588 APPENDIX TO COUNTER-CASE OF GREAT BRITAH^. 



Milton Scott. — That while in scliools the seals are mixed as to sex 

 and age. 



G. E. Moelder. — " Seals travel in schools mixed as to age and sex." 



Lee J. Thiers. — " We see seals in schools, and they are mixed in sexes 

 and ages." 



Adolphe F. Carlson. — " These schools [of seals] are generally mixed 

 as to age and sex." 



Frederick Croclcer. — " Seals, for the most part, travel in schools, and 

 the sexes are mixed." 



William Conner s. — " Seals travel in schools, and they are mixed up, 

 males and females, old and young." 



P. E. Peterson. — " Seals travel in schools, and they are mixed as to 

 age and sex." 



James Ford says that schools of seals are mixed as to age and sex. 



James W. Crew. — " Schools are mixed as to age and sex." 



W. F. Roland. — " Generally these bands and schools are made up of 

 all ages and both sexes, but now and then I have seen a bunch of all 

 one kind and sex." 



Andrew McKeil. — " The schools or bunches were mixed, all ages, of 

 both sexes, except old bulls, were together." 



William Petit. — "All ages and sexes travel together." 



41 Ahner Sinclair. — "When in bunches the older males and 



females are mixed together." 



William Edwards. — "I have seen grey pups travelling together, and 

 sometimes females; generally the older seals travel together." 



Maurice Edwards. — "Grey pups stay pretty well together; the other 

 ages and both sexes mixed together." 



Wallace Christian. — "I have found this year [1892] small bunches of 

 seals of one sex and age." 



Thomas CLeary. — "I found seals of all sexes and ages mixea 

 together." 



Henry Sieward. — "As a rule all ages and sexes are mixed together.'' 



8. W. BucTcman. — ''I think the young males travel together, and that 

 the older ones go with the females." 



FranTc Moreau. — "Seals are mixed as to age and sex." 



Peter Hammel. — "The schools are mixed — old and young, male and 

 female." 



Xy. — Statements relating to Raids made upon the Pribyloff Islands. 



Adolphe RidderhjelJce, master of the steam-schooner "Challenge" at 

 the time the raid was made on East liookery, St. George's Island, gives 

 a full account of the raid in his testimony; of this the following is an 

 abstract: 



At about 3 o'clock on the afternoon of the 16th November, 1891, he 

 was close enough to the south side of the island to have been seen had 

 a look-out been kept; the day was bright and clear. He passed the 

 island and returned about midnight; when a mile away from the island 

 a boat was lowered and sent to see whether the coast was clear; it 



