HOUSE AND GARDEN 
48 
July, 
0 cK 
Household 
y 'V Refrigerating 
Ice Making Plants 
AND 
Residence of Mr. T. A. Sperry, Cranford, N. J. 
Equipped with Brunswick Refrigerating Plant. 
Refrigeration with ice is as much out of 
place in a really modern villa or town house as 
is heating by means of stoves. 
There’s a far better way. 
Air cooled by the Brunswick system is dry — 
foods are preserved without deterioration either 
in texture or taste. No germs freed from melt¬ 
ing ice find their way to the food. 
For use in beverages, etc., you can make ice 
that you know is absolutely pure. 
The Brunswick is easy to operate. Your but¬ 
ler needs give it only a few moments’ attention 
each day. 
Write for Full Information 
by mail—or ask our representative to call. 
Each installation is specially designed to meet 
the requirements of the user and guaranteed to 
produce the results for which it is designed. 
Brunswick Refrigerating Co. 
NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. 
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ON EVERY 
PIECE 
Every glass essential for the A well-appointed table is 
to be found in Heisey’s Cfff Glassware. This sparkling, 
clear-as-crystal glassware V is low priced enough for 
every day use. It is for sale only by the best crockery and 
department stores. ■ jT’ : 
Our free “Handbook for the Hostess" is worth writing for. 
| Newark. Ohio 
333-FINGER BOWL 
PLATEanoVIOLETHOLDER A. JH.. Heisey ^'•C&’^beplNY' 
Homes That Architects Have Built 
for Themselves. 
(Continued from page 19) 
hall is fireproof, faced on the hall side 
with oak. The window is an iron case¬ 
ment frame and sash fitted with leaded 
glass. The room thus constructed affords 
a safe place for the storage of paintings 
and heirlooms in the event of the house 
being closed in the absence of the family. 
The small additional expense involved in 
having such a room, and its obvious ad¬ 
vantages, have suggested its use in other 
houses designed by Mr. Sellars for clients 
who possess objects of interest which 
could not be replaced if destroyed by fire. 
Besides the hall and den the main part 
of the house consists of the dining-room 
and living-room. From the living-room 
French casements open onto a bricked ter¬ 
race which connects with the piazza at the 
end of the house. This terrace is formed 
of reinforced concrete paved with brick 
and the space under it is used for the 
storage of wood and inflammable matter, 
thus keeping the cellar free from such ac¬ 
cumulations. From the brick terrace 
steps lead to a lower terrace and flower 
garden inclosed by hedging. 
Between the dining-room and kitchen 
the pantry is arranged with access 
through a short passageway to the front 
hall. This passageway contains coat 
hooks and the telephone. Besides the 
usual cupboards, with compartments for 
table leaves and other conveniences in the 
pantry, the sink is provided with a copper 
covered portable drain table with shelves 
underneath for silver-cleaning parapher¬ 
nalia. This drain table being arranged 
on castors is easily drawn aside for access 
to the pantry window, and the arrange¬ 
ment also insures greater cleanliness than 
where such boards are built solidly against 
the wall. 
In the kitchen the range, boiler and gas 
stove are set in a large brick recess similar 
to the old-fashioned fireplaces with shelf 
above the opening, and so arranged that 
the heat and fumes from the cooking pass 
into a flue instead of into the room. The 
drain table here is also portable, but cov¬ 
ered with zinc. Communicating with the 
kitchen is a laundry with large closet for 
supplies and beyond this is the refrigera¬ 
tor room. 
The second floor of the back building 
over the kitchen and laundry is occupied 
by the nursery, nursery bathroom and a 
large closet for the children’s belongings. 
Opening from this room is a balcony and 
the whole arrangement is such that this 
portion of the house can be isolated from 
the rest of the building if necessary in 
time of sickness. 
The main portion of the second floor 
consists of bedrooms, bath, closets, and a 
sewing room fitted with cupboards for 
linen, with lockers for storage of clothing. 
On the third floor are the servants’ 
rooms and bath, storeroom, workshop and 
nursery bedroom provided with built-in 
book shelves and ample closets, while over 
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