htdex. 
III. 
Horse.s and Sunday, 257. 
I louse- Martin’s NesI, 24S. 
Huhbard, E., My Moor, 247. 
t lulnie’s Familiar Carden Flowers, 253 ; 
\\\s, Familiar Wild Flowers, Vi, 197. 
Hunler’s Open Spaces and Footpaths, 21. 
Hussey, S., The Rook, 59. 
Hyenas, 33. 
Ichneumon Flies ? 19. 
Ingersoll’s Wild Neighbours, 252. 
Izaak Walton’s Caterpillar, 88. 
Jackdaw’s Note, 118. 
James, L. C., Quirrel, 163. 
Kelso, J. E. II., Summer Migrants, 
I.r 9 ; Swallows in November, 18. 
Kew Pelican, Fate of, 238. 
Kingfishers, Fined for Killing, 76. 
Kirby, W. F., American Insects, 254 ; 
Closing Footpaths, 198; Ichneumon 
Flies, 19. 
Knight’s In the West Country, 252. 
Laidlaw, M. S., Robin’s Nest, 130. 
Last Look, \, 64. 
l^yland’s The Thames Illustrated, 253. 
Lindsay’s Flower Seller, 250. 
Lloyd -Praeger’s Open Air Studies in 
Botany, 253. 
London : Birds, 46, 98 ; Magpies, 99. 
London County Council Again, 58, 217. 
Longman, C. J., Orange-tip Butterfly, 
128. 
Mackie, A. C., Cock and Chicks, 218; 
Railway Embankments, 206 ; 
Squirrel and Eggs, 199. 
Macpherson, A. H., London Birds, 46. 
Macpherson’s, H. A., Red Deer, 72. 
McCabe, J. B. , White Cattle of Cadzow, 
244. 
McNair, J. F. A., Carnivorous Mollusc, 
239 ; Goats and Sheep, 226 ; 
Hyaenas, 33. 
.Magpies in Regent’s Park, 59 ; London, 
99 - 
Maitland’s,Mrs. Fuller, 
72, 174 ; her Song-hook of Bethia 
Hardacre, 250. 
Martin, H. W., Feathered Friends, 48. 
.Martin, E. A., his Bibliography of Gilbert 
White, 55; Feathered Women, 1 16; 
Wise Precaution, 116. 
Martins, ii8; Remarkable .Vest, 248. 
•Ma.sefield’s Wild Bird Protection and 
Nesting Boxes, 175. 
.Maxwell’s Post Meridiana, 252. 
Miall’s Round the Year, 36. 
Miles, W., Closing Footpaths, 217; his 
Along the Medway, 137 ; Unfre- 
quented Field-Paths, 41. 
Miller, W. J. C., Birds’ Nests and 
Songs, 181 ; Nature Poetry, 28, 66, 
81. 
Milman’s In the Garden of Peace, 75. 
Miss Corelli’s Botany, 39. 
Mocking Bird, Curious Habit of, 79. 
Moir, E. M., Bullfinch, 37. 
Mole’s Larder, A., 63, 117. 
Mollusc, A Carnivorous, 239, 257. 
Morley, R. , Barn Owl in Captivity, 77. 
Mowing Machines, 198. 
Myers, A., Birds’ Nests, to. 
.My Moor, 247. 
Natural History Notes, 18, 38, 59, 77, 
98, 1 17, 139, 178, 199, 218, 238, 
255. 
Nature Poetry, 28, 66, 81. 
Nest, An Early, 109. 
New Forest in Springtime, 61. 
Nightingale’s Croak, 118. 
“ Noble Sport,” 17. 
Novel Pet, A, 128. 
Nuthatches, 118. 
Open Spaces and Footpaths, 2i. 
Orange-tip Butterfly, 128. 
Ormerod, H. J., Herald of Spring, 54. 
Over the Northern Heights, 1 76. 
Owen’s Country Month by Month, 137. 
Owl, Barn, in Captivity, 77 ; Little, 218. 
Page, I. E., Horses and Sunday, 257. 
Palgrave’s Golden Treasury of Poems, 
251 ; his Landscape Poetry, 251. 
Palmer, C. J., Nightingale’s Croak, u8. 
Partridges and Pheasants, 218. 
Pawson, A. H., Visit to Selborne, loi. 
Peek’s Poetry of Sport, 25 1 . 
