168-d THE GARDEN MAGAZINE NoOvEMBER, 1906 
THE GARDEN MAGAZINE 
La for 1907 
OU cannot afford to live another year without Whe 
Garden Magazine, because it is essential in making 
your garden successful and your grounds beautiful, and 
it will contribute immeasureably to the pleasure of your table. 
If you read it you are bound to have a better garden in 
spite of yourself, and it may save you on vegetables alone 
ten times the price of a years subscription. 
The Garden Magazine for the next year will be marked 
by the superb photographic illustrations that have placed it 
head and shoulders above all other gardening periodicals. 
The First ‘Tested’ Planting Tables 
The Planting Tables have formed a conspicuous feature of Che Oarden Magazine. 
They give explicit directions in condensed form at just the time you want them. In the great 
Spring Planting Number—March, 1907—we shall issue the first “tested” planting table ever 
published. These were completed and paid for a year ago and then we returned them to the 
authors and asked them to plant everything according to their own directions in order to fill the 
gaps and correct any possible errors. With these tables you can’t go wrong in your spring planting. 
The “Quality Vegetables” Series 
This is the first series of articles to focus the attention upon the quality from three points 
of view heretofore absurdly separated, 1. é, varieties, cultivation and cooking. 
The Little Monographs of Garden Crops 
Che Garden Magazine has created a new type of horticultural literature in little 
articles on various flowers, vegetables and fruits, such for instance as “All the Phlox Worth 
Growing,” etc. These articles are the first to explain with the utmost clearness the comparative merits and limitations of all 
the species worth growing in every large and complicated group. ‘They tell the real inside truth about the plants, as does the 
whole magazine on every subject that it treats. 
Complete Planting Plans 
Che Garden MBagaszine was the first horticultural periodical to make a specialty of complete planting plans 
which show exactly how to lay out city gardens or country places, what to plant, where to plant it, and how much every- 
thing will cost. We have new and distinguished help in these intricate and perplexing home problems. The ordinary person can 
never afford to employ a landscape gardener and all the great mass of writing on landscape gardening 1s utterly useless. ’ But 
by patiently working month by month and explaining the points in landscape gardening that people really need to know, we 
are getting nearer to solutions for small places. We have the intense gratification of knowing that many of these plans have — 
been adopted by our readers, to their entire satisfaction. 
Other Remarkable Features 
Complete spraying calendar for the home garden, telling how to control every kind of insect enemy. 
There will also be many articles on city roof gardens, vines, bulbs and winter flowers. 
The April and October issues are Double Planting Numbers, which sell at 25 cents each, and alone are worth the 
price of a year’s subscription. They are included in the regular subscniption without extra cost. 
Price 10 Cents a Copy, $1.00 a Year. 
| DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & CO., 133-137 East 16th Street, New York City 
