1 



U.H*3 



The West 



Vol. XIII. No. 4. 



Nov. 



JQ02. 



Whole No. ug. 



ERI0D1CALS. 



AMERICAN BOTANIST: 



Bin^hamton, n. Y. 

 AMERICAN ECONOMIST: 



No. 135 W. 23d St., New York, N. Y. 

 AMERICAN GARDENING: 



No. 136 Liberty street, New York, N. Y. 

 AMERICAN GEOLOGIST: 



Minneapolis, Mfnn. 

 AMERICAN HOMES: 



5! 6 5th five., New York. A magazine that has 

 become a creciit to the ration's taste in architec- 

 ture, which it is doins much to improve. 



AMERICAN ORNITHOLOGY: 



Chac*. K. Read, Sta. A. Worcester, 

 Mass.; 50 cts a year (monthly). "The 

 best illustrated bird magazine." Send 

 30 cts for 3 months' trial. Pictures of 

 birds, nests and eggs. 

 BOTANICAL. GAZETTE : 

 BRYOLOGIST; 78 Orange st., Brooklyn, 

 N. Y. 

 CANADIAN ENTOMOLOGIST: 



No. 429 Wellington st., London, Ont., 

 Canada. 

 CONDOR: 



Bi-monthly bulletin of the Cooper or- 

 nithological club. 



ENGINEERING AND MINING JOUR- 

 NAL: 



251 Broadway, New York. 

 "The best and most influential mining 



paper in the world." Weekly edition, $5 



a year; monthly, $1.50 a year. Specimen 



copy free. 



EVANGEL: Scranton, Pa. 



FARM AND FIRESIDE: 

 Springfield, Ohio. 



FERN BULLETIN: Binghamton. N. Y. 



HEALTH-CULTURE : 

 No. 503 Fifth Avenue, New York. 



INTERNATIONAL PRINTER: 210 Lippincott 

 bldg., Philadelphia, Pa. 



JULIAN MJNER: Julian, SanDiego Co., Cal. 



I ublished in the centerof a rich mining belt 

 where orchards, gardens, grain fields, creame- 

 ries, and apiaries flourish, timber & water are 

 plentiful, and picturesque resorts are numer- 

 ous, where minora' springs are of great benefit 

 to hundreds of health seekers at all seasons. 

 John G. Overshiner, editor and proprietor, 



MEEHAN'S MONTHLY: 



Devoted to general gardening and wild 

 flowers. $2 a year. Germantown, Phila- 

 delphia, Pa. Each issue contains a col- 

 ored portrait by Prang of some American 

 wild plant or flower, with description, 

 and various notes on horticulture. 



MINERAL COLLECTOR: 



No. 238 Greene street, New York, N. Y. 

 MINING: Spokane, Washington. 



Journal of the northwest mining asso- 

 ciation. SI a yr. Monthly. 



MUHLENBERGIA: 

 No, 547 W. Walnut St., Lancaster, Pa^ 

 A journal of botany edited and pub- 

 lished by A. A. Heller. $1 a volume. 

 MONITOR: Hamburg, 111. 



NATURE STUDY: Manchester, N. H. 

 NAUTILUS: 



Cor. 19th and Race sts., Philadelphia, 

 Pa. 



Devoted to the interests of concholo- 

 gists. Monthly, $1 a year. 



OHIO NATURALIST: Columbus, O. 



Published by the biological club of the 

 Ohio state university. 50c a year of 8 

 numbers. 



OOLOGIST: Albion, N. Y. 



PACI5MC FL'>RIST, Oi chard and GardenMag- 



azice, 514 Pine st. San Franciec \ Cal. 



An illustrated monthly of useful information 

 to all interested in the cultivation of fruits and 

 flowers, ornamental horticulture, agriculture 

 and landscape gardening. $1 a year; 50 cents fo- 

 6 months; $2 to foreign countries. H.H. Lilien- 

 thal, manag°r. 

 PHILATELIC West and Camera News: 



Superior, Nebraska 



Send 10c for 4 months trial, or 50c for a year. 

 100 pages each month devoted to curios, relics, 

 coins, stamps, photography, history, etc. finely 

 illustrated; organ of 23 societies of 20,000 mem- 

 bers; ads pay big at 1 cent a word— write today! 

 VERMONT JOURNAL: Windsor, Vt. 

 WEST AMERICAN SCIENTIST: 



San Diego, California. 

 WI< SON BULLETIN: 160 N. Proferror street, 



Qberlin, Ohio. 



'The best exponent of field ornithology.' 



Specimen copy free. 



