Features
Monthly Comment
Every Reader
Talks with Architects
Mr. William Martin Aiken on the City Architect
An Elizabethan Residence at Montclair, N. J.
Large and small Gardens
The Garden
Winter and Summer Plants
A Twin Gable House at Ogontz, Pa.
Personal Labor in the Garden
An Iceless Refrigerator
Bituminous Coal for the Furnace
Heating Talk
Soft Coal for Domestic use
A Colonial Residence at Hartford, Conn.
The Household
A New Idea in Bed Furnishings
A Residence at Elkins, Pa.
Children's Wall-Paper
Household Cheapness
Substitutes for Anthracite
Cleanliness in Business Districts
The Parlor Suit”
A Stable at Elkins, Pa.
Ordinary Furniture, Old and New
The Family Library
“Arts and Crafts” Furniture
Sanitation
A Study of Water Qualities
A Residence at Atlanta, Ga.
A Water-Tight Basement Wall
The Needs of Town Dwellers
A Modern Colonial Stairway
A Residence at Stapleton, Staten Island
Destruction by Fire before Completion
Right to Mechanic's Lien
Ten Reasons for Employing an Architect
A Page of Colonial Mantels
Verbal Contracts.—Limit of Time for Lien
A Portable House
A Tree Garden.—The Estate of Thomas Stetson, Esq., New Bedford, Mass.
Legal Notes
Architect'S Certificate Conclusive
Party Wall Agreement
Violation of Building Ordinances
Change in Character of Lien
House Suggestions
The “Tent City”
Written Agreement not to File Lien.—Bond
A Residence at Nutley, N. J.
New Building Patents
The Shape of Rooms
Materials Old and New
Saving Steps
A New Color Chart
Art Modeling
Doors, Blinds, Windows, Moldings, Etc.
Roofing Tin
Publishers' Department
A Cold Galvanizing Process