274 APPKxnrx. 



written ; not adapted, however, to students too young to use a 

 standard botany, though it is as little technical as p(jssible. 

 Wright, Bird-craft. $3.00. 



Two hundred birds pictured and ably described. 

 MiNOT, Land and Game Birds of New England. 83.50. 



Accurate and untechnical, an excellent book to get one into the spirit 

 of the study, but scantily illustrated. 

 McIlwuaith, Birds of Ontario. $2.00. 



Good not only for the birds of Canada, but for the more northern 

 states as well ; illustrated. 

 Blanohan, Bird Neighbors. $2.00. 



Fifty colored plates. 

 Blanohan, Birds that Hunt and are Hunted. $2.00. 



Forty-eight colored plates. These two books cover most of the better- 

 known land and water birds, and give good colored pictures to 

 guide in identification. 

 Eliot, North American Shore Birds. $2.50. 



Includes all the snipe, sandpipers, plovers, etc., with fine drawings of 

 each species, and accurate technical descriptions ; also short account 

 of habits. 

 Eliot, Gallinaceous Game Birds of North America. $2.50. 



Treats theturkeys, grouse, quail, etc., afterthesamemethod as theabove. 

 Corey, How to Know the Ducks, Geese, and Swans of North America. 

 Paper covers, $1.00. 



A fully illustrated and thoroughly prepared manual. 

 Corey, How to Know the Shore Birds of North America. Paper, $.75. 



Similar to the above in scope and plan ; fully illustrated. 

 Langille, Our Birds in their Haunts. $3.00. 



A high authority on songs, habits, etc., and long a favorite work with 

 beginners. 

 Fisher, Hawks and Owls of the United States. (United States Bulletin.) 

 Has very fine colored plates of each species, with full account of the 

 economic value of each. 

 Nuttall, Handbook of Ornithology. Revised by Chamberlain. 2 vols., 

 $9.00. 



A modernized reprint of an old and valuable work. 

 Belding, Land Birds of the Pacific Coast. $2.50. 

 Goss, Birds of Kansas. $7.50. 



Five hundred and twenty-nine species treated ; thirty-five plates ; a 

 recognized authority, not only on the birds of Kansas, but of all 

 the Mississippi Valley. 



