Febbcabt 84, 1881.] 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



75 



-Mr. J. N. Podge, 



ol Fan, sold W. P. Percivai. Palo. Mich. 



Fret -Mr. J. N. Dodge, SI Pine St., : 

 Fred fort.he white, kiooo .-.nil latibeagh 

 Sill, sold to Mr. W.P.Perclvdi. 



2V«,..,»-Mr. .T. >'. L>"il-c, -1 PI:.- -n.. 1 

 Trump for the white, bl*EB: and tan beat 

 of sill, sold Mr. IV. R. Shedd. of Wallhai 



si Pine St.. Detrott, BlirtmB'iaio names TW-oimu, . ..-no. mu ""^« 

 Bolt H and Choke mr (our dog puppies, and Kim Tor The bitch puppy 

 sold Mr. X. Lluifo ■:■ , GrU Lt>F, CODB. Ptbiple, oil By King-wood IT. out 

 of Flora. 



BREU. 



Mav- Hover— Mr. A. Bailey's orange and white seller bitch May to 

 Mr, T. Deumenn's ibaii.linure. Mil.) Imported red Irish setter dog 



Pl.ter, in, t'ep. 3, 1831, 



Sannf-ltot'er-'SXT. E. olll's setter hitch Xsincy (Hutchinson's irn- 

 rted Rob-Belle; to Mr. T.Jjemnefiil's .;i.;alrimore, Mil.,; Imported red 



Among older breeders the us 

 Mason, Lorl Befton, Lord Don 

 most prominently, and their blo< 



The dog we have Choi "" 

 colored plate is Wagg, w) 

 Price, of Rhiwlas. As 

 present owner, but by Mr. Samuel l 1 

 wrs bom March, 1S71, ami is by Cbai 

 is liyer and white in color. weighs six 

 as follows : Length or head, ten i 

 inches ; height at shoulder, twenty- 

 thirty iuchea ; girth of loin, twenty- 

 eighteen inches ; girth of forearm, s< 



The following list of his triumph 

 need no fiutber comment -Field ' 



Mi s 



;i Feb. 



.: . 'blton Queen u 



:,!,,.., ,, ;-.-,-., ■,.,-,— Mr. .?. 

 cm ikofbttch iMieeuUisoi 



lit, l: 31, 

 JuJu-Smntlti—Wr. M", It 



to Sandy, Feb. 15, 1881. 



-'.:. ■' -Mr. I'-Ji'i '.Vol wo id i i 



setter lilt ch Peri to his white, black and 



dub's bla< 



nd 1 



FlU-lle. 



,.,-, clndsie 



Shephen 

 Scotch col 



Fairii-Ji. 

 Lindsay's 



Flora Be 

 Flora Bell 



Lu/x-Lf, 



[formerly 

 Belli Ha 

 Belle, li'rh 10, IS: 



Mm 



darksWlle, Term..) Imported Judy 



Ky.,) has bred his red Irish 

 an Gordon .Setter Dick. 



.fiWt-'ll'S ,'N. .1... Peel oh enilio llltoii id'. 



I Elizabeth, N. ,7.,) 



imported 

 Fairy to 



i TT, - 



. N. Dod 



Smith's _, 



Biw,,,:,„d ll.-l'-nn—,). N. Dod; 



Baker's Fan, Feb. 1(1, 13SI. 



WHELPS. 



Sheldon's (Rahw 



ick's (Cape May City, N. -7.) Luce 



>'s champion l.eiecslor 



mplou bi-agie hauler to N. Elmore's 



e's foot beagle Rlugwood II. to Wm. 



s foot beagle Klngwood II. to R. M. 



Prairie Boxc— Mr. P. L. 



Prairie hose, whelped l-Y-b. 

 three hitches, blade and \ 

 Elmo. 



are, ami black, 



./Ttnc-Johu Faweott's red Irish Juno whelped on Feb. s, last, nine 

 puppies, six dogs and three bitches, by owner's Ttldeu. 



