THE OOLOGIiST. 



Wood, Reptiles, Fish, Shells, Insects 

 and Invertebrates of the World, 

 Americanized by Holder; this is the 

 Third Volume of Wood's "Animated 

 Creation," or "Our Living World;" 

 this volume relates to the various 

 departments about as follows: Rep- 

 tiles and Batrachians, 160p, Pish 

 llOp, Mollusks 84p, Insects, etc. 84p, 

 other Invertebrates about 15'0p; 644p 

 (10x13 in.) 10 full-page oleographs 

 in colors, 20 full-page eng. and 300 

 ills., elegantly 'bound in full moroc- 

 co 3 60 



Brehm's Life of Animals. The Apes 

 and . Monkeys; Half-Monkeys or 

 Lemuroids; and Wing-handed Ani- 

 mals, complete, 4to, 86p, 78 % to full 

 page ills, unbound 70 



Lydekker. ("Lloyd's") Mammals, 

 Mammals of Great Britain, Marsu- 

 pials, Carnivora, 3 vol., 300 p. each, 

 100 col. pi 2 35 



Jordon & Gilbert, Synopsis of the 

 Fishes of North America, 1018 p. M. 

 B. 16 1 95 



Dall, Marine Mollusks of the S. E. 

 Coast of U. S., 22,2p, 74pl, con. 70i0 

 figs. M. B. 37 2 60 



Ashmead, Monograph of N. A. Proc- 

 tortrypidae, 472p, 18 pi, M. B. 45 65 



Riley, Packard & Thomas, 3d Report 

 U. S. Entomological Commission 

 with special reference to the Rocky 

 Mountain Locust, Army Worm, Can- 

 ker Worm, Hessian Fly and Scien- 

 tific Results, 450p, 64 cl 35 



Scudder, "Tertiary Insects of North 



America," 4to, 734p, 28pl 2" 10 



Thomas, Synopsis of the Acridiae of 

 No. America, 4to, 262p 8'0 



Lankester, et al.. Zoological Articles, 

 contributed to the Enicyclopedla 

 Brittannioa: Protozoa, BS^p; Spon- 

 ges, 18p; Hydrozoa, 20p; Planar- 

 ians, 6p; Nemertines, i6p; Rotifera, 

 6p; Mollusca, 74p; Polyzoa, 4ip; Ver- 

 te^brata, 12p; Tunicata, lOp; Total, 

 204p, hundreds of fig.; 4to 1 €5 



Blanchan, .Nature's Garden; Wild 

 Flowers. A 'beautiful book illustrat- 

 ing in color and giving the life his- 

 tories of many of our wild flowers . . 

 2 75 



Howard, The Insect Book. A popular 

 work on bees, wasps, ants, grass- 

 hoppers and others of North Ameri- 

 can insects. Illustrated with 16 col- 

 ored plates and SS in black and 

 white, all from photographs of the 

 insects 2 75 



Marshall, Mushrooms. An invaluable 

 book for all who are interested in 

 these growths, either as an article 

 of food or for study. 41 color plates 



and 40 black and white 2 75 



Cope, "Vertebrata of Tertiary Forma- 

 tion," 4to, I043p, 134pl 2 85 



Lesquereaux, "Cretaceous and Ter- 

 tiary Floras," 4to, 296p, &0pl.. 1 35 

 Newberry, Fossil Fishes and Fossil 

 Plants of Triassic Rocks, New Jer- 

 sey and the Connecticut Valley, 



190iJ. 26pl, 4to 1 65 



South American Butterflies. 

 I can furnish select specimens of 

 the rare and magnificent Morpho Men- 

 elaus from U. S. of Columbia (gor- 

 geous peacock blue) 5^/4x7 in., pre- 

 paid, for only $2.00. Each insect is 

 mounted on a new patent tablet, 

 which. not only protects it from dust, 

 breakage, etc., but puts them in a 

 shape at once more beautiful and in- 

 finiteljr neater than is possible by the 

 antiquated method of impaling them 

 on pins. 



The Butterflie.s and IVloths of Canada 

 With descriptions of their color, 

 size, habit, and the food and metamor- 

 phosis of their larvae. Full instruc- 

 tions for catching and preserving with 

 a Synopsis of the Butterflies and 

 Moths of Canada. 



By Alex. M. Ross, F. R. S. Fully il- 

 lustrated. Post 8vo, cloth gilt. 

 My price, prepaid, only 60 cents. 

 This valuable work is out of print 

 and has been regarded as rare for 

 some time — copies selling at $1.5i0 to 

 $2.50 each, when o'btainable. A small 

 lot of new copies was recently "un- 

 earthed" in a publisher's cellar and 

 I obtained the lot — valuable to col- 

 lectors in the United States. 



PENIKESE. 



A reminiscent sketch of Agassiz fa- 

 mous Summer School. 

 A 96-page book of much interest to 

 students of Nature. 

 Published at 35c. 



My price prepaid, only 8 Cents. 



A Valuable Collection of Fossil Corals. 



A specially selected collection of 

 Falls of the Oiiio Fossils suitable for 

 school uses or an unique and val- 

 uable addition to any public or pri- 

 vate collection — put up for and always 

 sold at $50.0'0. One hundred (lO'O) 

 species and about 200 specimens rang- 

 ing in value from lOc. to 50c. each. A 



"Clearance Sale" of Frank H. Lattin, M, p., Albion, N. Yi 



