House and Garden 
THE BUNGALOW OF MR. LINDSAY, ALTADENA, CALIFORNIA 
frees the house from odors of cooking, for the trade- 
winds are so constant that by properly locating these 
service rooms absolute freedom from this annoyance 
may be secured as well as the surety of more privacy, 
which the “one floor plan” sometimes makes diffi¬ 
cult to obtain. 
The several illustrations herewith given set forth 
good examples of what may be defined as “accli¬ 
matized bungalows” as well as some houses, the 
inspiration for which may easily be traced to Spain 
or Mexico and Italy, and improperly called bunga¬ 
lows, but which by any other name would still be 
quite as beautiful. 
Of this latter type the home of Mr. Francis W. 
Wilson of Santa Barbara is a charming one showing 
unmistakable Italian origin, but it cannot properly 
be called a bungalow. The house is in the form of 
the letter H, with the ends of the two rear legs con¬ 
nected by a wall about six feet high from which flows 
a stream of water falling into a little pool in and 
around which caladiums are growing, forming a 
delightful feature of the enclosed court where com¬ 
plete privacy is assured. 
The house of Mr. A. J. Eddy at Pasadena, Cali¬ 
fornia, is another one possessing much beauty of 
finish throughout its interior where primitive designs 
and effects have been employed — after being refined 
and beautified to meet modern usages. The exterior 
presents the severe simplicity of detail which is so 
restful and which characterized all the older adobe 
ranch houses, after which it has evidently been 
patterned. 
1 he home of Arturo Bandini, Esq., located on the 
outskirts of Pasadena, is built on three sides of a 
court and shows the Mexican form constructed in 
the simplest manner, of redwood boards set upright, 
the joints both inside and outside, being covered with 
three-inch battens. The exterior is left in the rough 
and stained, while the inside is surfaced and given 
a thin light oil finish to prevent spotting of the wood 
and yet retain as nearly as possible its natural color. 
The interior illustrations suggest much room and 
comfort and artistic possibilities at comparatively 
small outlay. 
What may be considered a type both of Southern 
California bungalows and California rural homes, is 
seen in the Fitzgerald house at Duarte, California. 
It is situated in perhaps the most beautiful stretch 
of country in the San Gabriel valley, and has for a 
background the Sierra Madre mountains, whose 
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