BUY PART I. WHILE YOU CAN. 



Practical Hintsfon the Field: 

 Lepidopterist. 



By J. V/. TUTT, F.E.S. 



i>AKTs I, n sL^a III 



(II and III interleaved for Collector's own notes), 

 Containing about 4000 Practical Hints of the form so well known. 



Together with 



GENERAL & SPECIFIC INDEX to Parts I, II & III, 



Containing references to nearly 1600 British species, 

 By H.'j. TURNER, F.E.S. 



Together with Chapters on the 



Preservation, Mounting, and Photographing of Eggs, 



By F. NOAD CLARK and A. E. TONGE. 

 And also Chapters on 



Collections, Collecting, Collectors, The Egg & Eggstage,» 

 the Larva & Larval Stage, the Pupa & Pupal Stage 



(with model descriptions and hints for useful records), the whole illustrated by 

 SEVEN CAREFULLY EXECUTED PLATES. 



Making this the most important book on the subject ever offered to the field lepidopterist. 



PRICE (for the Three Parts as above) £1 net. 



Separately— PART I, 10/6 (interleaved), 9/- (not interleaved), PART II, 6/-, 



PART III, 6/-. 



(An Eiicyclopajdia of Field Lepidopterology.) 



Koughly, the number of species of lepidoptera in the whole British fauna amounts to 

 about 2100 species. It was not until the three parts were carefully indexed by Mr.- 

 Turner that it was suspected how wide a field the Hints covered, and how comparatively 

 few of the British species, other than the very commonest, received no hint as to theii' 

 mode of capture in one or other of their stages. The long general index shows that the 

 work is encyclopaedic from the field lepidopterist's point of view, and nothing so complete as 

 the hints on sallowing, light, sugaring, egg-laying, larva-hunting (in all its forms), pupa- 

 hunting, and the various jihases of rearing lepidoptera — breeding-cages, treatment, food, 

 <fec. — has ever previously been attempted. In addition to these points, five chapters, simple 

 enough for the beginner, and yet wide enough to teach the expert something, have been 

 added, with the intention of suggesting to the field lepidopterist how to use his observa- 

 tions and work, not only to his own advantage, but also to the advantage of entomological v 

 science, and the book can be recommended as being of first value to all field entomolo- > 

 gists, whilst the chapters on the preservation, mounting, measurement and photographing ( 

 of eggs, will appeal to a very large class of entomologists. 



Parts I and II are too well known, and have been so universally well spoken of by i 

 the entomological press, that there is only need to say that the second section of Part III 

 is on the same lines as the previous parts. This section alone [i.e., omitting the pre- 

 liminary chapters, plates (and their detailed explanation), general index and specific 

 index] is alone as large as Part I, and as full of detailed facts. 



Part I is nearly sold out, and is only available at 10s. 6d. (interleaved) and 9s. Od. 

 (uninterleaved) per part ; Part II is still available at 6s. Postal orders with order to be 

 s«nt to 



J. HERBERT TUTT,|119, WestcombeiHill, Blackheath, 8.B. 



