DAVID BOGUE, 3, SI. Marlin's Place, PV.C. 
Monthly, price 4</. ; Annual Subscription, 5r. (including Postage). 
HARDWICKE’S 
SCIENCE GOSSIP: 
Illustrated Medium of lutercJiange and Gossip 
for Students and Lovers of Nature, 
Edited by J. E. TAYLOR, Ph.D., F.L.S., F.G.S., &c. 
Numerous Illustrations. 
14 Volumes are ncnv published^ in cloth^ price 5^. each, 
Vol. XV. commenced January, 1879. 
Among the subjects included in its pages will be found: 
Aquaria, Bees, Beetles, Birds, Butterflies, Ferns, Fish, 
Flies, Fossils, Fungi, Geology, Lichens, Micro- 
scopes, Mosses, Moths, Reptiles, Seaweeds, 
Spiders, Wild Flowers, Worms, 
&c., &c. 
“This is a very pleasant journal, 
that costs only fourpence a month, 
and from which the 
reader who is no na- 
turalist ought to be 
able to pick up a 
good fourpenny- worth 
of pleasant informa- 
tion. It is conducted 
and contributed to by 
expert naturalists, who 
are cheerful compa- 
nions, as all good na- 
turalists are \ technical 
enough to make the 
general reader feel 
that they are in ear- 
nest, and are not in- 
sulting him by writing 
down to his compre- 
hension, but natural 
enough and direct 
enough in their records 
of facts, their ques- 
tioning and answering 
each other concerning 
curiosities of nature. 
The reader who buys for himself their 
monthly budget ofnotes and discussions 
upon pleasant points 
in natural history and 
science, will probably 
find his curiosity ex- 
cited and his interest 
in the world about 
him taking the form 
of a little study of 
some branch of the 
sort of knowledge that 
has won his readiest 
attention. For when 
the study itself is so 
delightful, and the en- 
thusiasm it excites so 
genuine and well-di- 
rected, these enthu- 
siasms are contagious. 
The fault is not with 
itself, but with the 
public, if this little 
magazine be not in 
favour with a very 
large circle of read-* 
ers. ’ ’ — Examiner, 
London : DAVID BOGUE, 3, St. Martin’s Place, W.C. 
J. OGDEN AND CO., PHINTEKS, I72, ST. JOHN STREET, E.C. 
