SUPPLEMENT TO 
Orchard & Garden. 
Orchard and Garden is published monthly. It is an illustrated 
national journal devoted to horticulture. Enlarged to 20 pages 9 by 12 
inches. ELEGANTLY PRINTED on the best paper, stitched and 
trimmed. ORIGINAL from beginning to end. PROGRESSIVE and 
entertaining in all its features. Its articles are timely, its tone pure, 
and above all it is EMINENTLY PRACTICAL. Written, Edited and 
Published by Practical Horticulturists. 
OPINIONS OF ITS READERS. 
Articles Short and to the Point. 
Orchaed and Garden is the best journal 
of its kind for the price I have ever read. 
It gives information of every day practical 
value to the gardener and fruit grower. I 
like it all the more because its articles are 
short and to the point giving valuable facts 
in the smallest possible space. — S. E. Row- 
land, Tex. 
Valuable Information in It. 
The Orchard and Garden is a very good 
little monthly, and I find a great deal of 
valuable information in it. — Theo. J. T ha n- 
NO, Germantown, Pa. 
A “Big Tiling.” 
Am greatly delighted with your O. & G. 
I think it a big thing for the money, not 
surpassed anywhere, and my catalogue of 
papers is a long one. — W. H. Sellers, Jack- 
son Co. , Mo. 
Just What He Needs. 
I am pleased with Orchard and Garden 
it being just what I need, as I am beginning 
to set out fruits on my farm and want the 
advice of experienced persons. — T. S. Sher- 
man, Jefferson Co., Neb. 
Good Authority. 
I regard the O. & G. good authority on all 
subjects pertaining to fruit. — D. M. Marus, 
Cherokee Nation, I. T. 
Best Possible Investment. 
I consider Orchard and Garden, the 
best 50 cents investment possible for me to 
make. — A lex. Clark, Livingston Co., N. Y. 
Best in IT. S. 
My opinion of Orchard and Garden is 
that it is the best paper in the United 
States. — E. Tande m an n, Norfolk, Neb. 
Orchard and Garden is the best paper 
on fruit culture published in the United 
States. — A. V. N. Deforest, Middlesex 
Co., N. J. 
Improves all the Time. 
Orchard & Garden improves every 
month, and its visits are received with 
pleasure. — M. Houghton, Middlesex Co., 
O. & G. is first-class and improving all the 
time. — Allen & Mozer, St. Davids, Ont. 
I N THE FUTURE, as in the past, 
the publishers of Orchard & Gar- 
den are determined and prepared to 
keep this journal at the head of all hor- 
ticultural publications in America. No 
efforts and no expense will be spared 
to fill its pages with thoroughly practi- 
cal and instructive articles from the pens 
of the foremost horticultural scientists 
and writers. We do not aim at literary 
effect; but we do aim to give our read- 
ers trustworthy information on all topics 
of interest to horticulturists and to make 
the paper entertaining and of fullest 
value to all subscribers. How far we 
are succeeding in this, and how well it 
is appreciated by its extensive circle of 
readers may be inferred from the testi- 
monials voluntarily tendered it, a few of 
which we publish herewith. And we 
are to-day better prepared to follow up 
our success and prosecute the work of 
making Orchard & Garden invalu- 
able to its readers than has been the 
case in any previous year. 
Too Good For tlie Price. 
You are making a good paper, and far too 
good for the price. — A. S. Fuller, Bergen 
Co., N. J. 
Worth Ten Times the Subscription. 
The intrinsic value of your paper cannot 
be less than ten times the subscription price 
especially to any beginner in fruit culture. 
— A. M. Howell, Greenville Co., S. C. 
Can’t Succeed Without It. 
I send renewal of my subscription. Can’t 
succeed in fruit culture without ORCHARD 
and Garden.— Wm. H. Kismer, Monmouth 
Co., N. J. 
Deserves a Large Patronage. 
Your paper is well deserving the large 
patronage it receives. Its candor and pro- 
gressive spirit commend it to all interested 
in any way in horticultural matters. — Prof. 
F. Lamson Scribner, Knoxville, Term. 
Best Thing Extant. 
Orchard and Garden is the best thing 
extant for the small fruit grower. — W. A. 
Huntsman, Ray Co. , Mo. 
The Paper That is Kept. 
Have been taking eight papers, but am 
now dropping all but three of which Or- 
chard and Garden is one. — H. M. String- 
fellow, Hitchcock, Tex. 
Each Number Worth the Subscription. 
The Orchard and Garden is as solid as a 
hard burned brick. In almost every num- 
ber I see some one article that I consider 
worth the yearly subscription price. — B. F. 
Livingston, Alachua Co., Fla. 
It Gives Both Pleasure and Information. 
I have derived much useful information 
and pleasure from Orchard and Garden. 
— Hampton Dodge, Niagara Co., N. Y. 
The Gardener’s Treasuie. 
Received Orchard and Garden. ’Tis 
the orebardists and gardener’s, treasure. — 
D. V. Suttle, Siskiyou Co., Cal. 
Valuable to Fruit Growers. 
It is a valuable journal for fruit growers. 
I have taken it since the first issue. — B. F. 
Smith, Douglass Co., Kan. 
Deserves a Place in Every Home. 
You certainly make a very handsome and 
valuable journal and it deserves a place in 
every home in the land . — Evening N«w», 
Jackson, Mich. 
