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U L Y , 1 .0 1 1 



THE GARDEN 



This BEAUTIFUL DIAL 



(Complete) for $10.00 



Pompeian stone pedestal 

 and hand-chased brass sundial 



adjusted to latitude of purchaser. 



Pedestal 35 in. high ; Dial 8 in. 



diameter. Price $10.00, F. O. B. New 



York ; or freight paid to any point in 



the U. S. east of Mississippi River for 



$1.00 additional. 



Special offer, will not he repeated. 



THE ERKINS STUDIOS 



223 Lexington Ave., New York 



The Largest Manufacturers cf 

 Garden Furniture in America 



M\ r' A V T X' T" 1 '' y°" "'"'' injormation about dogs 

 t\ \J A A 1 IN Vj apply to the Renders' Service 



377 



HAVE YOU A GARDEN? 



Then YOU will enjoy 

 THE HOUSE BEAUTIFUL 



with its delightful features on landscape and 

 vegetable gardening, together with instructive 

 articles on house furnishing and decorating. 

 These are written by the foremost authorities 

 in this country. 



A FEW FEATURES FOR JULY 



The Home Garden'* by Clarence Moores Weed. 

 "How New England Folks Build Their Houses" fcv 



Chas. E. White, Jr.. A. A. I. A. 

 "Attractive Small Houses" Pictures and Plans. 

 "Making Over Old Houses, with Before and After 



Pictures" by Aymar Embury. II. 

 Colonial Remains in New England." 

 "Seasonable Notes tor the Home Grounds'' by E. B. 



Clark. Landscape Architect. 

 "Sicilian Villas" by George Porter Fernald, with Drawings 



by the A ulhor. 



'Cabinets and Tables of the Georgian Period" by 



Virginia Robie. 



64 PAGES. OVER 90 ILLUSTRA TIONS. 



OUR OFFER 



To convince you of the worth of The House Beautiful we 

 will mail you the big July issue and the splendid June number 

 for only 25c — the price of one copy on the news stands 



CLIP AND MAIL TODA Y 



The House Beautiful, Room 1713, 



315 Fourth Ave., N. Y. City. 

 Please mail to me the July and June issues of The House 

 Beautiful. Also explain your big inducements to NEW 

 subscribers. I enclose 25c in stamps. 



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COMING— 



July 15th 



Flight Number 

 August 1 5th 



Good Health Number 

 September 1 5th 



Household Economy 



Number 



October 1st 



Annual House Building 

 Number. 



November 1st 



Western Number 

 November 15 th 



House Furnishing 



Number 



December 1st 



Christmas Annual 



December 1 5th 



Winter Gardening 

 Number 



JULY 



Every page of the July 1st issue 

 suggests the fragrant air of nature 

 in mid-summer. As you glance 

 through this number of 



Visions come up before your eyes 

 of lovely gardens, cool forests, and 

 meadows exhaling the delicious 

 odor of hay freshly cut. 



You will enjoy this issue beyond 

 your fondest expectatiens — it is the 

 kind of number all of us country 

 cranks must have on our reading 

 tables. 



The Issue Will Contain The Following Illustrated Features: 



" Successful American Gardens," VII. — Holm Lea, the estate of Professor Charles 

 Sprague Sargent, by Wilhelm Miller. Photographs by Arthur G. Eldredge. An estate which has 

 the grandest rural vistas in America, though surrounded by a civic area of nearly two million souls. 



"Forest Secrets — The Soul-Song of Baba-Moss-Anid." — By Ernest Thompson 

 Seton. Photographs by Herbert K. Job, A. Radclyffe Dugmore, and Chester A. Reed ; draw- 

 ings by the author." An elucidation of the ovenbird's soul-song, and when he sings it. 



" The Joys of Being a Farmer." — By A. P. Hitchcock. Photographs by Frances 

 and Mary Allen, F. A. Saunderson, Wm. H. Zerbe, J. H. Field, and others. One of " The 

 Joys of Country Living" series. 



"Cutting Loose from the City." — By Ray Mclntyre King. Photographs by Lo\d Burt 

 Noteling. Eighth in the series. How a ten-acre fruit and poultry farm in California solved the prob- 

 lem for a professional man of small means, bankrupt in health, and with a growing family to support. 



"Surface Effects in Concrete and Stucco." — By Albert Mayer. Photographs by Ben- 

 jamin A. Howes and others. How to obtain all sorts of surface effectsin the use of concrete and stucco. 



The departments: Garden and Grounds, The Nature Club, Stock and Poultry, Stable and Kennel. 



25c A COPY 



$4.00 PER ANNUM 



24 ISSUES A YEAR 



DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY, Garden City, N.Y. 



" I cannot speak too favorably of The Complete 

 Photographer." — A critic in New York. Life 



The Complete 

 Photographer 



By R. Child Bayley 



For Professional 

 and Amateur 



Fully illustrated. Net, $3.50 (postage 22c.) 

 Doubleday, Page & Co. Garden City, N. Y. 



BARTON'S 

 LAWN TRIMMER 



TAKES THE PLACE OF SICKLE AND 

 SHEARS— NO STOOPiNG DOWN 



SAVES 90% OF TEDIOUS LABOR 



Cuts where lawn mower 

 will not, up in corners, along 



stone-walls, fences, shrubbery, 



tomb-stones, etc. 



It is simple in construction 



and made to endure. Makes 



a cut 7 inches wide. 



Price only $3.75 each. Send 

 Money Order to 



BARTON, Ivyland, Pa. 