EUho-Maa Whelp— Mr. J. 3. Donovan, of Boston, Mass., has pur- 

 chased Horn Mr. tieo A. Kimball, oi < lo-hoa. M-is-., a red Irish setter 

 bireli pnppv, out ot kbrdrilb-. Mtn; i JV eiiuiiruiot] KlehO. 



Lad-./ Huron— M 1 . Emory P. Robliv 

 ,7. M. ' Uaynes, of Wilmington, O., .._. 

 Llewellln setter bitch i.ody Prion (Carlowttz-ljodgc' 



Bruee-Jeei'ie Whelps— Mr. M. W. Miner, OL WaiiCega.u, 1115., l 

 ehonol of Mr. J. II. Whitman, Chicago. Ills., two Scotch del 

 puppies, whelped May P-, issd, our of Jessie by 



Bob -Hello Whelp-Mr. Macic W. Mluei 



thur, Waukegai 

 Johnson's i 

 i .Vriukegu 

 Pet Ln«e. 

 bought bat 

 Sole, out ') 



Laverock. 



.Serf M 

 ter dog *p. 



Jiattfer-IH 

 I>. Young 



blacks 



% o„ has soli 



ir-old haver 



"s Hose). 



: bought of Mr. A. McAr- 



rdoi 



fold lbs English s.l'I- 



of Hamilton, < 

 be old. Of. del 

 but. of vlr.J. N- Hodge's i 



n.Mler-Sitl Whelp— Mr. 



ndoliih St.., Detroit, 



oiiiol' \lr. J. X Dod 

 HaUter-SlU Whelp 



E. shedd, of Waltha 



py, o month, old. b.v 

 out of Mr, .1. N. (Joe 



It. II I,-, sill Whelp 

 EL Todd, ol vermin) 

 it months old, oy Ka 

 of Mr J. X. Oiodcfc'- 



Himitewd PI.-Fioe, 

 sold to Mr. N. lilmo: 

 beagle dog ptigp.y. 

 ntugwond Loxyi mi 



Aim. 



sold to Mr. 

 dog pupi 



Eofyi oi 



1 ft. - 



.Ehr 



iha-'s 



KOOe.V) ' 



Battle. 



J. Fetch 



M. 



Pine st . Detroit, has 

 lack and tan beagle 

 Imported Klngivood- 



, Detroit, has sold to 

 ad tau beagle bitch 

 look nrst. in puppy 

 arrior-C-leii. Kowetl's 



Up— 3 N. Dodge, st Pine st., Detroit, has sold to W. 



d, of Palo, Mich,, a white, blackend ran beagle dog puppy, 



ive months old, to' Rat tier .imported Wairloi -tien. Kowett-s Kosey) 



out oi a. :■;. boage'ssiu 



IVfiqm,,!,] n-Finra Whdp—3. y. Dodge. 81 Pine at., Detroit, sold to 

 IS". Elino.e, of Qranby, Coan.. a mottie.i unite, b nek and tan beagle 

 bitch puppy, two months old, by noigwond II. (imported Tilnguood- 

 KOHOV) "Ul 01 J, N. bodgi-'a Flora. 



liiwiirooii ir-Flo-a Whelp -J. V. Dodge, ol Pine st, Detroit, sold to 

 $. tliuore. Of .-ircubv, iifif. !i.. a luo.! led white, black ecO ;.u dog 

 uitfipv. tvoa ru-jathsol'd. in Eina-ftooii (I. [imported King-wood-" 



'.,..' . '. . \ JO I go'.-; h'0-.-C;, 



Riivtwoad n.-pii.n, live '.—.J. 71. Di ...if.-e, si Pine St., Detroit, 

 "son., a mottled white, black ■"" 



bihcrwoo.fUL (imported Kl 



HJI.l .... 



two mom as Old, I 



J. M. uodce s Lit 

 B«»* U.-H. B. I 



Ko.-'.ciuh ,1. Brock 



a. (-poii-idoif... 



sold X. 

 i dog puppy, 

 )od-Rosy> out of 



i oil, 



the 



„ N. S 

 and v 



, has pui'ch; 



od ( 



Dr. 11. A. 



