MACMILLAN & CO.’S 
BOOKS FOR SELBORNIANS 
THE CAMBRIDGE NATURAL HISTORY. Edited by S. F. Harmer, 
M.A., P’ellow of King’s College, Cambridge, Superintendent of the University Museum 
of Zoology ; and A. E. Shipley, M.A., Fellow of Christ’s College, Cambridge, Uni- 
versity Lecturer on the Morphology of Invertebrates. Vol. III. — Molluscs and 
Brachiopods. By the Rev. A. H. Cooke, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of King’s 
College, Cambridge; A. E. Shipley, M.A., Fellow of Christ’s College, Cambridge ; 
and F. R. C. Reed, M.A., Trinity College, Cambridge. Illustrated. Medium 8vo, 
17/- net. 
Times. — “ There are very many, not only among educated people who take an interest in science, but even 
among specialists, who will welcome a work of reasonable compass and handy form containing a trustworthy 
treatment of the various departments of Natural History by men who are familiar with and competent to deal 
with the latest results of scientific research . . . Altogether, to judge from this first volume, ‘ The Cam- 
bridge Natural Histoiy ’ promises to fulfil all the expectations that its prospectus holds out.’’ 
SUMMER STUDIES OF BIRDS AND BOOKS. By W. Warde Fowler, 
Author of “A Year with the Birds,” &c. Crown 8vo, 6/-. 
Times. — “ Readers of Mr. Warde Fowler’s delightful ‘ Year with the Birds,’ do not need to be told what 
a dainty feast he has provided for them in his new volume. . . . The volume will be treasured by all 
lovers of birds and their haunts." 
Science-Gossip. — “ Every line of the chapter on birds shows the author’s intense love and appreciation of 
his feathered friends. He does not write only as a critic, but as one who has lived with them and loved them." 
Daily Telegraph. — “ Mr. Fowler is a born student of natural history, and possesse.s the happy faculty of 
being able to describe what he sees.’’ 
TALES OF THE BIRDS. By W. Warde Fowler, M.A. With Illus- 
trations by Bryan Hook. Second Edition. Crown 8vo, 3/6. 
A YEAR WITH THE BIRDS. By W. Warde Fowler, M.A. With 
illustrations by Bryan Hook. Third Edition, Enlarged. Crown 8vo, 3/6. 
NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC INSECTS. By L. C. Miall, 
F.R.S., Professor of Biology in the Yorkshire College, Leeds. Illustrated. Crown 
8vo, 6/-. {Immediately. 
LIFE AND STRUCTURE OF BIRDS. By F. W. Headley, Assistant 
Master at Haileybury College. Illustrated. Crown 8vo. [ Very shortly. 
SHORT STUDIES IN NATURE KNOWLEDGE. By William Gee, 
Assistant Lecturer, Manchester Field Naturalists’ Society. With Illustrations. Crown 
8vo, 3/6. 
FROM A NEW ENGLAND HILLSIDE. Notes from Underledge. By 
William Potts. Pot. 8vo, 3/-. 
THE FRIENDSHIP OF NATURE. A New England Chronicle of Birds 
and Flowers. By Mabel Osgood Wright. i6mo, 3/-. 
Speaker. — “There is close and patient obsen^ation in the book, as well as an imaginative handling of facts 
and a pleasant literary flavour." 
Pall Mall Budget. — “ A charming little book." 
THE PLANET EARTH. An Astronomical Introduction to Geography. 
By Richard A. Gregory, F.R.A.S. Globe 8vo, 2/-. 
Observatory. — “ There cannot be a doubt that the author of the present little book has arrayed his facts 
in a very popular and readable manner, and at the same time has induced to a retention of these by a concise 
and a little more technical synopsis at the end of each chapter. ... A book to be honestly recommended 
for its purpose.” 
Nature. — “ The explanations are models of clearness and accuracy, and the diagrams illustrating them 
are excellent. Many of them are new, and involve original ideas of the author ; as, for instance, a diagram 
illustrating the sun’s apparent path in winter and summer, and another showing the principle of Foucault’s 
pendulum by a lecture experiment. Teachers of geography and physiography will do well to make themselves 
familiar with Mr. Gregory’s methods." 
THE BOOK OF THE ROSE. By the Rev. A. Foster Melliar, M.A., 
Rector of Sproughlon, Suffolk. Illustrated. Extra crown 8vo, 8/6 net. 
Journal of HorticulUire. — “ A work of permanent value to be treasured and studied for the information 
that it contains. All persons who love the Queen of the Summer that holds sway throughout his pages, and 
who desire to see her charms displayed in fullest beauty in gardens or exhibitions, should not be happj’ till 
they severally and individually own this extremely attractive and emphatically useful ‘ Book of the Rose.’ " 
Gardener s Chronicle. — “ You are told exactly what to do ; and you must be exacting indeed if you find 
any point on which you desire information that is not included in these fourteen chapters. . . . ."Ibis 
charming and instructive volume, which, as a practical guide, we venture to think justifies its title, ambitious 
though it be, of ‘ The Book of the Rose.’ ” 
MACMILLAN & CO., LONDON. 
John Bale and Sons^ Printers^ 85-89, Gt. Titchfield Street^ London^ /F. 
