The Remodeled House 
By Gardner Teall 
Photographs by T. C. Turner 
= soamg)| HE making of a house is one of the occupa- 
BRSay Serr agi, - : ea a ; 
Ne op 4iq|| tions of man that is as joyful in its pursuit 
Y aX as it is in its ancestry. Fortunately for the 
“4|| full measure of happiness, the human race 
is compounded by a multitude of tempera- 
ments. There is the man and the woman 
to whom the things of yesterday appeal by reason of their 
association with interesting events in history, even though 
history be local, and again we find the man and the woman 
to whom to-morrow seems to be the vital objective point for 
happy endeavor. We will expect to find them among 
home-makers the world over, those who linger fondly over 
the memories of the old home, to whom such memories 
carry delightful suggestions of connection with every old 
house they happen to come upon, and those others whose 
eagerness to construct, specializes upon the things that are 
new—new foundations, new walls, new roofs, new furnish- 
ings, and whose whole lives, in a sense may be characterized 
by their pleasure in the whole aspect of newness and of 
novelty. Of course, it is true, that in making a home one 
This picturesque old stone farmhouse required yery little external remodeling to make its interior light and roomy 
