UNE CHIENNE ILLUSTRE 3 
College professors and scientists have marveled at her 
wonderful feats of mind reading. There is no trick, 
nothing to deceive in this part of the entertainment. Her 
work is purely mental work. You will have to see in 
order to believe. 
BRONTE’S PEDIGREE 
Bronte is a Scotch collie of the finest type. She was 
born July 29, 1903, in the famous White Oak Farm Collie 
Kennels, at Center Moriches, New York (on Long Island). 
Bronte is a very wonderful dog; she can count money, she 
can count people and tell how many there are in the room 
and how many have glasses on. In addition, subtraction, 
multiplication and division there are but few boys in the 
public schools of today who would stand any show in a 
contest with Bronte. The following sum would be very 
easy for her: Thirty-four times three, divided by two, add 
nine, subtract thirty-two and divide the result by seven. 
Bronte spells many words by barking the number of letters 
in the word. Bronte is a mind-reader and does some 
wonderful work in that art at every performance. 
BRONTE’S INVITATION 
Bronte will be glad to meet members of the National 
Geographic Society in the various towns and cities where 
she entertains, and will be pleased to answer any questions 
and explain her position on the various geographic pheno- 
mena that are being discussed among her fellow members. 
She has travelled 200,000 miles, visiting every state in the 
Union and much of Canada and Mexico. 
A FELLOW MEMBER 
Robert E. Peary, who was retired with the pay of a rear- 
admiral, was given a gold medal for discovering the North 
Pole by the National Geographic Society. 
