64 Game and Foxes. 



teeth, such a fox can no longer procure his living 

 in the way Nature intended, and he, like a mangy 

 fox, will venture risks which no healthy fox would 

 dare. An aged fox cares for practically no scare 

 the keeper can devise, and it is to be feared he 

 finally gets so cunning as to regard them as 

 tokens of the whereabouts of a meal. A fox, as 

 described, is better destroyed in the interests of 

 both hunting and shooting. 



