THE O0LOO1ST. 



IS THE BEST 



jpw \{mt stwno mawiir cp. Q^mtm> 



MlCAr 25 UNION SQUARE, N.y, ,,« FRANCls/ 



cM !ll* Qo BOSTOHMAss, QUANTA SA. «** F c R ^OIS Ca 



st.louis^ ' FOR SALE By auus-rex- 



E. W. WILCOX, ALBION, N. Y. 



VALUABLE OOLOGISTS. 



The following No's, of the Oologist are of 

 special value to to every collector: 

 Feb. '89, Maurice Thompson's --Red-headed 

 Family." 



March, '89, "Directions for making a Bird or 



Mammal Skin." 

 Nov., '89, Complete List of N. A. Birds with 



prices of eggs, also three pages of Oological 



instruction. 



Feb., '90, Complete List of N. A. Birds and the 



prices of their skins. 

 Feb., '91, A complete description of the first 63 

 numbers of fhe Young Oologist and Oolo 

 gist with price per copy, also an exhaustive 

 Index of Vol. VII 

 Any of the above Oologists will be sent you 

 post paid for 5cts. or the entire five for only 

 locts. Address 



.FRANK H. LATTIN, 

 Albion, N. Y. 



Resurrection Plant, 

 2 Card Marine Alg-fen, tJarthoa Vineyard 

 8 25 Tar. Foreign Stampi 



5 Starfiah, Cam Cod. Mj^b. 



6 Bark frjji Corli-Ttec, Spoin 



7 "Bin True" Bark. Mftripcsia, Cala. 

 6 Gaud Do:iar. Caeco Bay, Ida, 

 » Chinoep Coin 



10 Task Bhell, W I. 



11 Orp&o.iip* Co-.ii], Singcpor» 



12 Cy-praa lynx, Singapore 



13 d-proa AdwJa, Aotoiaa 

 II Oypran Arabrioa, S. L 

 I& Bed i>'. _ i Bean, BtAamiu 



, Noresu, Biihamag 



jrn Banmclo, Pari£o 



36 Money Cowry.Ceyloi 



27 Pink Coral, Carolina Is.ee 



28 Indian Pottery. Orlasjis Co., W. Y. 



2 Petted Wood, Sonoma Co., Cain. 



3 "Elertrio" S:onc, Jeff. Co., N. Y. 

 1 Sand Shark Eg£, Atlantic 



5 Flexible Coral \i£cittca), Tonga Ialef 



T Bioodytooth Shall, Naosao 



3 Foasil Shark TcoLh, S. C. 



) Operculum or Shell Eoctr, Bahamas 



) Native Lodaatono, Magnet Cor*, Ark, 



i Piece of Loofah, J&poa 

 I 2 Egg Capuales of Parurink.4, AffimUo 

 i Pieco of Ta^Q Cloth, made by tha Kt» 

 ti^esof Samo&a lalea, 



FRANK H. LATTWf, 



rublisttcr of "THE OOLOQISTj* 



WhoktaXe imd Retail Dealer in 



Speciinoa!;, laotrTUMntt, SfljpHw ad 



Tublioatlons fcr tie Hitortllit 



Albion, M. Y. 



^"Seiid 2c stamp toe Comflkt* Lists* 



Mr. Howells' New Work. 



This is truly one of tbo nwst "Marr^cnu" cotlec 

 sdspted to Ktndorfitutcn Wort, olid wbilo provio 

 okl'-r ones will appreciate its merits. The bpeeitoeus _. .-. 

 ,We will cood the entire CoUoetioo by reiaru muiL cacb Bpocioion Inbel- AUI U flR/IITP 

 1 sod wnppcdtii>paral£lj,Kifed£UT*7yand*jaiftiaianpuaratuaed t tai Until OuUltf 

 Address plainly, FILABK H. UTHN, AXBIOX. K. Y. 



The announcement that Mr. Howells will 

 leave Harper's Magazine, to take editorial 

 charge of the Cosmopolitan, on March 1st, 

 calls attention to the process of building up 

 the staff of a great magazine. Probably in 

 no monthly has the evolution been so dis- 

 tinctly under the eyes of the public as in 

 the case of the Cosmopolitan. The first 

 step after its editorial conrol was assumed 

 by Mr. John Brisben Walker, was to add to 

 it Edward Everett Hale, who took charge of 

 a department called "Social Problems, '< 

 subjects concerning which the greatest 

 number of people are thinking today. 

 Mr. Hale, who is a student, a fair minded 

 man, a thorough American and a man of 

 broad sympathies, has filled this position on 

 a way to attract the attention not only if 

 this country, but of leading European jo ur- 

 Dals. Some months later, a department 

 was established called "The Eeview of 

 Current Events." To take charge of this, 

 a man was needed who should be familiar 

 not only with the great events of the past 

 thirty years, but who knew personally the 

 leading men of both the United States and 

 Europe who could interpret motives and 

 policies. Murat Halstead accepted this po- 

 sition with the distinct understanding that 

 his mouthly review should be philosophical 

 and never partisan. The next step in the 

 history of the Cosmopolitan, was the placi 

 ing of the review of the intellectual move- 

 ment of the month in the hands of Mr. 

 Brander Matthews, who for some time ha§ 

 been recognized as one of the two or three 

 ablest critics in the United States. 



Finally came the acceptance of the editor- 

 ship conjointly with Mr. Walker, by Mr. 

 Wm. Deau Howells. Mr. Howells, who is 

 recognized universally as the foremost A- 

 merican of letters, upon the expiration of 

 his contract with Harper Brothers, on the 

 first of March will take in haud the desti- 

 nies of a magazine which promises to exer- 

 cise a share of influence with the reading 

 classes of the United States. His entire ser r 

 vices will be given to the Cosmopolitan, and 

 everything he writes will appear in that 

 magazine during the continuance of his edi- 

 torship. 



D. L. DOWD'S Health Exerciser^ 



For Brain-Workers and Sed- 

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 Ladies. Youths, Athlete or In- 

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 •JIIS1SISI Take s up but 6 in. square floor r 

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