182 
from the dining- 
room. The latter 
has a beamed ceiling, 
a low buffet with 
windows built in 
over, and an open 
fie pileare es 9 Thre 
kitchen,  breakfast- 
room and_ screened 
porch occupy part of 
the rear of the house. 
In addition to these 
rooms there are two 
bedrooms and a bath- 
room on this floor. 
The second story 
contains extra guest 
and servants’-rooms. 
A bungalow of 
simple design and 
construction is illus- 
trated int Mig.to, It 
was designed and 
built by the owner, 
Mr. T. W. Dale, of 
Los Angeles. 
the exterior walls, while cloth and 
paper cover the interior wall sur- 
faces. It.contains five bedrooms 
and a bathroom. ‘The cost was 
$800. 
A house of unusual beauty and 
design, and also resembling a Swiss 
chalet in its exterior treatment, is 
the one built at Hollywood, Call- 
fornia, and illustrated in Fig. ro. 
It is situated on the side of a hill, 
thereby permitting a two-story ar- 
rangement. Wide redwood slabs 
are used for shingling the outside 
wall. A feature of the exterior is 
the cobblestone terrace wall and 
the hanging porch of the second 
story of the house. The trimmings 
and windows are painted white. 
Mr. LuVerne Sanders Reid de- 
signed and built the interesting bungalow at South Pasa- 
dena which is presented in Fig. rr. 
structed on the typical bungalow plan, is low and ram- 
AMERICAN HOMES AND GARDENS 
Fig. |7—An excellent design for a bungalow 
Rough boards placed perpendicular on the 
framework, with strips covering the joints, were used for 
Buttet 
Ea eed 
| 
Sereen | | 
Porch | | 
EA | ‘Dining Chamber 
(e) Kitchen | Room | 
| | 
Y toner) 
Clos. ! 
; ] 
Bath Room a HH i i Closet 
2 a | 
aC I ied 
| il ' 
eee aa 
Ling Roar t 
| 
ie ees al 
| | | 
Chamber i 
Closet 
— Porch 
This example, con- 
Cement Floor 
Fig. |8—Floor plan 
May, Ig1I 
and isi ot 
the cheapest con- 
struction. Matched 
sheathing boards 
stained brown are 
used for the exterior 
walls, and the lattice 
screened porch, over 
which are growing 
vines, gives distinc- 
tion to the whole 
general scheme. 
‘There are five rooms 
and a bathroom in 
the interior, )yG@ose 
$500. 
The bungalow 
built for Mr. Syl- 
vanus B. Marston, 
at Pasadena, from 
the plans of Mr. H. 
A. Doty, of the same 
place, and shown in 
Fig. 12, is an attrac- 
tive dwelling, con- 
bling 
structed of stucco, cobblestone and narrow clapboards. It 
contains six bedrooms and a bathroom. Cost $2,800. 
A typical bungalow of interesting 
style is illustrated in Figs. 13 and 
14, and was built for Mr. G. Law- 
rence Stimson, at Pasadena. 
The bungalow shown in Fig. 15 
illustrates a dwelling at South Pasa- 
dena. The design is worked out in 
a combination of red brick and 
brown-stained shingles. 
Rock-faced field stone and brown- 
stained shingles were used to build 
the house of Dr. C. F. Metcalf, at 
South Pasadena, illustrated in Fig. 
16. The combination of materials 
has been very well worked out by 
the architect, Mr. J. G. Pierecemton 
the same place. The interior is 
plastered and contains five rooms 
and a bathroom. Cost $1,900. 
The bungalow illustrated in Figs. 
17, 18, 19 and 20, and built at Pasadena, is different from 
the other bungalows illustrated in this article. The arrange- 
ment permits of securing a direct vista through the house. 
Fig. 20—The living-room 
