September, 1916 
THE GARDEN :\1 A G A Z I N E 
73 
N O ONE — not even the rabid devo- 
tees of radiator heats — disputes the 
fact that warm air heat is the ideal 
one, provided it works. Admittedly, most 
warm air systems don’t work. 
The Kelsey Health Heat does. It’s a 
warm air heat that absolutely heats any 
room in any weather with the wind in any 
direction. It burns less coal than radiator 
heats. It delivers more heat for the coal 
it bums, no matter what system of heat 
you compare it with. These are statements 
so sweeping as to perhaps produce doubt 
in your mind. We have the doubt dispel- 
ling proofs. Want them? Send for book- 
let, ‘*Some Saving Sense on Heating.” 
T he. T^e.L 5 lv 
WARM AIR CE-nERATOR I 
232 James Street, S 3 rracuse, N. Y« 
New York 
103-P Park Avenue 
Chicago, 111. 
2767-P Lincoln Avenue 
Detroit, Mich. 
Spaee 95*P, Baildert’ ExchsDge 
Boston, Mass. 
405-P.P.O. Sq.Bldf. 
Now is The Time for Gar- 
den and Hoose 
Improvements 
“Pergolas," Lattice 
Fences, Garden Houses 
and Arbors 
“Catalogue H-29” tells 
all about ’em. When 
writing enclose loc. and 
ask for Catalogue H-29. 
HARTMANN - SANDERS COMPANY 
Factor]) and Main Office: 
Elston and Webster Avenue, CHICAGO 
New York Office: 6 Elast 39th St., New York City 
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Into the Garden Home 
Most gardens have entrance gates. They may be 
fashioned of wood or metal. 
Here is a hint to makers of gates or doors, antique 
or cast in modern metal, of a market of potential 
buying power. 
The path approaching the garden home may be of 
brick or gravel. Particular home builders now want 
the walks, surrounding the house, to harmonize, in 
contour, with its exterior. Fancy makes of bricks, 
with special faces or surfaces are ideally adapted 
to the need. 
Wanted — A Manufacturer 
to persistently point out uses — old or new — for 
fancy brick about the garden home. 
Entrances, porches and windows of the garden home 
are screened — who will suggest a particularly 
meritorious make.? The door proper is trimmed 
with hardware, clothed with a curtain and shade. 
If you make a better door knob, a handsomer curtain, 
a more dependable shade. Garden Magazine Readers 
want to know it. Thirty-thousand check books 
make money spending easy for anything wanted or 
needed in the country or suburban home. 
This offers Intensive Advertising Service to adver- 
tisers of things needed by readers of The Garden 
Magazine. We will prepare layouts and copy, look 
after details of advertising construction either by 
ourselves or in cooperation with your agency. Know- 
ing how and when to approach our readers on their 
own grounds in their own language is the biggest 
half of your problem. We stand ready to take care 
of it for any one who, so far, has not been able to 
intensively cultivate the field of The Garden Magazine. 
THE GARDEN MAGAZINE Garden City, N. Y. 
Advertising Headquarters, li West 32nd Street, New York City | 
A Handsome Color-Combination 
The roofs of this house are stained 
with the light moss-green shade of 
Cabot’s Creosote Shingle Stains 
and the walls are finished in the soft, brilliant white of 
Cabot's Old Virginia White. The contrast is rich and beau- 
tiful and the effect will be lastingly satisfactory. The merits 
of Cabot’s Stains are known all over this country and in 
many other lands, and the clean, cool "white-wash effect” 
of the Old Virginia White is a delight to artistic people who 
dislike “painty” colors. Low priced, easy to apply, wood- 
preserving. 
You can gel Cabot's Stains all over the country. Send 
for stained wood samples and name of nearest agent. 
SAMUEL. CABOT, Inc., Mfg. Chemists 
1 Oliver Street BOSTON, MASS- 
24 W. Kinzie St., Chicago - 523 Market St., San Francisco 
Advertisers will appreciate your mentioning The Garden Magazine in writing — and ue will, too 
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