The Ten 
Commandments 
in the 
Animal 
Here is “the shrewdest and most arresting wild-animal book ever 
written.” Offered as a unique supplement to Ernest Thompson Seton’s 
remarkable revelations of the lives of wild creatures. The “Ten Com¬ 
mandments in the Animal World,” a cloth - bound book, will be pre¬ 
sented as a gift from the publishers to every outdoor enthusiast who 
answers this advertisement and becomes a customer for the beautiful 
six-volume set, comprising: 
The Outline of Wild Animal Life and Woodcraft 
N O living man is better qualified to deal 
with this amazingly interesting theme 
than Ernest Thompson Seton. He is 
veritably a wizard of woodcraft and animal lore. 
The style and charm of his writing, the variety 
and drollness of the illustrations from the au¬ 
thor’s own sketch-book and camera, the rich 
forest-green covers stamped with unique wild- 
animal designs, constitute a set of books that 
will appeal to every lover of the woods and 
wilds. In fact, the demand for these books is 
growing as they become better known; and cus¬ 
tomers go out of their way to express their 
delight in this unique publishing enterprise. 
Here are books that hold the mys¬ 
terious thrill of the forest—carrying 
you back to vacation-land, where you 
breathe the pine-scented air and hear 
the “swish of green trees—as you en¬ 
joy the stirring true stories of wild creatures 
and the Great Outdoors. 
THE BELOVED AUTHOR 
Seton is universally beloved because he ha 
the unusual gift of doing three things at once: 
he entertains with his drolleries of speech 
and sketch; he diverts with his power to catch 
the romance and drama of outdoor life; he 
instructs, for he is internationally known as 
a great Naturalist. He is as keen an analyst 
of the phenomena of Nature as was Thoreau, 
and much more human in his estimates of them. 
His stories of natural 
history are classics in ~ , T L * 
style and thought. / ► ^ I U1 S 
Vi .7 
1457 
Illustrations from the 
author’s own sketch¬ 
book and camera. 
rVOES the bear know by instinct that it is 
wrong for him to steal from his brother 
bear? Is the growl of a clog with a bone really 
a warning to other dogs jto respect the com¬ 
mand, “Thou shalt not cov^et”? Do you know 
that a pack of timber-wolves Jias been known to 
punish the wolf-sentinel w^io repeatedly gave 
“false witness” about approaching danger? Are 
the seven great “Thou-shalt-rmts” and the three 
great “Thou-shalts” known and observed by 
squirrels as well as elephants—by bees as well 
as birds? 
Doubleday, 
This unusual .offer will be with¬ 
drawn as soon as the special edition 
of “The Ten Commandments in the 
Animal World” is exhausted. Don't 
delay a day and make sure of one of 
the gift copies that have been set 
aside for readers of Forest and 
Stream. We haven’t nearly enough 
to go around, so you should be among 
the first and send us your request to 
inspect the set. 
Doubleday, Page & Co. 
Dept. 6412 
Garden City New York 
. Page & Co., 
' Dept. 6411, 
Garden City, 
N. Y. 
Please send me the 
. free book, “The Ten 
' Commandments in the 
Animal World,” and for 
examination the six-vol¬ 
ume set of Seton’s works. 
I will return them witbiri 
five days at your expense, 
otherwise I will remit $1.00 
within that time and $2.00 a 
. month for five months. “The Ten 
' Commandments in the Animal World” 
S becomes my property without cost' the 
/ moment I decide to own the books. - v . 
Name 
Address 
• City.. State. 