. English setter dog Dash 



:. moc 



j, of Philadelphia, has sold to .7. EL 



ii. ek. white and to. ilei :c c ireeortod 

 iloi-t, out ot Fairy II. by Pride of the 



--.. ol lion 

 .,N. T., 

 whelpei 



-ies of Mr. T. Statter, Mr. C. H. 



e, and Mr. Garth, Q. 0.. appear 



1 is eagerly treasured by breeders. 



.... :he subject of illustration in our 



the propartff Of Mr. Kicliai'd ,7. Lloyd 



triced before, he was not bred by his 



amuc-1 Price, of Devonshire. Wagg 



by Champion Saneho out of Kapplio, 



ai'hs sKtv-tive pounds, and measures 



d, ten mehcH : gh'th of muiw.le, ten 



twenty-four iuehes ; girth of chest, 



twenty-three inches ; girth of skull, 



Barm, seven and three-quarter inches. 



isafc for his quality, and 



Field Trials divided 



Clinton Stata at Devon. 1874. Shows:— 1st Bu-nhiigham, 1874 ; 

 Itt Crystal Palace; 1st and cup Exeter; 1st Truro ; 1st and cup 

 Nottingham ; 1st and cup for best pointer in the whole show, Bir- 

 ingham, 1875 ; 1st Crystal Palace ; 1st Brighton : 2d Exeter ; and 

 1 "and cup for best pointer in the whole show, Birmingham, 

 76; champion prize, llinningham ; champion prize, Kennel 

 Club Show, Alexandra. Palace. 1877 ; 1st Kendal ; 1st Oxford 

 Show; champion, Crystal Palace ; 1st Cleckheatou : 1st. and enp 

 iat pointer in show, Dlaydon-ou-Tvne : 1st Darlington ; 1st 

 Brighouse ; 1st Great Hortou : 1st Whitbv : 1st Thornton ; 1st 

 Queensburv ; 1st Binglev ; 1st Skipton ; 1st Todmordan, and cup 

 for best Sporting dog , 1st Wakeiiel.l ; 1st, Farnworth : champion 

 Birmingham ; champion kennel club show, Alexandra Palace j and 

 champion Kendal, 1S78 ; 1st and cup for best sporting dog in the 

 rhce.i, Yi'i.b, ei'houvr.iuiu ■ let run cup I'm- b,. ; .i soeo-iui.c leg. l-Uoek- 

 port, 1879 ; champion cup L-ish Kennel Club show, Dublin, April, 

 1879; lBtEpworth. 1879; 1st and special cup, Great International 

 Dog Show, Hanover, Germany, 1879 ; 1st and soccial cup for the 

 best dog m all clauses of the show, Eipon, June 10, 1879 ; cham- 

 pion prize, Kennel Club summer show, Alexandra Palace, duly, 

 1879. and enp for best pointer in the whole show ; 1st and Bxtra 

 cup for hoot dog io boo whole ib.o'f. IleektuoiKlwike. 1879 ; 1st find 

 cup for best sporting dog, Cleckheatou. 1879 : 1st Darlington. 

 1879, 1st and extra cup, Brighouse, 1879; Hayley Hill, 1879; 

 special cup for best sporting dog, a haudsome creek presented by 

 Spratt'8 patent ; 1st Whitby; 1st Thornton, Bradford, Yorks ; 1st 

 Blackpool; 1st Keighlcy ; 1st and cup Woodeomo, Huddorsfleld ; 

 1st Halifax ; 1st. Aimloy ; 1st variety class and cup for best dog in 

 the held, Wortley ; 1st and eup, Todmordeu ; champion Bishop 

 Auckland ; 1st Farnworth; 1st and cup for best pointer, K. (J. 

