January, 1910 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



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 write the Readers' Service 



291 



who has WASHING and 



CLEANING to do uses 



PEARLINE 



Simple —a child can use it 

 ^ Use without Soap, Borax 

 Naphtha or Pefroleum. 



To Wash in Boiling Water 



Fill wash - boiler half - full of 

 water; for each pailful therein, add 

 a tablespoonful of PEARLINE. 

 Put in finest pieces first (not too 

 many at a time) , stir well until 

 they come to a boil , Rinse thor- 

 oughly in two or three waters. 

 Table- and bed-linen, towels and 

 white clothing, are thus beautifully 

 washed without being rubbed to 

 pieces on the washboard, but cloth- 

 ing much soiled should be soaked 

 before boiling. 



Wash Flannels by hand in 

 lukewarm PEARLINE suds; rinse 

 thoroughly in warm water; wring 

 dry; pull and shake well, and they 

 will keep soft without shrinking. 

 Dry in warm temperature. 



To Wash without Boiling 



Pour as many pails of water 

 into a tub as will cover the wash ; 

 add a tablespoonful of PEAR- 

 LINE for each pailful therein; stir 

 until dissolved. Soak the clothing 

 in this solution two hours, or over- 

 night ; stir well ; and rub out the 

 parts most soiled in this suds. 

 Wring out ; rinse well in two or 

 three waters, and they will be clean. 

 For Washing Dishes, PEAR- 

 LINE is magical— a teaspoonful in 

 the dishpan; and, for cleaning paint, 

 milk-cans, windows, silver, jewelry, 

 etc., use PEARLINE suds. 



To Make Soft-Soap.— Dis- 

 solve one pound of PEARLINE 

 in a gallon of boiling water, add 

 three gallons of cold water; stir 

 together and, when cold, you will 

 have four gallons of soft-soap. 



Millions Use It 



THE COUNTRY HOUSE 



By Chas. Ed w. Hooper. 



A practical and comprehensive treatise on house building. Elab- 

 orately illustrated. $3.36 postpaid. 



Doubleday, Page & Co. 133 E. i6thSt., New York 



A Greenhouse 

 Reasonable in Price 



BY reasonable just what do you mean ? 

 First and foremost, we mean an every way 

 practical house, made of the best materials, just 

 the best we know how. Now such a house 

 can never be made cheap, but it can be, and is, 

 reasonable. 



With such a house, made such a way, you 

 will be able to do what you want to do. You 

 will not be wishing in a year or so that you had 

 built it better. 



You will have no vexatious troubles with the 

 heating, and some night freeze out your roses, or 

 have to hustle in oil stoves which is just about 

 as bad. 



Being our Sectional Iron Frame Construction, 

 it can be easily enlarged with least expense. 



If you want curved eaves, we can build it 

 that way. 



Considerable saving was accomplished in this 

 house by partitioning off one of the sections for 

 a work room, and building a cellar directly be- 

 neath it for the boiler. 



Now that you are so thoroughly interested in 

 greenhouses, and have finally determined to have 

 one, don't make the mistake of calling in your 

 carpenter to build one ; or order, sight-on-seeing, 

 one of the cheap, "ready-to-wear" kind. You 

 will pay more in the end in either case, and you 

 won't get what you want in both cases. 



We have been building greenhouses for over 

 half a century, and we know some things about 

 it that count. Do you want further particulars 

 of this house, or our booklet showing others ? 



Lord and Burnham Company 



IRV1NGTON 

 N. Y. 



NEW YORK 



St. James Bldg. 



BOSTON 

 Tremont Bldg. 



PHILADELPHIA 

 Heed Bldg. 



CHICAGO 

 The Rookery 



Actions 



and 



Reactions 



Rudyard 

 Kipling 



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Rudyard Kipling's 



A Song 

 of the 

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Doubleday, Page 



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