UBAR GREENHOUSES 
PIERSON U-BAR CO 
ONE MADISON AVE.. NEW YORK. 
CANADIAN OFFICE. lO PHILLIPS PLACE. MONTREAL 
I 
T was fifteen degrees below when the photo 
was taken—and it looks it. Inside was a 
regular summer land with foliage plants, 
ferns, small palms, and endless flower and veg¬ 
etable plants getting an early start for setting 
outdoors the first promising spring days. 
In sections like this where the season is short, 
unless you have a greenhouse it is next to im¬ 
possible to have either flowers or vegetables be¬ 
fore frost nips them off. For such purposes a Leanto house is 
a decided success. For a leanto, or any other kind of a green¬ 
house, the U-Bar construction has its distinct advantages. So 
distinct, so different is the U-Bar house that Uncle Sam grant¬ 
ed us a patent. So that is why we are the only U-Bar green¬ 
house builders. The catalog both tells and shows the U-Bar 
superior points. Send for the catalog or send for us—or both. 
This is the U-Bar 
The Bar that makes 
U-Bar Greenhouses 
The Famous Green¬ 
houses they are. 
The house is 33 feet long—this is a glimpse of but 16 feet of the interior. 
Travel by Automobile 
€fl An opportunity for 
those who do not own 
their own cars to tour 
New England 
by Automobile 
By special arrangement with a well-known 
tourist agency TRAVEL is able to an¬ 
nounce automobile tours of New England 
covering all the important points of in¬ 
terest, including 
TLe Berkshires 
The White Mountains 
IVIaine and Massachusetts 
Sea Coasts 
Long Island Sound 
These tours are of twelve days, covering 
nearly 1000 miles entirely by automobile. 
N ew 1911 high-powered seven-passenger 
touring cars of a prominent make have 
been arranged for and private cars for five 
or six passengers will he provided. All 
expenses are included — hotels, shipment 
of baggage from point to point, etc., and 
patrons are relieved of every care and 
annoyance. 
ROUTE New York to Poughkeepsie, 
totir along the Hudson; through 
- Berkshire Hills to Pittsfield, 
Mass.; to Manchester, Vt.; east to Lake 
Sunapee; north up the Pemigewasset Val¬ 
ley to Flume; past the Old Man of the 
Mountains; throngh Franconia Notch to 
Bethleh em; south past Bretton Woods 
and Mt. 'Washington, through Crawford 
Notch, past Willey House, along the Saco 
River to North Conway; past Poland 
Springs to Portland, following the Maine 
Coast to Portsmouth; continuing along the 
Atlantic Coast to Boston ; south along 
Narragansett Bay to Narragansett Pier, 
then along the coast to New London and 
on to New York, 
DATES Leave New York City at 10:30 
TOTTR a - J une 30tk J uly 14th and 
- 28th, August llth and 25th, and 
September 8th and 22nd. Leave Boston 
two days later, respectively. 
TRAVEL BY AUTOMOBILE and see 
the country as you cannot in any other way 
For full information and folder describing tours in detai^ 
with prices, address 
AUTOMOBILE TOUR DEPARTMENT 
Travel 
McBRIDE. WINSTON & CO.. Publishers 
449 FOURTH AVENUE. NEW YORK 
HOUSE AND GARDEN 
July, 1911 
In writing to advertisers please mention House and Garden. 
