ADDENDUM 



IN speaking of the trust antelope place 

 in their eye-sight as a guard against danger, 

 I do not mean to imply that their noses are 

 not also very acute ; it is as important with 

 them as with all other game to prevent their 

 ng the hunter's wind. So with deer; 

 while their eyes are not as sharp as those of 

 big-horn and prong-horn, they are yet quite 

 keen enough to make it necessary for the 

 still-hunter to take every precaution to avoid 

 Z seen. 



Although with us antelope display the most 

 rooted objection to entering broken or 

 wooded ground, yet a friend of mine, whose 

 experience in the hunting-field is many 

 times as great as my own, tells me that in 

 certain parts of the country they seem by 

 preference to go among the steepest and 

 roughest places (of course, ; n so doing, be- 



