202 



AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS 



September, 1906 



In Mill, Factory, Storehouse 



and Temporary Building construction, whether first 

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 roofing or siding material than our 



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AMERICAN 



SHEET C& TIN PLATE 



COMPANY 



FRICK BUILDING 



PITTSBURGH, PA. 









BUILDING 



Construction and 

 Superintendence 



By F. E. KIDDER, Ph.D., F.A.I.A. 



Consulting Architect and 

 Author of "The Architect's and Builder's Pocket Book" 





JUST PUBLISHED 



THIRD EDITION OF 



KIDDER'S 



Cfjurcfjcs anb Cfjapete 



By F. E. KIDDER, Architect 



This edition has been thoroughly revised 

 by the author, and enlarged, many new 

 designs being added, including several 

 new designs for Catholic churches. There 

 are 120 illustrations in the text and more 

 than 50 full-page plates. The book con- 

 tains a large number of plans and per- 

 spectives of churches of varying costs. 

 Besides this there is much concise and 

 practical information relating to planning 

 a ml seating; details of Construction, 

 Heating and Ventilation, Acoustics, etc., 

 making it in its present form : : : : 





Part I. Masons' Work 



430 Pages. 260 Illustrations 



Part II. Carpenters \Vork 



550 Pages. 530 Illustrations 

 JUST PUBLISHED 



Part III. Trussed Roofs and 

 Roof Trusses 



298 Pages. 306 Illustrations 

 Each volume 7 x 9 ' i inches. Substantial cloth binding 



Price for Parts I and II, $4.00 each 

 Price for Part III, $3.00. Sold Separately 





The Best American Book on 

 Church Design and Construction 



One oblong quarto volume. Price, net, S3. 00 





Munn G? Co., 361 Broad-way, NewYork 





irliiiin & Co,, 361 JJioabtuap, iltto §?orb Citj> 



separate chapters on the furniture of the var- 

 ious centuries to the Renaissance, dealing sep- 

 arately with the furniture of the different 

 Louises, treating of Spanish and German fur- 

 niture, as well as that of the Low Countries, 

 and concluding with chapters on the English 

 furniture of the eighteenth century, the furni- 

 ture of the French Empire, and ending with 

 a chapter on Colonial furniture. The book is, 

 therefore, while brief, fairly complete in its 

 contents, and gives such elementary informa- 

 tion as most owners of furniture will care to 

 have and perhaps will need most to know. 

 The numerous illustrations are chiefly from 

 photographs. The author, however, seldom 

 gives the original or present location of the 

 pieces illustrated, which is an omission of 

 quite some seriousness. Some of the illustra- 

 tions of modern houses seem somewhat out 

 of place in an historical handbook such as 

 this aims to be, although they do show modern 

 uses of historic furniture. This, however, is 

 an aspect of the subject quite apart from the 

 more useful purpose of describing the chief 

 characteristics of the leading historic styles of 

 furniture, which is the subject with which the 

 book is primarily concerned. 



The Complete Hostess. By Clara E. 

 Laughlin. New York: D. Appleton & 

 Co., 1906. Pp. 14 + 321. Price, $125; 

 postage, 1 2c. additional. 

 There need no longer be occasion for worri- 

 ment as to how to entertain one's guests, for 

 the present book aims to tell the reader what 

 to do in an almost infinite variety of ways and 

 on an almost infinite variety of occasions. 

 Would you know how to conduct a ball, con- 

 sult page 42 ; two pages further on you will 

 find some useful hints as to how the guests 

 should behave at such functions. If you have 

 in mind a "Cupid Party," you will find full 

 directions on page III. If a "Cobweb Social" 

 is suggested as a suitable form of church en- 

 tertainment, you will learn all about it on 

 page 210. "Doll Millinery Shows," "Living 

 Spelling Bees," "Baby Shows," "Pillow 

 Climbing," Duck on a Rock," and other titles 

 of like interest add to the appetizing nature of 

 the books and appeal to the very widest circle 

 of readers. 



The briefest dip into its numerous pages 

 shows it to be a volume of the most fascinating 

 variety of contents. But it has a perfectly 

 legitimate purpose which it fills very admir- 

 ably. It is not intended to supply an encyclo- 

 pedia of etiquette and entertainment, but to 

 gather together a reasonable number and 

 variety of well-tried formula? so that a woman 

 who wants to give a birthday party for her 

 five-year-old son, or a lawn tea for her visiting 

 sister-in-law, or who must think up some idea 

 for the church bazaar or "Fete of All Na- 

 tions," shall be able to find in these pages 

 suggestions which her own clever wit will 

 amplify and adapt and make personal and 

 charming. So at least says the editor in her 

 introduction, and she has carefully estimated 

 the purpose of her book. Various writers 

 have contributed to it, and the book, on the 

 whole, contains much helpful information, 

 suggestion and advice on matters serious and 

 frivolous. It is easy to see that it will soon 

 become the favorite source-book in all well- 

 managed country homes. 



Suburban Houses. By J. Herbert Pearson. 

 New York: Spoil & Chamberlain, 1905. 

 Pp. 12, with 46 plates. Price, $3.00. 



Books on houses of moderate cost, es- 

 pecially those intended for suburban use, ap- 

 pear somewhat more popular in England than 

 in America. That the present book is of Eng- 

 lish origin, and is, therefore, intended chiefly 

 to meet English conditions, makes it necessarily 

 somewhat insular in scope, but does not de- 

 tract from its value as a contribution to that 



