189 
The above work is a very clear and practical guide to the dissection of a 
typical small mammal, and will be found very useful to any collector who 
wishes to increase his knowledge of mammalian anatomy. 
Howell, Arthur H. 
1937. A simple method of saving small mammals in the field; Jour, of Mam- 
malogy, vol. IS, No. 1, p, 95. 
Deprecates use of salt and alum as causing alteration of colour of hair 
in some species; recommends use of powdeied borax on flesh side of skin 
while damp and drying the skin right side out. 
Hubbs, C. L., and K. F. Lagler 
1958. Fishes of the Great Lakes region. Cranbrook Inst. Sci. Bull. 26:1-213. 
Huber, Wharton 
1930. A Method of Salting and Preparing Water Bird Skins; The Auk. vol. 47, 
No. 3, pp. 409-411, PI. 1 (July 1930). 
Hudson, George E. 
1935a. A practical method of degreasing bird skins; The Auk, vol. 52, No. 1, 
pp. 102-103. 
1935b. A practical method of degreasing study skins; Jour, of Mammalogy, 
vol. 16, No. 1, pp. 329-330. 
Huidekoper, Rush Shippen 
1891. Age of the Domestic Animals; being a complete treatise on the dentition 
of the horse, ox, sheep, hog, and dog, and the various other means of determin- 
ing the age of these animals, pp. viii, 171, illustrated with 200 engravings. 
F. A. Davis, Philadelphia and. London. 
Jackson, Hartley II . T. 
1926. The Care of Museum Specimens of Recent Mammals; U.S. Bioi. Surv., Jour, 
of Mammalogy, vol. 7, No. 2, pp. 113-118, PI. 1 (May 1926). 
Jensen, D. D., and F. G. Holdaway 
1946. DDT in Conirol of Hide Beetles; Jour, of Economic Entomology, vol. 39, 
No. 3, June 1946, pp. 283-286. 
Jewett, Stanley G. 
1914. Directions for Preparing Scientific Specimens of Large and Small Mam- 
mals, Birds, Birds’ Stomachs for Economic Investigations, Birds’ Nests and 
Eggs, Fish and Reptiles, pp. 20, Figs. 15. Published under the direction of 
the Oregon Fish and Game Commission, William L. Finley, State Game 
Warden, Bull. No. 1, Jan 1, 1914 (Salem, Oregon: State Printing Depart- 
ment). 
Jordan, David Starr 
1929. Manual of the Vertebrate Animals of the Northeastern States Inclusive 
of Marine Species, by David Starr Jordan, Chancellor Emeritus of Leland 
Stanford Junior University, with an introduction by Barton Warren Ever- 
mann, California Academy of Sciences. Thirteenth edition. Completely re- 
vised and enlarged and with illustrations. World Book Company, Yonkers-on- 
Hudson, xxxi, 446. 
“The district covered is, approximately, the northeastern United States 
and southern Canada, extending from Labrador westward to and including 
Manitoba and North Dakota, and southward and including North Carolina 
and Kansas.” (In bringing nomenclature and descriptions up to date the 
author acknowledges help of Dr. Hartley H. T. Jackson on the mammals, 
Dr. Carl L. Hubbs on the fishes, Dr. Emmett R. Dunn on amphibians, Dr. 
Alexander G. Ruthven on reptiles, and Dr. H. C. Oberholser on birds.) 
Since the first appearance of this work in 1876 up to the thirteenth edition 
in 1929, it has been generally admitted to be the most concise and practical 
handbook for identifying both land and water vertebrates found in this 
region. The keys are workable and up to date, the etymology of scientific 
names is interesting and useful, and a large number of modem naturalists 
began with it as schoolboys and have kept it on their desks ever since. 
Jordan, David Starr, and Barton W. Evermann 
1900. Fishes of North America. 4 vols. 
