TWO DIANAS IN ALASKA. By Agnes Herbert and 



a Shikari. With numerous Illustrations. Demy 8vo. Price 

 I2S. 6d. net. Postage 6d. extra. 



The sportsman. — " The warm and lengthy praise we gave to the companion 

 volume ' Two Dianas in Somaliland' might be repeated. They should have a 

 place in every sportsman's library ; nay, in far more, for the piquancy of the 

 style, and the charming friendliness of it all, enthrall the reader. " 



The Field. — "The story is told by Miss Herbert with all the free and joyous 

 spirit which characterised her former volume ; the same love of exploration, 

 admiration for the beauty in nature, keenness for sport, and withal a womanly 

 restraint and tender-heartedness." 



Couniiy Life. — ' ' Miss Herbert's hand has lost nothing of its sprightliness ; she 

 describes graphically and with never-failing nerve many exciting hunts. It is to 

 the full as daring and lively as the Somaliland volume." 



TWO DIANAS IN SOMALILAND: The Record of a 



Shooting Trip. By Agnes Herbert. With numerous Illus- 

 trations. Demy 8vo. Price 12s. 6d. net. Postage 6d. extra. 



The Sportsman. — " A more delightful book — nay, so delightful a book — is not 

 met with once in a generation. It is sui generis ; we know of none that can 

 pretend to compare with it. There is not a line in it that cannot be read with 

 pleasure, while the whole volume contains such a record of interesting and thrill- 

 ing adventure as one rarely meets with." 



The Field. — ^^ The story is told with great animation throughout, and with a 

 sense of humour that carries one on attentively to the end. We shall be much 

 mistaken if this very attractive volume on big-game shooting is not soon in a 

 second edition." 



The Aihejtceum. — "That most attructive book, "Two Dianas in Somaliland,' 

 which shows the author to be almost as skilful with her pen as with the rifle ; and 

 that is saying a great deal. The book is e.xceptionally interesting." 



JUNGLE BY-WAYS IN INDIA: Leaves from the Note- 

 book of a Sportsman and a Naturalist. By E. P. Stebbing, 

 I.F.S., F.Z.S., F.R.G.S. With upwards of 100 Illustrations by 

 the Author and others. Demy 8vo. 12s. 6d. net. 



* ^ This is the book of a sportsman-naturalist. The habits and 

 dispositions of the animals as seen in their homes, and not the mere 

 killing of them, form the keynote of the book. During a period of 

 some sixteen years spent in the Indian Forest Service, the author has 

 devoted much time to the Jungle. In the course of his wanderings and 

 shooting excursions he has made nntes on the habits and dispositions 

 of the animals met with, usually jotted down actually on the spot 

 where the incidents relatf^d took place, the notes often being assisted 

 by thumb-nail sketches. Mr. Stebbing holds the opinion that the 

 atmosphere of the Jungle can only be obtained in this manner, and 

 it is believed that some of it will be found permeating the pages of 

 " By-ways." The author also finds time to notice the doings of the 

 multitudinous minor life around him, and briefly touches upon some 

 of the curious insects, snakes, and lizards, etc., which so often cross 

 the path and come to the notice of the Anglo-Indian Shikiri. A feature 

 of the book is the illustrations, which have been drawn in the Jungle 

 itself, and are more faithful even than photographs. 



