Toronto, Can. 59 Richmond St.,E. Boston........+++ John Hancock Bue. Washing D. 2 a poutiem Bide; 
j ; : Pittsburgh....-... 106 Sixth Street Louisville........ 319-23 W. Main Street oledo, jesqac -321 Erie Street 
sixty-four pages of this book well worth | SUA ICA Tataes AN OONNMSSe RE Seeee Clavslawdi.eee4eitlaron Reads'S.E. Fer Worth, Tex, Fronvand Jones Ste. 
careful study for acquiring a fuller knowl- Cincinnati........ 663 Walnut St. Hamilton,Can.....20-28 Jackson St.,W. 
edge and understanding of Japanese man- 
ners and morals, past and present. ke. i au 
