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A PRAM SHED

The problem of where to put the baby's perambulator has been solved by a youthful mother, Mrs. Mark Pilkington, states a writer in the London "Daily Telegraph." She does not like her pretty lilac-coloured Cheyne Walk Hall, with its Georgian wallpaper of silvery flower blossoms, to be cluttered up.

For her son Simon she has had a black'-paihted pram shed put up in the front garden, facing, the river, complete with.lock,and key,,as, his garage.

What to do with the powder closets on each floor of her eighteenth-century home was another interesting problem for Mrs. Pilkington. Two of them are now bathrooms, one for the baby, and f the other is a tiny a.rite^room to the double'drawing-room that later on will be a nursery schoolroom for Simon.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19380704.2.148.3

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXVI, Issue 3, 4 July 1938, Page 14

Word Count
129

A PRAM SHED Evening Post, Volume CXXVI, Issue 3, 4 July 1938, Page 14

A PRAM SHED Evening Post, Volume CXXVI, Issue 3, 4 July 1938, Page 14

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