*i&£»*8tr 



^ be tfoxestex. 



During the coming Year THE FORESTER, 



- the Illustrated Monthly Magazine of the Ameri- 

 I can Forestry Association, will be more interest- 

 \ ing and valuable than ever before. No one who 

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

 I interested in the movement to encourage the 

 , preservation and care of the forests should be 

 without it. 



Among the contributors are Gilford Piuchot, 



\( hief of the TJ. S. Division of Forestry; Dr. B. 



i mow, Dean of the New York State College 



estry; Henry Gannett, Geographer of the 



I -. Geological Survey: Dr. John Gifford: Prof. 



Henry S. < traves, of the Yale Forest School; Dr. 



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



n, Secretary of Agriculture; Prof. Win. K. 



Dud y, of Stanford University, Cal.; Prof. N. 



S. Shaler, of Harvard Universaty; and many 



i of note and authority on their specialties. 



numbei of contributed articles, each 



; issue of the Magazine will contain a record of 



.lation touching the interests of the country's 



f' r - (of which there will probably be a great 



di tiring the coming year) with editorial 



I co nts. and reviews of recent publications 



03 tl most competent experts. Each number 



is handsomely illustrated. For a sample copy 



sci la two cent stamp to 



THOE PORESTEB, 



•>'()-i Fourteenth St. s. TV., 



Washington, D. C. 



. THE FORESTER is sent to members of the 

 ican Forestry Association free of cha 



ership dues, $2.00. Life member- 

 Sustaining membership, $25 per 

 11 iii ton is engaged in work which 

 is of the greatest importance, and for the pro- 

 (vhich all the moral and financial sup- 

 porl 1 ibtainable is needed. 



To join th ■ Association address the Secretary, 

 202 Fourteenth Street S. W., 



Washington, D. C. 



CHOICE NORTH DAKOTA SETS. 



Western Will, t 



• Ban. s mdpiper 



Wilson's Phalarope 



" k 1 : ' 



Spotted Sandpiper. 



1 i er. . . . 



Prairie Sharp-tail Grouse. 



Ch. Collared Longspur.... 



S tnson Hawk 



awl 



PER EGG. 



Ferruginous Rough-leg 



Hawk CO 



Short Eared Owl 40 



Am Long Eared Owl... .15 



Green Wing Teal 30 



Gadwall 20 



Canvas -back Duck 30 



Red-head Duck 10 



Shoveller It 1 



Mallard OH 



Am. Golden-eye 20 



First-class with data. Personally collected. 

 Nn exchanges. Carriage prepaid by express on 

 order exceeding $3.00. On order exceeding- $10 



11 allow discount 10 per cent. 

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

 ter and others; 

 , EUGENE S. ROLFE, 



Minnewaukan, N. Dak. 



Zbe plant Moulb. § 



A MONTHLY JOURNAL OF POPULAR BOTANY ~\J 



Bright, Readable and Instructive. 



EDITED BY I 



F. H. KNOWLTON and CHARLES LOUIS POLLARD. ! 



The first number of Volume IV will appear 

 January 1, 1901, with another associate, and 

 will contain 16 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 TEAR. \ 



Send in your subscriptions promptly, and tV*. 

 make sure of welcome reading twelve months in 'J* 

 the year. ^if 



Address all communications to 



THE PLANT WORLD COMPANY, 



F. O. BOX 334. 



WASHINGTON, D. C. 



THE OOLOGIST 



(of Albion, N. V | 



IS THE OLDEST PUBLICATION IN AMERICA, j 



Tin- OSlogist is the cheapest "Bird" publication ' 

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

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

 ulverl ising and the Oologist for a whole year). 



'I in-: Oologist, luis a larger paid circulation than, ' 

 ■ill other "Bird" publications in America combined, 

 Tin Oologist has lunjr been recognized the best 

 Advertising Medium in its line in the world. The i 

 "Country Gentlemen" is t lie leading Agricultural 

 newspaper in America, and in soliciting advertising 

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

 lowinig statement: "As to quantity of circulation it j 

 publishes many more 'Want Ads' than all other\ 

 papers combined. You doubtless know what a ( 

 Wan1 Ad' circulation must be and always isl" 



From this same stand point The Oologist's rank ( 

 among publications devoted not only to Ornithology ( 

 but Natural History as well, is identical to that of 

 the Country Gentlemen among agricultural publi- 

 cations, i 



Thk Oologist has very few half-tones ami contains 

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

 vertising. ] 

 During the past fifteen years, (The Oologist's 

 age) many superior "Bird" publications and scores 

 of inferior ones have dropped by the way. The I 

 Oologist, however, is still issued each mouth and | 

 .1 sample copy of a recent issue can always be t 

 obtained by addressing a pi stal tn j 



FRANK W. LATTIN, Publisher, 



ALBION, N. Y. 



r3> *-'^r 



