126 AMERICAN HOMIS 
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THE RELATION OF OUTBUILDI] 
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HE home-builder who has settled upon the plan for} 
his house will probably find that the style for the | 
dwelling is by no means the 
only building problem confront- 
ing him. The modern _ house, 
whether it be a small -one or 
one of pretentious proportions, will, in all 
probability, require other buildings comple- 
mentary to it to complete the home architectural 
group. There will be the stable, or the garage— 
both perhaps—various sheds, the outside store- 
house, poultry houses and the outbuildings in 
general that are requisite to the convenience of 
a permanent domicile. The wise home-builder 
and the thorough architect has come to appre- 
ciate the fact that harmonizing the outbuildings 
with the dwelling house is one of the most im- 
portant matters for serious consideration in plan- 
ning the premises for ultimate effectiveness. One 
style of architecture throughout any group of 
buildings lends to them a strength of architec- 
tural purpose, as it were, that adds greatly to the distinctiveness and 
attractiveness of any home surroundings.. The reader will see dis- 
played upon these pages various types of dwellings and their .ad- 
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