198 



THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 



Mat, 1906 



TO SUBSCRIBERS 



CARDJ1S G 



MAGAZINE 







WE HAVE made some attrac- 

 tive new coin cards, to carry 

 fifty cents securely through 

 the mails. A description of the 

 practical usefulness of The Garden 

 Magazine is printed on the reverse 

 side, also a blank for a new subscriber 

 to write his name. 



May we not send you a few of these 

 cards — you simply to hand them to 

 your friends who are interested in 

 gardening or in beautifying their 

 home grounds? 



Each card that comes back to us, 

 (the card is numbered and we identify 

 it) secures for you a premium without 

 one cent of expense to you. 



Four cards entitle you to a Dollar Book, prepaid by us. 

 One card counts as 25 cents toward any of the following premiums — our best publications. 

 Thus eight cards will secure $2.00 worth of books. We prepay all express charges. 



A List of the Premiums 



TUCK ;,vv-^ 

 - m\ FIFTY -:;•;-'• 



3:- CENTS .-' '.vT 



"UNDER THE SHRUBBERY » -V" 



XV' ,-«f AND MALL, TO -^ ' \\ ' r V V" 



■^VlliTm^YKiVR NAME AND ADDRESS Oj- t r _KE "3THER SIDE? 



How to Make a Flower Garden (Fullerton), 



$1.60. 

 How to Make a Vegetable Garden (Fullerton), 



$2.00. 

 The First Book of Farming (Goodrich), $1.00. 

 Farming — a year's subscription, $1.00. 

 How to Keep Bees (Comstock), $1.00. 



Roses and How to Grow Them, $1.00. 

 Country Life In America — one year, $4.00 



(6 months, $2.00). 

 The Dog Book, price per part — subscription, 



$1.10 

 The Garden Magazine, $1.00 a year (sent 



to any address). 



The Poultry Book (3 Vols.), $13.60, subscrip- 

 tion. 



How to Plan the Home Grounds (Parsons), 

 $1.00. 



Also a long list of popular novels and other 

 books — list on application. 



Two yearly subscriptions to THE GARDEN MAGAZINE (your own renewal and a new subscription from a friend, not 

 a renewal) sent in at any time this month or next with $2.00 remittance, will count as four cards toward any of the above 

 premiums. 



You would undoubtedly like to own one or more of these practical books, and probably you would be interested to tell 

 your friends about THE GARDEN MAGAZINE. Will you not drop us a postal card, or fill out this coupon, so that we may 

 send you some of the cards now, at the time when your friends will be most benefited by the magazine? 



DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO., G.M. 5 '06 



133-137 East 16th St., New York. 



You may send me 



coin cards, postage prepaid, without any ex- 

 pense to me whatever. 



Yours truly, 



Address- 



Let us send you six, a dozen, or 

 a hundred or more cards. 



DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO. 



I 33 _I 37 E ast 1 6th St., New York. 



