NOV 141902 

 76 HOME AND FLO WERS 



♦ ♦ ♦ 



Plant Roses Now! 



The Fall Start Helps Them. 

 Five Choice Kinds Given Away. 



Our Latest and Best Premiuni Offer 



You may bave Tlie Floral World one year and Five Choice Rose 



Plants, assorted colors, for only 35 cents. This is the regular subscription 

 price of the journal, so you are getting the Roses FRESE. 



We wish to largely increase the subscription list of The Floral 

 World, and we wish to have our friends try Fall planting of Roses. 

 Many persons bave found Fall planting much better than Spring 

 planting. 



We recommend Fall planting in all sections where the cold of the 

 winter is not too severe. If you have never planted in the Fall, liow- 

 ^ ever, better make a trial on a small scale. Our splendid offer enubh-s 

 you to do so at practically no cost. Remember, subscribe for 



THE FLORAL WORLD 25 cts. 



and we will give you 



FIVE ROSE PLANTS FREE. 



The Roses will be of assorted kinds and colors, especially selected 

 to suit your locality. As far as possible we will send one white, one 

 red, one yellow, one pink and one intermediate color. Five Choice Rose 

 Plants and The Floral World a year for only 25 cents. Order at once. 

 Address 



THE FLORAL WORLD, Springfield, Ohio. 



"CIVIC PROGRESS" 



A Quarterly Publication Devoted 

 to Home and Public Improve, 

 ment in City and Country. 



Beginning with October, "Civic Progress" will appear quarterly as a chronicle of 

 American civic betterment effort. Supplementing the monthly magazines by filling a dis- 

 tinctive field of its own, "Civic Progress" will present the less ephemeral literature of the 

 movement in attractive and inexpensive form. The quarterly will thus constitute a record 

 of significant developments of unusual value in the propaganda of the movement for a "More 

 Beautiful America." 



The October issue contains a full report of the annual convention of the American 

 League for Civic Improvement, giving in full the papers and addresses which made that 

 event so notable in the history of the betterment movement. This number alone is well 

 worth the price of a year's subscription — 50 cents. Single copies, 15 cents. 



The second number will portray some noteworthy events of recent occurrence which 

 indicate the trend of popular and professional interest in the "model city" and the "model 

 farm." This number will have added value in view of the proposal of the American League 

 •) for Civic Improvement that concrete illustrations of modern city building and rural better- 

 ment be shown as leading features of the St. Louis Exposition. 



Subsequent issues will cover the significant phases of influential gatherings, important 

 events and progressive thought. Arts and Crafts, Rural Problems, and other questions 

 >) common to all communities will receive authoritative and helpful treatment. 



SEND IN YOUR SUBSCRIPTION TO-DAY. 

 PER YEAR, 50 CTS. 15 CTS. PER COPY. 



,j Address: CIVIC PROGRESS, Springfield, Ohio^ 



