cA cHaiure Magazine for the 'People 



THE PLANT WORLD 



*fI^AS long ago passed the experimental stage of young magazines, and its 

 II*' seventh year finds it firmly established as the only American publication 

 on popular Botany in the genuine sense. It has articles written by leading 

 botanists all over the country, and one of its special features at present is the 

 series by William E. Safford, formerly Lieutenant Governor of Guam, de- 

 scribing the life and Natural History of that remote island. The photographs 

 of plants published from time to time have been everywhere commended as 

 among the finest examples of this type of work. The department devoted to 

 "The Flower Garden and Greenhouse" is just the thing for those who 

 have a small back yard garden or a few window boxes; and teachers will find 

 the new department of nature study, conducted by Prof. Lloyd, of the 

 Teachers' College in New York, invaluable in their work. 



This Magazine is also the official organ of the Wild Flower Preservation 

 Society of America, an organization devoted to the protection of native plants. 



Subscription Price, $1.50 per Year Sample Copy for a two-cent stamp 

 if tliis Journal is mentioned. Address, 



♦♦ The Plant World Company, 



Box 334 



Washington, D. C. 



BULLETIN OF THE 



Michigan 

 Ornithological Club 



An Illustrated Quarterly Devoted to the 



Ornithology of the Great 



Lake Region, 



A. W. BLAIN JR., Editor. 



J. Claire Wood, \ Associate 

 Adolphe B. Covert, j" Editors. 



Each issvie of the Bulletin is filled with notes 

 fresh from the field and museum. A large 

 cops of field ornithologists are among its con- 

 tributors, which makes the Bulletin indispens- 

 able to all students interested in bird-life in the 

 Great Lake region. The prospects for 1904 

 point toward a greater increase in size and 

 general interest. 



Subscription 50 cents per year. Sample copy 

 15 cents. 



Address all communication.s to 



CHAS. E. WISNER, Business Mgr., 

 DETROIT, MICH. 



The 'Bryologtst 



WITH THE JANUARY, 1904 NUM- 

 BER, begins its seventh year and 

 volume. It is a 16-20 page bi-monthly, 

 devoted to the study of the Mosses, 

 Hepatics and Lichens. It is fully il- 

 lustrated with original, new and ar- 

 tistic drawings and halftones. It 

 meets the needs of both the beginner 

 and the more advanced. 



SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, S1.00 A YEAR 



Address, 



MRS ANNIE MORRILL SMITH, 



78 Orange St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 



THE BRYOLOGIST, now beginning 

 its seventh volume, is the official or- 

 gan of the Sullivant Moss Chapter, a 

 society for the study of the Mosses, He - 

 patics and Lichens by correspondence. 

 Dues |il.lO a year and this carries 

 with it a subscription to the Bryologist 

 Address the Treasurer, 



MRS. ANNIE MORRILL SMITH, 



78 Orange Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 



