XV111 



AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS 



November, 19 13 



MINERAL WOOL 



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Monoplanes and Biplanes 



Their Design, Construction and Operation 



The Application of Aerodynamic Theory, with a Complete 

 Description and Comparison of the Notable Types 



By Grower Cleveland Loening, B.Sc, A.M., C.E. 



IN the many books that have already been written on aviation, this fasci- 

 nating subject has been handled largely, either in a very " popular " and 

 more or less incomplete manner, or in an atmosphere of mathematical 

 theory that puzzles beginners, and is often of little value to aviators themselves. 

 There is, consequently, a wide demand for a practical book on the subject — 

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 design and completely setting forth and discussing the prevailing practices in the 

 construction and operation of these machines. " Monoplanes and Biplanes " 

 is a new and authoritative work that deals with the subject in precisely this 

 manner, and is invaluable to anyone interested in aviation. 



It covers the entire subject of the aeroplane, its design, and the theory on which 

 its design is based, and contains a detailed description and discussion of thirty- 

 eight of the more highly successful types. 



12mo., (6x8Vi inches) 340 pages, 278 illustrations. Attractively bound in cloth. 



Price $2.50 net, postpaid 



An illustrated descriptive circular will be sent free on application. 



Munn & Co., Inc., Publishers 



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Name Street 



Town State 



The Publisher. By Robert Sterling 



Yard. Boston and New York: Hough- 

 ton-Mifflin Company. 1913. Cloth 8vo. 

 l?9 pages. Price, $1.00 net. 

 "The Publisher" is a book dealing with 

 both the publishing profession and the 

 publishing business, that will prove both 

 interesting and entertaining to the gen- 

 eral public — to the public that likes good 

 reading, and has wondered, perhaps, 

 about the mysterious processes by which 

 a book is selected, manufactured, ex- 

 ploited and sold — what kind of a man the 

 publisher is — what sort of a living he 

 makes. Mr. Yard, the author of "The 

 Publisher," now editor of "The Century 

 Magazine," is a publisher and editor of 

 long experience, and a breezy and enter- 

 taining writer. 



The Woman Thou Gavest Me; Being the 

 Story of Mary O'Neill. Philadelphia: 

 J. B. Lippincott Company. 1913. 584 

 pages. Price, $1.35 net. 

 "The Woman Thou Gavest Me," the first 

 book in four years from the pen of Hall 

 Caine, is the story, told in autobiographical 

 form, of a beautiful, pure and exquisite 

 woman who goes through some of the most 

 severe tests which the responsibilities of 

 marriage bring into human life. The author 

 tells us in his preface that lie has "drawn 

 more largely and directly from fact than 

 is usually the practice of the novelist," and 

 no one after reading the tale will venture to 

 question the statement, for many of the 

 situations, strange and unlikely as they 

 sometimes are, are only what one has met 

 with in actual life either from personal ex- 

 perience or from the experiences of others. 

 With wonderful and artistic skill they are 

 described and worked into the orderly 

 movement and development of the plot. The 

 revelations of Mary O'Neill, the heroine, are 

 more startling than anything of a similar 

 kind within recent years. Hall Caine's 

 imaginative genius has arranged them into 

 a novel of live interest to every thinking 

 man and woman in America. It is the 

 story of a great love which every one will 

 read with deep emotion, following with in- 

 tensest interest the unfolding of a woman's 

 life in its most human, most intimate, most 

 poignant phases. We can well believe that 

 Mary O'Neill is a real woman, but regard- 

 less of that there are Mary O'Neills in 

 every community. Hers is the very heart 

 of every woman. Questions of love and 

 marriage are the staple material of many 

 novels, but few writers possess the skill 

 with which Hall Caine seizes the salient and 

 essential facts of a dramatic situation and 

 compels the eager and arrested attention of 

 his readers. 



Life in Ancient Athens. By T. G. 

 Tucker. New York: The Macmillan 

 Company. 1913. Cloth. 8vo. Illus- 

 trated. 323 pages. Price, $1.25 net. 

 The social and public life of a classical 

 Athenian from day to day is the subject of 

 Professor Tucker's admirable book, which 

 leaves an impression true and sound, and 

 also vivid and distinct upon the reader. It 

 is a serious historical error to assume, as 

 is commonly done, that what is said of 

 Athenian manners and customs, whether 

 public or private, is to be said of the Greeks 

 in general. This point Professor Tucker's 

 book makes clear. It is perhaps a platitude 



