PHEASANTS: 



THEIE 



NATURAL HISTORY AND PMCTICAL 

 MANAGEMENT. 



BY 



NOTICES OF THE PREVIOUS EDITIONS. 



From the Encyclopcedia Bntannica, Art. Pheasants, by Prof. A. Newton. 

 " Mr. Tegetmeier'a ' Pheasants, their Natural History and Practical Manage- 

 ment,' is to be commended as a very useful work." 



From " Tarrell's British Birds." Fourth edition. 

 " For further details as well as for instructions as to the management of 

 pheasants, both in the coyeit and the aviary, and the disorders to which they 

 are liable, the reader is referred to Mr. Tegetmeier's excellent work . . . 

 to which the editor is under great obligations." 



From the Daily Telegraph, 

 "Both in its descriptive and in its practical aspects the treatise is admirable."' 



From the Pall Mall Gaeette. 

 " This new and sumptuous edition contains so large an amount of fresh matter 

 that it may be regarded practically as another work. In its own way it is quite 

 exhaustive. ... In the technical details of rearing and preservation, Mr. 

 Tegetmeier will be found a thoroughly trustworthy and scientific guide." 



From the Qourdeners' Chronicle. 

 "The book' generally, froni the beauty of its typography, tasteful and appro- 

 priate binding, and namerons woodcuts ard larger figures of the various 

 species of pheasants alluded to, well deserves to find a place amongst the books 

 of ornament on the drawing room table, as well as amongst those of practical 

 utility in the »tudy." 



From Baily's Maganine. 



■' A sine qua non in the library of a country gentleman or woman." 



From the Athenwum. 

 " Nothing can be more interesting than the description of such superb 

 birds. . . . The work treats of the hatching, rearing, and treatment of 

 pheasants„and is replete with important details." 



