VI 



THE GUIDE TO NATURE— ADVERTISEMENTS 



GREENWICH INN 



Sound Beach, GonrL 



On the Water. 50 Minutes from N.Y 

 ACCOMMODATING 200 



Frequent trains. Golf, Tennis, Bathing, Boating 



Saddle Horses, Orchestra. 

 New York Office: ROOM 1108, 347 FIFTH AVE 

 Telephone, 1 185 Murray Mill 



Ye Olde Greenwich Inn. 



The editor of this magazine wishes 

 to add a word to this advertisement 

 of the Greenwich Inn, located in Sound 

 Beach ("Old Greenwich"). The an- 

 nouncement represents a thoroughly 

 first-class summer hotel at the best of 

 seasides, Sound Beach. 



Do you want to know what kind of 

 a place Sound Beach is. Then send 

 for the beautiful illustrated booklet 

 telling of this famous Inn. 



It is located on the most beautiful 

 part of Long Island Sound, with mod- 

 ern roads leading to most picturesque 

 country. 



It is near ArcAdiA. Come to Sound 

 Beach ! 



A Successful Seed and Plant Store. 

 We take pleasure in calling atten- 

 tion to the Quality Seed Store of 

 Stamford, Connecticut, not because 

 the store is one of our advertisers, but 

 because a magazine devoted to the 

 study of nature in all its forms would 

 be interested in the success of any 

 store devoted to seeds, plants and flow- 

 ers. The experience of several similar 



stores in Stamford has been discourag- 

 ing, but the success of the Quality 

 store shows that the failures, of which 

 there have been many, were not due 

 to the merchandise nor to the locality. 

 Faulty management may have been a 

 fatal factor. Stamford is a plant lov- 

 ing city. The success of the Quality 

 store demonstrates that, and that suc- 

 cess is proof of Mr. G. B. Cannon's 

 good management. The store is ideal- 

 ly located, is well equipped, well stock- 

 ed, and is controlled by a pleasing, 

 genial, efficient manager. We are al- 

 ways gratified to note the success of 

 any business house that advertises in 

 this magazine, but we are especially 

 pleased when the success is achieved 

 through the aid of that nature to which 

 The Guide to Nature is devoted. 



We are proud of the class of adver- 

 tisers represented in The Guide to Na- 

 ture, and another source of justifiable 

 pride is that seldom in the ten years 

 of the magazine's life has any of its 

 advertisers failed, although many firms 

 have gone down that did not adver- 

 tise with us ! We do not for a moment 

 assert that advertising in this maga- 



