A PEKINGESE PUPPY 



" The word '■friend' does not exactly depict 

 his affectionate worship. He loves us and 

 reveres us as though we had drawn him 

 out of nothifig. He is, before all, our 

 creature full of gratitude and more de- 

 voted than the apple of our eye. He is 

 our intimate and impassioned slave, whom 

 nothing discourages, whom nothing repels, 

 whose ardent trust and love fjothing can 

 impair." 



Maeterlinck. 



YOUNG life abounds with a charm that can never be repeated 

 as days and months broaden into years. Even the calf, 

 gambolling and frisking in the field, stupid and clumsy though it 

 may be, is not wholly devoid of the magic of immaturity, and 

 when we come to the puppy, the kitten, the cub of lion or tiger, 

 we see grace and beauty in every movement, and a winsomeness 

 that captures the fancy. 



To experience the fullest pleasure in the ownership of a dog 



