February, 1914 
HOUSE AND GARDEN 
At one end of the bowling green, a pergola, rose-covered, provides a pleasant rest¬ 
ing place for those who play the game 
The house is treated in a formal manner and box and evergreen trees are used to 
carry out the feeling of symmetry 
The great living-room is practically all windows on two sides and is planned so 
that it may be available for all sorts of entertainments 
Above the dining-room wainscoting a frieze of peacocks has been painted in an inter¬ 
esting scheme of blues and 
The house is almost symmetrical and balances even to the arrangement of the small trees, except at one end, where the breakfast and sleeping porches are. Here an attractive 
form of the French awning, projecting out over what is really a wing to the house, adds just enough variety to prevent the house from appearing stiff 
