XI 



Bears— Birds— Pheasants— Quail— Wi Id Turkeys — 

 Ducks— Principal Kinds of Fish— Trout— Bass- 

 Salmon— Carp— Perch— Pike— Rock Fish— Cat Fish, 

 pages, 



485-548 



CHAPTER VII. 



TAPEWORMS OF POULTRY. 



A Report upon the Present Knowledge of Tapeworms 

 of Poultry— General Discussion— Table of Tapeworms 

 Recorded for Poultry — Life History and Source of In- 

 fection—The Relation of the Tapeworms of Wild 

 Birds to Those of the Domesticated Fowls — Symptoms 

 and Pathology — Tapeworm-Infected Fowls as Food — 

 Prevention — Treatment — ^Classification — Analytical Key 

 to Families and Genera — ^Family Bothriocephalidae — 

 Subfamily Bothriocephalinae — Genus Bothriocapha- 

 !up — ^Bertken's Pigeon Bothriocephalus — Genus Both- 

 riotaenia — ^Subfamily Ligulinae — Genus Ligula — Family 

 Taeniidae— Subfamily Mesccestoidinae — Genus Mesoc- 

 estoides — Subfamily Dipylidiinae — Genus Amabilia — 

 Genus Hymenolepis — Genus Dicranotaenia — Genus 

 Dicranotaenia— Genus Davainea — Genus Echinoco- 

 tyle — Genus Ophryocotyle — ^Idiogenes — Addendum — 



Explanation of Chart — Description of Plates, pages, . . 549-657 



CHAPTER VTII. 



SOME EGGS. 

 Plate I— Plate II— Plate III— Plate IV— Plate V, pages... 658-659 



CHAPTER IX. 



THE DESTRUCTION OF NOXIOUS ANIMALS. 



General Remarks — Some Bounty Records — The Bounty 

 Act of 1885 — Scientific Men Protected— Others Lab- 

 ored to Repeal It — Their Efforts Were Successful — 

 Why it Should be Repealed— Why the Act Should Not 

 Be Repealed — ^Where Skunks Were Paid For— A Few 

 Wolves — Crawford's Enormous Outlay — Official Re- 

 ports of Animals Killed in Different Counties — The 

 Scalp Act of 1897— An Act— Methods of Capturing 

 Birds of Prey— Shooting— The Grass Suit — When Snow 



