November, 1913 
HOUSE AND GARDEN 
279 
Of 
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A T the top of your Shopping List for today be sure to write “Get the November 
**■ 1st Vogue.” If you expect to spend another penny for clothes this Winter it 
will pay you handsomely to make such a memorandum. For this W inter Fashions 
number of Vogue tells you just where to shop, just what to buy, and just how to make 
your money gain for you the greatest possible distinction in hats and gowns. 
' | ’HE long experimental period of Autumn is over; only a few weeks ago nobody 
* knew for certain just what would be good style and what would be bad. Now, 
at last, Paris has uttered its final judgment on the Winter mode. 
AND if you want to know just what gowns, hats and wraps are to be worn at the 
** Horse Show, the Opera, and the other social functions of the season, you will 
find the whole answer now awaiting you on the newsstands. Don’t forget this Winter 
Fashions number of Vogue—a great picture gallery of new and beautiful clothes. 
0 / /!&• lb iklAJt- 
DE sure to tell your newsdealer today to put aside for you a copy of the next Vogue, 
the mid-November “Dramatic and Vanity” number. Fashions from the theatre 
and opera—fore and aft the footlights, and pages and pages on the little but important 
accessories of the fashionable toilettes—all the news of the latest perfumes, creams, 
soaps, powders, and other preparations that make fair women fairer. Reserve this 
number now, as your newsdealer may be sold out on the very first day. 
VOGUE 
25 cents a number 
Twice a month 
FOUR FORTY-THREE FOURTH AVENUE 
NEW YORK CITY 
Conde Nast, Publisher 
$4.00 a year 
24 numbers 
In writing to advertisers please mention House & Garden. 
