130 
Adding a new touch 
to your bedroom 
The Dolly Madison Bedspread with its charming 
crinkle texture, simple design and soft coloring blends 
admirably with any decorative scheme and adds a 
most interesting note to any bedroom. 
We offer the Dolly Madison spread in plain ecru, 
ecru and blue, ecru and rose, ecru and orchid and ecru 
and taupe. This bedspread always looks its best—for 
it cannot wrinkle or crease and is easily laundered. 
It never requires ironing. By extending the use of 
Dolly Madison cloth to the window curtains, draper¬ 
ies, bureau scarfs, slip covers, etc., you will achieve 
some very novel effects. 
Dolly Madison Bedspread 
Cotton Silk 
Size 72 X 99, each $ 12.50 each $ 16-50 
“ 90 X 99, “ $15.00 “ $19.50 
By the yard, 72 inches wide 
Cotton $4.75 Silk $5.75 
Imported Dotted Grenadine Curtains 
$8.25 per pair 
Bands and Valance to match $ 4-25 
All mail orders will be given prompt atten¬ 
tion and selections made as carefully as if 
in person. Send for our New Illustrated 
Booklet No. 62. 
House & Garden i 
The main color note in this room — mauve—is found in the background of 
the chintz u'hich covers a long, comfortable sofa and makes the window 
hangings 
COLOR SCHEMES/ffr BEDROOMS 
{Continuedfrom page 128) 
gauze curtains which hang just under the 
green silk ones. These curtains are very 
ferninine and soft and are made to hang to 
the floor. They are of a deep ivory white 
gauze finished with a three-inch ruffle of 
ivory colored lace. This lace is put on 
with a little ruching of a peach colored 
ribbon, between the two windows stands 
a dressing table made of ivory colored 
silk on which has been appliqued a mag¬ 
nificent length of old embroidered silk. 
An oval mirror in a gilt frame hangs over 
this dressing table. 
Near the fireplace there is a standing 
screen, the upper part of which is made of 
yellow brocade with a design of the same 
pinks and greens as are found elsewhere 
in the room. In order to make a small 
piece of material do the major part of the 
screen, the lower j)art was covered with a 
plain yellow silk of the same tone, and 
framed with square applications of yellow 
ribbon which give it a paneled look. 
Against this screen is an old French arm¬ 
chair covered with a striped stuff in 
green and yellow. I'he sharpness of 
stripes against the yellow brocade and 
back of that the pale green wall makes a 
delightful arrangement of colors. At the 
o{)posite side of the fireplace a small 
French table with a marble top holds a 
yellow porcelain bowl of potpourri and a 
white lamp with a yellow shade. Beside 
this another French bergere covered in 
brocaded stuff of yellow ground is placed. 
At the other end of the room a chaise 
longue of white painted wood covered 
with a green and white checkered velvet 
is placed. There is no monotony of green 
in this room, no feeling of a deliberate 
color plan, yet a most satisfying and 
agreeable repetition of the colors: yellow, 
apricot, ivory white and green. 
/Vnother guest room in the same house 
is a very small single guest room which is 
furnished in the Directoire stjde. The 
color of the room, which is light green, 
(Continued on page 132) 
The curtains in the little girl’s room are the sharp blue of Bristol glass — 
an excellent contrast to the orange tones of the old maple and the pink 
and red flowers in the chintz 
