i88 



Betts, W. H. The Pet Canary. Svo. izsPP- 5'-- 



London : Betts. 1895. 



The Pleasurable Art of Breeding Pet Canaries. 



i/-- London : Betts. ? 1899 



B1.AKSTON, AV. A., W. vSwAYSLAND, and A. F. WiKNKR. 



The Illustrated Book of Canaries and Cage Birds. 



Demy /\to. £,1. London & New York : Cassell. 1880. 

 Canaries by Blakstoii, British Birds by Swayslaiid, Foreign by 

 Wiener. 



Boi^TON James. Harmonia Ruralis, or an Essay towards a 



Natural History of Brilisli Song Birds, Illustrated with 



figures the size of life, male and female, with the nest and 



eggs. So coloured plates. 2 vols. \to. £,\o los. 1824. 



Contains matter of avicuUural interest. 



Another Edition, 1830. Revised and very considerably 



augmented. 



BosviTErx, Peter. Bees, Pigeons, Rabbits, and the Canary 

 Bird, familiarly described. \(iuio. Glasgoiv. 1S40. 



Bradburn, J. Denham. British Birds. 



^vo. i/-. Lo7idon : Feathered World Office. 1891. 



An enlarged and illustrated ^to edition has been pnblislied, 

 Aug. 1903. 



(7b be continued.) 



IReview. 



Qtdet Hours zvith Nature, by Mrs. Brightzven, F.Z.S., F.E.S. 

 T, Fisher Umvin. Cheap Edition, 2/-. 



Mrs. Brightweii is one of the most sticce.ssfiil of 

 the large and ever increasing company of authors who 

 write on natural history subjects from the popular 

 standpoint. This little work lias all the attractive 

 qualities by which the writer's books aredistinguished. 



Mrs. Brightwen has the rare gift of inspiring the 

 confidence of wild creatures. Most of lier pets seem 

 to have been "tamed" without ever having been 

 "captured" — they are, and always have been, free to 

 come and go at will, and their only captivity is the 



