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Specimen Tickets .—Sportsmen naturalists should very carefully note all 
details on the tickets they attach to their specimens. The following particulars 
should be noted:—Date, locality, weather conditions, sex, estimated age, condi¬ 
tion of animal, measurements, weapon, bullet, and charge, etc. The same in 
the case of birds, and if the nest is discovered a description thereof, its exact 
situation and description of the eggs. 
Sportsman 8 Library , The .—The following books on Indian Sport and 
Natural History should be on every sporstman’s bookshelf : — 
“The Old Forest Ranger.” (Major W. 
Campbell.) 
“Seonee.” (Sterndale.) 
“ Large and Small Game of Bengal.” (Baldwin ) 
Tiger Shooting in India.” (Rice.) 
“ Wild Sports of India.” (Shakespear.) 
“ Wild Men and Wild Beasts.” (Gordon 
Cumming.) 
“ The Spear and the Rifle ” (Shikaree.) 
“ Denizens of the Jungle.” (Sterndale.) 
Shikar Sketches.” (Moray Brown.) 
(t Williamson’s Oriental Sports.” 
“ Reminiscences of Sport in India.” (Burton ) 
“Highlandsof Central India ” (Forsyth ) 
“Thirteen Years among the Wild Beasts of 
India. ” (Sanderson.) 
“ Eight Years in Ceylon.” (Baker.) 
“ Rifle and Hound in Ceylon.” (Baker.) 
“Wild Beasts and their Ways.” (Baker.) 
“ Sportsman’s Yade Mecum.” (K. C. A. J.) 
“ The Hindu Koh.” (Genl. Macintyre.) 
*' Tiger Shooting in the Doon and Alwar 
(Col. Fife-Cookson.) 
“ A Summer Ramble in the Himalayas.’ 
(Mountaineer.) 
“ Large Game Shooting ” (Kinloch.) 
“Sport in Bengal.” (E. B. Baker.) 
“Hog Hunting in the East.” (Newall.) 
“Twenty Years’ Pigsticking in Bengal.’ 
(Raoul.) 
“ Small Game of Bengal.” (Raoul.) 
“ Pigsticking.” (Baden-Powell.) 
