SCRIBNER'S BOOKS FOR NATURE LOVERS 



By ERNEST THOMPSON SETON 



Lives of the Hunted 



Illustrated by more than 200 drawings by the author. 80th 

 thousand. $i-75 net (postage 15 cents). 



CONTENTS 



Krag, the Kootetiay Ram. Chink ; the Development of a Pup. 



A Street Troubadour, being the Ad- The Kangaroo Rat. 



ventures of a Cock Sparrow. Tito; The Story of the Coyote that 

 Johnny Bear. Learned How. 



Tlie Mother Teal and the Overland Why the Chickadee Goes Crazy Once 



Route. a Year. 



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

 ages."— C'/z/ca^c Evening Post. 



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

 his work." — Agnes Repplier. 



Wild Animals I Have Known 



With 200 ilhistrations froui drawings by the author. 105th 

 thousand. Square i2mo, $2.00. 



" It should be put with Kipling and Hans Christian Andersen as a classic." 



— The At hence um. 

 "Mr. Thompson is now drawing the best mammals of any American artist. 

 • . . This is artistic fidelity to nature in high degree. . . . Nothing of 

 equal simplicity could be more effective than these little marginal oddities and 

 whimsies. The book is thoroughly good, both in purpose and execution." 



—New York Evening Post. 



The Trail of the Sandhill Stag 



Written and ilhistrated with 60 drawings. Square i2mo, 

 $1.50. 



" Bliss Carman, speaking of ' The Trail of the Sandhill Stag,' says : ' I had 

 fancied that no one could touch " The Jungle Book " for a generation at least, 

 but Mr. Thompson has done it. We must give him place among the young 

 masters at once.' And we agree with Mr. Carman." — The Bookina?t. 



