Hunting in Many Lands 



TABULATED SERIES 

 With name of owner, and locality and date of capture. 



BISON BULL. 



Girth. Length. 



1. P. Liebinger, Western Montana, '93 12}^ 19 



2. Theodore Roosevelt, Medora, N. D., Sept., '83. 1224^ 14 



3. Theodore Roosevelt, S W. Montana, Sept., '89. 12^ i?^ 

 No. 2 was an old stub-horn bull, the animal being bigger in body 



than No. 3, which, like No. i, was a bull in the prime of life. 



F. Sauter, the taxidermist, exhibited a head killed in 

 Montana in 1894, which measured 14 inches in girth 

 and 18 inches in length. 



In Ward's book the horns of the biggest bison given 

 measure 15 inches in girth and 20^ inches in length. 



BIG-HORN SHEEP. 



Girth. 



4. Geo. H. Gould, Lower Cal., Dec., '94. 16^ 



5. G. O. Shields, Ashnola River, B. C. . . . \b]^ 



6. Arch. Rogers, N. W. Wyoming 16 



7. Arch. Rogers, N. W. Wyoming 15^ 



8. T. Roosevelt, Little Mo. River, N. D. . 16 



No. 4 had the tip of one horn broken ; it is on the whole the finest 

 head of which we have any record. 



No. 5 was a very heavy head, the horns huge and with blunted tips. 



A head was exhibited by C. G. Gunther's Sons which 

 measured 17^ inches in girth, although it was but it^Y^ 

 inches in length. 



In Buxton's catalogue the three biggest rams exhibited 

 by English sportsmen had horns which measured respect- 

 ively, in girth and length, 15^ and 39 inches, \6y% and 

 38^ inches, and 16^ and 31 inches. 



In Ward's catalogue the biggest specimen given had 

 428 



