HOUSE AND GARDEN 
July, 1911 [ 
Mr. Bloodgood’s house is so situated that no side of it is hidden. 
The service yard is at the far end, screened by a lattice 
The house has the typical central hall, extending through the house. Upstairs, all bedrooms but one immediately adjoin baths 
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Like its New England prototypes, the service end of the house is 
worked out as a low wing 
The entrance is on the north side, the particularly graceful porch 
being flanked with large rhododendrons 
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THE HOME OF MR. W. D. BLOO.DGOOD, HEWLETT, L. I .—J. Acker Hays, architect 
