MY £ at a cost so l° w as to make them possible for 



OF DREAMS , , F 



everybody. 



A beautiful dream! Many said it must for- 

 ever be only a dream. 



But the dream is taking visible form. It is 

 rising before our eyes. The garden commun- 

 ities of Letchworth, Hampstead, Port Sunlight, 

 and Bourneville in England are practical 

 demonstrations. The garden city is no longer 

 a dream. It is not "the newest Utopia." Its 

 houses are built of substantial brick and mor- 

 tar, its trees and grass and flowers are growing 

 and blooming — this much is history. And the 

 idea on which it is built is one of eternal truth. 



The history of this movement is one of the 

 most striking facts of modern life. A garden 

 city, where each home has its own garden, but 

 where each is so related to all that the whole 

 is one great garden — that is, indeed, "the 

 garden glorious." 



I have called it a dream taking form. In 

 fact it is only part of a larger dream that many 

 are dreaming today. It is the dream of all who 

 love their fellow-men, a dream of better things 

 for all men — for men and women who toil and 



