78 



THE OOLOGIST. 



THE OOLOGIST. 



SSITES AITB PUBLISHED BI-UOKTHL? 



FRANK H. LATTIN, - ALBION, N. Y. 



Correspondence and items of interest to the student 

 of Birds, their Nests and Eggs, solicited from all. 



Terms of Subscription. 



Single Subscription, - - 25c per Annum. 



Sample Copies, - - - -5c each. 



The above rates include postage and premium. 



Terms of Advertising, 



Single insertions, 10 cents a line, nonpareil. 



I time. 3 times. 6 times 



Five lines $ .50 I 1.25 $2.00 



One inch i.oo 2.50 4.00 



J^ column 3.50 8.75 1400 



I '* 6.50 16.25 26.00 



One page ; 12.00 31 .25 50.00 



Advertisements under five lines charged one line 

 extra. Yearly advertisements payable quarterly in 

 advance. 



Special discounts can sometimes given on advertise- 

 ments. Send copy for estimate. 



Remittances should be made by draft on New 

 York ; money order or postal note payable at Albion, 

 N. ^ ., registered letter, or by the American, U. S., or 

 Wells & Fargo E.xpress Co. Money Order. Unused 

 U. S. postage stamps of any denomination will be 

 accepted for sums under one dollar. Make money 

 orders and drafts payable and address all subscrip- 

 tions and communications to, 



FRANK H. LATTIN. 



Albion, Orleans Co., N. Y. 



Entered at the Post Office at Albion, N. Y., as sec- 

 ond-class mail matter. 



JOTTINGS. 



Our regular business has caused the delay 

 of this issue. 



Our new twenty -page catalogue for the 

 ornithologist, oologist and taxidermist is 

 one of the best and most complete of the 

 kind ever issued. Send for it. 



Next Oologist will not be issued until 

 July 1st, and will contain in full a cata- 

 logue of our surplus stock, including min- 

 erals, fossils, curiosities of all kinds, coins, 

 stamps, etc. 



Special attention is called to the few 

 sample descriptions on another page, taken 

 from Davie's invaluable work. Only a few 

 copies are left ; the price is .$1.00 per copy. 

 You will find it worth three times that 

 amount. 



A sample copy of this Oologist goes to 

 nearly every known oologist, ornithologist 

 and taxidermist in America. We think you 

 can glean 35 cents worth of information 

 from! ts pages during '87. Try, and be 

 convinced. 



Carefully read every advertisement in 

 this Oologist, but stop long enough after 

 reading the full page advertisement of 

 Messrs. Rand& Reed, of Worcester, Mass., 

 to send for their list of shades and then 

 order one or more of them, we will guar- 

 antee you will never regret it. If you are 

 not a taxidermist they will tit you up the 

 shade complete for your parlor, dining- 

 room, or ofUce. ' ' Lattin " has a sample 

 of this firm's handiwork in a Ruffed 

 Grouse, handsomely mounted on a rich 

 plush panel, framed in a fine heavy gilt 

 frame and covered with one of those 

 shades for his dining-room. Words can 

 not express its beauty and attractivenes — it 

 is both artistic and life-like, and this shade 

 brings the specimen right to the front 

 where it can be seen and admired. We 

 would not exchange our dining-room piece 

 for a fifty-dollar painting. 



In regard to the value of our new "Book 

 of Dates" and " Field Notes," we allow a 

 few of the leading oologists to speak : 



" No person making a study of nests and 

 eggs can afford to be without these two 

 valuable books. Oologists will certainly 

 lose no time, money, and valuable notes 

 and records without these necessary articles 

 in the field. You may depend upon my 

 patronage for these books annually. 



Oliver Davie." 



"lam Justin receipt of 'Field Notes' 

 and ' Book of Dates ' which you so kindly 

 sent me. Of the latter, I can say .with 

 Chancellor Winchell, ' It occupies worthily 

 an important place absolutel}" unfilled to 

 this time. ' Of the former, it is just what 

 I have long needed, and you deserve as 

 much credit for the inception of these as 

 for the tasteful mani^^r in which they are 

 executed. Harry G. Parker." 



" They are l)oth necessities indeed, and 

 every live collector should find a place for 

 them in his drawer of iudispensables. 



Saml. B. Lado. 



