ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE & CO.'S 



By the Author of "Lives of the Hunted.''^ 



Monarch, The Big Bear, by Ernest Thompson 

 Seton. With many drawings by the Author 

 in half-tone and Hne. 5s. net. 



" Some (nature students) are drily scientific, some are dull and 

 prosy, some are sentimental, some are sensational, and a few are 

 altogether admirable. Mr. Thompson Seton, as an artist and 

 raconteur, ranks by far the highest in this field." — Mr. John 

 Burroughs, in the Atlantic Monthly. 



" A more charming and pathetic animal story was never written, 

 even by that sympathetic student of wild life, Thompson Seton." — 

 Daily Express. 



Two Little Savages. Being the Adventures of Two 

 Boys who Lived as Indians and what They 

 Learned. With over 300 drawings. Written 

 and Illustrated by Ernest Thompson Seton. 

 Post 8vo, cloth, 6s. net. 



" From the delight and envy which this book has awakened in 

 us we can imagine the unalloyed pleasure with which it will be 

 devoured by all boys clever enough to understand it and fortunate 

 enough to hve where emulation of the doings of Yan and Sam and 

 Sappy is within the horizon of possibility. . . . Mr. Seton's name 

 is sufficient guarantee for the style, in which we inhale the aro- 

 matic freshness and pungency of the great forest-library where he 

 has studied." — Glasgow Herald. 



Natural History in Zoological Gardens^ by 

 Frank E. Beddard, M.A. Oxen., F.R.S., 

 Prosector of the Zoological Society, etc. Illus- 

 trated by Gambier Bolton and Winifred 

 Austen. Extra Crown 8vo. 6s. net. 



This volume contains an account of each of the principal 

 kinds of animals found in most Zoological Gardens. The 

 types of vertebrate life are placed in due relation to each 

 other in an orderly way. It will be of assistance as a guide 

 to the mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians collected 

 together in such great variety at these institutions, and 

 a great help to the study of animal life. It is sumptuously 

 illustrated both from photographs and drawings. 



"It gives a skilled and interesting account of the history, the 

 appearance, and the habits of more than a hundred different kinds 

 of beasts, birds, and creeping things. . . The instructive and con- 

 cise descriptions in the text are helped out by many admirable 

 photographs," — Scotsman. 



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