House and Garden 
I. The wagon shed; 2, tlie residence looking southwest; 3, the garage and gardener’s cottage; 4, stable No. 3 for draft horses 
Club house, covered show ring and stable for hackneys 
SO.ME OF THE BUILDINGS DURING CONSTRUCTION 
entered through French doors. It has windows on 
three sides with a view to the lake. 
The living-room is south of the dining-room, and 
has windows at each end and toward the porch. There 
are fireplaces, bookcases, etc. The kitchen is di¬ 
vided from the dining-room by a butler’s pantry. It 
has the necessary pantry, pot closet, servant’s room, 
etc. On the second floor there are five bedrooms and 
a bath-room, and on the third floor two bedrooms and 
a bath-room. This building is carried out in the 
same characteristic design as all of the buildings, but 
is covered with asbestos shingle tile. It is also lighted 
by gas and electricity. 
The buildings on farm No. i he about half a mile 
south of the private stable. The club house for 
stable grooms is a building with fourteen bed¬ 
rooms, and baths, and a large club room, with 
brick fireplace, wash-rooms, storeroom, dining¬ 
room, and kitchens. The general office of the stock 
farm is located at one end of the club house. This 
building stands on a large open court with buildings 
on two sides, the court being about one hundred and 
eighty by three hundred feet in size. Directly ad¬ 
joining the club house and forming a continuous 
design with it, is the training paddock with an open 
space seventy-eight by one hundred and eighty feet. 
The roof is extended far enough to the south to cover 
the stallion stable, which is arranged with five large 
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