194 NATURE-STUDY REVIEW [7:7— Oct., 1911 



tures of the uncouth baby and its royal parents. Thirty-two of 

 these illustrate the volume. One only wishes that more of the 

 author's details of observation accompanied the pictures. There 

 are only thirty-eight pages of text. Yet enough is given to make 

 a fascinating tale of hardships and persistence and a vivid idea 

 of the life history of this great bird. 



Photography for Bird-Lovers. — Cloth 5s. 



The Home-Life of a Golden Eagle. — Paper 5s. 



There has recently come from the press of Ginn & Co. a 

 new text book in botany, under the title of "Practical Botany," 

 by Joseph Y. Bergen and Dr. Otis W. Caldwell. The book con- 

 tains twenty-six chapters, which average about twenty pages 

 each. After a short discussion of the occurrence of plants in 

 nature, there follows a brief treatment of the roots, stems and 

 leaves, buds and branches, the flower, pollination, seeds and 

 seed distribution. With chapter ten the authors take up the 

 discussion of the great groups of plants using in general the 

 stock examples as types of the various groups. Chapter twenty 

 begins with what may be called the economic part of the book 

 and the remaining chapters are largely economic and ecological. 



The book seems to be a very well balanced work treating 

 with equal fulness the different divisions of the botanical field. 

 While the authors have condensed the material greatly the book 

 has not suffered from it and one does not feel that he is reading 

 a mass of dry facts as is so often the case in texts of this char- 

 acter. 



The authors have certainly made the material justify the 

 title, and have given us a real "Practical Botany" and the time 

 is ripe for its reception. ($1.25). W. McN. 



ALL ABOUT THE WILDFLOWERS 



All the little bits of information about plants, that do not 

 get into the technical magazines will be found in The American 

 Botanist. This makes it a mine of information for even the well 

 informed teacher. It gives you a new viewpoint and makes com- 

 mon things new in consequence. Sample copy free. Sample 

 volume, unbound, 35 cents. Subscription 75 cents a year. A set 

 of 16 volumes already published for $8.00 postpaid. Every 

 nature-study teacher ought to order it today. 

 WILLARD N. CHUTE & CO., JOLIET, ILL. 