 Show, Brighton ; champion Birmingham, 1879 ; 1st and cup Brad- 

 ford 1880 ; 1st (Ehrenprois) and Emperor's enp for best sporting 

 dog, Berlin, 1880 ; champion Crystal Palace, 1880 ; 1st Thome, 



Belle, the subject, of the engraving which accompanies this 

 article, is also the property of Mr. Richard .7. Lloyd Price. She 

 was bred by Lord Henry Bcntinck in 1870, and is by his Ranger 

 out of Grouse. Belle weighs fifty-five pounds, and measures as 

 follows : Length of head, nine inches ; girth of muzzle, eight and 

 a half niches : girth of skull, eighteen inches : height at shoulder, 

 twenty-four niches; girth of chest, twenty-eight, inches, girth of 

 loin, twenty-one imhea ; girth of forearm, nine inches. 



The following are among her performances, from which it will 

 be seen that she, in the course of her illustrious career, has suc- 

 ceeded in lowering the colors of Mr. Parcel] Llewellyn's Onttntoss 

 and Mr. Macdona's champion Banger :— County stakes for all- 

 aged bitches at Vaynol Field Trials, 1872, mid of Judy of the Ban- 

 gor stakes for pointer braces at the same meeting. Won also Urn 

 County stakes i'ora-ed pointer bitches, at the ahitioiial Pointer and 

 Setter'Field Trials, held at Couiberinoro, Shrewsbury, April 29, 

 1873, and with her daughter Grecian Bend, won the Acton Keynald 

 slakes for pointer braces, at the same meeting - - 

 Field Trials 1873, second with Bomai 

 f. takes for braces, August 13, 1873, f 

 for all-aged pointers and setters, Aii{ 

 Hanger, Mr. Llewellyn's Counters at 

 and other celebrated animals, after 



withdrawn from public competition and put to breading purposes 

 only. Appouded are the points sba made in the Rhiwlas stakes, 

 lflrfSj and County stakes, Vaynol, 1872 : 



KlllWl.AS STAKES. 

 VOyiUK Ol' POINTS WJIKN 



FBDIGEEE OT" MB. NEWTON'S BANOEK. 



81re, SlrT. Whtchcote'3 Banger.— Dam, Mr. Foster's Ruth. 



Pec ef f M ,,. - for. icio, ,- lofif. -dr erg or. ■ f; . gf - 



Mr. Newbatt.'a fNell. 



Lord n. Beo-rlnck's .i.-eiak-Ioni 'fi a -, en's Venus. 



Mr. Edge's Uuke.— Lord vitllei'.s 1 Maoeuo.- Lord Craven'.- 'ff-o 



.strli. Goodrich's Jewel.— Mr. Twibels Jewel (Laxten Kennols). 



Dak ., _ 

 Gojdsell, of orange. N. 

 English setter dog Lmkf 

 Border. 



rlaut*mm-3. Otis Fell 

 Bill, of litirns, Allegany 

 io-; bound hitch Nantoti 



fSoMii Adair Fannie Whelp— J. Otis Fellows, of HornellsMHe, N. Y., 



has sold to A. K. Wallace a liver and n hite cocker bitch puppy, out 

 of Fannie by Robin Ada Ir. 



Pkbsbntation. 

 Mr. M. W. Miner, of VVuiikegan, Ills . has prescnied the black setter 

 olLcii pupp'c Daisy 'fee, by bob out of Belle, to Mr. W. L. Parks, Port 

 Roval, d'enn. 



IMPOBTATIOK. 



Mozart U— Mr. M. A.Magner, of Boston, Mass., has Imported an- 

 other Yorksiiho fci-rnr, Viozni 111. be is about three years old, has 

 a beautiful blue and uniform and straight coat; the golden tan 

 mark I oes are rich ; weight 5>j' lbs. 



