Rough-Coated Collie 365 
also got over Heacham Galopin, the sire of Wishaw Clinker. The good 
done for collies in this country through the enterprise and rivalry of these 
Western exhibitors cannot be fully estimated, but we had a foretaste of 
what it may amount to through the successes of a few Western-bred collies 
in very strong competition this year, a young bitch bred by Mr. Lepman 
and shown by Mr. Trench as Thorndale Baroness being a deservedly 
large winner. 
In the East we have had the return of Mr. Morgan as an exhibitor, 
an event he signalised by purchasing the great English winner, Wishaw 
Clinker, from Mr. Tait, of Scotland, and Ormskirk Olympian from Mr. 
Stretch, Mr. Raper judged them at New York in 1904 and placed them in 
the order named, but the opinion of our leading authorities on collies was 
that Ormskirk Olympian should have won; that is how we would have 
placed them, and considered it a somewhat easy win. It was a great day 
for the Clinkers at that show, as his daughters, Brandane Ethel and 
Rippowam Revelation, were the leading winners throughout the bitch 
classes, after Moreton Hebe. Mr. Morgan’s rival is now Mr. Samuel 
Untermeyer, and not content with some very nice American-bred collies, 
with Breadalbane and Faugh a Ballagh as leaders, he has also made 
some important purchases abroad and has in Sourhpors Sculptor an extra 
high-class dog. 
Other exhibitors in the metropolitan district are Mr. M. Mowbray 
Palmer, the president of the Collie Club, whose prefix of Rippowam is well 
known; Mr. Preston, Mr. Lindsay, of the Lindsays whose names go back 
to the early show days; Mr. Buckle, Mr. Hall, Mr. Mayhew and Mr. 
Geraghty. Philadelphia has also a strong collie clan and a club of its 
own, and, although Doctor Jarrett seems to have retired from exhibiting, 
there are many good fanciers, such as Messrs. Kain, Fernandez, Heuer, 
Romig & Flint, Henshall, Lightfoot, Doctor Konover and others. Boston 
has also been for many years a good-collie town, and the Copeland, Middle- 
brooke, Murray and Westridge kennels are always factors at the Massachu- 
setts shows; while Mr. Bascom, of Providence, is seldom without an entry 
and has done much to keep interest alive in Rhode Island. 
The Canadian section of colliedom has never until late years been of a 
dangerous character. Mr. McEwen has been for long a supporter of the 
breed, but his entries have hardly been of the class of those that we have 
received at our shows from Montreal or Ottawa. Mr. Joseph Reid, of 
