The Garden Magazine, March, 1924 
59 
During the long reign of the Tudors, greater luxury 
became general among the English nobility. <J By 
1650 the Renaissance had fully flowered and spread 
its culture throughout Europe. <1 In admiring the 
Tudor treatment here shown one sees the Gothic 
character of that time evolved out of the Northern 
temperament,enriched and brightened by Southern 
influences. €J Today this gracious spirit is re¬ 
captured by our community of master cabinet¬ 
makers at historic Fort Lee atop the Palisades. 
(ftallme^ oP ||ugge;sticm 
7&m 
HeKrUorh ©allme 
INCORPORATED 
417-421 MADISON AVENUE 
Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth Streets 
T HE successful room not only harmonizes with its archi¬ 
tectural background but leaves the impression that it 
was created to be lived in. 
Thus, the planning of any interior is a matter of discrimi¬ 
native selection rather than extravagant expenditure — 
which may account for even the simplest room remaining 
an unforgetable picture in one’s memory. 
The suggestions freely offered to visitors; the complete 
Decorative Service; the reasonable attitude toward cost— 
all are essential features worthy of consideration, and a 
stroll through the galleries should be very convincing. 
