THE OOLOGIST. 



185 



dn my "Clearance Sale" "List No. 3," M^y, 1902, of 

 Selected Shells, Birds Eggs, Mounted Birds, Bird Skins, 

 Fossils, Corals, Gem Stones, Barrel of Shells, Nature 

 Study Collection and Miscellah^ous Lot of Specimens 

 and Curios. 



I can still furnish as follow : 



"Nature Study Collection" at only 

 ?8.72. I can still furnish about a dozen of 

 these famous collections, but am obliged to 

 substitute a few specimens of equal value for 

 ones where display has been exhausted. 



"Barrel of Shells" at only $3.70, for 

 which I oughtget-at-least $12. I can still 

 furnish a few barrels, but in a few Instances I 

 must send other material to replace stock 

 already exhausted. All substitutions are at 

 purchaser's advantage. 



Birds Eggs Singles, Sets and Col- 

 lections. I can still furnish as offered and at 

 prices quoted. 



Mounted Birds and Skins. Can still 

 furnish as offered. 



I can still furnish the "Bonanza Collection of 

 Curios" at 35 cents prepaid, also the "Student's 

 Shell and Coral Collection" at the same price 

 and the $1.50 "Student's Mineral Collection." 

 60 cents by express. 



I can also furnish the Fossils, Gem Stones 

 Minerals, Corals. Indian Relics, and miscel 

 laneous Curios as offered. 



I still have the bulk of a "Special Lot of 

 Choice Shells" and the discounts and "Special 

 Offer" connected with the sale of same is still 



in force. This is a rare oppostion by the Conch 

 olo?lst to secure XXX nominal rate. 



If you have mislaid or destroyed your copy 

 of My "List No. 3 " of May 1902, another copy 

 will be mailed for stamp. 



I can still furnish for cash or sivap about one- 

 half the Lots of "Scientiflc Shells" as offered 

 in List No.^ 1 of March 15, 1901. Write if inter- 

 ested. 



Books, Pamphlets and Excerpts for the Nat- 

 uralist. Ornithology. Zoology, Natural His- 

 tory, Mammalogy, Herpetology, Ichthylogy, 

 Conchology, Entomology, Botany, Geology, 

 Paleaontology, Ethnology, Etc As offered in 

 my "List No. 1" of March, 1902 I can still fur- 

 nish and rather than Issue a new list will close 

 them out at one-half price. Make out list of 

 wants and send me exactly one-half the prices 

 quoted and I'll ship cheapest way at your ex- 

 pense. This offer applies only to orders of 

 $1.00 or over. Always mention a few titles you 

 can use in case your first choice has been sold. 

 I'll surprise you on the quotations I'll make on 

 the "Old Magazines and Publications" I offer 

 in same list. If you have not a copy of this 

 "List No. 1," a copy will be ma,iled you for 

 stamp. 



FRANK H. LATTIN, M. D., ALBION, Orleans Co., N. Y. 



AnOld Scheme Resurrected, 



The publisher of the Oologist desires a lot of 

 short, pithy, boiled down articles based on 

 cold, unvarnished facts of your own practice, 

 ■experience or observation upon any subject of 

 value or Interest "to the student of birds, their 

 ■nests and eggs." We want you to send one of 

 these articles during 1902 and we want you to 

 ■write the same on the back of an ordinary 

 postal card and mall to us. Give the article a 

 short, suitable heading and at the end sign 

 your name and address. Should you prefer to 

 write on paper you can do so, but the paper 

 must be a single sheet the size of a postal card 

 and written on one side only. 



To every subscriber of the Oologist. fulfill 

 our request by mailing us one of these "Postal 

 Card Articles" Curing the balance of the year, 

 1903, we will reciprocate by sending gratis, a 

 <;opy of '■' Penikesev or a coupon good for an 

 "exchange adv.," in the Oologtst Address, 

 FRANK H. LATTIN, M. D. 

 Albion, N. Y. 



HAVE .YOU SEEN THE JOURNAL 

 OF THE 



MAINE ORNITHOLOGICAL SOCIETY? 



A Quarterly Journal of interesting: matter 



relative to Maine Birds. Now in its 4th vol. 



50 cents per annum. 15 cents per copy 



Sample copy free. 



J. MERTON SWAIN, Editor and Publisher 



WatervlUe, Maine. 



'You might as well be out of the Bird World al- 

 together as go without THE OSPREY." 



THR OSPRRY, 



of 



An Illustrated Monthly Magazine 

 Popular Ornithology. 



Edited by Theodore Gill, in Co-op- 

 eration with Robert RIdgway. L. 

 Stejneger, C. W. Richmond and 

 Other EmInentOrnithoIogists. 

 The Osprey does not keep a poet, 

 but it has an office cat who can catch 

 more birds than all the poets put to- 

 gether. If you don't believe this, read 

 The Ospret. If you want to buy, sell 

 or exchanj?e specimens, advertise in 

 The Osprey. If you want to keep in 

 with other Bird Men, subscribe for The 

 Osprey. If you want to write about 

 Birds, you can do it in The Osprey, 

 provided you know how to write. If 

 you like a beautifully printed and pro- 

 fusely illustra^d_ .magazine,., all about 

 Birds you wv^S^^ TSi; Osprey. 



Te^ms— One Dollar A; Year, 

 Published by; 



321-323 4H St., Washington, D. C. 



