76 
House & Garden 
Ventilator Easily Installed in part of window or wall 
A New Day in the Kitchen 
— and the Home 
Protect the fine things in your home now being 
soiled by the grease-carrying fumes that cooking 
daily sends through your home—even past closed 
doors—laying a film for destroying dust on your 
decorations, pictures, curtains, walls, etc. Pre¬ 
serve their fresh cleanliness by installing an 
Learn the comfort — the joy — of working in a 
kitchen where the air is always clean, always 
fresh with abounding energy — free from the 
taint and discomfort of cooking odors, smokey and 
steamy air — the new day of lighter housework. 
Moderate in price. Easily installed in part of 
window or in wall. Connected with any elec¬ 
tric light socket. Costs but a cent an hour. Fully 
guaranteed. 
Go today to your hardware store or electrical 
dealer and see the llg Kitchen Ventilator in oper¬ 
ation; or write us direct for illustrated literature. 
The llg is the only ventilating fan with the fully 
enclosed self-cooled motor—used in thousands of 
restaurants, hotels, homes, offices, stores, factories, 
etc. 
Ilg Electric Ventilating Co. 
162 Whiting Street - Chicago, Illinois 
L_ 
The marble top table and chairs here are finished in white 
enamel, a good kitchen color 
Furnishing Your Kitchen 
(Continued from page 57) 
and pine for the cheaper kinds of top. 
The marble top table is the royal 
pastry table, which, of course, though 
not a luxury, is an extra table. Fancy 
a seven foot marble slab 2/ 2 " thick! 
Isn’t it like an Alma Tadema concep¬ 
tion! The pastry table usually has a 
rack of some sort beneath it, either 
slatted or solid. This rack may be half 
shelf and half electric plate warmer. 
In smaller homes the pastry table of 3' 
length is most convenient with a some¬ 
what thinner marble top or glass top. 
The top of the cook’s table is some¬ 
times divided into two parts, one part 
made of marble or glass for pastry work 
and the other part of polished wood 
for ordinary pursuits. This effects the 
saving of a table if the cooks do not 
squabble or if there is but one cook 
and little room! 
The cook’s table is placed opposite 
the range and has a 7' high pot rack 
attached. 
The legs of most of these high-grade 
tables are tipped with metal to keep 
them unspotted from the washings of 
the floor. The trimmings, too, ere of 
the same metal, formerly called German 
silver. 
It would not be a bad idea to have 
a metallic tip of some sort put on the 
legs of the less expensive tables, to 
keep them from wearing and to main¬ 
tain a rigidity well beloved in tables. 
For there is no heppiness in table tip¬ 
ping outside of the spiritual seance! 
Kitchen Cabinets 
A kitchen cabinet is a thing of duty 
and a joy forever. It is first cousin to 
the table and really is but the table 
extended and expanded into drawers 
(Continued on page 78) 
Space prevents showing all the various kinds 
of cabinets. This design is of wood, with 
round corners and an enamel table top. 
Courtesy of Wasmuth-Endicott Co. 
