By Ernest Thompson Seton 



LIVES OF THE HUNTED 



Author of "Wild Animals I Have Known," etc. Illus- 

 trated with more than 200 drawings by the author. 

 Eightieth Thousand. $1.75 net ; postage 15 cents. 



CONTENTS : 

 Krag, the Kootenay Ram. 



A Street Troubadour, Being the Adventures of a Cock Sparrow. 

 Johnny Bear. 



The Mother Teal and the Overland Route. 

 Chink, the Development of a Pup. 

 The Kangaroo Rat. 



Tito, the Story of a Coyote that Learned How. 

 Why the Chickadee Goes Crazy Once a Year. 



OPINIONS 



"Surely no more entertaining book could be devised for children of all 

 ages."— Chicago Post. 



"This story ('Krag') of the monarch of the Big Horns will strike the 

 average reader as among the best things that Mr. Seton-Thompson has done." 



— N. Y. Tribune. 



" The breadth of Mr. Seton-Thompson's sympathy is the finest charm of 

 his work."— Agnes Repplier, in Saturday Evening Post. 



" Every acUnirer of Ernest Seton-Thompson's animal stories will hail with 

 pleasure his new volume, ' Lives of the Hunted ' of the same nature as ' Wild 

 Animals I Have Known ' and shows the same sympathetic insight and 

 genuine literary touch. His stories are as truly literature as 'The Jungle 

 Books.' "—Chicago Record- Her aid. 



"It is a delightful volume, full of a charm that will be felt all the more 

 keenly if the reader has any love for the wild life of nature and finds pleas- 

 ure in everything that brings one in touch with her varying moods. It is one 

 of those unusual books in whose pages the older as well as the younger reader 

 feels equally at home. It is strong, vivid, full of fascinating description, and 

 breathes in every page a deep and reverent love of nature and of the myriad 

 life that rests in the care of the angel of the wild things."— Brooklyn Eagle. 



" The charming animal biographies which have made the name of Seton- 

 Thompson famous the world over are continued in this volume with all the 

 spirit and truthfulness of their predecessors and the admirable drawings with 

 which the stories are illustrated are reproduced here with the perfect copying 

 effected by the latest and best photo-print process. 



—Philadelphia Evening Telegraph. 