THE ENGLISH POINTER, 



iCONTIKCED FKOM PAGE 14.] 



I J'OR vears Devonshire has been the great home of the pointer in 

 England, and Mr. Francis, of Exeter, and Mr. S. Price, of 

 Bow, Devon, have done much for gaubeg this southern county the 

 reputation it "bears so justly for the production of first-rate 

 specimens of the breed. The latter has certain y gamed im- 

 mortality by breeding Wastg, a dog who in his day kne.v no rival, 

 but who at'the time of wiottug la l^noffij: co how traces of that 

 groat, destroyer— lime. Mr. E. C. Norrish, too, at Crediton, is 

 rapidly making himself a name as an exhibitor of pointers, and is 

 in possession of a remarkably haudcome brace of liver-and-whltes 

 in the persons of Digbv and Bevel, who began to win prizes in 

 nrst-rate company when only a few months old. The oredit of 

 breeding the=e dogs, however, is due to Mi'. R. Andrews, from 

 whom Mr. Norrish obtained them. , 



; also at the Gr 

 i Fall, her son, in the Fenlly: 

 aid 1st in the Rhiwlas .-take 



ich pert'o 



20 



80 



IS 



10 



100 



Pace and Pointing Drawing 



stvle of (style and on game or 



Nose, hunting. Breaking, -r-odiioffs'i. Backing, reading. Total. 

 Belle. K'/t 'JO mi lis i" 5 »■% 



copntv Stakes, Vaynol, iST*. 



Belle. 30 mi 20 16 hi r, 100 



PuUmarks, a feat only once accomplished, except by Belle. 



measuhements of belle, taken jiauch 13, 1574.* 



Round chest 2 / f - {H ia - 



Nose to root of tail o f%. 



Height at shoulder • 2 



Head, skull-bone to nose '...-. 8 



Bound lace, under eves 10 



Round thigh • 1 8 



Round loin 1 | 



Round skull \ » 



Sloui-boneto Bhoulder-blade 10 



"While alluding to famous pointers, and Drake especially, the 

 pedigree of this great dog should not be omitted. Wo therefore 

 give it, and also a short history of the crack, as they appear in Mr. 

 R. J. Ltovd Price's Kennel List. 



Drake was vureliased at Sir It. Garth's sale, July 14, 1874, .for 160 guineas. 

 ' Die,! April 22, 1877. 

 DRAKP. 

 UcdT H^P- 



? '* | " s s 



TX3 1 a -i B I 



$5* It- gc | 



1 



S j 



-"E 



pa 





! I S 1 



l ? ? 



.-- 



o cr- 



Mi 



DltAKE, TAKEN l 



MBASCniCMENTS O 



Round cheat 



Nose to root of toil 



Height at shoulder 



Head, skull-bone to nose 



Bound face, under eyes 



Bound thigh 



Round loin 



Bound skull 



Skull-bone to shoulder-blade. 



i 26, 187L 



Drake's performances 



8}f 

 :— 1st prize Puppy Stakes, Stafford 



Trials, 1868; 1st prize: All Aged Stakes, ditto, ditto; 1st prize, 

 Braces ('with Sfarci. ditto, ditto ; 1st prize, Champion Cup, ditto, 

 18(111 ; 1st, prize, Champion Cup, Shrewsbury Trials, 1870.— Drake 

 war; she of the winners of the 1st, 2d and 3d prizes, Puppy Stakes, 

 Shrewsbury, 187i; also of the winner, Dandy Drake, and grand- 

 sire of second and third in 1878 ; also of Beau, Mallard, Romp, 

 Lucky SLvpence, and Gypsy and Yellow Drakes, of Luck of Eden- 

 hall iwi-.-euer of the Pi fid " lYieb f'erby, 1870), and of Tick, in the 

 Rhiwlas Kennels, as well as Lord Downe's Bang, Drake II., Mars. 

