74 
House & Garden 
GIVES ENDURING CHARM 
Bird Baths, Fonts, Sun- 
Dials, Gazing Globes, 
Flower Vases, Boxes and 
other beautiful and use¬ 
ful pieces of Garden and 
Home Decorations are 
made in our Everlasting 
Stony Gray Terra Cotta. 
AEOW&Y 
POlfERY 
Catalogue will be sent upon request. 
Gailqwy Terra GdIta Gd. 
3218 WALNUT ST. PHILADELPHIA. 
The Winter Porch 
(Continued from page 72) 
mercerized silk stripe or a linen moire, 
would be excellent. The curtains, made 
up simply, might be of the same 
material. 
Then, to key up the room, use wrought 
iron antiqued with gold and touched up 
with a suggestion of the color found in 
the drapery. There could be a console 
table of wrought iron in excellent work¬ 
manship, with a top of black glass 1/4" 
thick. A mirror with a wrought iron 
frame, a gem, comes with a panel of 
black glass on either side of the mirror. 
A plant stand, 5' high, is also of 
wrought iron touched with gold. Around 
this could be grouped plants in Spanish 
or Italian pottery gardeniers. There 
would be several low tables and benches. 
And there, in your mind’s eye, is 
created a comfortable, distinguished 
living porch from which all upholstered 
furniture and practically all the wicker 
has been excluded. 
Remember this: To maintain its 
popularity as an all-year room, the porch 
must be furnished with distinction. 
TOWNSEND’S TRIPLEX 
The Greatest Grass Cutter on Earth 
Cuts a Swath 86 Inches Wide 
Drawn by one horse and operated 
by one man, the TRIPLEX MOWER 
will mow more lawn in a day than the 
best motor mower ever made, cut it 
better and at a fraction of the cost. 
Drawn by one horse and operated 
by one man, it will mow more lawn 
than any three ordinary horse-drawn 
mowers with three horses and three 
men. 
Send for catalogue illustrating all 
types of Townsend Mowers. 
S. P. TOWNSEND & CO. 
17 Central Ave., Orange, N. J. 
vi c k;s 
3i FLORAL GUIDE Pcfrs 
ITS FREE ^"^Several New Features. WRITJ^ODAY 
r Based on our experience as the 
oldest mail order seed concern and 
largest growers of Asters and other 
seeds in America. 500 acres and 12 green¬ 
houses. Our Guide is an invaluable aid to a 
successful garden. Illustrates and describes 
leading Vegetables, Flowers, Farm Seeds, 
Plants and Fruits. With our Guide we will in¬ 
clude booklet, “ALiberty Garden.” Both free. 
Send for your copies today , before you forget. 
JAMES VICK’S SONS 
18 Stone Street, Rochester, N. Y. 
The Flower City 
“ Pennsylvania” 
Quality 
LAWN MOWERS 
All blades crucible tool steel 
RUST PROOF 
FENCE 
Write for free catalog C. Study it 
over, then get ready for the spring. 
WRIGHT WIRE CO., Worcester, Mass. 
BUILD YOUR WALLS FOR 
PERMANENCE 
ON 
Kno-Rurn 
EXPANDED METAL LATH 
McCray Refrigerators 
Active cold air circulation — Sanitary 
linings. Send for catalogue. 
McCray Refrigerator Company 
716 Lake Street Kendallville, Ind 
New York’s Janu 
Art Salon Universal, 416 Madison 
Avenue. The Caruso Blakelocks; Early 
American portraits by Durand, Inman, 
Jouett and others. During January. 
Jacques Seligman & Co., 705 Fifth 
Avenue. Sculpture by Andrew O’Con¬ 
nor. Shown by Mrs. H. P. Whitney’s 
Studio for the benefit of Edith Whar¬ 
ton’s War Charities. Until January 
15th. 
William Macbeth, 450 Fifth Avenue. 
Complete retrospective collection of the 
paintings, drawings, etchings and 
bronzes of Arthur B. Davies. Jan. 
2-31, incl. 
Warwick House, Ltd., 45 East 57th 
Street. English and French 18th Cen¬ 
tury Color Prints. Opens Jan. 5. 
Gothic Gallery, 707 Fifth Avenue. 
Gothic and Renaissance Sculpture, from 
the 11th to the 17 th Century. During 
January. 
Richard Dudensing & Son, 45 West 
44th Street. Works of Inness, Blakelock, 
Cazin, Keith and William Rotschell; 
and water colors by G. Signorini. Dur¬ 
ing January. 
Anderson Galleries, Park Avenue and 
59th Street. First Editions of English 
poets and novelists of the 19th Century 
(from Dec. 22; sale, Jan. 3). Histori¬ 
cal Library of the late William H. Sam¬ 
son ( from Dec. 22; sale, Jan. 3). Chi¬ 
nese Antiques, including bronzes, pot¬ 
tery, porcelains, paintings, etc. (from 
Dec. 26; sale, Jan. 4). Chinese collec¬ 
tion of Mr. Frederick Moore (from Dec. 
26; sale, Jan. 4). Rare Chinese rugs 
and reproductions (from Dec. 26; sale, 
Jan. 5). Part X of the Frederick R. 
Halsey Print Collection (from Jan. 2; 
sale, Jan. 7-8). Part III of the Ameri¬ 
cana Library of the late J. B. Learmont 
(from Dec. 22; sale, Jan. 7-8). Part 
IV of tire Library of the late J. B. Lear¬ 
mont, consisting of Autographic Mate¬ 
rial of Colonial and pre-Revolutionary 
times (from Dec. 22; sale, Jan. 9, 10, 
11 ). 
