BULLET AND SHOT 



Time, and constant exposure to the sun, will 

 effect all that is thereafter required, with the 

 exception of the measures necessary for the preser- 

 vation of the horns, the bony cores of which soon 

 become full of maggots. To prevent damage 

 to the horns, the latter should be worked about 

 by hand (after all the previous processes have been 

 completed) until they have become loose, and then 

 removed from the cores, and these, as well as the 

 inside of the horns, should be well washed with a 

 solution of carbolic acid. 



In a country in which the processes of decay are 

 so rapid as they are in India, it behoves the sports- 

 man to neglect no precaution which may enable 

 him to successfully preserve a fine trophy. 



The only other trophies yielded by the bison 

 are the hoofs. These are easily detached from 

 the feet, and require no special treatment. Out of 

 these pin-cushions, inkstands, etc., can be made. 



