Febhcaut, 1911 



THE GARDEN M A G A Z I N E 



8-i 



"To business that we love we rise betime 

 And go to 't with delight." — Antony and Cleopatra 



SPRING MAGIC 



is in the air ! The wise are planning their gar- 

 dens — or planning to get them. City- worn people 

 are beginning to think about getting a country 

 house. Doubleday, Page and Company have under- 

 taken the task of making the season doubly at- 

 tractive to all those fortunate people whose pulse 

 quickens at the idea of Spring in the Country. 



For instance: 



The Garden and Farm Almanac for 191 1 is ready 

 to stand at your elbow and tell you what, when and 

 where. Much bigger and much better than ever : 



25 cents. 



The special 

 number of Coun- 

 try Life in Am- 

 erica for Feb- 

 ruary is devoted 

 to Bungalows. 

 The last word — 

 indeed all of the 

 last words about 

 Bungalows and 

 not near-bun- 

 galows, but real 

 ones. Fifty dol- 

 lars' worth of 

 practical in- 

 formation. Fifty 

 dollars' worth of 

 1 ; pool plans and a 



An outdoor room. 50 feet wide by 100 feet long, formed thousand dollars 

 by tbe planting of 50 large cedars, all of them brought , , r ■ 



20 miles or more worth of inspira- 



tion for 20 cents. Four dollars pays for 24 numbers a 

 year of Country Life in America. 



The Garden Magazine will blossom forth next month 

 in a riot of Spring plans. $1.50 a year. 



The Nature Library and the Garden Library should 

 be in your hands now for Spring planning. 



If you are to enjoy the next few months to the 

 full, lay some reading plans now, and our books, maga- 

 zines, and service department will answer your questions 

 and are at your disposal. 



Doubleday, Page & Company 



P. S. and important. Our address is Garden City, 

 Long Island, New York. We have a well-equipped 

 bookstore in the Pennsylvania Station, New York, and an 

 advertising office at 133 East 16th Street, New York, 

 but send your letters to Garden City, N. Y. We have 

 our own W. U. telegraph office in the building. 



