BtJO HUNTER'S HASTDBOOBL" 



INSECTS : 



flow to Catch, and How to Prepare Them for the Cabinet 

 Comprising: a Manual of Instruction for 

 the Field Naturalist. 



BY WAX/ITC.R !>. MA3TTONT, 



Author of "Taxidermy Without a Master," "Handbook of Field 



Botany," etc. 



Illustrated. 50 cents* 



The Boston Post says: "Are you interested in bugs? Do you 

 like to capture the wild and untamed beetle, the insatiable potato 

 bug, and the festive grasshoj* er, ami impaling them on pins, see 

 'em through a glass ? Then you want to know just the correct 

 way to do it, and you want to purchase this little volume." 



"In describing the outfit nothing essential is omitted, and 

 illustrations help to make plain this and the directions for pre- 

 paring. Useful instructions are added as to the construction of a 

 cabinet, time and places to hunt, and the method of 'printing 

 butterflies.' Every boy who has any taste for natural history 

 should have this neat little manual. The many 'Agassiz Clubs' 

 which have sprung up among the youth of the country should add 

 it to their libraries." Chicago Advance. 



OF INESTIMABLE VALUE TO YOUNG BOTANISTS." 



FIELD 



A Hand-Book for the Collector. Containing Instructions for 



Gathering and Preserving Plants, and the Formation of a 



Herbarium; also, Complete Instructions in Leaf 



Photography, Plant Printing, and the 



Skeletonizing of Leaves. 



BY WALTER, D?. 



Illustrated. Cloth, 5O cents. 



" A most valuable companion. The amount of information con 

 veyed in the small compass is surmising." Demorest's Monthly, 

 ew York. 



" It is just what the boys and girls need for the spring campaign 

 in Botany, and at the modest price of fifty cents is accessible tc 

 ail." - Christian Register, Boston. 



**It is entirely practical, and gives the collector just the know* 

 ledge required to render his work permanent and satisfactory, 

 Its smallness fits it to be carried in the pocket, which is a consid 

 " ' : - 



