October, 1923 
63 
No especial architectural style was followed, the house 
growing naturally along lines that fitted the site. Ma¬ 
sonry forms the first floor walls, with stucco and haf- 
timber the others. Hand-hewn beams crop out here 
and there. Mr. Seton’s house is at Greenwich, Ct. 
The kitchen wing has become a quaint addition, with 
its vine-covered walls and overhanging story sup¬ 
ported by rough beams. The irregularities of the, roof 
line and the rude boulders of the chimney are all part 
of a very natural atid pleasing picture 
The chimneys of Mr. 
Seton’s house are fea^ 
lured both by the material 
chosen for them and tfte 
style in which they are 
laid up 
The niches in the kitchen 
chimney, it is said, have 
been reserved for the busts 
of cooks who stay in the 
household more than a 
year! 
