An Important Book of Natural History 



From a drawing by Ernest Thompson Seton 



Woodland Caribou, male and female 



Life - Histories of Northern Animals 



By ERNEST THOMPSON SETON 



IVith 68 maps and 6oo drawings by the Author. In two large 8vo 

 volumes, of over 600 pages each. 2 vols. $18 net. {Expreisagt Ext.a) 



THIS book is the result of the Author's thirty years of careful 

 observation and study of the quadrupeds of North America, 

 and is the most comprehensive and authoritative as well as 

 interesting work on these animals. It is a book of popular 

 natural history on a strictly scientific basis. In it are treated some 

 sixty quadrupeds that are found in Manitoba, thus taking- in all the 

 large land mammals of the United States, except about a dozen, in- 

 cluding five of the big game; among them are bufifalo, antelope, elk, 

 beaver, fox, squirrel, bear, coyote, rabbit, mouse. 



"Everything in my power," says the author in his preface, "has 

 been done to make this a painstaking, loving attempt to penetrate the 

 intimate side of the animals' lives — the side that has so long been 

 overlooked, because until lately we have persistently regarded wild things 

 as mere living targets, quite forgetting that they have their homes, 

 their mates, and their sorrows, a home life that is their real life. The 

 illustrations which are most remarkable, are from photographs, 

 drawings, and maps. 



CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, 153 Fifth Avenue, NEW YORK CITY 



