28 
HOUSE & GARDEN 
NEW FURNITURE & REPRO- ^ 
DUCTIONS OF THE OLD. 
Suggestions for Fall Furnishing, Together with Two Pictorial 
Notes Showing Flow to Place Furniture to the 
v Best Decorative and Utilitarian Advantage a 
nother mirror of 
Colonial lines. 
Visualize it used 
in the living- 
room below. 
Mahog an y 12” 
by 24” 
For the bedroom 
nothing is more 
useful than a 
tray cabinet. It 
stands 64", and 
is finished in iv¬ 
ory white. The 
doors are rattan. 
Inside are wide 
shelves that can 
be pulled out, 
$150 
A good form of 
Colonial mirror, 
adaptable to liv¬ 
ing or bedroom. 
Mahogany 12" 
by 24" 
No boudoir is complete without a 
dressing table, and this type is 
at once modern and commodi¬ 
ous. Rattan panels give it the 
same characteristics as the tray 
cabinet shown here, $177 
The advantage of this 
mahogany magazine 
stand is that the top 
is a tray and can be 
lifted off 
Sturdiness and comfort 
are the two essentials 
for a chair after one 
has looked to its lines 
and finish. Both desir¬ 
able features are found 
in this piece 
In buying furniture look to 
line, finish and uphol¬ 
stering; avoid novelties, 
and as close as possible 
follow the proven master 
styles 
Remember that good fur¬ 
niture of simple design 
is not necessarily expen¬ 
sive; pieces of inferior 
pattern are costly at any 
price 
Photograph by Mary H. Northerni 
Japanese in effect but adapted by its furniture and arrangement to 
Occident life. White furniture with white or ivory woodwork is a 
pleasing combination 
Davis, McGrath & Keissling, architects 
Colonial in feeling, the furnishing of this room was mainly a problem 
of acquiring genuine old pieces and good reproductions-and then 
grouping them properly 
