WEST, NEWMAN & CO., 54, HATTON GARDEN, LONDON 
THE POCKET-BOOK OF BRITISH BIRDS. 
By E. F. M. Elms. With description of British species and distinguishing 
characters ; habits; food; language or song ; nest and eggs. Foolscap 8vo, 
Cloth , gilt top, 160 pp. + blanks for Notes. Price 2s. 6d., postage 2d. 
“An inexpensive volume, which well deserves to be a ‘pocket-book’ for those 
who wish to become field ornithologists.” — Zoologist. 
“ Of Mr. Elms’s book it is difficult to speak too favourably .... The 
amount of information conveyed is extraordinary.” — Tribune. 
THE ENTOMOLOGIST : A Journal of General Entomology. 
Monthly. Edited by Richard South, F. E.S., assisted by Messrs. 
Adkin, Rowland-Brown, Distant, Fitch, Frohawk, Kirby, 
Kirkaldy, Lucas, Sharp, and Verrall. Frequent Woodcuts and 
occasional Plates. 6d. 
Contains original articles, by well-known Entomologists, on every branch of the 
science ; notes on the habits and occurrence of Lepidoptera, Coleoptera, Hymenoptera, 
Diptera, &c. ; Proceedings of Societies ; Reviews, &c. Monthly lists of Duplicates and 
Desiderata. 
Subscription for one year, including postage to any part of the world and all 
double numbers, 6s. 
FAMILIAR INDIAN BIRDS. 
By Gordon Dalgliesh. 80 pp., cloth, gilt, price 2s. 6d. Illustrated by 
half-tone Blocks from the Drawings of R. II. Bunting and H. B. 
Neilson. 
This little book is intended mainly for those who live in, or visit, India, and who are 
interested in the birds they are likely to meet in everyday life, and who wish to learn 
something about them. The author writes from personal knowledge and observation. 
“ A very handy little monograph ... as an accurate vade mecum of Indian 
bird life the little treatise may be very cordially recommended . . . admirably 
fulfils its object .” — Morning Post of India. 
A BIRD COLLECTORS MEDLEY. 
By E. C. Arnold, M.A. Crown 4to , cloth, gilt extra. Pp. 144. 
Price 10s. With twelve coloured full-page illustrations, and eight un- 
coloured, from the author's drawings. Illustrated in the text by twenty 
process blocks. 
A book for amateur collectors and shore-shooters, and of especial interest to 
those who may visit the Eastbourne Museum where the author’s collection is 
deposited. 
“ All who take delight in the study of birds, whether collectors or not, will 
thoroughly enjoy and profit by Mr. Arnold’s able and instructive volume.” — Tribune. 
“This is a book written by an enthusiastic bird collector, who shoots and sets up 
his own specimens, and is his own artist. . . . It is living again the old life to 
read these interesting pages. . . . Mr. Arnold takes us over many good haunts 
of rare birds, and incidentally gives us many facts and hints. The ‘ Notes on Bird- 
preserving ’ contain nuggets of experience. The book is fully illustrated, twelve of 
the plates being coloured, and doing credit to the reproducers.” — The Zoologist. 
“ We have nothing but good words to say of the excellent writing and capital 
pictures in colour and black-and-white which Mr. Arnold has given us of the birds, 
and where and how to find them.” — Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic News. 
