House and Garden 
This Booh is FREE to Gvex^ 
T^^rcseholder 
A\ODERN BATH-ROOA\S 
Every man and every woman who wants to have a 
healthful, sanitary home should send at once for a 
copy of this free book. Send for it now and read it. 
This is the modern bathroom book. It contains over 100 beautifully illustrated 
pages of information that every householder should have. You want a health¬ 
ful, sanitary home. This book tells you how you can secure it. You want to 
know whether your present sanitary conditions are what they ought to be. 
This book tells you what you ought to know. If you are building or remodeling 
your home, it gives you a mass of information that will be invaluable to you 
in deciding on your sanitary arrangements. '’’‘Modern Bathrooms” completely 
solves your sanitary problem for you. It is the most instructive and beautiful 
book ever issued on this subject. And there is a copy— free—for every one. 
“MODERN BATHROOMS” 
gives actual photographs and describes in detail 16 
different bathroom interiors ranging in price from 
$69 to $542. No matter how much or how little you can 
afford for your bathroom equipment, it tells you how 
you can make your bathroom absolutely healthful 
and sanitary, and how to get the best and most 
valuable equipment for the least possible money. 
“MODERN BATHROOMS” 
also contains many beautiful illustrations of mod¬ 
ern kitchens and laundries. It tells exactly what 
fixture to use for every purpose; how much 
these fixtures cost, and how’ to plan, buy and ar¬ 
range them in the most economical and attractive 
way. Every householder should have a copy of 
this book. It will pay you to send for and read it. 
You cannot get this book from any publisher. You cannot buy it at any 
price. But you can secure it free from us by writing for it today. Enclose 
6c. postage and send us the name of your architect and plumber if selected. IVrite now. 
Address, Standard Sanffars'lpf^.Co. Dept. 40, Pittsburgh, Pa., U. S. A. 
Offices and Showrooms in New York: ‘*^taiJdard* Building, 35-37 West Slst Street. 
Louisville : 325-329 West Main Street. 
London, Eng.: 22 Holborn Viaduct, E. G. 
Pittsburgh : 
949 Penn Avenue. 
New Orleans: Cor. Baronne& St. Joseph Ste. 
Cleveland: 648-652 Huron Road, S. E. 
ONDS 
p 
W EXTRACT 
“ The Standard for Sixty Years 
Nothing else so quickly affords relief 
HIV from sunburn, insect bites, chafing, etc. 
Refuse all substitutes. The genuine 
is sold only in original sealed bottles. 
I.AIIONT, CORLISS & CO., Ari-iUb, New Vork 
WATER SUPPLY. The problem solved by the 
Kewanee System of Water Supply. Write for 64 
page illustrated catalog No. 44. 
Kewanee Water Supply Co., Kewanee, Ill, 
Maritire 
Kiln dried and pulverized. No Nveeds or bad 
odors. Helps nature hustle. For garden, 
lawn, trees, shrubs, fruits and house plants, 
^yi LARGE BARREL, Cash with Order. 
Delivered to your Freight Station. 
Apply flow. 
The Pulverized Manure Co., 30 Non Stock Yards, Chicago- 
AUTOMOBILES 
Where to go for a Tour 
(Continued from page 99.) 
the roads are often poor. In the lake re¬ 
gions of Wisconsin and Minnesota there 
are numerous attractive summer resorts 
and the roads are often good. The 
Great Lakes offer alluring attractions 
for tourists in the adjacent states, who 
frequently penetrate into Canada from 
Buffalo and Detroit. The Thousand 
Islands and St. Lawrence region 
are objective points for thousands of 
automobilists and motor boat enthu¬ 
siasts, while Montreal and Quebec are 
delightfully quaint and are more typi¬ 
cally Old World cities than many 
European cities. Canadian roads as a 
rule are not boulevards like the hun¬ 
dreds of miles of state roads that make 
New Jersey, Massachusetts and Con¬ 
necticut famous for touring, but they 
are generally fair. The Delaware Water 
Gap is centrally located for a great many 
tourists and is well worth a visit. It can 
be reached in a day’s run from New 
York or Philadelphia and offers pictur¬ 
esque mountain and river scenery, good 
hotels and fair roads. 
One might go on indefinitely naming 
sections that are suitable for pleasure 
touring, but any auromobilist can pick 
them out for himself il he will but keep 
in mind the fundamentals that make for 
enjoyment of a trip—diversified and 
pleasing scenery, good roads, good 
hotel accommodations, freedom from 
excessive heat, and reliable guide books 
or road maps. 
THE EDITOR’S TALKS AND CORRE¬ 
SPONDENCE 
(Continued from page lOO.) 
of the room and may be distinctly deco¬ 
rative. We, however, advise you 
against a large over-mantel mir¬ 
ror as in a small room this is a very 
objectionable feature. It you have a 
paneled space between the windows of 
your principal room you would obtain a 
good effect by having a mirror set in 
extending the full length from picture 
rail to base-board. A long narrow mir¬ 
ror framed flat might he used over your 
mantel effectively. One should use much 
care in placing mirrors in a small room. 
TILES FOR A PATIO 
I desire to pave the floor of a patio 
with tile and would be glad to have you 
12 
In writing to advertisers please mention ITousk and Garden. 
