BOOKS BY F. SCHUYLER MATHEWS. 



Familiar Flowers of Field and Garden. 



New edition. With 12 orthochromattc photographs of characteristic 



flowers by L. W, Brownell, and over two hundred drawings by the 



Author. 121110. Cloth, $1.40 net ; postage, 18 cents additional. 



The new photography's revelations of nature have found perfect expression in 

 Mr. Brownell's remarkable pictures. The beautiful series included in this new edition 

 will be appreciated by every one, and prized by students and nature-lovers. 



Familiar Trees and their Leaves. 



New edition. With pictures of representative trees in colors, and 

 over 200 drawings from nature by the Author. With the botanical 

 name and habitat of each tree and a record of the precise character 

 and color of its leafage. Svo. Cloth, $1.75 net; postage, 18 cents 

 additional. 



Mr. Mathews has executed careful and truthful paintings of characteristic trees, 

 which have been admirably reproduced in colors. The great popularity of his 

 finely illustrated and useful book is familiar to nature-lovers. The new edition in 

 colors forms a beautiful and indispensable guide to a knowledge of foliage and of 

 trees. 



Familiar Life in Field and Forest. 



With many Illustrations, iamo. Cloth, $1.75. 



" A very attractive book, which contains a mass of useful information and curious 

 anecdote." — San Francisco Chronicle. 



" The book is one that is apt to please the young naturalist, as it is not over- 

 crowded with scientific words of such dimensions as are usually a bugbear to the young 

 student. The information is given in a pleasant way that is attractive as well as 

 instructive." — Minneapolis Tribune. 



Familiar Features of the Roadside. 



With 130 Illustrations by the Author, nmo. Cloth, $1.75. 



" A faithful guide-book for our roadsides. . . . Can be unhesitatingly com- 

 mended for summer strolls." — New York Evening Post. 



" Which one of us, whether afoot, awheel, on horseback, or in comfortable car- 

 riage, has not whiled away the time by glancing about ? How many of us, however, 

 have taken in the details of what charms us? We see the flowering fields and bud- 

 ding woods, listen to the notes of birds and frogs, the hum of some big bumblebee, 

 but how much do we know of what we sense ? These questions, these doubts have 

 occurred to all of us, and it is to answer them that Mr. Mathews sets forth. It is to 

 his credit that he succeeds so well. He puts before us in chronological order the 

 flowers, birds, and beasts we meet on our highway and byway travels, tells us how to 

 recognize them, what they are really like, and gives us at once charming drawings in 

 words and lines, for Mr. Mathews is his own illustrator."— Boston Journal. 



D . A P P L E T O N AND COMPANY, NEW YORK. 



