30 
House & Garden 
Save the dresser top 
P ERFUMES, toilet waters, lo¬ 
tions and other requisites of the 
i dressing table will spill out and run 
down the side of the bottle. And 
the alcohol they contain will ruin 
the varnish with unsightly marks. 
There is only one certain way 
to protect the beautifully finished 
top of dresser or toilet table and 
preserve it from those disfiguring 
accidents of every-day use —cover 
it with plate glass. 
The use of plate glass to cover 
dresser tops has become amazingly 
popular—yet it is only one of a 
dozen such practical uses about the 
house. For dining-room, library 
or console tables, plate glass pro¬ 
tects without hiding the finely fin¬ 
ished top. Its highly polished sur¬ 
faces and mirror-like clearness are 
strikingly effective against dark 
and nicely grained wood. A hard¬ 
ware or glass dealer will sell 
you the plate glass cut the proper 
size, with the edges nicely rounded. 
Plate glass mirrors have many 
uses about the house for decoration 
or utility, and they are always in 
style. Plate glass mirrors made 
right here in our own country are 
unsurpassed for brilliance and 
beauty. Only perfectly smooth¬ 
surfaced and crystal-clear plate 
glass is selected, and the silvering 
is done with the utmost skill. 
Speak to your architect about 
built-in mirrors, over mantels, in 
French doors, closet doors, bath¬ 
room doors and toilet cabinet 
doors. A plate glass mirror is 
made for permanency and will 
last the life of the house if properly 
installed. 
PLATE GLASS MANUFACTURERS of AMERICA 
Use Plate Glass jor: 
Hotel, Office-Building 
and House Windows 
Genuine 
Desk Tops 
Windshields 
PLATE GLASS 
Closed Car Windows 
Shelves 
£^u.s.aJ3 
Nothing Else 
is Like it 
