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"Whoever shall start out for a country walk with this little book will add greatly to present enjoyments, and will be continually acquiring a fund of useful and agreeable knowledge."--_Public Opinion_.
A SELECTION OF FIFTY PLATES
From "How to Know the Wild Flowers." Printed on Special Paper suitable for Coloring by Hand, The set, in a portfolio, $1.00 net.
Books for Lovers of Nature
On Flowers, Animals and Birds
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, Publishers
HOW TO KNOW THE WILD FLOWERS
By MRS. WILLIAM STARR DANA
With 48 Colored Plates and New Black and White Drawings, Enlarged, Rewritten and Entirely Reset
A Guide to the Names, Haunts, and Habits of our Native Wild Flowers.
With 48 full-page colored plates by ELSIE LOUISE SHAW, and no full-page ill.u.s.trations by MARION SATTERLEE. 60th Thousand. Crown 8vo, $2.00 net.
This new edition has been enlarged, revised, and entirely reset, the ill.u.s.trations have been remade, and it has in addition 48 full-page colored plates from drawings by Miss ELSIE LOUISE SHAW, made especially for this edition. _The Nation_ says: "Every flower-lover who has spent weary hours puzzling over a botanical key in the efforts to name unknown plants, will welcome this satisfactory book, which stands ready to lead him to the desired knowledge by a royal road. The book is well fitted to the need of many who have no botanical knowledge and yet are interested in wild flowers."
"I am delighted with it.... It is so exactly the kind of work needed for outdoor folks who live in the country but know little of systematic botany, that it is a wonder no one has written it before."--_Hon.
Theodore Roosevelt_.
"It is not often that a book so suggestive of pleasure, pure and simple, comes our way. So far as we recall books on flowers, it is the first that makes country walks an intelligent joy for those who know nothing of botany but who have eyes to see and minds to question."--_The New York Times_.
By H. E. Parkhurst
HOW TO NAME THE BIRDS
Ill.u.s.trated. 16mo, leather, $1.00 net.
"Mr. Parkhurst has compiled a convenient pocket guide to the birds of the New England States, New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania. He has greatly simplified the common system of bird cla.s.sification for the beginner by omitting such details as are invisible at field-range, and by emphasizing such characteristics as color, size, and time of appearance."--_Review of Reviews_.
"He has given to his book every advantage essential to a plain, straight-forward account of honest observation."--_N. Y. Tribune_.
"The advantage of H. E. Parkhurst's 'How to Name the Birds' is not merely in its concise and careful descriptive matter, but in its form.
It is the only book of the sort that one can put into the pocket of an ordinary coat and carry into the woods and fields when he is away on his country rambles."--_Brooklyn Eagle_.
SONG BIRDS AND WATER FOWL
Ill.u.s.trated. 12mo, $1.50 net.
"This most entertainingly as well as carefully written volume has for one of its best values the attention it gives to that most untrampled, and yet peculiarly alluring domain of bird lore--the stream and the lake, the sea-beach and the wave. With this book Mr. Parkhurst must receive full confirmation as one of the most companionable and beguiling writers on birds."--_G. W. Cable_.
"It will be welcome to the many friends his former book made. The ill.u.s.trations are the finest that have ever been printed in this country in black and white, with exception of another series by the same artist."--_The Nation_.
THE BIRDS' CALENDAR
Ill.u.s.trated. 12mo, $1.50 net.
"A charming book. It contains a year's individual experience of study and observation, the birds for each month being enumerated and described, with comments on their characteristics and habits, and with very useful and beautifully printed ill.u.s.trations."--_The Outlook_.
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, Publishers 153-157 Fifth Avenue, New York
By Harriet L. Keeler
OUR NATIVE TREES
AND HOW TO IDENTIFY THEM
With 178 full-page plates from photographs, and 162 text-drawings.
Crown 8vo, $2.00 net.
CONTENTS: GENERA AND SPECIES; ILl.u.s.tRATIONS; GUIDE TO THE TREES; DESCRIPTIONS OF THE TREES; FORM AND STRUCTURE OF ROOTS, STEMS, LEAVES, FLOWERS AND FRUITS; THE TREE-STEM OR TRUNK; SPECIES AND GENUS; GLOSSARY OF BOTANICAL TERMS; INDEX OF LATIN NAMES; INDEX OF COMMON NAMES.
CRITICAL OPINIONS
C. S. SARGENT, _Professor of Arboriculture in Harvard University_: "Of such popular books the latest and by far the most interesting is by Miss Harriet L. Keeler.... Miss Keeler's descriptions are clear, compact, and well arranged, and the technical matter is supplemented by much interesting and reliable information concerning the economical uses, the history and the origin of the trees which she describes. Outline drawings of the flowers and of the fruits of many of the species, and beautifully reproduced full-page photographic plates of the leaves or of branches of the princ.i.p.al trees, facilitate their determination."
"The value of a book of this character is not only enhanced by its numerous ill.u.s.trations, but positively dependent upon them; those in the present volume being of unusual interest; and the book ... is one which should add new interest to the coming Summer for many to whom nature is practically a sealed book, as well as heighten the pleasure of others to whom she has long been dear."--_N. Y. Times Sat.u.r.day Review_.
"The plan of the book must be heartily commended. No admirer of trees should be without it, and if you go away into the country for even a short stay, and care to know--as you should care--anything about our native trees you will find this volume an invaluable guide. One could bring home from a walk a collection of leaves and then, with the aid of the ill.u.s.trations in this book, identify them all. Then you will know those trees the next time you encounter them, and they will take on a new interest and meaning to your eyes."--_Brooklyn Eagle_.
"The book is altogether an admirable specimen of book-making, alike to eye and touch. The ill.u.s.trations, over 300 in number, include almost every tree mentioned, and are rarely beautiful. Especially satisfactory are the plates of the varying foliage and cones of the conifers."--_N.
Y. Commercial Advertiser_.