BOOKS for NATURE LOVERS 



"THE AMERICAN ANIMAL BOOK" 



MOOSWA and Others of the Boundaries 



By W. A. FRASER. With J2 full-page illustrations by Arthur Heming. Crown 8vo, $2.00. 



Author and illustrator have cooperated in making' this story of the woods and 

 their chief denizens a book of imag-inative interest and romantic realism. Each 

 knows the Canadian wilderness with the thoroughness of long familiarity, and 

 together they have vividly portrayed the world of the trackless northern forest. 

 The various fur-bearing animals are the dramatis personce of an animal story 

 which depicts animal life from the inside. 



cNjyru in the 7tst thousand 



WILD ANIMALS I HAVE KNOWN 



By ERNEST SETON-THOMPSON. With 200 illustrations from drawings by the 

 Author. Square 8vo, $2.00. 



" It should be put with Kipliug- and Hans Christian Andersen as a classic." — The Athenceum. 

 '' This book is unique in conception and illustration. . . . One of the most valuable contribu- 

 tions to animal psycholog-y and biography that has yet appeared." — The American Naturalist. 



Enlarged, Rewritten, and Entirely Reset 



HOW TO KNOW THE WILD FLOWERS 



By MRS. WILLIAM STARR DANA. With 48 Colored Plates and New Black and 

 White Drawings. A Guide to the Names, Haunts, and Habits of our Common Wild 

 Flowers. With 48 full-page Colored Plates by Elsie Louise Shaw, and 110 full-page 

 illustrations by Marion Satterlee. 60th thousand. Crown 8vo, $2.00 net. 



"Of all the aids to the study of nature none has won a wider popularity than Mrs. William 

 Starr Dana's ' How to Know the Wild Flowers.' Here accurate science is put ia a simple, practical 

 form, and ' resented with unusual grace of style, and the book has become the favorite companion 

 for open-air rambles of flower lovers who were daunted by the dry particularity of the average 

 botany." — Chicago Evejiing Post. 



OUR NATIVE TREES, and How to Identify Them 



By HARRIET L. KEELER. Second edition, revised. With 178 full-page illustrations 



from photographs, and 162 illustrations from drawings. Crown 8vo, $2.00 net. 



"It will be surprising if this does not prove the best and most popular book upon the trees 

 which has so far appeared. . . . The popular descriptions which follow the botanical are info m- 

 iug and valuable. They tell us just what we wish to know about our trees— their habits, peculiari- 

 ties, and appearance in history and literature. . . . For prac'ical purposes we commend this guide 

 above any we have seen." — Brooklyn Times. 



OUR COMMON BIRDS, and How to Know Them 



By JOHN B. GRANT. With 64 full-page plates. I6th thousand. Oblong I2mo. $1.50 net. 



" The book is learned, but not too much so for common use, and, if carefully studied, it will 

 introduce the student into the interesting world of bird life. The book has more than sixty plates 

 of the commoner American birds, with decriptions, and a very enjoyable and instructive introduc- 

 tory essay." — The Congregatioitalist. 



CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, pHPhV^J^.^k^^- 



