36 
House & Garden 
Why, Even The 
Garage Is 
Attractive! 
Hasn’t the architect done an 
interesting piece of work with 
the garage-end of tiiis little 
English half-timbered house? 
The Cadillac is just as content¬ 
ed as though its home was as 
ugly as usual. And think of 
the advantage it is to the 
neighbors! 
You can see other views of the 
same charming place in next 
month’s House & Garden. 
And if English half-timber 
doesn’t quite express your 
temperament, you can look at 
a long low bungalow from the 
South—a Dutch colonial clap¬ 
board house—a house from 
Salem that couldn’t be truer to 
type if it tried—and a New 
Orleans home in the delightful 
Spanish-French manner of 
that adored city of the sun. 
And—what do you think— 
the plans of all these houses 
are there, too! 
House Planning Number 
NOVEMBER 
House & Garden 
T hat Ilotise Planning Nnnilter would Itirii the 
most tent-spreading Arab of them all into a 
hap])y ratepayer. It’s full of houses that walk out 
of their pages and sit down on your checkbook. All 
kinds of houses, too; for all widths of checkbooks. 
There’s a good deal of technical information, 
easily told—what plans cost, and why—how to 
draw to scale yourself. There are three pages of 
balconies; a page of those picturesque adobe houses 
from the Southwest; a page of Spanish rooms. 
An article treats of the preservation of old wall¬ 
papers. Another talks about Kirman rugs and 
when to be sure they weren’t made in America. 
Then there’s period silver, and how to use it. 
Regency furniture and how to judge it—the passing 
of the pantry, and what has taken its place—mid¬ 
winter planting—the Campanula family— 
Last of all, there’s the simplest, peacefullest old 
English garden that used to be a sheepfold. You’ll 
just wish you could pick up your favorite magazine 
—House & Garden, of course—and walk right into 
it, but— 
First Make Sure You Get the November Number by Reserving It Today— 
House Planning Is the Nicest Winter Sport There Is . . . But so Many 
People Play it! 
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