XX11 



AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS 



April, 1 9 13 



?! 



: 



'i 



-~ 



If YOUR Screens 



Are Filled With 



POMPEIIAN BRONZE 



SCREEN CLOTH 



You can immediately install 

 them when spring arrives, for 

 Pompeiian Bronze Screen Cloth 

 never needs painting or renew- 

 ing. Its bare bronze wires re- 

 sist all corrosion. It can not 

 rust. Tell your neighbors about 

 the sterling worth of Pompeiian 

 Bronze. Don't let them spend 

 money needlessly each season 

 in painting and patching. 

 Barring fire or accident, 

 Pompeiian Bronze Screen Cloth 

 is completely efficient forever. 

 If you have not already adopted 

 Pompeiian Bronze, be sure that you 

 get the genuine by looking for Re- 

 movable Red String woven into the 

 selvage. If your dealer won't supply 

 you, we will do so promptly. 

 Write for our Booklet 



Clinton Wire Cloth Co. 



First Power Loom Weavers 



69 Sterling St. Clinton, Mass. 



Makers of Clinton Wire Lathing and Clinton Elec* 

 trically Welded Fabric for Reinforcing Concrete. 

 Both recognized as standard by the leading archi- 

 tects and engineers on both continents 



POMPEIIAN BRONZE | 

 SCREEN CLOTH 



LASTS AS LONG AS YOUR HOUSE 



Do You Want To Sell 



A Building Lot 

 A House 



A Farm or 



An Estate? 



^ An Advertisement in "American Homes & 

 Gardens" new Advertising Section 'The 

 Real Estate Mart" 



Will Be Read by People Who Want 



TO BUY! 



PHOTOS OF PROPERTY REPRODUCED 



Rates of Advertising on Request 

 Address: "The Real Estate Mart" 



r AMERICAN HOMES &GARDENS 



361 Broadway, New York, N. Y. 



NORWAY 

 MAPLES 



A splendid lot of trees 



Send for Catalog. 

 The Elm City Nursery Co. 

 New Haven, Dept. M., Conn. 



3 



as the sundial is, till well into the nine- 

 teenth century, it, or a variation of it, was 

 used to tell time in many country neighbor- 

 hoods, where the "noon-mark" on the win- 

 dow-sill told the "dinner-hour" through the 

 various chapters on early timekeepers, 

 tahle clocks and early watches, long-case 

 clocks, curious clocks, American clocks, 

 and clockmakers. New England clockmak- 

 ers, Connecticut clockmakers, Massa- 

 chussets clockmakers, Boston clockmakers, 

 Rhode Island clockmakers, and Pennsyl- 

 vania clockmakers, the author carries a 

 fascinating narrative that will bring joy to 

 the collector's heart and add to the store 

 of information which everyone interested in 

 antiques and curios enjoys adding to his 

 fund of general information. 



Engraved Gems. By Duffield Osborne. 



New York : Henry Holt and Company : 



1912. Cloth. Large 8vo. Illustrated. 



424 pp. and plates. Price, $5.00 net. 



In the sumptuous volume on "Engraved 

 Gems," by Duffield Osborne, the author has 

 given modern collectors a long needed work 

 that is not only excellent as a history of 

 the subject, but which will inspire collectors 

 as well. In the eighteenth century — 

 the century of the Dilettanti — an impetus 

 was given to the study of the engraved 

 gems of classic times which held to the 

 fifth decade of the nineteenth, and which 

 again has come to its own in the attention 

 given it by those of our own day who in- 

 terest themselves in the art humanities. 

 The early works on engraved gems, such 

 as those by Dr. Charles W. King have long 

 been out of print and Mr. Osborne has been 

 able in the light of recent research, to cor- 

 rect in his own volume many of the errors 

 that crept into the work of the early writers. 

 The author graciously acknowledges his in- 

 debtedness to certain authorities in the 

 preface of "Engraved Gems" and through- 

 out this volume every page is readable and 

 interesting. The plates that are appended 

 to the text are very fine half-tones from 

 well selected examples of glyptic art and 

 render invaluable service to the reader in 

 his progress from chapter to chapter. 



A Pottery Primer. By W. P. Jervis. 

 New York : The O'Gorman Publishing 

 Co.: 1911. Cloth. 16mo. Illustrated. 

 186 pp. Price, $1.00 net. 



This little history of the potter's art by 

 Mr. W. P. Jervis entitled "A Pottery 

 Primer" is intended by its author as an in- 

 centive to further research to those who 

 may be interested either in the ancient his- 

 tory of pottery garnished from the most 

 trustworthy sources, on the original mat- 

 ter here first presented. In this field it 

 serves its purpose well. 



Life of Japan. By Masuji Miyakawa. 



New York: Neale Publishing Co. 1910. 



Price, $1.50. 



In recent years Japanese institutions have 

 been studied by Americans and Europeans, 

 and many books have been written about 

 them. But a book on Japan by a Japanese 

 authority is a less common occurrence and 

 Dr. Miyakawa's "Life of Japan" is worth 

 the careful consideration of every student 

 of international economics, throughout its 

 nineteen excellent chapters, to which a help- 

 ful index is appended. 



A Wayfarer in China. By Elizabeth 



Kendall. Boston : Houghton Mifflin 



Company: 1913. Cloth, 8vo. Illustrated. 



338 pp. Price, $2.50 net. 



Elizabeth Kendall says in her preface to 



"A Wayfarer in China," "no one who has 



ever known the joy of hunting impressions 



or strange peoples and strange lands in the 





Cuantnte 



vv 



>i 





« 



■Vv 



'//'S%*#. 





OUT of the ordinary" 

 fabrics to suit all styles 

 of decorations, wonderfully in- 

 expensive and effective. 

 Reproductions of 1 5th Century Orna- 

 ment, chiefly taken from brocades and 

 stuffs found in paintings by famous 

 old masters. 



Copies of rare pieces from Musee de 

 Cluny, Musee de Lyon and South 

 Kensington Museum. Large varieties 

 of weaves and textures, plain and in 

 design. 



Guaranteed absolutely color-fast to sun and 

 water, even in most delicate shades. 

 Each bolt bears the guarantee tag shown 

 below. Insist upon seeing this guarantee be- 

 fore purchasing. 

 Leading stores everywhere. 

 Ask your dealer for our book, "Draping the 

 Home," showing a variety of practical in- 

 teriors in color ; or write to us for it. 



ORINOKA MILLS 



215 Fourth Ave., New York 



Guarantee — These goods are guaranteed 

 absolutely fadeless. If color changes from 

 exposure to the sunlight or from washing, the 

 merchant is hereby authorized to replace them 

 with new goods or refund the purchase price. 



Mm 



UAm 



YfM 



■■-&•* /If ' r . 



w 



mm 



ANDROMEDA 

 SORREL TREE 



Fine specimens 



Send for Catalog. 

 The Elm City Nursery Co. 

 New Haven, Dept. M., Conn. 



* 



American Homes & 

 Gardens ft ft' ft and 

 Scientific American 

 sent to one address 

 ror one year, jl *- 



REGULARLY *pfc 



The Scientific American Boy 



d 



By A. RUSSELL BOND. 320 pp.. 340 lllut. $2 postpaid 

 A STORY OF OUTDOOR BOY LIFE 



Suggests a large number of diversions which, aside from affording 

 entertainment, will stimulate in boys the creative spirit. Com- 

 plete practical instructions are given for building the various arti- 

 cles, such as Scows, Canoes, Windmills, Water Wheels, Etc. 



