116 JOURNAL, NATURAL HIST. SOCIETY OF SIAM. Vol. I 
Cervulus feae. Fea’s Muntjac. My coolies when searching for 
food came across the dead body of a deer which they did not recognize. 
The deer had been killed by a leopard while drinking in the Menam 
Lor, a tributary of the Quaa Noi, and at that point about 4 miles from 
Kow Pra on the Tenasserim boundary in N. Lat. 14° 23’. On that 
day I also was searching for food, and returned to camp in the late 
evening to find that the hungry men, having found the deer, had eaten 
all of it and had roasted the head and mashed it up. The horns, 
similar to those of a Barking Deer, had been turned into knife handles, 
and the skin had been twisted up into pack ropes, All that I recovered 
of this rare deer was a piece of the skin with the tail attached ; and 
this, taken in conjunction with the horns and locality, I consider places 
the question of identification beyond doubt. So far as I know, this 
is the second specimen so far recorded, the first having been obtained 
many years ago in Tenasserim. 
Colour. The hair of the back, dark brown, each hair either 
tipped or annulated with golden yellow. A few white hairs intermixed, 
and these also are tipped golden yellow. ‘Tail, pure white, with a 
narrow black line down the centre. Length of tail in dried skin 
(probably stretched) 6 in. and the white hairs project. for 1.3 in. 
beyond this. 
The Karen guide informed me that this was the ‘‘ ee-kung ” and 
that it took place of the “ ee-keng ” or Barking Deer in the evergreen 
jungle, and that the call of the two species was similar. 
K. G. GAIRDNER. 
June, 1914. 
No. V.—NOTE ON LANGUR MONKEYS. 
On pages 33 and 36 of Vol. I. No. 1 of the Journal, I referred 
to two species of Semnopithecus (now Presbytis ) which I was unable to 
identify. 
T have now heard from the British Museum authorities that the 
species described on p. 33 as “black in colour, with poll and tail french- 
grey, and with bare rings around the eyes of a pinkish white colour’, 
is Presbytis obscurus. This species extends down the Malay Peninsula, 
the northern limit in Siam apparently being N. Lat. 18° 20’. 
® 
