HANDBOOK OF BIRDS.— {Continued.) 



OPINIONS OF ORNITHOLOGISTS AND OF THE PRESS. 



" The ' Handbook ' is thoroughly original in conception and execution, and con- 

 tains features entirely novel and of special merit. It is written in simple, nontech- 

 nical language, with special reference to the needs of amateurs and bird-lovers, yet 

 with an accuracy of detail that makes it a standard authority on the birds of eastern 

 North America."— J. A. Allen, Editor of TJie Auk. 



" This is far and away the best book of the kind that has appeared in this or any 

 other country for many years ; it is easily first, and with a long interval among 

 numerous recent competitors for public favor. . . . The author has scored a brilliant 

 success ; his prescriptions can be taken from cover to cover with the assurance that 

 they will cure any case, short of invincible ignorance. . . . In its own field it will 

 stand for an indefinite period without a possible i:i\Si\.^'— Elliott Coues, in The Nation. 

 " The plan and originality of the 'Handbook,' its copious illustrations, bountiful 

 keys, guccincr accounts of habits, convenient size, and low price insure its wide pop- 

 ularity, while as a handbook of the birds of eastern North America it is bound to 

 supersede all other works. It is a boon to the amateur, a convenience to the profes- 

 sional, and will prove a help and incentive to the study of birds."— C.//a/'^ Me?riam, 

 Chief of the U. S. Biolojical Suroey, Department of Agriculture, Washington, I). C. 

 " I am delighted with the ' Handbook.' It has several new features valuable for 

 beginners, by which identification is greatly simplified. . . . The illustrations are 

 particularly excellent, and the whole is so entirely trustworthy and up to date that I 

 can heartily recommend it."— Olii'e Thorns Miller. 



"I have examined the 'Handbook ' with the greatest satisfaction. It is what I 

 hoped for, what we have all waited for— a true manual, covering a broad field, but 

 not too broad, and crammed with knowledge, but brightened throughout with pleas- 

 ant description ; a book, I should think, for every student of birds, whether he 

 knows much or little ; invaluable, certainly, for all earnest amateurs."— 2?mrf/ort/ 

 Torrey. 



"Without doubt the most satisfactory work of its kind that has appeared. ... It 

 is and will remain an authority, and is indispensable to all who would become fa- 

 miliar with our bird life."— Z'wWic Opinion. 



"The best key to our Eastern bi-ds that has yet been published. . . . Will be 

 speedily recognized as an authoritative book on h\iA»." -Philadelphia Ledger. 



" The combination of popular and scientific has Ijcen nowhere so successfully 

 accomplished."— The Bookman. 



"A delightful and alluring introduction to this fascinating study."— .Ve^c York 

 Examiner. 



"Here at last is the book we all want."— .V. Y. Evangelist. 



"By long odds the best book on the subject that has ever yet been written."— 0«r 

 Animal Fi'iends. 



" Nothing has been neglected in the structure of the work, and one can but ap- 

 plaud the masterly manner in which its scheme has been carried out."-7'/;« Dial. 



"It is a remarkably well-conceived work admirably carried out.- — Atlantic 

 Monthly. 



"It should be in the hands not only of every student of ornithology but of every 

 individual who loves Nature and outdoor life."— Smnlay-School Times. 



D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, Publishers, 



72 Fifth Avenue, New York. 



