February, 1923 
9 
Mahogany 
in Your 
Home 
W HETHER you use Genuine Mahogany for 
interior woodwork or for furniture, the re- 
suits are not alone pleasing to the eye, but there 
comes into your home an atmosphere of coziness, 
hospitality and distinctiveness, which grows with 
the years. 
To the charm of Genuine Mahogany wood¬ 
work—the sentimental value of refinement and 
hominess —is the added monetary value should 
you ever desire to sell. 
The good taste of Mahogany Furniture is just 
as apparent. If you desire your dining room, 
bedroom or living room to be in Chippendale, 
Hepplewhite, Sheraton; Duncan Phyfe, or any of 
the famed Colonial styles,you must remember that 
in Mahogany and Mahogany alone is correct ex¬ 
pression found. For the Great Furniture Makers 
used Mahogany to the exclusion of other woods. 
And while we dwell upon the distinctiveness 
of Mahogany, let us disabuse your mind of the 
idea that it is an expensive, difficult-to-obtain 
wood. Mahogany is plentiful. Fifty million feet 
are imported into this country every year. Its 
cost is very little, if any more than other less 
beautiful woods. 
There are other good features about Mahogany. 
Aside from its beauty, the ease with which it can be 
obtained and its low comparative cost. Mahogany 
is easy to finish and care for. It improves with 
age, taking on more mellow and delightful color 
tones, as time goes on. 
We will gladly send you, without cost, our 
illustrated folders on Period Furniture and the 
“Home Beautiful.” 
after all—there’s nothing like 
MAHOGANY 
MAHOGANY ASSOCIATION, Inc. 
St. James Building 
1133 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 
