88 The Fox Terrier. 



and is usually to be found with from thirty to seventy in 

 his kennels, varying of course with the time of year. The 

 puppies are mostly out at walk, the adults are kept at 

 home, and, although fewer are bred during the winter 

 months than in the summer, their production is continued 

 more or less during the year through. With so many dogs, 

 and having had his strain so long, an unusual list of cele- 

 brities may be given as having at one time or another been 

 either owned or bred by Mr. Tinne, the best of them as 

 follows : Brockenhurst Joe, Pickle, Buff, Darkie, Dickon, 

 Brockenhurst Spice (whose blood runs in every terrier but 

 one now in the Brockenhurst kennels), Deacon Ruby, 

 Diamond Dust. Diadem, New Forest, Hunton Darkie, 

 Newcombe, High Spirits, Brockenhurst Tyke, Pendennis, 

 New Forest Ethel, First Arrival, Kate Cole, Ethel New- 

 come, Lyndhurst Vixen, Brockenhurst Trinket, Adam Bede, 

 Brockenhurst Agnes, Hester Sorrel, Pete Quilliam, and 

 others. The last-named dog as a puppy was shown at the 

 Club's show at Cheltenham in 1901, where, although too 

 young to beat the few placed over him, he attracted marked 

 attention, being pronounced as likely to turn out the best 

 dog seen for a considerable time. However, distemper 

 carried Pete off a few weeks after the show, and fox 

 terrier owners mourned the loss of so promising a dog. 



During the past half dozen years no one has been more 

 successful as an exhibitor of fox terriers than Mr. Francis 

 Redmond, of Whetstone House, Totteridge. Still I must 

 confess an inability to appreciate some of his dogs, and in 

 type he has not always been so consistent as he is to- 

 day, owing no doubt to the fact that certain of his best 

 terriers came into his possession by purchase. Still these 

 purchases have proved wise ones, and to them is due the 



