The Holland Tea Table
Elegance is reached in the Holland tea table, its standard riohly carved in roahogany or antique oak and inlaid with medallions in delft. The top is a movable tray in the beautiful china mounted in brass with heavily chased handles of the metal at either end. A complete tea service of delft accompanies it, making it a drawing room appointment of great beauty and expense. The well informed hostess, although delighted in its possession, wil! not claim for it genuineness, knowing that the lovely bine china now suoh a craze is but a close imitation. Only one perfect service of real oíd HollaDd delft isowned in this country, and that descended from Dutch ancestors and is so valnable as to
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Subjects
Ann Arbor Argus
Old News