. 
DU CHAILLUS 
GORILLA COUNTRY. 
STORIES OF THE GORILLA COUNTRY: Nar- 
rated for Young People. By Paut B. Du CualtLtv, 
Author of “ Discoveries in Equatorial Africa,” ‘“ Wild 
Life under the Equator,” &c. Profusely Illustrated. 
t2mo, Cloth, $1 75. 
“‘The stories it contains are full of the kind of novelty, peril, and adventure 
which are so fascinating to children. . . . . It isa capital book for boys.”—Loz- 
don Spectator. 
“‘Exceedingly interesting—as much so as even ‘ Robinson Crusoe’ ever was— 
not only to young people on account of its striking novelty and charming and nat- 
ural style, but to the aged and learned as well.” —WNew York Herald. 
‘‘These stories are entertaining, and are well told, and they are calculated to 
impart much knowledge of natural history to youthful readers.’”’—Bostox Trav- 
eller. ; 
“MM. Du Chaillu tells his stories in a ‘ once-upon-a-time’ way, with a personal 
zest which is quite captivating.” Hartford Press, 
*¢ Almost a rival of ‘Robinson Crusoe’ for intense interest, while it has this ad- 
vantage over that work, that it is a narrative of facts.” —Sunday-School Times. 
“It is a book for young people—true, every line of it, but full of action, adven- 
ture, enterprise, and peril, and as exciting as a well-told fairy tale.” —Phzladelphia 
Press. 
“Du Chaillu’s stories of the cannibals, and of his adventures in the vast forests 
of Africa, and among the wild beasts and men no less wild, are told in a pictur- 
esque, vivacious style.”"—New York Times. 
“Fresh, original narratives related in a style of incomparable naziveté, and with 
a delightful confiding tone that must find its way to the heart of every juvenile 
lover of the marvels of nature.”—New York Tribune. 
“Full of rare adventure, and probably what is better, of truth.”"—Zzon’s Herald. 
“Too strange, as well as too life-like, not to be true.” —Christian Advocate. 
PUBLISHED BY HARPER & BROTHERS, NEw York. ° 
(ae Sent by mail, postage prepaid, on receipt of $1 75. 
