Houses or Homes?
There’s a deal of difference between houses, — just houses, built to sell, and houses that are built to be homes.
The difference comes in the care and forethought given to details that go to make the whole house habitable and useful. Builders, today, meeting the demand for such homes, are equipping them with every device that makes the care of the house easier; the whole house more useful.
The Sharp Rotary Ash Receiver
will help in a multitude of ways to make the homes you build more comfortable, more useful. It stores ashes out of sight in a dust tight, fireproof compartment where they stay, forgotten till finally disposed of.
There are no ash cans to litter up the cellar; no grimy ash dust to sift through the house. Dusting upstairs is reduced to a minimum. Downstairs, the cellar, attractive and free from ash cans and dust, offers space that invites use as a laundry, or even a comfortable card or billiard room.
We have just prepared an interesting booklet about “The Cellar as Clean as the Rest of the House. ” It shows just how the receiver is installed and how it simplifies the care of the furnace. There are also photographs of many homes where the Sharp Rotary Ash Receiver has banished furnace drudgery forever.
Write for your copy TODAY.
SHARP ROTARY ASH RECEIVER CORPORATION
314 Bridge Street
Springfield, Mass.
The American Architect and The Architectural Review published every other Wednesday by the Architectural and Building Press, Inc., at Stamford, Connecticut, Publication Office, Stamford, Conn. Editorial and Advertising Offices, 243 West 39th St., New York. Yearly subscription, $6. 00. Entered as second-class matter Aug. 81st. 1921, at the Post-office in Stamford, Conn., under the Act of March 3d, 1879. Issue No. 2397, dated July 5, 1922.
Residence of Mr. F. M. Travis Torrington, Conn.
Architect M. H. Westoff Springfield, Mass.
The Cellar as clean as The rest of the house
The Sharp Rotary Ash Receiver consists of a set of five, eight or twelve cans mounted on a revolving steel frame, installed in a concrete pit, under the ash pit of any size or style heating plant. Thereʼs nothing to get out of order.
There’s a deal of difference between houses, — just houses, built to sell, and houses that are built to be homes.
The difference comes in the care and forethought given to details that go to make the whole house habitable and useful. Builders, today, meeting the demand for such homes, are equipping them with every device that makes the care of the house easier; the whole house more useful.
The Sharp Rotary Ash Receiver
will help in a multitude of ways to make the homes you build more comfortable, more useful. It stores ashes out of sight in a dust tight, fireproof compartment where they stay, forgotten till finally disposed of.
There are no ash cans to litter up the cellar; no grimy ash dust to sift through the house. Dusting upstairs is reduced to a minimum. Downstairs, the cellar, attractive and free from ash cans and dust, offers space that invites use as a laundry, or even a comfortable card or billiard room.
We have just prepared an interesting booklet about “The Cellar as Clean as the Rest of the House. ” It shows just how the receiver is installed and how it simplifies the care of the furnace. There are also photographs of many homes where the Sharp Rotary Ash Receiver has banished furnace drudgery forever.
Write for your copy TODAY.
SHARP ROTARY ASH RECEIVER CORPORATION
314 Bridge Street
Springfield, Mass.
The American Architect and The Architectural Review published every other Wednesday by the Architectural and Building Press, Inc., at Stamford, Connecticut, Publication Office, Stamford, Conn. Editorial and Advertising Offices, 243 West 39th St., New York. Yearly subscription, $6. 00. Entered as second-class matter Aug. 81st. 1921, at the Post-office in Stamford, Conn., under the Act of March 3d, 1879. Issue No. 2397, dated July 5, 1922.
Residence of Mr. F. M. Travis Torrington, Conn.
Architect M. H. Westoff Springfield, Mass.
The Cellar as clean as The rest of the house
The Sharp Rotary Ash Receiver consists of a set of five, eight or twelve cans mounted on a revolving steel frame, installed in a concrete pit, under the ash pit of any size or style heating plant. Thereʼs nothing to get out of order.