^hc jfovcstcv. 



During the coming Year THE FORESTER, 



the Illustrated Monthly Magazine "f the Ameri- 

 fcan Forestry Association, will lie more interest- 

 , ing and valuable than ever before. No one who 

 "cares for trees or life in the woods, or who is 

 ^interested in the movement to encourage the 

 (preservation and care of the forests should be 



without it. 



Among the contributors are Gifford Pinchot, 

 j Chief of the U. S Division of Forestry; Dr. B. 



E. Fernow, Dean of the New York State College 

 1 of Forestry; Henry Gannett, Geographer of the 



U. S. Geological Survey; Dr. John Gifford; Prof. 



Henry S. Graves, of the Yale Foresl School; Dr. 

 ! C. A. Schenck, of Biltmore, N. C; Hon. James 



Wilson. Secretary of Agriculture; Prof. Win. R. 



Dudley, of Stanford University, Cal.; Prof. N. 



[S. Shaler, of Harvard Universaty; and many 



i others of note and authority on their specialties. 



Besides a number of contributed articles, each 



; issue of the Magazine will contain a record of 



legislation touching the interests of the country's 

 ■ forests (of which there will probably be a great 

 Ideal during the coming year) with editorial 

 I comments, and reviews of recent publications 



by the most competent experts. Each number 



is handsomely illustrated. For a .sample copy 

 . send a two cent stamp to 



THE ^omSSTEJFt, 



, 302 Fourteenth St. s. w., 



Washington, D. C. 



. THE FORESTER is sent to members of the 

 American Forestry Association free of charge. 

 Annual membership dues. $2.00. Life member- 

 ship. 81.00. Sustaining membership, S2.s per 

 year. The association is engaged in work which 

 is of the greatest importance, and for the pro- 

 gress of which all the moral and financial sup- 

 port obtainable is needed. 



' To join the Association address the Secretary, 

 202 Fourteenth Street S. W., 



Washington. I ». C. 



CHOICE NORTH DAKOTA SETS. 



Westi in Willet I" 



Bart. Sandpiper 15 



Wilson's Phalarope .25 



r Kildeer 10 



Spotted Sandpiper. in 



! Belted Piping Plo\ i i. .50 



Pi ni u- Sharp-tail Grouse 20 

 Ch. Collared Longspur..., .15 



S\\ atnson 1 [awk 20 



\1 irsh H.iwk 2ii 



First-class with data. 



I'll: EGI 



Ferruginous Rough-leg 



II iwl 



Short Eared Owl 



Am. Long Eared Owl. . 



i.i.i M Wm- Teal 



Gadwall.. 



( .inv.is-li.ii k Duck 



Red head Duck 



Shoveller 



Mallard 



in 



in 

 .1.1 



::n 

 .-.'ii 

 .30 

 .in 

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Am. Golden-eye "20 



Personally collected, 

 j No exchanges. Carriage prepaid by express on 

 order exceeding S3. 00. On order exceeding $10 

 , net will allow discount 10 per cent. 

 I References: J. P. Norris, Jr.. William Brews- 

 ter and others. 

 j EUGENE S. ROLFE, 



Minnewaukan, N. Dak. 



Khc plant Morlb. | 



A MONTHLY JOURNAL OF POPULAR BOTANY. 

 Bright, Readable and Instructive. 



I hi I ED BY JS 



F. H. KN0WLT0N and CHARLES LOUIS l'< iLLARD. ® 



The first number of Volume IV will appear 

 January 1. 1901, with another associate, and' 

 will contain lb pages, illustrated, together with 

 a monthly supplement of 8 pages devoted to a; 

 series of popular articles on the Families of 

 Flowering Plants, also profusely illustrated.. 

 This course will be just what is needed by those 

 who desire some knowledge of the flowering' 

 plants, but who have neither time nor inclina- 

 tion for the study of ordinary text-books. • 



The Subscription Price of Plant World is Unchanged 

 ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR. 



> fa 



Send in your subscriptions promptly, and 

 make sure of welcome reading twelve months in , 

 the year. 



Address all communications to 



THE PLANT WORLD COMPANY, 



IP. O. BOX! 334 



WASHINGTON. D. C. ' 



THE OOLOGIST 



tot" Albion, N. Y. ) 

 IS THE OLDEST PUBLICATION IN AMERICA.^ 

 Tiik Oologist is the cheapest "Mini'' publication }• 

 in the world (for only 50 cents you receive $1.00 7 

 worth of premiums, your selection, 25c. worth of [ 

 advertising and the Oologist for a whole year). 



The ( (ologist, has a larger paid circulation than, I] 

 all other "Bird" publications in America combined. 

 The Oologist lias long been recognized the best 

 Advertising Medium in its line in the world. The \ 

 "Country Gentlemen" is the leading Agricultural 

 newspaper in America, and in soliciting advertising 

 for its columns, it makes its strongest hit in the fol- !j 

 lowinig statement: "As to quantity of circulation it. 

 publishes many more 'Want, Ails' than all other '. 

 papers combined. You doubtless know what a? 

 Want Ad' circulation must be mnl always isl" < 



From this same stand point The Oologist's rank f. 

 among publications devoted not only to Ornithology 7 

 but Natural History as well, is identical to that of 

 the Country Gentlemen among agricultural -publi- 

 cations. . ^ 



Tiik Oologist has very few half-tones and contains 

 only 10 pages each issue — one half of which are ad- 

 vertisning. j 



During the past fifteen years, (The Oologist's 

 age) many superior "Bird" publications anil scores 

 of inferior ones have dropped by the way. Tui:^ 

 Oologist, however, is still issued each month and 

 a sample copy of a recent issue can always be P 

 obtained by addressing a postal to 7 



FRANK W. LATTIN, Publisher, I 



ALBION, N. V. . 



^&&&&&$ 



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