Persian Antique Gallery, 539 Madi¬ 
son Avenue. Persian Antiquities, 8th to 
17th Century. Until Jan. 12. 
ary Art Exhibits 
George H. Ainslie, 615 Fifth Avenue. 
Retrospective Exhibition of paintings by 
George Inness. Jan. 15 to April 15. 
E. E. Babcock Art Galleries, 19 East 
49th Street. Portraits by Ferd. Maesch, 
Jan. 1-15; Western pictures by William 
R. Leigh, Jan. 24-31. 
Braus, Inc., 21-23 Broadway. West¬ 
ern paintings by Warren E. Rollins. 
Jan. 5-19. 
John Levy, 14 East 46th Street. For¬ 
eign and American paintings. During 
January. 
Ehrich Galleries, 707 Fifth Avenue. 
Italian, Flemish and German Primitives. 
Jan. 5-31. 
E. Gimpel & Wildenstein, 647 Fifth 
Avenue. Recent portraits and decora¬ 
tions by Henry Caro Delvaille; portrait 
medals by Theodore Spicer Simson. 
Dwing January. 
Satinover Galleries, 3 West 56th 
Street. Flemish, Dutch and Italian Prim¬ 
itives. Jan. 2-15. 
The Gorham Company, Fifth Avenue. 
Sculpture by men who have answered 
their country’s call. During January. 
Durand-Ruel, 12 East 57th Street. 
Street. Paintings by Degas. During 
January. 
Arden Studios, 599 Fifth Avenue. 
Flowers and Still Life. Jan. 7-8. 
Arlington Art Galleries, 274 Madison 
Avenue. Landscapes and Figure Paint¬ 
ings by Rosman Coney; Street and Har¬ 
bor Scenes of New York, by Alice 
Hirsh, Jan. 2-15. Landscapes by Henry 
W. Tomlinson, Jan. 18-30. 
Art Alliance of America, 10 East 47th 
Street. Hand Decorated Textiles. Jan. 
22-31. 
Modern Gallery, 500 Fifth Avenue. 
Paintings by Maurice de Vlaminck, Jan. 
7-19. African Negro sculpture, Jan. 21- 
Feb. 9. 
C. W. Kraushaar Art Galleries, 260 
Fifth Avenue. Paintings by George 
Luks. Jan. 14-31. 
Garden 
as you 
would cut 
the lawn 
Three 
Garden Tool# 
in One 
BARKER 
WEEDER, MULCHER 
AND CULTIVATOR 
is pushed along the rows just as a mower 
over a lawn. Cuts the weeds underground and 
breaks the hardest crust into a porous, mois¬ 
ture - retaining mulch — intensive cultivation. 
Works close up to plants. Cuts runners. "Best 
Weed Killer Ever Used.” A 10-year-old child 
can operate it. Does faster and better work 
than ten men with hoes. Has easily attached 
leaf-guards, also shovels for deeper cultivation. 
Inexpensive. Makes gardening profitable and 
a pleasure. 
Send for Free Illustrated Catalog and 
Factory-to-User Offer. 
BARKER MFG. CO. 
Dept. 19 David City, Neb. 
$ 600 perAcr< 
m Strawberries 
Mr. Nord made a net profit 
of $665 per acre with Knight’s 
Berry Plants. 
Mrs. Baker made over $300 
with $30 worth of Knight’s 
Berry Plants. 
Mr. Quick invested $6 in 
Knight’s Berry Plants. They 
cleared him over $100. 
The Mellera Sisters bought 
850 Knight’s Berry Plants, cost¬ 
ing $2.55. Net profit the next 
spring $136.33. 
The secret of success with 
small fruits is Knight’s Berry 
Plants. 
Send for free catalogue TODAY. 
DAVID KNIGHT &. SON 
Box 81. Sawyer, Mich. 
For Best Lumber Insist on 
Real “Tide-Water” Cypress 
Look for this on 
every board—• 
Accept no Cypress 
,T*adi Rig. U S 
without this mark. 
DOORS 
are a most important part of the house. Don't 
select them until you know about MORGAN 
DOORS. 
“The Door Beautiful” —a book of valuable 
suggestions for interiors sent free. 
MORGAN SASH & DOOR CO. 
Dept. A-19 Chicago, III. 
A More Comfortable Heme 
is a certainty if you use Medusa Water¬ 
proofing to prevent dampness in concrete 
basement floors or walls and in stucco 
exteriors. Medusa is permanent and 
costs little. Write for suggestions to 
Dept. D. 
The Sandusky Cement Co., Cleveland 
Free Book on Song Birds 
Tells you how to attract birds 
to your home. Describes fa¬ 
mous Dodson bird houses, feed¬ 
ers. etc. Learn the secrets of 
wild bird life. Mail a postcard. 
JOSEPH H. DODSON, 
Vice-President American Audubon Ass’n 
Dodson Wren I 731 Harrison Ave., 
Houst, 55.00.1 Kankakee, III. 
Hot and Cold Water 
in Your Country Home 
You can have all the running 
water you want, under strong 
pressure, for bathroom, kitchen, 
laundry—any part of your coun¬ 
try home. There is a 
KEWANEE SYSTEM 
to meet your exact needs that will cost but lit¬ 
tle and give you a lifetime of perfect service. 
No overhead tank to freeze in winter or be¬ 
come stagnant in summer. Exceedingly simple 
to operate hut hard to get out of order. 
The Special Features of the Kew- 
anee enable you to add other utili¬ 
ties such as Electric Light. Electric 
Washing Machine, Power for Cream 
Separators, etc. 
Write for Bulletin FREE, telling 
about special KEWANEE features. 
Kewanee Private Utilities 
Company, 401 Franklin St., 
Kewanee, Illinois 
