20 
GUIDE TO THE 
the Sunda Islands (C. equinus of the Malay Peninsula, 
Sumatra, and Borneo, and others), has only three 
points to its antlers, the bez and trez tine being 
absent, the brow tine long, and the beam only 
simply forked. 
In the next case in the central passage we find only 
Kangaroos, Wallaby, and Eock-Kangaroos, also some 
perfect albinoes. Kangaroos are kept in numbers 
in Tring Park, and the Great Kangaroo {Macropus 
giganteus) does extremely well in the open grassland, 
while Bennett’s Wallaby frequents the Park- wood and 
breeds freely. This latter {Macropus or Halmaturus 
bennetti) is a close ally of the Eed-necked Wallaby 
{M. ruficolUs'). Gentle as these animals usually are, 
we had one case in which a large male “ Boomer ” 
(as the colonists call M. giganteus) became quite 
unbearable, attacking and dangerously wounding men, 
so that it had to be killed, and is now to be seen in 
the next case, in which again large Kangaroos fill 
the upper shelf, while in the middle we find the 
Sloths, 
Ckoloepus and Bradypus, of which a species of 
Bradypus, Ckoloepus hqffmanni, and C. didactylus 
are shown. Below we again see some more Kan- 
garoos and Wallaroos {Osphranter), and between 
these and the Sloths (called also “ Faultier ” = 
“ Lazj" beast ” in German) we notice the 
