BY THE SAME AUTHOR 



GETTING ACQUAINTED 

 WITH THE TREES 



Cloth, 8vo, $1.60 

 Standard School Library Edition, 60 cts. 



"These sketches are not scientific, but popular, and do 

 for inanimate nature," says the Pittsbui-gh Press, "what 

 Ernest Thompson-Seton and John Burroughs have done for 

 the beasts and birds. Trees have had their lovers among 

 naturalists, painters, and poets. Mr. McFarland is one of 

 these, and he has the plain and intimate way of saying 

 things that conveys this interest to others." They record 

 the gi-owth of the author's own interest and information as 

 he has observed and enjoyed the trees among which he has 

 walked. To pass on some of the benefit which has come 

 into his own life from this interest in trees has been his 

 purpose. The book is profusely illustrated fi-om unusually 

 fine photographs taken by the author. Such an authority 

 as Prof. Charles Sargent, of the Harvard Arboretum, has 

 pronounced this "a capital book." 



THE MACMILLAN COMPANY 



PuBLisHEiis 64-66 Fifth Avenue, New York 



