572 



HORTICULTURE 



October 17, 1914 



StOlQ 



aiE^ 



IT'S not reasonable to expect you will take the 

 trouble and bother to write us a letter, stating all 

 the facts necessary for us to advise with you intelli- 

 gently concerning the kind of greenhouse best suited 

 for your particular place or purpose. Neither is it 

 to be expected that you are going to scratch your head 

 to be sure to let us know all the things we must of 

 necessity know, before we can give you an estimate. 

 But if you had before you a simple Question Blank, 

 that you could, with comparatively little effort, fill 

 in, you would willingly give us all the information 

 necessary. 



Of course, you don't want to be bothered with a 

 lot of fool questions. Neither do you want to be 



asked to answer a lot of questions in a second letter 

 after you thought you had answered them all in the 

 fust. 



So to overcome all these things, we have prepared 

 very carefully a Question Blank, that is as easy to fill 

 out as rolling off a log. It covers every point we 

 want to know. 



Send for our new catalog and we will enclose one of 

 these blanks. Just fill it out and return. If you 

 don't want to, you don't have to bother writing any 

 letter. The Question Blank is letter enough. 



Send for the catalog and let's get down to facts and 

 figures. 



Sitting on the residence stoop of Homer P. Knapp, at Fainesville. Ohio, this U the cbarminK elinipBe you get of 



his U-Bar greenhouse. 



U-BAR GREENHOUSES 



PIERSON U-BAR CO 



ONE MADISON AVE. NtWYORK, 



OUUDIAM OFFICfe. lOPHILUPS PLACE. MONTREAl 



