FOR. SUMMER. READING 



The Nature Library 



HAS EXCEPTIONAL CHARM AND VALUE. 



IS it a pleasant hour with Nature 

 you wish? Or would you con- 

 firm a recollection of some 

 point brought up during a recent 

 outing, identify a species, or put 

 your finger on some fugitive fact 

 in Nature? These are but a few of 

 the many uses the books have 

 aside from theii principal value as 

 a complete guide to the study of 

 American Natural History, and 

 their attractiveness as entertaining 

 reading. 



THE long out-door season will 

 mean much more to you and to 

 the little ones if these beauti- 

 ful volumes are at band for counsel 

 and entertainment. All the year 

 they keep the country in the home, 

 and all that is best and mostattrac- 

 tivein Natureis ever before you. 



"As neressary as the dictionary, but fnr more 

 inferesting." 



TEN SÜPERB LARGE VOLUMES. 



4,000 pages, 10>4" x 7% inches; 300 plates in füll colors; 450 half-tone, 

 photographs; 1,500 other illustrations, and a general introduction by 



John Burroughs. /, „ . 



^ /Am.Orni. 



You will incur no Obligation and you will become informod about a most no- 

 table work by sending to us the coupon opposite. 



WE wish to submit an elabor- 

 ate booklet, which will show 

 better than anything except 

 the books themselves the beauty, 

 authoritativeness, and usefulnessof 

 the new edition of 



THE NATURE LIBRARY. 



^/ Genf lernen: 



Og You niay 



b] send me at 



^/your expense 



r /the new book- 



^/let containing 



/Tysample color 



/plates. black 



.^/and white -half 



<i/tones. specinien 



Ü/text pages, etcof 



'The Nature Lib- 



/rary. Includealso 



'partioulars of price 



^-ind terms. 



DOUBLEDAY. PAGE &. CO.. 



PUBLISHERS 



54 Union Square, New York 



Name. 



CoviiAtry Life 

 irv America^ 



TKe World'«/ 

 Work/ 



' A ddress . 



'City. 



