ORNAMENTING NEW HOMES. 7 



out a great inconvenience and in some cases great loss 

 financially. 



Healthfulness of Location. 



This is of the first and paramount importance, for with- 

 out health no one can enjoy life or do his share toward 

 making his own life or that of others of value. And first 

 of all low and swampy or malarial land should be avoided; 

 While much may be done by underdraining l ;^nd other 

 means be employed to make such locations healthful, with so 

 many thousands of acres about us free from these objections 

 there is no necessity for a single dwelling being located on 

 unhealthful ground. Rising land with good drainage, 

 where the surface-water shall quickly pass off, where there 

 shall be an abundance of moving air about the site, and an 

 abundance of sunlight, is the most desirable. 



Convenience. 



The location should be convenient of access not only 

 for the occupants but for all who may be in contact with 

 them. Many a family have shut themselves out from 

 society almost completely by building a home where friends 

 can only meet them by making a very unusual effort. 



The leading idea of modern times is centralization; 

 and the advantages of being near neighbors where social 

 intercourse can be frequent, where the whole family will be 

 brought into close contact with the surrounding world, are 

 many; but it becomes a question if the individuality, the 

 strong characters brought out by the self-reliance acquired 

 by living in more isolated sections, are not worth consider- 

 ing also. The electric railroad, penetrating far into fche- 

 country, connecting town with town and country with town, 



