Page:Popular Science Monthly Volume 88.djvu/695

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Popular Science Monthly
667

hats on the pegs below. These "arms" are fitted on wooden pegs that extend through the cleat in such a manner as to permit them to be moveable. Heavy wire is bent by pliers to form hooks for the coat-hangers. The hat-pegs are really a pair of wood-handled awls.

An attractive hall-rack that was made
of miscellaneous boards and rope

The lower cleat affords support for a six-inch shelf which serves as an umbrella rest. Holes are bored in the outside corners, through which holes the rope supports are passed to the two deep wooden pegs projecting out far enough to receive the umbrellas, and thence to the pair of brackets above the center cleat.


A Nautical Porch Seat

NEARLY every attic has a rickety chair the seat of which might be rescued and converted into a comfortable porch chair such as the one pictured. Attached to a substantial cross-section in front, the back secured to two wooden cleats on the wall, the seat is complete. Two heavy ropes are fringed and knotted through the wooden brackets, then thrust through the holes in the cross-section of the seat.

A porch seat with a nautical air—
made from an old chair-seat


Bad table manners gain a hen nothing
with this home-made feeding trough

Teaching Hens Good Manners

HERE is a contrivance for correcting the hen's bad table manners. Observe how over-crowding is rendered impossible. The narrow strips of standing-room, and the lack of head-room explain the good behavior. A few packing-boxes and some nails are all that is needed to build this feeding-trough.