BIRDS AND NATURE 



TERMS Aim CONDITIONS OW PVBUCATIOVI 



^WKSlic fiabscriptlofi price to onQ dollar and tttf MA0AZIN6S, back cumbers, ftrom i8gm vfrnsftR i: 



mnte a yeas, payable in adTvance^ with sc assorted pic eopy, $2.00 a year; the 64 back numbers for 8t2.(Sow 

 tiTds, $3.c»; single copy, 15 cents. BOUND VOLUMES, I to XVI, each 8vo, m pafoCs 



POSTAGE IS PREPAID by the publisher tor all sub^ ?t°°? .*° *9 *° colored pictures. 8x10 in., cloth. «i.5fe 



aerlptions in the United States, Guam, Porto Rico, Tutuils Double volumes, half morocco, $3,00, Sixteen single vo^ 



(Samoa), Canada and Mexico. For all other countries in nmes, cloth, $i8.oa Eight doable volumes, half morocc©^ 



the Postal Union add 30 cents postage. f iS.oo. , .. ^ . . 



CHANGE OP ADDRESS. When a change oif ad^ Exchange price for bound »o umes when magaf/n«| 



dress is ordered, both the new and the old address must """o returneB ; Single volumes, cloth, »i.oo. Combine^, 



be given. Postmasters are not allowed to forward second- *°'H3^,^X^Dr?*^?^^.*^'r»'l^il°= -* ^ -. . ^ ^ 



clals matter until postage is sent to prepay charges. It ^^i^-^RED PICTURES, assorted as desired, t sent* 



costs two cents per copy to forward tfiis magazine! Sub- «ach ; $1.80 per 100; $15.00 per 1,00a The 648 pictures for 



scribers who do not observe this rule should not ask us * '^oobmihiwc ouk«. ^* »».-. ♦«« ^^« *«i«,^.« ,.»^ 



to send duplicate copies. , PREMIUMS. Either ,o? the toSlowlng colored ple^ 



■^..<./^^.-^»,.,.^,.~,-,.^ ,« ,_ OIL « L V turessent free with subscriptions: Ji) Song of the Lark, 



DISCONTINUANCES. If a subscriber wishes his 18x21, or (2) Gladstone, 18x24, or (3) The Golden Pheasant 



magazine discontinued at the expiration of his subscript ,8x24, or (4) ten colored pictures from Birds and Nature 



tion, notice to that effect should be sent, otherwiseit ip ?-) Three Forest Tree Pictures, 9x12, or (6) 5et of IP 



assumed that a continuance of the subscription is desired. industrial Pictures* 



KOW TO REMIT. Remittances should be sent bj atmod Dtini Br<A'nn>MR 



eheck. draft, express order, or money order, payable to „ „ . , ,. OTHER PUBLECATIUNS, 



order of A. W. Mumford.^^Cash should be sent in regis- e I 1 d i!:'";^ ••;i,*r\ ....«., ....,»i.«^ 



ae,rt>A \p.ftt^r School Bulletin (Monthly) l.oo 



gereaieties^ ,,, - , , American Primary Teacher (Monthly) t.00 



AGENTS. We want an energetic, courteous agent Ie N. E. Journal of Education (Weekly) «... t-jo 



®T©ry town and county. Writdior terms and territory. Educational Review (Monthly) «.0© 



RECEIPTS, Remittances are acknowledged by Ten per cent discount on any or all of these WB« 



©iange of label on wrapper, indicating date to which sub- ordered in combination with Birds and Nature. Sea8 35 



serlption is paidc ^ one or several addresses. 



BIRDS AND NATURE, Monthly; 48 pages,. Sxio inches; per year, I1.50. A magazine 

 devoted tc nature and illustrated by color photography. It is the only periodicaJ in the 

 world which publishes pictures of birds, animalSi, insects, flowers, plants, etc, .^ aat 

 aral colors. Eight full-page plates each month. 



BIRDS OF LAKESIDB AND PRAIRIE. By Edward B. Clark, tnis book contaias fiel<? 

 sketches of bird life in the great Middle West. The author takes his readers afield with him 

 ^nd puts them in close touch with our feathered friends of lakeside, woodland and prairie 



President Roosevelt on meeting Mr. Clark quite recently, remarked; "You are the srentle .^an fflit 

 ^rtote that paragraph about the prothonotary warbler. I read with great interest about that little bird— I an 

 sg^uite familiar with your book, Mr. Clark, and I have always wanted to meet the man who wrote It, The pro 

 thonotary warbler was a new bird to me. Up 1>o the time of reading about It in your book I never had hear* 

 of this specimen." 



THE FAIRIES THAT RUN THE WORLD AND HOW THEY DO IT. By Emeet VJncertt 

 Wright, no pages, cloth, 30 full page illustrations. The subjects dealt with in this littlf 

 book ere well known to children and many pleasant thoughts regarding the workings ^■' 

 nature may be derived from its pages. 



WILD BIRDS IN CITY PARKS. By Herbert Eugene Walter and Alice Hah Walter, Pock«' 

 edition, pp. 66, cloth, with chart showing Migration of Birds. New edition, entirely 

 2 e written, enlarged, and including 145 birds, both land and water. The object of thi& 

 little book is to furnish those who may be interested in making the acguaintancc o^ wt&f 

 birds with a simple letter of introduction to one hundred interesting birds. 



«5 BIRDS AND NATURE PICTURES. 



**These pictures are so natural that it almost mvam as 1£ ttae oreatuie wapnmateA Is aotas m aimk^ ^$ 

 to* the page and escape.'*~GUcacro BecorO-H&raUL 



Send to €€nti for $ampie €opy s^ nttd!^ tmd JNfagmm Jitk pr emtaitgm, Aikff^fi 



Jt W. M0MFORD, PwiMlaftMir,, f0 Wftlwai^ Awmmn^ 



