xxvi 



AMERICAN HOMES AND GA 



R D E N S 



June, 1907 



TWELVE Complete Stories 



THRILLING with adventure and mystery 



SPARKLING WITH FLASHES OF HUMOR 



FASCINATING and delightful romance 



MANY 

 HAND- 

 SOME 

 PICTURES 



JUNE 



15 CENTS 



GUNTEKS 



MAGAZINf: 



JUNE 

 NUMBER 

 NOW ON 

 SALE 



ENJOYING BEAUTIFUL MUSIC WITHOUT 

 AN INSTRUMENT WITHIN MILES 



SOUNDS LIKE FICTION BUT IT'S A FACT 

 READ ABOUT IT IN THIS ISSUE 



AMtRlCAlV 

 HOMES AND 

 GARDENS 



Bound Volumes thi American Homes and Gardens 



IX response to many requests of both new and old 

 subscribers we have caused a beautiful design to be 

 prepared and expensive register dies cut so as to 

 produce a most artistic cover. The beautiful green 

 cloth is most substantial, and the book is sewn bv hand 

 to give the necessary strength for so heavy a volume. 



The decoration of the cover is unique. There are 

 five colors of imported composition leaf and inks, 

 artistically blended. It is hardly possible to give an 

 idea of this beautiful cover. The top edges of the 

 book are gilded. 



P * <t'3 tin for the semi-annual volume of too;, 

 mcc, >PtJ.,J\J containing the first si.>c issues 

 published of this periodical. 



Pfi/>/» f\C\ ^'^^ ^9°^ volume containing nil 



rrice, »J)^.UU the numbers of the year. Prepaid 

 to any address in the United States or Canada. 



MUNN & COMPANY, No. 361 BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY 



■pOR those who have 

 the numbers we 

 have prepared a lim- 

 ited number of cases 

 which are identical 

 with those used on the 

 bound volumes. Any 

 bookbinder can sew 

 the book in the case 

 for a moderate price. 

 \Ve will send this case 

 strongly packed, for 



$1.50 



BOOKS 



Relating to Arcliitecture, 

 Decoration, Ceramics, R-ugs, 

 rumiture, etc., Wl be rec- 

 ommendecl and supplied by 

 our well-equipped 

 Sook Department 



Munn ®} Co. 



361 Broadway, New York 













tion concerning areas and disposition of in- 

 terior spaces. The plans of gardens, of which 

 a number are included likewise, are also help- 

 ful, and materially increase the usefulness of 

 the book. 



The subjects illustrated are sufficiently 

 numerous to make the book representative in 

 a very complete sense. Houses near Phila- 

 delphia, in Connecticut, in New Jersey, Mass- 

 achusetts, and other States, not forgetlting 

 California, make a tolerably fair geographical 

 covering. Old houses, in Philadelphia and 

 the South, also come in for illustration, and 

 their quaint old gardens form some of the 

 most picturesque of the illustrations. 



It is, therefore, a volume that the lover of 

 gardens and of houses will eagerly welcome as 

 a notable addition to the really few competent 

 books on this subject. There is a world of 

 suggestiveness and help in these pictures, and 

 a world of interest and of charm. The most 

 important lesson it teaches is that in many 

 parts of America large sums of money are 

 being expended on gardens, some of large size, 

 and all of them of real and penetrating beauty. 



The Studio Year Book of Decorative 

 Art, 1907. New York: John Lane 

 Company. Pp. 228. Price, $2.25 paper; 

 $3.00 cloth. 



This is a book of wonderful charm and 

 interest. Illustrated with hundreds of illus- 

 trations, accompanied with an adequate ex- 

 planatory and critical text, it is a book that 

 abounds with practical suggestions and help- 

 ful information to every one concerned with 

 architecture and the decorative arts ; the house- 

 owner and the craftsman alike may find much 

 to enjoy and profit by in its richly illustrated 

 pages. Not, of course, that everything in it 

 is of interest, or even of value — no annual 

 summary of the decorative output of a single 

 people or group of people could be expected 

 to yield such results as that — but taken as 

 a whole, the book is crowded with ideas, and 

 those who look to the work of others for 

 inspiration and enjoyment will here find them 

 in abundance. 



The Year Book aims to cover the whole 

 field of decorative art, and it does so in a 

 reasonably complete manner. The opening 

 chapter treats of domestic houses, and pre- 

 sents types of the latest works of English 

 architects, houses, for the most part, of genu- 

 ine interest and definite personal charm. 

 Other chapters treat of the interior arrange- 

 ment and the decoration of the house ; of fur- 

 niture; of firegrates and mantelpieces; of wall 

 and ceiling decorations; of stained glass; of 

 embroidery and textile fabrics ; of pottery, por- 

 celain, table glass and metal work, and of 

 garden furniture. All these subjects — and 

 the variety is so numerous as to be complete 

 in a decorative sense — are illustrated by 

 English examples. The interest and value of 

 the volume is, however, greatly enhanced by 

 the two concluding chapters, dealing with 

 modern decorative art in Germany and in 

 Austria. No student of contemporary move- 

 ments in decorative art can afford to remain 

 in ignorance of the extraordinary work being 

 done to-day on the Continent, and especially 

 in Germany and Austria. These chapters will 

 open up a new world in decorative art to 

 those unfamiliar with its manifestations in 

 these countries, and are by no means the least 

 welcome portions of this remarkable review 

 of household art in its widest sense. The il- 

 lustrations are, for the most part, from pho- 

 tographs, but include some line drawings and 

 numerous prints in color. The book is not 

 only a record of remarkable achievement, but 

 is itself notable in the amplitude of its scope 

 and the interest of its illustrations. 



