16 



Frank Chapman. Subscription $1 per year. Address, Bird-Lore, Crescent 

 and Mulberry streets, Harrisburg, Pa. 



The Canadian Field NaturaUst, the continuation of the Ottawa 

 NaturaUst, is a monthly (nine numbers a year) published by the Ottawa 

 Field Naturalists Club, Editor, Arthur Gibson, Entomological Branch, 

 Dept. of Agriculture, Ottawa, Ont. Subscription $1 per year. Address 

 G. L. Patch, Sec, Geological Survey, Ottawa, Ont. This publication 

 contains a great deal of interesting zoological material and numerous 

 notes and articles on the birds of Canada. 



On the subject of protection and attraction of birds about the home, 

 among the great mass of Uterature available, the following can be specially 

 recommended: 



How to attract and protect wild birds, by Martin Hiesmann: Witherby & Co., London, 



Is. 6d. 



This is an extended account of the methods pursued by Baron Berlepsch in 



Germany and gives innumerable methods by which the end can be obtained on both 



large and small estates. 

 Wild bird guests, by Harold Baynes: E. P. Dutton & Co., 1915, $2. 



This gives a most interesting and readable account of the method pursued by 



the writer and his friends whereby they made Meriden, New Hampshire, a veritable 



model bird village, where the birds became as famihar and friendly as household pets, 



coming when called and ahghting freely upon the person. It is beautifully illustrated 



with innumerable photographs showing both methods and results. 

 The domestic cat, by Edward H. Forbush, State Ornithologist, Mass.: State Board of 



Agriculture, Bulletin No. 2, 1916. 



This is an exhaustive treatment of the house cat in its relation to wild bird life. 

 Bird houses and how to build them, by Ned Dearborn: United States Department of 



Agriculture, Farmer's Bulletin No. 609. Address Department of PubUc Documents, 



Washington, D.C. Cost about ten cents. 



On the subject of the English Sparrow as a pest the following can be 

 recommended : 



The English Sparrow in North America, by Walter B. Barrows: Bull. No. 1, U.S. Dept- 



of Agriculture, 1889, pp. 405. 

 How to destroy the English Sparrow, by Ned Dearborn: Farmer's BuUetia No. 383, 



U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1910. 

 The Enghsh Sparrow as a pest, by Ned Dearborn: Farmer's Bulletin No. 493, U.S. Dept. 



of Agriculture, 1912. 



These reports give the English Sparrow a fair trial and an honest conviction, and 



suggest various means of keeping its number under control. 



KEY TO THE BIRDS OF EASTERN CANADA. 



Explanation. 



In zoological descriptions a " key " is a device through which a speci- 

 men can be gradually referred from larger to smaller groups by picking 

 out salient characters and its specific identity thus finally fixed. 



The key here pubhshed is a modification of one originated by Mr. 

 Frank Chapman and Ernest Thompson Seton and published in the former's 

 " Handbook to the birds of eastern North America." It is hoped that 

 it will be found of great assistance to the beginner. One advantage of 

 this key is that it is independent of the varying characters of age, sex, or 

 season, and may be used for juveniles and females as well as adult male 

 specimens. 



