D. APPLETON AND COMPANY'S PUBLICATIONS. 



^HE ART OF TAXIDERMY. By John Row- 



* LEY, Chief of the Department of Taxidermy in the American 

 Museum of Natural History. Illustrated. i2mo. Cloth, $2.00. 



Mr. Rowley has ir.trodLiced new features into the art which have not been described 

 in print before, and his book represents th^ latest advances in taxidermy as an art and 

 as a science. He takes a hunting party to the Canadian woods in his opening chapter, 

 and gives a series of vivid pictures of actual field work. This is followed by a series of 

 careful explanations of the proper treatment of animals, large and !>niall, of birds, and 

 heads. The many lovers of outdoor sport who are interested as amateurs in the various 

 phases of taxidermy will find their requirements fully met, whde to prolessional taxi- 

 dermists this important and comprehensive work will be indispensable. It is elabo- 

 rately illustrated. 



INSECT LIFE. By John Henry Comstock, Pro- 



-* fessor of Entomology in Cornell University. With Illustra- 



tions by Anna Botsford Comstock, member of the Society of 

 American Wood Engravers. i2mo. Library Edition, cloth, 

 ^2.50; Teachers' and Students' Edition, %\ 50. 

 "Any one who will go through the work with fidelity will be rewarded by a 

 knowledge of insect life which will be of pleasure and benefit to him at all seasons, and 

 will give an increased charm to the days or weeks spent each summer outside of the 

 great cities. It is the best book of its class which hai yet appeared."— A'ctc York 

 Mail and Express. 



"The arrangement of the k'ssons and experiments and the advice on ccllection and 

 manipulation are only some of the very admirable features of a work that must take 

 first place in the class to which it belongs." — Philadelphia Press. 



"The volume i< admirably written, and the simple and luctd style is a constant de- 

 light. ... It is sure to serve an excellent purpose in the direction of popular culture, 

 and the love of natural science which it will develop in youthful minds cm hardly fail 

 to bear rich fruit " —Boston Beacon. 



O 



UT LINKS OF THE EARTH'S HISTORY. 



By Prof. N. S. Shai.er, of Harvard University. Illustrated. 

 i2mo. Clolh, $1.75. 



*' Any one who reads the preHminary chapters will not stop until he has read the 

 entire book. The subject is certainly one of supreme interest, and it would be hard to 

 find any one more competent to write about it than Piolessor Shaler."— /V^iii Yotk 

 Herald, 



" Professor Shaler fortunately possesses a popular style, and what he writes on a 

 scientific topic is entertaining as well as instructive. This book is illustrated with a 

 number of splendid full-page cuts, whicti admirably illuminate the v/ork."— Boston 

 Globe. 



' Professor Shaler, of Harvard, in the well-worded text and the handsome ilhistra- 



geological study, as it furnishes the key to unlock some of the great mystenes the stu- 

 dent meets in this broad field of science. ... He explains many curious phenomena. 

 The work is very free from technic;ilities, and is so plainly told as to be easily under- 

 stood by every intellectual reader."— CAfcafc Inter-Ocean, 



D. APPLETON AND COMPANY. NEW YORK. 



