3 70 Sport and Life. 



Antelope Goat, Baillie-Grohman, Forest and Stream, XXV., 225. 



" Sheep " of the Pacific Coast Indians, and generally of the white population of 

 western British Columbia and northern Washington ; also, to a less 

 extent, of Indians and whites of the northern Rocky Mountains. 



" Ibex" of the whites in certain parts of Montana, Idaho, and California. 



Apoh' -mah-kee-kinna of the Blackfoot Indians. 



Wa-pa-tik of the Cree Indians. 



Kivhait-lii of the Partlage, or Comox, Indians of Vancouver Island, British 

 Columbia. 



Mullukhtlaiv of the Yokwiltulth or Seymour Narrows (B. C.) Indians. 



Holih-solken of the Squawmisht Indians of south-western British Columbia. 



Shogkhli't of the Similkameen Indians. 



P'ka'lakal of the Ft. Hope, B. C. (Fraser River) Indians. 



Matte of the Tsimpsheans (Fort Simpson, B. C.) Indians. 



Mut of the Skidigate Indians of the north-west coast. 



Taculp Sheep of the Indians of the interior of British Columbia. 



ILLUSTRATION: Partington's Brit. Cyclopaedia Nat. Hist., Vol. II., 1836, fig. 

 facing p. 614. [This figure (slightly modified from Landseer's in 

 Richardson's Fauna Boreali- Americana) is one of several on the same 

 page, illustrating the article " Goat." But there is no reference to- 

 the Rocky Mountain Goat in the text.] 



NOTE II. 

 THE JONES' BUFFALO RANCH. 



The following description of the Bones' buffalo "ranch" was written and 

 published in an American journal before the establishment was disposed 

 of. As the precise- locality has not much to do with the experiment, I 

 have thought it better to leave the description as it stood. 



FIVE miles west from the city of Omaha, Neb., grazing over a magnificent 

 rolling prairie, may be seen these days a herd of strange looking animals. 

 A barbed wire fence limits their wanderings, and a group of whooping 

 cowboys, mounted on branded ponies, rounds them up morning and night 

 into a corral, where the curious are permitted to view them at 25 cents a, 

 peep. 



