188 
Gray, Prentiss N. 
1932. Records of North American Big Game; Prentiss N. Baldwin, Editor. 
Published under the auspices of the National Collection of Heads and Horns, 
New York Zoological Society. A Book of the Boone and Crockett Club. New 
York. The Derrydale Press, 1932, pp. vi, 178, illustrated. 
Hal kett, A n due w 
1913. Check-list of the Fishes of the Dominion of Canada and Newfoundland; 
Dept, of Marine and Fisheries, pp. 130, PI. 14, (Ottawa: Government Printing 
Bureau.) Out of print. 
This work gives system of classification, habitat, range, technical and 
vernacular names of 569 forms of fishes. 
Hall, E. Raymond 
1937. Deleterious effects of preservatives on study specimens of mammals; Jour, 
of Mammalogy, vol. 18, No. 3, pp. 359-360. 
Strongly recommends against use of salt-alum in treatment of study 
specimens. 
Hall, E. Raymond, and Ward C. Russell 
1933. Dermestid beetles as an aid in cleaning bones; Jour, of Mammalogy, vol. 14, 
No. 4, pp. 372-374. 
Hamilton, William J., Jr. 
1930. The Food of the Soricidae; Jour, of Mammalogy, vol. H, No. 1, pp. 26-39 
(Feb. 1930). 
Gives much valuable new data on food of shrews. 
1938. The desirability of recording full data on specimen labels; Jour, of Mam- 
malogy, vol. 19, No. 2, p. 102. 
1939. American Mammals, Their Lives, Habits and Economic Relations; First 
Edition, pp. 434, figs. 92. McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., New York and 
London, 1939. 
1943. The mammals of Eastern United States. An Account of Recent Land 
Mammals Occurring east of the Mississippi; with thirty portraits by Earl 
J. Poole, pp. 432, figs. 184, Ithaca, New York. Comstock Publishing Company, 
Inc., 1943. 
Harlan, James 
1825. Fauna Americana: Being a description of the mammiferous animals inhab- 
iting North America, pp. x, 320 (Philadelphia). 
Describes 147 species of mammals occurring north of the southern boun- 
dary of the United States. 
Henshaw, Henry W. 
1915. Directions for Preparing Specimens of Large Mammals in the Field; 
U.S. Dept. Agriculture, Biol. Surv. Doc. 102, pp, 4, Figs. 6 (Washington, D.C.). 
Holden, F. H. 
1914. A method of Cleaning Skulls and Disarticulated Skeletons; Contr. from 
the Univ. cf California MuseTim of Vertebrate Zoology. The Condor, vol. 16, 
No. 5, pp. 239-241 (Sept.-Oct., 1914). 
1916. Cleaning Skulls and Skeletons: A Supplementary Note; Ibid., vol. 18, 
No. 6, p. 231 (Nov.-Dee., 1916). 
Hollister, Ned 
1923. Museum Preservation of Incisor Teeth of Ruminantia; Jour, of Mam- 
malogy, vol. 4, No. 2, pp. 123-125, Fig. 1 (May 1923). 
Horn ada y, William T. 
1892. Taxidermy and Zoological Collecting, pp. 362, Pis. 24, Figs. 85. A complete 
handbook for the amateur taxidermist, collector, osteologist, museum-builder, 
sportsman, and traveller, with chapters on collecting and preserving insects, 
by W. J. Holland (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons). 
For a field collector, this practical book is as valuable as it was the day 
it was written. Except for the methods of mounting mammals, which have 
been greatly improved, this book may be safely followed by the taxidermist, 
as the methods used for birds and small mammals have stood the test of time. 
Howell, A. Brazier 
1926. Anatomy of the Wood Rat; Monographs of the American Society of 
Mammalogists, No. 1, pp. 225, line drawings 34, halftone figs. 3. colour 
plates 8. (Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins Company.) 
