THE FORESTER. 



1Bivb*%ove for 1901 



BIRD LORE'S special aim during the coming year will be to assist teachers and students of 

 birds by telling them just what to study and just what to teach at the proper season. It will, 

 therefore, publish a series of articles on the birds of a number of localities, including the vicinity 

 of Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago and San Francisco. To these will be added 'Sug- 

 gestions for the Months' Study' and 'Suggestions for the Months' Reading.' The whole thus 

 forms a definite plan of study which, it is believed, will be of the utmost value to the instructor, 

 to the independent observer, and to bird clubs and natural history societies. In this connection 

 much assistance will be rendered by BIRD-LORE'S Advisory Council, composed of over fifty 

 prominent ornithologists, residing throughout the United States and Canada, who have consented 

 to respond to requests for information and advice. 



While a number of the more general articles for the year will bear on the months' subject 

 for study, there will also be contributions of wide popular interest, among the more important of 

 which may be mentioned an address on Audubon, by Dr. Elliott Coues ; letters written by Audu- 

 bon in 1827 ; John Burroughs' list of his rarer bird visitors ; Frank M. Chapman's fully illustrated 

 account of a bird nesting expedition with this genial naturalist ; Ernest Seton-Thompson's 'How 

 to Know the Hawks and Owls' (illustrated) ; Tudor Jenks' ' From an Amateur's Point of View ;" 

 T. S. Palmer's ' Ostrich Farming in America ' (illustrated) ; F. A. Lucas' ' Birds of Walrus Island,' 

 with remarkable illustrations; H. W. Henshaw's 'Impressions of Hawaiian Birds'; C Will 

 Beebe's illustrated account of some of the birds under his charge at the New York Zoological 

 Garden, and an important paper on 'Bird Protection in Great Britain,' by Montagu Sharpe, 

 chairman of the English Society for the Protection of Birds. 



20 Cents a Number ; $1 .00 a Year. Send 10 Cents for a Specimen Copy. 



THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, Crescent and Mulberry Sts., Harrisburg, Pa. 



THE BOTANICAL GAZETTE 



Edited by JOHN M. COULTER, Professor and Head of the Department of Botany 

 in the University of Chicago, and CHARLES R. BARNES, Professor of 

 Plant Physiology in the University of Chicago. Published monthly, with il- 

 lustrations. Subscription price, $4.00 a year in the United States ; foreign, 

 $4.50 ; single copies, 50 cents. 



THE BOTANICAL GAZETTE is an illustrated monthly journal devoted to botany in its 

 widest sense. For more than twenty years it has been the representative American journal of 

 botany, containing contributions from the leading botanists of America and Europe. In addition 

 to the formal papers presenting the results of research, current information and discussion are 

 given in the editorials, and in the departments of Current Literature, Open Letters, Notes for 

 Students, and Notes and News. 



REPRESENTATIVE COMMENT 



B. T. Galloway, U. S. Dep't of Agriculture Prof. W. N. Kellerman, Ohio State University 



"One of the best journals of its kind now "It is simply indispensable to the botanist, 



published." B. T. Galloway. teacher or student. W. N. Kellerman. 



Dougla9 H. Campbell, Leland Stanford University Prof. George L. Goodale, Harvard University 



"It well represents the progress of botanical "It is a credit to American botany. In its 



science in the United States." present form it has increased claims upon the 



Douglas H. Campbell. support of botanists." George L. Goodale. 



THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS 



Kindly mention The Forestkr in writing. 





