114 
House Garden 
A Happy Gift Idea 
' I 'HE Stormoguide is a novel gift with much more 
than its novelty to commend it. What could he 
more useful than this sure, reliable weather forecaster? 
So much—business, sport, the success of parties, the 
fate of new clothes, not to speak of health—depends 
on knowing, twebe to twenty-four hours in advance, 
what the weather is going to be. 
Ordinary barometers need a scientist to explain them; 
the Stormoguirle has a simple chart which makes its 
forecast intelligible at a glance. And it has the same 
absolute precision that has put Tycos instruments in 
every important laboratory and observatory in the 
country. 
The silvered metal dial, with neat black-fdled figures 
and lettering, together with the tasteful frame of 
mahogany, rosewood or walnut, make the Stormoguide 
a decoration for any room or hall. A simple adjustment 
—only to be made once—corrects the readings to the 
altitude of all localities. 
/In acceptable cjiftjor your friends’ homes—an invaluable 
equipmentJoryour own. 
Tycos 
STORMOGUIDE 
Stormoguide 2554 , as ittus- 
trated, has a 5 -inch silver 
metal dial set in a 7 -inch 
jrame, mahogany stand, 
17 yi inches wide at base. 
Highly polished, it is an 
ornament to any home, 
club or office. Price $ 50.00 
Stormoguide 2256 X, First 
quality movement, compen¬ 
sated to overcome changes 
in temperature. /Intiqiie 
finished, round, brass ca.re. 
Five-inch si Ivered-metat 
dial in 7 -inch frame. 
Price $ 25.00 
li (or any reason your dealer cannot supply you with a 
Stormoguide one will be sent direct upon receipt of 
price—postpaid and safe delivery guaranteed. 
lay/or Instrument Companies 
ROCHESTER, NEW YORK 
and 
110-112 Church Street, Toronto, Canada 
The "west end of the chapel at Whitehall is broken by a 
circular window and the entrance door. The windows 
are located high in the walls and directly under the eaves 
1 H E DOMESTIC CHAPEL 
{Continued from page 47 ) 
contemporary stories, novels and plays. 
-Vpart from its religious aspect, the 
purely architectural capacity of the 
domestic chapel is worth thinking about. 
It lends a stable dignity and poise to any 
house of which it forms an incorporated 
part, or to which it is joined on as a more 
or less separate unit. If it is comprised 
within the principal mass of the dwelling, 
its presence offers a legitimate oppor¬ 
tunity for varied interest of external 
composition, in the matter of fenestration 
and other particulars. If the chapel is an 
attached but virtually independent unit, 
the opportunity is greatly increased. 
The size of the chapel will be deter¬ 
mined by the use to which it is to be put. 
If it is intended only for intimate use in 
a small household, it will be correspond¬ 
ingly small, scarcely more, perhaps, than 
a little shrine, which might, indeed, take 
the form of a memorial. If, on the other 
hand, the chapel is meant for the use of 
a fairly large household—guests, servants 
and all—upon more or less frequent 
occasions, it will of necessity be more 
commodious and occupy a more consider¬ 
able place in the plan. 
An e.xcellent example of the first sort 
is the little oratory in the home of D. 
Putnam Brinley at New Canaan, Ct., a 
small room in the body of the house. 
The chapel at Whitehall, at Sudbury, 
Mass., by way of contrast, affords a good 
instance of the larger sort of domestic 
{Continued on page 130 ) 
At the right of the decoratively designed organ manual 
in the chapel of I. N. Spiegelberg, Miramont Court. 
Briarcliff Manor, N. T., is the choir with its beautifully 
carved woodwork 
