July, i 9 1 7 
59 
IN WAR TIME 
The Parisienne achieves smart¬ 
ness in war time without waste 
of valuable time, strength, or 
money which she prefers to 
devote to the suffering poilus. 
How does she accomplish it? 
Does she buy three hats to one 
gown, or one hat to three gowns? 
What does she wear to war¬ 
time teas? Concerts? Dinners? 
Youknow when you read Vogue 
— and only when you read 
Vogue—that your wardrobe is 
absolutely in line with what 
Paris has decreed. 
10 Numbers of 
VOGUE 
Hot Weather Fashions July 1 
Correct clothes for sports and sum¬ 
mer affairs. 
Hostess Number July 15 
Original ideas for week-ends and 
late summer entertaining. 
Interior Decoration August 1 
Color schemes, fabrics, papers, 
furniture for your autumn refur¬ 
nishing and decorating. 
Children’s Fashions August 15 
Outfits for the school boy and girl. 
Autumn Millinery September 1 
The best model hats produced by 
the great houses of Paris. 
Forecast of Autumn 
Fashions September 15 
The earliest and most authentic 
of the autumn modes—forecast¬ 
ing the new silhouette. 
Paris Openings October 1 
The complete story of the Paris 
Openings, establishing the mode. 
Smart Fashions for 
Limited Incomes October 15 
Working plans for your autumn 
wardrobe—materials and modes. 
Winter Fashions November 1 
The mode in its winter culmina¬ 
tion—models smart couturiers 
evolve for their private clientele. 
Vanity November 15 
Those graceful little touches which 
make a smart woman smart; 
where to get them and how to use 
them. 
Don’t Send Money 
Don’t bother to enclose a cheque or 
even to write a letter. The coupon 
below will do, and is easier and 
quicker. 
With one stroke of the pen you will 
solve your entire autumn clothes 
problem, assuring yourself valuable 
new ideas and insuring yourself 
against costly failures. 
A bill for $2 will be sent you in due 
course. Or, you may remit now, if 
you prefer. 
Il■lllllllllll■lllllllllll■ll■■llll■llll■lllllllllllllllllll■l■l!■■lllltl 
Vogue, 19 West 44th St., New York City 
Please send me 10 numbers of Vogue, beginning 
immediately. It is my understanding that you 
will send me a bill for $2 (Foreign, $3.50; Cana¬ 
dian, $2.50) in due course. (OR) I inclose $2 
herewith. 
Name .... 
Street .. 
City ...... 
State ... 
Don’t Allow Dry Weather to Hurt Your Garden 
All the labor and money you 
have devoted to it may be 
made almost an entire loss 
to you by a few weeks’ 
drought if you are unpre¬ 
pared for this. Provide now 
for the irrigation which will 
insure you against failure 
with your garden crops and 
increase their yields so great¬ 
ly as to make it a first-class 
investment. 
The Campbell Oscillating Sprinkler 
Keeps Garden Crops Growing Freely 
The Campbell Oscillating Sprinkler supplies a nature-like, gentle 
shower. Automatically the water motor oscillates the jetted pipe 
from side to side every three seconds, evenly watering a rectangular 
area 9 feet wide and 50 to 70 feet long. ^ It requires no attention— 
simply place it and turn on the water. Trouble-proof, it lasts for 
years. Harmless to tenderest foliage. Does not pack the soil. 
Superb for vegetable and flower gardens and lawns. 
Turbo-Irrigator with Tripod Stand 
Keeps Putting Greens in Prime Shape 
Thoroughly irrigates an 
ordinary sized green from 
one position. Automatic in 
operation, the greens may 
be watered at night when 
they are not in use. Saves 
enough in labor to more 
than pay for the installa¬ 
tion in a single season. 
Collapsible, so machines 
may be easily moved from 
place to place. Except tri¬ 
pod stand, entire construc¬ 
tion of brass, giving con¬ 
tinuous service for long 
period without showing 
wear or corrosion. 
