22 Selections from Mr. Edward Arnold’s List. 
SOME BOOKS FOR SPORTSMEN. 
THE SALMON RIVERS AND LOCHS OF SCOTLAND. 
By W. L. CatpErwoop, F.R.S.E., Inspector of Fisheries to the Fishery 
Board for Scotland. With numerous Illustrations and Maps’ of the prin- 
cipal rivers, One Vol. Demy 8vo., 21s. net, 
‘A new book by Mr. Calderwood is an excellent matter. There was ample room for this new 
treatment of the subject, especially by one whose opportunities for observation have been so great and 
whose use of those opportunities so excelleat.’— The Field. 
THE LIFE OF THE SALMON. With reference more especially 
to the Fish in Scotland. By W. L. CaLpErwoop, F.R.S.E., Inspector of 
Salmon Fisheries for Scotland. | Illustrated. 7s. 6d. net. 
‘The best book ever written on the life-history of the salmon’— The Fishing Gazette. 
TEN YEARS OF GAME-KEEPING. By Owen Jones. With 
numerous Illustrations. One Vol. Demy 8vo., ros. 6d, net. 
‘This is a book for all sportsmen, for all who take an interest in sport, and for all who love the 
English woodlands. Mr. Jones writes from triple view-points—those of sportsman, naturalist, and 
gamekeeper—and every page of his book reveals an intimate knowledge of the ways of the English 
wilds, a perfect mastery of all that the word ‘“ woodcraft” may stand for, and a true instinct of 
sportsmanship.’ — he Evening Standard. 
MEMORIES OF THE MONTHS. Leaves from a Field 
Naturalist’s Note-book. By the Right Hon. Sir HERBERT MaxwELt, Bart. 
Series I. to V. Large crown 8vo., with Photogravure Illustrations, 7s, 6d. 
each. (Sold separately.) 
“We have no living writer on the subject who possesses quite the same qualities as Sir Herbert 
Maxwell—a cultivated, pleasant style, the knowledge of the trained naturalist, the insight of the true 
lover of Nature, and the high spirits of the sportsman. His notebooks show how full the life of a 
country gentleman may be who can turn upon his surroundings the mind of the scholar and the 
philosopher. The plan of the series is excellent..—The Spectator. 
‘Sir Herbert Maxwell's net is wide. Some of his notes come from German technical papers, 
many from hosts of friends and correspondents, more from personal observation. All are written of 
gaily, unaffectedly, unprofessionally, and when it comes to salmon, with a touch of exaltation. The 
eee proves that Sir Herbert Maxwell’s pen has not yet gleaned his teeming experience.’-— 
he Times. 
CHRONICLES OF THE HOUGHTON FISHING CLUB, 
1822-1908. Edited by Sir HerBert MaxweELyt. With numerous Illus- 
trctions from Sketches by Landseer, Chantrey, Turner, etc. Demy 4to., 
£2 2s. net. 
PAGES FROM A COUNTRY DIARY. By Percivat Somers. 
With Photogravure Plates, 7s. 6d. 
‘This is good reading as far from the pretty and complacent ‘garden book” as from the un- 
alloyed naturalist’s ‘‘diary.” The author is a sportsman and a man of culture, with an observant 
eye for nature, and a shrewd and humorous eye for the human life around him; and his flow of 
anecdote and daily notes on country doings and country society, wild life, sport, and much else, 
introduce us to an agreeable personality, and a life full of varied interests.’— The Times. 
COL. MEYSEY-THOMPSON’S HANDBOOKS, 
A SHOOTING CATECHISM. Pocket 8vo., 3s. 6d. net. 
A FISHING CATECHISM. Pocket 8vo., 3s. 6d. net. 
A HUNTING CATECHISM. Pocket 8vo., 3s.,6d. net. 
Lonpon: EDWARD ARNOLD, 41 & 43 Mappox Street, W. 
