SCTE NCE 
Se Sh ise Fripay, Aucust 20, 1897. SENG UC OnLy Ces 
NEW BOOKS ° 
Mie. Lhe Macmillan Company 
FOR EVERY BIRD LOVER. 
CITIZEN BIRD: A Story of Bird Life. 
FIFTH THOUSAND. 
MABEL OSGOOD WRIGHT, DR. ELLIOTT COUES, 
Author of CLOTH. GROWN 8vo- Author of 
“Birderaft,” “Tommy-Anne and the PRICE, $1.50. “Birds of North America ” 
Three Hearts,” ete. elc., etc. 
Illustrated with drawings from nature by Louis AGAssiz FUERTES. 
“Lovers of birds haye for a long time been on the lookout for the book . . . Now thatit has been published it 
will be eagerly read, and the readers will be pleased to find their highest expectations more than fulfilled. . .. . 
An unusual feature of the book, one too seldom found in yolumes which 
A undertake to combine story and instruction, is the great skill and natural- From the 
Most Charming! ness with which the two features are mentioned. Here, then, in this book, Daily Advertiser, 
Story. a volume which cannot be too widely circulated, and which any person, Boston. 
young or old, of the average American intelligence will be glad to read, 
is a most charming story with people who are characters, not lay figures, who study together the names and habits of 
over a hundred of our common birds.” 
“One naturally turns with high expectations to a new book by two such noted bird lovers, 
A Charmingly Simple,, | | and meets with no disappointment in this case. The book is a f 
yet fairly complete charmingly simple, yet fairly complete introduction to the science of orni- From 
introduction thology, written forchildren. . . . Thereisno other book in existence The Tribune, 
a so well fitted for arousing and directing the interest that all children of Chicago 
to Ornithology. —_ any sensibility feel towards birds.” Sich 
Something “Something unique in the way of a work on natural history . . . and in this case the 
unique wholly Zesult is wholly delightiul. ‘Citizen Bird’ is intended for children and is 
is! written in such a bright, cheery, natura! manner that there cannot possibly From 
delightful. live a child with a soul so dead as not to respond to the charm of its pages. The Evening Post, 
There is such an air of freedom about it, there are so many dramatic touches in it, that one Chicago. 
is kept constantly in a state of pleased anticipation.”’ 
A DICTIONARY OF BIRDS. 
By ALFRED NEWTON, 
Assisted by Hans GAbDow, with contributions from RICHARD LYDEKKER, CHARLES S. Roy and RoBERT W. 
SHUFELDT, M.D. Complete in One Volume with Index and Introduction. Illustrated with a Map 
and many figures. Cloth. 8vo. Price, $10 net. 
“The eyent more than justifies our prediction that this work would ‘prove the most useful single volume eyer 
published on ornithology.’ No better balanced treatise of like magnitude exists in the literature of science; there is none 
in which a standard of excellence set up at the start is more equably main- 
The greatest and best tained to the finish. That standard, moreover, is one hitherto unexampled. | From a review in 
bookeyer written Professor Newton has no equal in erudition, so far as the science of orni- The Nation, 
about birds. thology is concerned, and few peers in the art of exposition. His long in- py pr, ELLrorr Cours. 
cumbency of an important chair in the University of Cambridge has made 
him a masterly teacher, and we have in this Dictionary the most mature fruits of lifelong devotion to his favorite study, set 
forth with rare skill and tact.”’ G 
IN PRESS. IN PRESS. 
WILD NEIGHBORS. LIFE HISTORIES OF AMERICAN 
A Book about Animals. By ERNEST INGERSOLL. With INSECTS. 
twenty full-page plates and other drawings made ex- | Ry Professor CLARENCE M. WEED, New Hampshire Col- 
pressly for this book. ae ss lege of Agriculture and Mechanical Arts. 
A book on the habits, haunts, etc., of certain animals, wi i os 
some account of the methods of training them in captivity. anne Piste Roni anloussfOns tok Hess UNG, Sy OS Valen ers) 
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY, 66 Fifth Avenue, New York City. 