Write for our booklet, “Artificial Rain,” describing full 
line of irrigation devices at prices to fit every purse. 
THE GEO. W. CLARK COMPANY 259C Fifth Avenue, New York City 
Planning to Buildf 
Then mail the Coupon below and receive free three attractive 
and valuable issues of The Architectural Record —each contain¬ 
ing a careful selection of the best work of leading architects, 
with an average of 100 or more illustrations, including exterior 
and interior views and floor plans. 
The Architectural Record is an artistic monthly magazine 
illustrating the work of successful architects throughout 
the country. It covers the entire field of architecture. In 
every issue houses of architectural merit are presented. 
In the business section you will also find described the latest and 
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The Architectural Record —authoritative and professional—will 
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7-1" 
Mail the coupon to-day and get the benefit of this 
SPECIAL OFFER 
/ THE 
ARCH I- 
TECTURAL 
RECORD 
119 W. 40th St., 
Our May, June and July numbers will be sent free / ^ ew CAv- 
if you subscribe now to start with August, 1917. Send tree your 
You will thus receive 15 attractive and valuable May. June and 
numbers for only $3 —the regular yearly price. July numbers and 
enter subscription for a 
, full year beginning August 
The Architectural Record cio^ 7, <£& S'^'fofcIS: 
ada. $1.00 for Foreign). 
119 W. 40th Street, New York 
Name . 
Address 
“Hello Huck!” 
R ECALL that golden day when you 
first read “ Huck Finn?” How your 
mother said, “Lor goodness’ sake, 
stop laughing aloud over that book. 
You sound so silly.” But you couldn’t 
stop laughing. 
Today when you read “Huckleberry 
Finn” you will not laugh so much. You 
will chuckle often, but you will also want 
to weep. The deep humanity of it—the 
pathos, that you never saw, as a boy, 
will appeal to you now. You were too 
busy laughing to notice the limpid purity 
of the master’s style. 
Mark Twain 
Out of the generous West came Mark Twain, 
giving widely and freely to the world such 
laughter as men had never heard. 
There seems to be no end to the things that 
Mark Twain could do well. When he wrote 
history, it was a kind of history unlike any 
other except in its accuracy. When he wrote 
books of travel, it was an event. 
He did many things—stories, 
novels, travel, history, essays, 
humor—but behind each was 
the force of the great, earnest, 
powerful personality that domi¬ 
nated his time, so that even 
then he was known all over the 
face of the globe. Simple, un¬ 
assuming, democratic, he was 
loved by plain people. 
If foreign nations love him, 
we in this country give him 
first place in our hearts. The 
home without Mark Twain is 
not an American home. 
The Centennial 
Half-Price Sale 
Must Close 
Mark Twain wanted these 
books in the hands of all the 
people. He wanted us to 
make good-looking, substantial 
books, that every man could 
afford to own. So we made this 
set, and there has been a 
tremendous sale on it. 
But Mark Twain could not 
foresee that the price of paper, 
the price of ink, the price of 
cloth, would all go up. It is 
impossible to continue the sale 
long. It should have closed 
before this. Because this is 
the one-hundredth anniversary 
of the founding of Harper & 
Brothers, we have decided to 
continue this half-price sale 
while the present supply lasts. 
Get your set now while the 
price is low. Send the coupon 
today before the present edi¬ 
tion is all gone. 
Harper & Brothers 
jr New York 1817-1917 
House & Garden 7-17 
HARPER & BROTHERS 
Franklin Square, New York 
Send me, all charges prepaid, Mark Twain’s 
works in twenty-five volumes, illustrated, bound 
in handsome green cloth, stamped in gold, gold 
tops and untrimmed edges. If not satisfactory, I 
will return them at your expense. Otherwise I 
will send you $ 1.00 within five days and $ 2.00 a 
month for 12 months, thus getting the benefit of 
your half-price sale. 
Name. 
Address. 
To get the red half-leather binding change terms to 
$2.30 on delivery , $3.00 a month for 20 months. 
