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National Geographic : 1919 Feb
Contents
IHoue of J. II. I/oods, lq., Lakewood, Ohio. Frank B.Meade and James R. Hamilton, Architects, Cleveland, Ohio. "White Pine in Home Building" is beautifully illustrated with old Colonial and Modern homes, full of valuable information and sug gestions on home-building, and gives a short, concise statement of the merits of White Pine. Send for it now. There is no charge for it to prospective home-builders. TO that growing class of discriminating American home-builders who judge build ing-material values in terms of service, White Pine makes a strong appeal. Despite a slightly higher first cost, it is for certain uses the most economical of all woods. Cheaper woods prove satisfactory in protected places. But nature has endowed WHITE PINE with distinctive qualities which make it the longest-lived and most satisfactory wood under exposure to the weather. White Pine stays where you put it without opening at the joints. Through all changes in temperature and weather it endures without warping, splitting or decaying. These facts are borne out in the many White Pine houses which have withstood the rigorous climate of New England since Colonial times. WITITE PINE BUREAU, 1206 AMerchants Bank Building, St. Paul,Minn. Representing The Northern Pine Manufacturers' Association of Minnesota,Wisconsin and Michigan, and The Associated White Pine Manufacturers of Idaho I "Mention the Geographic-It identifies you." r - - -
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