THE MUSEUM. 



Relief Maps 



FOR SCHOOLS 

 OF ALL GRADES. 



^M- Systematic Collectiins. 



MINERALOGY, GEOLOGY, ZOOLOGY, 



LANTERN SLIDES, ETC. 



Washington School Collections. 



Miuerals, Rocks aud luvertebrate Aiiimals. 



It is safe to say that no collections of equal excel- 

 lence have ever before been offered in this country at 

 so low a price ($a each). Send for circular. 



EDWIN E. HOWELL, 



612 17th St.. N. W., Washington, D. C. 



Naturalists' Supply Depot. 



Catalogue for '95 now Ready. 



TINY 



Send 10 cents for copy. 



REDUCED PRICES. 



FRANK BLAKE WEBSTER CO., 



HYDE PARK, MASS. 



The Naturalist. 



An illustrated 2U-page monthlj' devoted to the 



stud}' of Nature. 



Circulation rapidly increasios:, now being 3000 



Only 50 cents per Year. 



FREE EXOHAKGE COLUMN. 



Send in your subscription and commence 

 with vol. 2, No. 1. Vol. 2 commences with 

 the January, 1895. number, and will contain 

 over 100 Illustrations during the year. 



Address, 



G. B. CHENEY, 



OREGON CITY, OREGON 



GAMELAND 



The Sportsman-Naturalist's 



illustrated magazine, reveals 



virgin woods and waters, and 



treats exhaustively of birds, 



fishes and quadrupeds, camp 



life, wood-craft and general 



natural history and natural 



science. It i.s" not a vulgar 



"sporting" sheet: the household reads it. Twelve 



numbers make a book of 400 pages. Subscription f 1 



yearly, postage free, any address. With The Museum 



*!.. 50; three trial numbers, 85 cents No free copies. 



Address: Gameland, i:J Astor Place, New York, N.Y. 



BIRDS 



Skins. Eggs. Moimted Birds. Stamps, 

 Cui-ios at lowest rates. 12 varieties 

 Birds' Skins, Sl.OO Mounted Birds. 

 f)Q cents each. Approval sheets of 



Stamps at ."iO per cent discount. Fresh Bii-d's Skins. 



in season, same price as others. Lists free. 



ti-yr F. T CORT.ESS. LOS GATOS. CALIF. 



Arrow Heads 



ot semi-precious stone from Oregon, New 

 Mexico, Arizona, etc., are elegant and becom- 

 ing scarce. 10,000 flint Axtows and Spears 

 from all over the United States, from $.05 to 

 $2.00 each — common forms to choice and rare. 



A vai'iety will be sent on application to any 

 one giving good I'eferences. I pay postage 

 one way. A few cents will return the pacK 

 age. 



The Noble Fossils of the Cheyenne River 

 Bad Lands. Three tons of fine Minerals; 

 most all the species in Dana furnished. 



Shells, Aluminum Goods, 



Agate and Pyrites Je^velry, 



Sioux Indian Relics. 



Catalogue with prices, for stamp. 



Natural History Establishment 



L. W. STILWELL, 



WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, 



DEADWOOD, S. D. 



The Iowa Ornithologist. 



A Quarterly Magazine, devoted to Ornitholo- 

 gy and Oology. 

 Forty cents per year- Sample copies lOc. 

 Published forThe Iowa Ornithological Ass'n. 

 David L. Savage, Editor, Salem, la. 



Becoming Scarcer Every Year! . 



What? The Original Historic Confeder- 

 ate Money, the money that paid the hard struggling 

 soldier in the gloomy days gone by. The "War" is 

 over, our hard feelings towards the east and north 

 have gone too, they are now our friends and we are 

 theirs. But should not every collector of Historic Rel- 

 ics, store away in his collection, a collection of these 

 scarce bills while they may be had at a reasonable fig- 

 ure? We have all the dates and denominations and 

 will send any collector $100 assorted bills for 25c and 

 $500 for 50c, $1000 for .$1. Stamps taken same as cash. 

 Address, 



BOWEN BROS. 

 Ij-A-NSIN-Ca-, -A.R,IC. 



Are You a Sportsman? 



If so, you cannot afford 

 to be without 



"GAME AND SHOOTING," 



A 16-page monthly, brimful of interesting 

 reading. 



ONLY FIFTY CENTS PER ANNUM. 



Published by Ed F. Habeklein & Son, 

 McPherson, Kan. 



