158 



GARDENING. 



Feb. 



Publisher's Department. 



Gardening is most valuable I fitifl. 

 Torega, Va. B. S. 



Gardening seems the one indispens 

 garden paper. E. 



Plainfield,N.J. 

 I GET REAL practical hints trom 



DENING. C. W. 



Whitehall, Mich. 



WiTHorx Gardenini 

 of the pleasures of lile. 



Milton, N. Y., January 9, 1896. 



VdUR EXCELLANT paper is the best in 

 America. N.J. R., 



Landscape Gardener, Newark, N. J., 

 January 19,1896. 



Gardening fills a long felt want and 

 we appreciate it more with each issue. 

 Albertus Starr. 



New York, Januarj' 4, 1896. 



Y'OUR DELIGHTFUL PAPER I must say to 



you is the most interesting and usetul to 

 ine ol a half dozen I see E. E. T. 



Brighton, Maryland. 



We enjoy READING GARDENING and 



receive many good hints and advice from 

 it. Isaac Hicks. 



Westbury, N. Y. 



Y'ou ARE MAKING an excellent journal 

 and deserve to achieve great success. 



Andrew S. Fuller. 

 Kidgewood, N J. 



I don't KNOW what I would do with 

 out G.VRDENING. Its Contents are eagerly 

 perused as soon as it comes, and there is 

 not a number without something new 

 and interesting to me. 

 Geneva. N. Y. Geo. S. Conover. 

 Each of these articles of actual ex- 

 perience is fully worth an entire year's 

 subscription to the periodical, indeed, I 

 feel so choice of the numbers received up 

 to date, that they are kept in my safe 

 when not used for self instruction. 

 Michigan. C. W. Kedfern. 

 I WISH YOU continued and increasing 

 success with our helpful and interesting 

 paper. It would be difficult indeed to say 

 anything too good for Gardening. 

 Rev. J. C. Berrien, 

 Corresponding Secretary, Board of Min- 

 isterial Education Methodist Protest- 

 ant Church, Steubenville, Ohio. 

 I enclose herewith my check for $3 

 as I desire to take advantage of your 

 liberal offer to accept a new subscriber 

 with my renewal at that price. The new 

 subscriber is my gardener. Although I 

 am a subscriber to several papers relating 

 to floriculture and am greatly interested 

 in same, IconsiderGARDENiNGfarsuperior 

 to any of the others. In my estimation 

 it has more of interest to lovers and culti- 

 vators of flowers than all the others com- 

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 books of reference and I believe I refer to 

 them as frequently as to Nicholson's 

 "Dictionary of Gardening," and Robin- 

 son's "English Flower Garden," and much 

 oftener than to any of my other books 

 on the same subject. J. B. 

 Philadelphia, Ja nuary 11, 1896. 



SITUATION WANTUI) - Gnnlener; tlret class^prl 

 no family. Good recumiiiendallons- Adtlrena 



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