402 
HOUSE AND GARDEN 
Tune, 1014 
Burn Your Garbage on the 
Premises Where It Originates 
Sanitary engineers agree that the really sani¬ 
tary way of disposing of garbage and refuse is to burn it on the 
premises where it originates—before it decays and causes foul 
odors and provides a nesting, breeding and feeding place for 
flies, rats and other pests. 
And it is also the most economical way because 
garbage and refuse contain a large amount of good fuel matter 
which can be utilized for heating the hot water needed in apartment 
buildings, hotels, restaurants hospitals and homes. 
KEWANEE 
Water Heating Garbage Burners 
burn garbage and refuse, 
without odor. They elimi¬ 
nate the garbage can and the 
garbage wagon. They keep 
the hack door of the kitchen 
as clean and sweet as the 
drawing room. 
And they are by far 
the most economical device 
for heating - water because they 
use, as part of the necessary fuel, the 
garbage and refuse from the kitchen. 
Residence, New Haven, Conn,, 
Stephenson & Wheeler, Architects, 
Kewanee Water Heating Garbage Burner installed. 
Let us furnish you literature 
on the subject. A postal card 
will bring it. 
Kewanee Boiler Company 
Kewanee, Illinois 
Steel Power and Heating Boilers, 
Radiators, Tanks and Garbage Burners 
Branches : Chicago, New York, St. 
Louis, Kansas City, Salt Lake City 
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without removing the screens and admitting m 
flies and mosquitos. By the mere turn of a g 
little crank, shutters are opened, closed or g 
securely fastened at any angle, from the jj 
inside. g 
*The 
MALLORY 1 
Shutter Worker 
g is attractively finished to harmonize with the woodwork and can be easily installed in old or new g 
H frame or stone dwellings. At hardware dealers, or booklet sent on request to H 
I MALLORY MFG. CO., 255 Main Street, Flemington, N. J. § 
and can only be found by careful search, 
so unobtrusive its necessarily formal 
lines were made. A pergola, a gazebo, 
and even a flower garden with a fountain 
and straight flower beds, were all realized 
by careful planning, so that they do not 
obtrude, but rather retire, and seem to fit 
their natural surrounding as easily as an 
old glove. The day may come when the 
Italian villa of Lake Como type, or 
something else more architectural, will 
supersede the camp idea in the Adiron- 
dacks and be more or less appropriate, 
but at present Hukweem is typical of the 
best work now being done in this class of 
design. 
The Garden Club 
( Continued from page 452) 
owing by us to the Chinese or the Ja¬ 
panese for anything in the rose world— 
for we owe them so much on other 
scores. But their part of the world 
seems to have neglected the rose to a re¬ 
markable degree, considering that the 
lovely tea rose in its original form comes 
from there, and that they are the happy 
owners of the splendid rugosas in their 
wild state. So as it stands now the rose 
is distinctly a plant of the so-called 
Aryan races — which is hardly definite 
enough to stir us into an ecstasy of pa¬ 
triotism, one must confess, though it does 
in my illogical breast minister pleasantly 
to prejudice. 
I am in a fair way to have all this 
racial pride take a tumble, though, it 
seems; for it is to the China, or tea rose, 
that we are already indebted for the 
great glories of our rose gardens to¬ 
day — the H. T. class — and to the wild 
rose of Japan, rosa rugosa, that the 
growers here in America are looking for 
their great help in developing our own 
ideal garden rose — which must, of course, 
be as hardy as it is beautiful, and must 
blossom all of the time. And it is, more¬ 
over, two other Japanese species that 
have furnished American growers our 
wonderful ramblers, the commonest — and 
horridest! — of which, the ubiquitous 
crimson rambler being the child of one— 
rosa multiflora, while the lovliest ones — 
Lady Gay, Evergreen Gem, W. H. Egan, 
Dorothy Perkins and Dawson — are the 
offspring of the other — rosa Wichuriana. 
The last was given to America in 1893 
by Mr. Jackson Dawson, of the Arnold 
Arboretum, explained the rose man; and 
he insists that we ought all to always re¬ 
member this man, and to hold his name 
in highest esteem among horticulturists 
in America. The Dawson, Dorothy Per¬ 
kins and W. H. Egan are all his hybrids, 
and I do not know how many more, for 
we were not given all the names, of 
course; but all around his cottage are 
wonderful climbing hybrids, we were 
told, being tested and weighed in the bal- 
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