108 
House & Garden 
Burn Electricity or Coal 
in this Deane French Range 
At a turn of a switch you get instant heat—high, 
medium or low—as desired. 
With electricity you get cleanliness because there is no soot 
or smoke, to discolor cooking utensils or kitchen walls. You 
are assured of safety for matches and explosive fuels are not 
used. You save time, for there is no waiting for a fire to 
reach a temperature suitable for cooking or baking. 
s 
using electricity in combination with coal, is one that you will 
take pride in showing to your friends. The plain polished 
trimmings, the absence of “fancy work” to catch dirt, the angle 
base that prevents refuse from gathering beneath the range and 
stray drafts from cooling the ovens—all these features, and 
more, are found in Deane’s French Range. 
Consumption of fuel, be it electricity or coal, is held to a 
minimum. In fact, it has been said that the saving in fuel 
soon pays for the range. 
The range illustrated has an electric oven, cooking top and 
broiler, besides one coal oven and fire chamber. A detailed 
description of it—and many others—is given in “The Heart of 
the Home,” our portfolio of unusual ranges. A copy will be 
sent you on request. 
Bramhalk'Deane Co. 
263 ’265 ’West 36*^ Sf..New'&rh.KY. 
CREOSOTE STAINS 
PRESERVE AND BEAUTIFY 
Shingles, Siding, Clapboards and other Outside Woodwork 
Tliey can be applied twice as fast as paint, halving the labor cost. They are made of Creo¬ 
sote, “the best wood preservative knoum.'’ The coloring effects are transparent, and bring 
out the grain of the wood in deep, velvety tones that harmonize perfectly with nature—there 
is no shiny, painty effect. Tliey wear as long as the best paint, and “grow old gracefully” 
because they sink into the wood and therefore cannot crack or peel like an old paint coating. 
50% Cheaper Than Paint 
You can {jet CaboVs Stains oil over the country. Send 
for stained wood samples and name of nearest agent. 
SAMUEL CABOT, Inc., Manfg. Chemists 11 Oliver St., Boston, Mass. 
24 W. Kinzie St., Chicago 525 Market St., San Francisco 
Stained with 
CaboVs 
Creosote 
Stains 
Warren £ 
Pr indie 
Architects 
New York 
Many of the 
smaller seeds may 
be sown directly \ 
from the envelope \ 
in which they j 
come I 
For the Garden Beginner 
{Continued from page 106) 
For most of the vegetables listed 
the plantings may consist of the en¬ 
tire quantities mentioned. Relatively 
small quantities of cauliflower, eggplant, 
and parsley will be sufficient for most 
families, however. 
The following vegetables undoubtedly 
will be planted in larger amounts than 
those just mentioned, and the amounts 
of seed given will be a guide for ordi¬ 
nary requirements. Some families may 
need more of the various vegetables 
and others less: 
Beet . 2 ounces 
Cabbage, late. ounce 
Corn, sweet . 1 pint 
Lettuce . ^ ounce 
Muskmelon . 1 ounce 
Onion sets . 2 quarts 
Peas, garden . 2 to 4 quarts 
Radish . 1 ounce 
Spinach . 34 pound in 
spring and 
34 pound 
in fall 
Tomatoes, late. 34 ounce 
Turnips . 1 ounce 
The entire supply of seeds of string 
bean, bush Lima bean, sweet corn, 
lettuce, peas, and radish should not 
be planted at one time, but successive 
plantings two to three weeks apart 
should be made so that a fresh sup¬ 
ply of the vegetables may be had 
throughout the season. 
Of early Irish potatoes 1 peck to 
'34 bushel will be required, and of late 
potatoes 34 bushel to 1 bushel, or more, 
depending upon the amount of ground 
available for this purpose. If abundant 
space is available, it may be well to 
grow enough Irish potatoes to last 
throughout the winter. 
If the family wishes to raise vege¬ 
tables to supply current needs and 
also to supply a surplus for canning, the 
amounts indicated above should be in¬ 
creased considerably. 
Aids to Earliness | 
The hotbed, the “flat” or seed box, j 
and the cold frame are the gardener’s 
greatest aids in raising early crops. ! 
The hotbed and the flat enable him to j 
plant seed and produce seedlings long j 
before most of the seeds may be planted | 
out of doors and before those which 
have been planted in the plot have 
begun to germinate. The cold frame j 
{Continued on page 110) | 
