1906 
LETTERS FROM CUSTOMERS 
1906 
STORIES OF SUCCESS ON THIS PAGE ARE NEW. THEY WERE RECEIVED BY 
THE PLYMOUTH ROCK SQUAB COMPANY OF BOSTON IN NINE MONTHS OF 1906, 
I_ got from 
Kentucky. 
HIS SECOND ORDER. Enclosed please 
find express money order for five dollars for 
which please send me three pairs of your No. 1 
Plymouth Rocks at your earliest convenience. 
A previous order which I received from you 
has been doing fine-—J. E. D., Pennsylvania. 
PROLIFIC BIRDS. I purchased 12 pairs 
Homers of you about 18 months ago and they 
have done fine work for me. I have 50 pairs 
mated birds, saved the best ones and sold the 
second class.—J. A. D., Pennsylvania. 
SENT SISTER GOOD BIRDS. I enclose a 
money order for $17.88 for which please send 
three dozen nappies and six pairs blue 
checkers. You sent my sister such fine birds 
that I would like the order duplicated.—H. 
S. B., New York. 
RECOMMENDS OUR BIRDS TO EVERY- 
BODY. The birds arrived in good order and 
Iam pleased with them.,, I have 14 fine birds 
from the first ones I bought of you and I think 
the last four pairs will go to work soon. I 
Tecommend your birds to everybody.—J. M. 
M., Philadelphia. 
HE KNOWS OUR TEACHINGS ARE 
RIGHT. I have read your-Manual carefully, 
studied every point as I went, because I 
wanted to impress it on my mind. I have 
found in my own experience that pigeons do 
just as your Manual says. Your book is 
worth two or three dollars instead of 50 cents. 
I want to thank you for the favor you did 
at finding the oe and charges of some 
things for me. ould you kindly tell me 
what would be the cost of freight charges on 
one hundred, two hundred and three hundred 
pounds of grain?—G. A. S., Georgia. 
FIVE DOLLARS A PAIR WOULD NOT 
BUY HIS. Birds came Friday at noon, and 
accept many thanks for the fine birds you sent 
tome. My friend says $5.00 per pair would 
not buy his.—J. P. B., Georgia. 
PLEASANT BUSINESS FOR A WOMAN. 
You will possibly remember that a year ago 
last April I bought from you twenty-five pairs 
of your Extra Homers. A, 
I now have some eighty pairs in my house 
and have used something like two hundred 
squabs. My birds have done well and I have 
lost only one of my original stock. . 
I am thoroughly convinced that there is 
money raising squabs and it is a very pleasant 
‘business for a woman, requiring only a little 
you are doing fine—R. L. J., 
time each day to attend to them and one soon 
becomes very much attached to them—Mrs. 
M. L., Kentucky, 
GENEROUS TREATMENT. The pigeon 
that I wrote you about a few days ago has 
died. I think it must have been injured in 
shipping. It was a female. I think your 
promise to send another a very generous one, 
and I would appreciate it very much. In 
about two or three months I expect to order 
more birds of you. The others are doing 
excellently.—A. H. B., Massachusetts. " 
_ TRADE BEGETS TRADE. I have’ been 
instrumental in making some sales of pigeons 
for you. At least I have secomamended you to 
several people who said they would buy of you. 
Did a doctor of Fairhope buy a lot 
of pigeons of you? He came over here to see 
me about what I thought of the business and I 
recommended you to him strongly. I just 
sold 30 pair of my pigeons to Dr. O. F. Caw- 
thon and E. J. Buck and I recommended them 
to buy 10 or 12 pairs of you. I will continue 
to advertise you all I can. Later on I want 
to rearrange my house and build up a big 
place and I will send to you for what I need. 
—M. O., Alabama. 
GOOD INCREASE IN SIX MONTHS. 
Yesterday I wrote you for the Manual or 
National Standard Squab Book, but I forgot 
to tell you of some of your birds I have seen. 
Last aust or September a doctor friend of 
mine in Brunswick bought of you six pairs of 
Homers. In two or three weeks they began 
to lay and hatch. He sold four or five pairs 
at $1.00 to $2.00 a pair. He has now between 
seventy and eighty total. They are beauties 
and if mine are as pretty and do as well I don’t 
think I will be disappointed. Please send 
Manual as quick as possible.—G. S., Georgia. 
GOOD RECORD FOR FIRST MONTH. I 
deem it will be gratifying if you know how the 
13 pair of Homers I received from you on May 
3d are doing. 
There has not been a sick one in the lot and* 
they are very much admired by all who see 
Koo and are pronounced first-class Extra 
stock. 
‘They are contented and very busy all the 
time. Eight pe are breeding now, with 
three nests each having a pair of nice healthy 
squabs. I think this a splendid record for the 
first month in a new home,—S. H. W., Penn- 
sylvania. : 
LOST HIS TEXT BOOK. Please find en- 
closed 50 cents, and send me another Nat- 
ional Standard Squab Book. I have mis- 
Remember, these are stories told in 1906, by customers who are really raising squabs 
with our birds and not merely talking about what they are going to do. 
satisfactory results day after day. 
17 
They are getting 
