4 Mr. Edward Arnold's Autumn Announcements 
THE SALMON RIVERS AND LOCHS 
OF SCOTLAND. 
By W. L. CALDERWOOD, 
INSPECTOR OF FISHERIES TO THE I'isHERY BoarpD FoR SCOTLAND. 
AutHor or ‘THE Lire oF THE SALMON.’ 
With Illustrations and Maps of the Principal Rivers. One Volume. 
Demy 8v0., cloth. 21s. net. 
Also a Large Paper Edition de Luxe, limited to 250 copies, on hand-made 
paper. Handsomely bound. One Volume. Quayto. £2 2s. net. 
This comprehensive and valuable work gives a complete account 
of the rivers and lochs of Scotland frequented by salmon. The 
author has personally visited every important river described, and 
possesses unequalled knowledge of his subject. 
Among the matters discussed in the book are the boundaries and 
fisheries of estuaries ; obstructions and sources of pollution in the 
rivers ; fish passes and croys; means adopted for maintaining the 
water supply ; descriptions of angling waters; ownership of the dif- 
ferent fisheries; angling obtainable at hotels; records of the annual 
catch on various fisheries; influence of temperature on the salmon; 
stories of great ‘days’ on famous rivers; the scenery of the river- 
valleys, etc., etc. 
The book is well illustrated, and contains several maps, specially 
drawn on the scale of 2 inches to the mile, to show the different 
fisheries on such important rivers as the Tweed, Tay, Dee, 
Spey, etc. 
A FIFTH SERIES OF 
MEMORIES OF THE MONTHS. 
By the Right Hon. Sir HERBERT MAXWELL, Bart., 
AurtuHor or ‘Scottish GARDENS,’ ETC. 
With Photogravuve Illustvations. Large Crown 8vo., cloth. 7s. 6d. 
The pleasure given by each fresh instalment of Sir Herbert 
Maxwell’s ‘Memories of the Months’ continues unabated, and the 
welcome accorded to the Fourth Series was such that a large circle 
of readers may be confidently predicted for the Fifth. 
Every year rings new changes on the old order of Nature, and the 
observant eye canalways find fresh features on the face of the Seasons. 
Sir Herbert Maxwell goes out to meet Nature on the moor and loch, 
in garden and forest, and writes of what he sees and feels. This is 
what gives his work its abiding charm, and makes these memories 
fill the place of old friends on the library bookshelf. 
