The Odds Are 4 to 1 
Against You 
Heed Nature’s Warning 
—Bleeding Gums 
Don’t gamble with your teeth and health. 
You have far too much at stake. More, the 
odds are too heavy against you. 
Teeth'destroying, health'sapping Pyorrhea 
strikes four persons out of every five that pass 
the age of forty. And thousands younger, 
too. The chances are 4 to i it will strike 
you unless you are vigilantly on guard. 
Heed Nature’s warning when she gives it. 
Bleeding gums are the danger signal. Act at 
once. Don’t wait. For Pyorrhea works fast. 
The tender gums recede. The teeth loosen, 
drop out or are lost through extraction. Pus' 
pockets form at the roots and often flood the 
system with infection. 
Formula of R. J. Forhan, D. D. S. 
Forhan Company, New York 
Forhan’s, Limited, Montreal 
Go immediately to your dentist for teeth and 
mouth inspection. Brush your teeth, twice 
daily, with Forhan’s For the Gums. This 
healing, time'tested dentifrice, when used in 
time and used consistently, will prevent 
Pyorrhea or check its progress. 
Forhan’s For the Gums is the formula of 
R. J. Forhan, D. D. S. It will keep your teeth 
clean and white, your gums firm and 
healthy. It is pleasant to the taste. Buy a 
tube today. At all druggists, 35c and 60c. 
A grass terrace, with walks of cracked flag and 
formal planting corresponds in spirit with the 
great stone house of which it is a part. Trow¬ 
bridge & Ackerman, architects 
Terraces for Outdoor Living 
(Continued from page 53) 
terrace, to both its kind and its fur¬ 
nishing. 
Fortunately a terrace can be suffi¬ 
ciently formal to be a credit, architec¬ 
turally, without going to the extreme 
of being furnished with backless mar¬ 
ble benches. This kind of marble bench 
is fine enough for a moment’s rest at 
the end of a garden path, and grandly 
‘architectural” on a terrace—but if 
there were no other seating furniture, 
most of us would stay indoors, unless 
we felt like walking back and forth 
outdoors, like sentries. 
But the terrace is not at all neglected 
in the matter of appropriate furniture 
in wood, iron, willow and rattan, En¬ 
glish, American and Chinese, with the 
addition of smart little enameled iron 
tables, with or without gay Deauville 
umbrellas. Terrace furniture should be 
chosen for its comfort and suitability, 
and so grouped and placed as to give 
the terrace a distinctly livable appear¬ 
ance without any suspicion of untidi¬ 
ness. Fashions in furniture here assert 
themselves, because there is such a 
thing as smart furniture, which looks 
as though it belonged on the terrace 
and nowhere else, and nondescript, raf¬ 
fish looking furniture which does not 
look as though it belonged on the ter¬ 
race—or anyw'here else. 
Often the terrace, or a small part of 
it, is protected from glaring sun or 
summer showers by awnings, which can 
add a dashing note of color and a 
spirit of festivity when they are in use, 
and can be rolled back when the sun 
retreats behind the house, or when 
the shower ceases. 
A terrace need not be large or small; 
certainly it need not be pretentious. It 
is a part of the house and a part of 
the garden, quite regardless of the size 
of house or garden—and above all it 
is a practical and charming addition to 
the real living of life in the country. 
Harting 
This informal terrace which introduces itself under an overhang 
of the house is used for an outdoor dining room. It was devised 
bv Richardson Wright, as. part of his house at Silvermine, Conn. 
