160 
House & Garden 
#* Marks the Point 
where the ironing board disappeared 
This ironing board unfolds 
from the wall 
A handy closet for brooms 
Why have an ironing board in the 
way when you are not using it? Why 
have a broom, or a breakfast nook, 
taking up space except when ac* 
tually in use? 
You can get built-in units which keep 
everything out of the way—and yet 
convenient. The “disappearing” iron* 
ing board, the “Pulmanook” with 
seats and table, which folds into the 
walls, the broom closet, and other 
handy new kitchen unit equipment 
are described in the folder which we 
have ready for you. Send for it—it 
will show you how to build a new 
kitchen more economically—or to 
make any kitchen more delightful. 
Wasmuth'Endicott Company 
205 Snowden St., Andrews, Indiana 
; i i 
1 
U si 
it, 
-—4 
“Combination IX” 
Includes the Kitchen Maid cabi¬ 
net, broom closet a?id generous shelf 
for dishes, linens and staple foods . 
Almost everything you keep in your 
kitchen can be kept in this con¬ 
venient unit, occupying less than 
one wall. 
FROM the NEW YORK FLOWER SHOW 
Evans 
This splendidly planted rose garden was the exhibit 
of the Cromwell Gardens at the Tenth International 
Flower Show held in March at Grand Central Palace 
The Silver Medal rock garden of the Julius Roehrs Co., 
paved and pooled, was effectively massed with decidu¬ 
ous and broad-leaved evergreen shrubs 
The wild garden of F. R. Pierson, which won and de¬ 
served its Gold Medal, was a shmning bit of informal 
design, with its lily padded pool and blooming shrubs 
