







P hid Collector ‘Ss 
BG: ARNOLD. M. i 
Crown 4to, Cloth, gilt, extra. Pp. 144. Price 1 Os. 
q With Twelve full-page Coloured Illustrations and Eight Un 
coloured, from the Author's Drawings. _ Illustrated in the Text 
by Twenty Process Blocks. oe 
@ A Book for Amateur Collectors and Shore-Shooters. 
“Mr. Arnold handles his narrative in a brisk, lively style, which captivates the 
reader quite apart from the interesting things he has to tell. The chapter entitle 
‘From the Point of View of a Dunlin’ is charmingly written, and may be reco 
mended to the indiscriminate butchers who go out with the intention of killing 
many birds as they can.”—Tribune. 
‘There is a delightful freshness and originality with this book which at onee 
demands the reader's attention. . . . He deals largely with shore birds, and oivg 
many interesting narratives about them.” —Naturalist. 
“This is a book written by an enthusiastic bird collector, who shoots and seh 
up his own specimens, and is his own artist... . . _It is living again the old life ti 
read these interesting pages.’—The Zoologist. id 
Cloth extra, Foolscap 8vo. Price 1s. 6d. Postage 2d. £ 
INSECT HUNTER’S COMPANION 
By tue Rev. JOSEPH GREENE, M.A. | 
FIFTH EDITION. : 
Entirely revised, and extended, by A. B. FARN. 4 
4 
The Chapter on Coleoptera by Kpwarpd Newman; on Hymenoptera by 
FREDERICK SuitH; on Breeding Galiflies by Kpwarp A. Firce. 












et 

“Few books on entomology have done more to encourage the study ant 
collecting of butterflies and moths than this most useful little book. . . Inevery wa 
an excellent little book, and no young collector should be without it. ”_The Field. 
‘‘We are glad to see a new and well got-up edition of this unpretentious bu 
eminently useful little book, which has “probably been in the hands of ever 
beginner in the study of our British Insects, and is still read with pleasure ant 
interest by many more advanced workers.’’—Entomologists’ Monthly Magazine. 
4 
BI RDSNESTING & BIRD=SKINNING. A Complete 
Description of the Nests and Eggs of Birds which Breed in Britain 
by Epwarp Nrwman. — Srconp EpIrion, with Directions for Collecting an 
Preservation; a Chapter on Bird-skinning; and Description and Woodeuts 0 
the Instruments necessary to the Collector. By MILLER Curisty. Cloth eX 
Feap 8vo. Pricels. Postage 2d. 
An excellent Supplement - to Elms’s ‘Pocxet-Boox or Britis Bigps.’ 
“Very good indeed, and can be thoroughly recommended.”—Athenewm. a 
London: WEST, NEWMAN & CO., 54, Hatton Garden, 
