Troth, cannot but prove the most attractive, as
they are the most useful, feature of this book.--_Preface._
BURROUGHS, JOHN.
Squirrels and Other Fur-Bearers.
Houghton. 1.00
This wise old nature-lover tells us in his delightful way of the fox,
mink, skunk, weasel, porcupine, muskrat, and other wild creatures.
There are fifteen colored illustrations reduced from Audubon's large
pictures.
CRAGIN, B.S.
Our Insect Friends and Foes.
Putnam. 1.75
A boy of eleven once asked me, in the midst of a schoolroom talk
on the uses of participles, where a grasshopper's ears were.... I
did not wonder that he found grasshoppers more interesting than
participles--I do myself--and so, I am sure, do the young people
for whom, most of all, this book has been written.--_Preface._
Butterflies, moths, and insects, are described, and full directions
for collecting, preserving, and studying them, given in this (p. 132)
satisfactory volume, which contains many illustrations. A list of
popular and scientific names is included.
ECKSTORM, F.H.
The Woodpeckers.
Houghton. 1.00
Illustrated with colored plates and figures in the text;
non-technical; color key.
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