November, 1912 
le a De ae hat os GA ER 
End of the living-room showing built-in-bookcases 
an entrance door on either side, and allowing plenty of 
space for wide lawns and flower beds. It is a distance 
of sixty feet from the border of the main street to the 
house, and one hundred and ten feet from the opposite 
street. [hus the extensive ground affords an opportunity 
to make the landscape architecture a fitting complement of 
that of the house itself. . 
The entrance proper is by a gravel walk, bordered on 
either side by Rocky Mountain pines. This ends in a Colo- 
nial porch with dignified Ionic columns above which is a 
group of windows with ornamental tops and showing den- 
coer eeeReN NK: 
"= 5 ol : 
AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS 
The dining-room is one of the most 
RAVOLE: 
The living-room is large, sunny and home-like 
tels of the old-time type. An innovation has been made 
at one side by the introduction of an outside chimney of 
brick, which allows of a wide fireplace in the living-room. 
Another addition is the glassed-in-veranda which affords a 
protection in Winter, and is used as an out-of-door living- 
room in Summer. 
At the rear, passing through the gateway, one walks up 
a path bordered on either side by old-fashioned flowers, 
the same varieties that grew in our grandmothers’ gardens 
of long ago. This helps to carry out the seventeenth century 
idea. Here, a wide veranda across the end of the house, while 
ee 
peed ns SUBS Espa 
ERR » rete tera mes 
ere 
successful rooms in the whole house 
