ary of North American
birds, the male of each species being shown in COLOR from pen and ink
drawings. Uniform with Egg Book. 350 pages.
$2.50 net
Page 474
[Illustration 476: _From "Water Birds"_.]
[Illustration: _From "Land Birds"_.]
LAND BIRDS
By CHESTER A. REED, B. S.
An illustrated, pocket text book that enables anyone to quickly identify
any song or insectivorous bird found east of the Rocky Mountains. It
describes their habits and peculiarities; tells you where to look for
them and describes their nests, eggs and songs.
EVERY BIRD IS SHOWN IN COLOR, including the females and young where the
plumage differs, from watercolor drawings by the four-color process. The
illustrations are the BEST, the MOST ACCURATE, and the MOST VALUABLE
ever printed in a bird book.
"LAND BIRDS" is the most popular and has the LARGEST SALE (over 300,000
copies) of any bird book published in this country. It is used and
recommended by our leading ornithologists and teachers. 230 pages.
Bound in Cloth, 75c. net; in Leather, $1.00 net; postage 5c.
WATER BIRDS
By CHESTER A. REED, B. S.
This book is uniform in size and scope with LAND BIRDS. It includes all
of the Water Birds, Game Birds and Birds of Prey, east of the Rockies.
Each species is ILLUSTRATED IN COLOR from oil paintings; the bird, its
habits and nesting habits are described.
The pictures show more than 230 birds in color, every species found in
our range. They exceed in number those in any other bird book. In
quality they cannot be surpassed--exquisite gems, each with an
attractive background, typical of the habits of the species.
"LAND BIRDS" and "WATER BIRDS" are the only books, regardless of price,
that describe and show in color every bird. 250 pages, neatly boxed.
Bound in Cloth, $1.00 net; in Leather, $1.25 net; postage 5c.
Page 475
[Illustration: 477.]
[Illustration.]
THE TREE GUIDE
By JULIA ELLEN ROGERS
Author of "The Tree Book"
The Tree Guide is uniform in style and size with the well known pocket
Bird Guides which have become so universally popular. It contains
illustrations (32 of them colored and many in black and white) and
descriptions of every tree east of the Rocky Mountains. The descriptions
include the range, the classification, the distinctive features such as
flowers, leaves, fruit, etc., and all other marks that lead to an easy
identification of the tree. No detail that will help the student has
bee
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