HOUSE AND GARDEN 
106 
February, 1915 
The exterior presents many interesting points; with the huge stone chimneys, turret, rows of casement windows and sturdy, buttressed, enclosed porch. 
rambling and unusual, and the grounds, when well planted, should give the house a distinctive setting 
The lines are 
In the living-room the Jacobean furnishings are fitting with the Caen stone mantel and 
beamed ceiling 
By having furniture consistent to one period, the dining-room has been decorated 
in good taste; simple and yet sensibly luxurious 
A STUCCO HOUSE 
ALONG ENGLISH 
LINES AT 
The service department has been set in 
the ell, well away from the living 
quarters 
That the lines of English cottage architecture can be successfully adapted to an 
American setting is readily shown by the rear view 
GREAT NECK, 
LONG ISLAND 
Caretto & Foster, architects 
On the second floor the ell serves again 
to separate the servants’ rooms from 
the other chambers 
