The Florists' Review 



January "23, 1913. 



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The House Without a Doubt'' 



That's What 

 W. R. Nicholson 



Says of Our Iron Frame 



Why don't you build "a house without a doubt"? Now's the tir 



ttlT took me a long while to make up my mind to build a 

 Lord & Burnham house. Although we had several of 

 this concern's Iron Frame houses on the place, houses that were 

 satisfactory in every way, still it did seem to me that the price 

 they asked was a bit high. 



"The more, however, that I studied the details of the house 

 that this concern proposed to build for me and began to realize 

 the carefulness with which the structural strains had been cared 

 for, the more I became convinced that I could not afford to 

 build any other house — I could not afford to have a house 

 that had a doubt. Now that the house is up I am thorough- 

 ly convinced that I made no mistake. 



"When I go into the house and see how light it is and how 



strongly it is supported I 

 look at those double ani 

 which the trussing is tre* 

 strongly holding togethefj 

 all doubt that there iM 

 Lord & Burnham houses I 

 "Then, again, after tbi 

 we didn't lose a pane of I 

 for us fourteen'years aj 



Very truly yours. 



