One Vol. Square 8vo. Pp. viii and 264. Price 21s. By post, 21s. 6d. net. 
HORN MEASUREMENTS 
AND 
WEIGHTS 
OF THE GREAT “GAME © THE WORE, 
BEING A RECORD FOR THE USE OF SPORTSMEN AND NATURALISTS 
BY ROWAN WA Ds Zes 
AUTHOR OF ‘‘THE SPORTSMAN’S HANDBOOK,” ETC. 
LONDON: ROWLAND WARD & CO., LIMITED, 
CCHE NU NGLE,? Too_pPICCADITEY, av. 
EXTRACTS FROM THE PRESS. 
‘To sportsmen the utility of these voluminous records can hardly be over-estimated. In 
the majority of cases the accounts of the antlers and horns are illustrated by engravings ; and 
photographs of many of the animals yielding them, with the sportsmen grouped around, are 
interspersed throughout the volume. We have thus the African elephant, the Java ox (Los 
banting), the Cape buffalo, and the Tibet and Pallah antelopes.”—/7e/d. 
«*Sportsmen and naturalists alike will welcome the appearance of Mr. Rowland Ward’s 
‘Horn Measurements and Weights of the Great Game of the World,’ which he has just issued 
from ‘ The Jungle,’ in Piccadilly. It is as complete a record as could now be compiled of the 
leading trophies of the chase, gathered from all quarters of the globe, chiefly, if not exclusively, 
by the enterprise and prowess of Englishmen, and leaves nothing in this respect to be desired. 
No important collection of specimens has escaped due notice, and the information which is 
given concerning them is not to be found elsewhere. We may add that the copious illustrations 
with which the book is adorned, whether they are the result of photography or of engraving, 
are excellent, and worthy in every way to bear company with the letterpress of the distinguished 
naturalist and pre-eminently skilful taxidermist with which they are associated.”— The World. 
‘Tt is not often that sportsmen and naturalists are enabled to make acquaintance with such 
an elegant volume, and yet at the same time so valuable a work of reference, as Mr. Rowland 
Ward’s ‘Horn Measurements and Weights of the Great Game of the World,’ published at 
‘The Jungle,’ Piccadilly. Profusely illustrated, and bound in material representing the hide 
of zebra, Mr. Ward’s record will be necessary to the library of every well-appointed country 
house.” —Daily Telegraph. 
“‘In these days, when every one is striving to ‘ beat the record,’ it is only right that sports- 
men should have clearly put before them the results already arrived at as regards the size 
of the trophies and the weight of game-animals already obtained by their brother Nimrods. 
No one is in so good a position to do this as Mr. Rowland Ward, to whose well-known 
‘Jungle’ in Piccadilly all the leading shooters of the present day send their ‘heads’ to be 
mounted and their ‘skins’ to be stuffed.”—Watwre. 
«‘Both the sporting and zoological world owe a large debt of gratitude to Mr. Rowland 
Ward for this handsomely-got-up volume, and he deserves the best thanks of all those interested 
in the subject of Big Game, for the thorough and conscientious manner in which he has com- 
pleted a very laborious task, and we only hope that his efforts will be rewarded by the book 
having such a rapid sale that a new edition will be called for at no very distant date,”— 
Land and Water, 
