NEW NATURE BOOKS 



Grasshopper Land 



By Margaret W. Morley 

 Hardly a boy or girl who has enjoyed the 

 shrill pipings and saucy "jumping into notice" 

 of those long-legged, big-eyed acrobats of 

 meadow and garden, will be able to resist the 

 invitation to "Grasshopper Land," especially 

 as the trip is conducted by such a delightful 

 guide, learned in all the wiles and ways of the 

 grasshopper. They will be only too eager to 

 "settle down under a shady bush on the edge 

 of a tangle of goldenrods and asters, where the 

 grasshoppers are blissfully chirping," study the 

 home life of these funny little neighbors and in- 

 cidentally learn a great deal about others of the 

 tribe, who claim their share of the lush stalks, 

 and do their f'cst to imitate that wonderful 

 jump. frith .00 illustrations by the author. 

 12mo. $1.25. 



Forest Friends 



The Woodland Adventures of a Boy Pioneer 

 By Dr. John Madden 

 The seven-year old lad who came with his 

 parents to the forest covered reaches of the early 

 frontier; lived in a log cabin about which at 

 night the deer, fox, and lynx were found prowl- 

 ing; roamed the wood with "Rover" and his 

 beautiful wild fawn, — what more did he need 

 to feel like a veritable Robin Hood? And as 

 he grew up he came to know the birds and 

 fishes and the wood-folk so well that the boy 

 who reads this records of his adventures can 

 want no better guide on his own hunting, fish- 

 ing, and birding expeditions, or if he must stay 

 at home, no better friend than this one whose 

 home was "under the greenwood tree." 



With frontispiece. 12mo. $1.25. 



A. C. McCLURG & CO., Publishers, Chicago 



RIGS THAT RUN" 



i i 



Are 



The 



gooa 



impo 



Wri 



THE FAMOUS 



StC^ us 



by all to be the greatest valut 

 cylinder models for 1907 c 

 ^ other high-grade cars, 

 ind ' in the *'Ri^ 

 ma vou manv 



ffered. 



all the 



those 



Run." 



ST. LOUIS MOTOR GAR GO. 



PEORIA, ILLINOIS 



