284 



AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS 



July, 1908 



" Wayside": The Drawing-room Is Finished in Lavender and White in Its Wall Trim, 

 and the Curtains Which are Hung at the Windows 



aganook " : Second Floor Plan 



Naganook" : First Floor Plan 



terest with the very 

 newest. In a very 

 striking degree and 

 in a very true sense, 

 the land has been 

 embellished archi- 

 tecturally. 



But architectural 

 embellishment is in 

 itself not sufficient. 

 There must be much 

 more, and of these 

 additional matters 

 Tokeneke has an 

 abundance and to 

 spare. It rejoices 

 in a sequestrated 

 convenience, if the 

 phrase may be 

 coined, in being 

 near enough to cen- 

 ters of population 

 to make it thor- 



" Wayside": The Chairs Are Painted Yellow, the Walls Are Covered with Yellow and 

 White Paper, and the Windows Are Hung with the Same Color Scheme 



oughly accessible, 

 and yet in being it- 

 self so retired and 

 completely private 

 and to give it a dis- 

 tinctive isolation 

 which, after all, is 

 one of its chiefest 

 charms. 



And when to this 

 is added its own re- 

 sources in outdoor 

 sports and recrea- 

 tion, and its prox- 

 imity to other facili- 

 ties of the same 

 kind, the last word, 

 surely, has been 

 said on the attrac- 

 tiveness of "this 

 completely delight- 

 ful place. 



" Naganook " Was Built in 1 764 and with a Slight Remodeling Still Forms a Happy 

 Sheltering Place for the Lover of the Country 



