166 AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS Apzil, 1909 
TOLL 
28—The shingled roof of Mr. Perry Todd’s house at Montclair, New Jersey, has a thatched effect 
gable end, with its shaded porch, comes close up to the trees. effective. ‘he dining-room (Fig. 35) is Delft blue in plain 
The hall has green tinted walls and oak trim, which is re- color up to the plate rail, five feet from the floor, with a 
peated in the reception-room, but with old rose wall cover- figured wall covering above. “The woodwork is yellow pine 
ing. The same oak appears in the panels of the living-room finished in ivory-white. The same yellow pine appears in 
(Fig. 34), which are filled in with Japanese grass cloth of a_ the finishing of the kitchen and dependencies. On the sec- 
golden-brown. The design of the Tiffany brick fireplace is ond floor are four bedrooms and two baths, and on the third 
floor three rooms, in spite of the apparently modest size of 
| the house. 
ap A larger and more ambitious house (Figs. 37, 38 and 
39), designed by Mr. Dudley Van Antwerp for Mr. Henry 
= |prcosce 
BuUTLERS PANTRY 
| KITCHEN 
DINING Room 
BRD Room 
con case Sd [poo cnse= If 5 a 
q cy HALL S| Fl 
PIAZZA RECEPTION ROOM | 
Flowers sox 
= 
29—The plans are well arranged for convenience and for equipment with the best modern appointments 
