42 
House & Garden 
Construction timbers are left exposed 
both inside and out, and either hand 
hewn or milled timbers can be used. 
The walls are composed of an outside 
and inside wall board. The foundation 
is cement with outcropping field stones 
between which is laid rich loam where 
vines and flowers can grow. Cedar 
posts make the verandah, which may 
be enclosed with glass or screens in 
sapling frames 
A detail of the sapling 
screen frames for veran¬ 
dah 
A BUNGALOW in the 
JAPANESE STYLE 
Designed for House ^ Garden 
By A. D. REED 
The feature of the plan is the way the 
four corner bedrooms can be opened 
into the living room. Partitions are 
made of paneled wall board and slide 
in grooves on the ceiling beams; when 
not in use they are nested four to¬ 
gether showing only the surface of one. 
The beds slide under the window seats. 
French doors let out onto the veran¬ 
dah and from the library to the en¬ 
trance 
A detail showing parti¬ 
tions nested, and ceiling 
beam groove 
The walls of the rooms are made of the paneled wall board in uniformity with the sliding partitions, and hang on simple hinges forming closets. 
The fireplace, which can be seen from almost every room, is a circular grate enclosed with two sliding sheets of black sheet iron. Two hoods and 
four pipes for smoke are of copper 