 Grace, dill and Pounce: Lord Derby's Drake and Dutchess: Lord 

 lutehiieid's Daisy: Ml'. Barclay- Field's Riot, and Mr. Price's Rose; 

 Sir K. Garth's Mite II.; and "many other Field Trial and Show . 

 Beuc.ti winners. Is also grandsire to Mr. Pilkington's Garnet and 

 Paust ; Mr. Barclay Field's Drake and Pride, and many others. 

 We may here state 'that Faust was sold to America last your for the 

 large sum of .£450. 



Considerable judgmeut is required in selecting a pointer, for to 

 no breed of dog is the axiom of "handsome io as handsome does" 

 more applicable. Many of the very best Field Trial dogs of mod- 

 em days, having been singularly lacking in quality, additional im- 

 portance has been given to the' belief already in existence that in 

 the matter of a pointer good looks go for very little. Such is, 

 however, by no means the ca-ie. and if the institution of dog shows 

 has doue nothing else, it has had the effect of improving the ap- 

 pearance of the modern pointer very considerably. Until owners 

 tvero in a position to be able to compare their dogs with those of 

 then -neighbors, naturally enough the sportsman was to a certain 

 extent indifferent about his dog's appearance. When, however, it 

 came to bo a matter of winning credit for his kennel, a new aspect 

 of affairs appeared, and pointer men seemed to be particularly af- 

 fected by the craze for improving the appearance of the breed, as 

 before said. In selecting a pointer a very great deal depends upon 

 the nature of the. circumstances under which he is to be worked, 

 and the strength of the sportsman who wishes to use the dog. 

 The small, active dog is ail yery well if ho is only intended to be 

 shot over in a country where lucre is uot much hard work to be 

 gone through, and the* big lumbering dog is also very Serviceable 

 under similar circumstances, or if the sportsman who proposes to 

 work' him is unable to undergo a vast amount, of work or hardship. 

 Judging, therefore, from the abovo remarks, it can be safely taken 

 as a general maxim in pointer judging that a good middle-size dog 

 is the best to select for general purposes of sport, yet it is by no 

 means a wise proceeding to select an indifferent specimen of the 

 middle-weight in preference to superior large or small-steed point- 

 ers. There are exceptions to every rule, but it is generally safer 

 to trust hi the undeveloped excellence of a good-looking dog than 

 to rely upon coming across a diamond in the rough ; so wo wiU at 

 once proceed to lay before our readers a description of what a 

 pointer should be like. 



-Mr. Newton's Ranger, "Champion Pointer of Pngland," awarded 



prh'e at, heeds, duly 18; Birmingham. December o. lssi ; Prcr.ton, s'ep- 

 leiuberg isni: Asburiihaiii Hall, Chelsea, March ■>-'.; and Paris. May 

 4, IS6S. 



[Reprinted from advance sheets of Vero Shaw's "Book of the Dog," 

 furnished to the Forest and Stream by the author, tlu-ough 

 Cassell, Potter, Galpin * Co., publishers, No. 596 Broadway, 

 New York.] 



EASTERN FIELD TRIAL WINNERS. 



We have hud struck off upon finely-tinted paper the portraits 

 which appeared in recent numbers of the winning dogs 

 at the late field trials at Robin's Island The pictures are 

 very neatly executed, and as the originals were drawn from 

 sittings, by the eminenL artists Mr. E. Forbes, of this city, 

 and Mr. J. M. Tr icy, of St. Louis, Mo., we do not hesitate 

 to recommend them to our readers. See notice in another 

 column. 



•These are taken from the Rhiwlas list, Kennel forwarded us by 

 Mr. R. J. Lloyd Price. 



§uhtinq nnd §moeing. 



THE TWO-TOSNEK. 



Sditor Forest 



hit it exactly. The only change I might suggest Is a trifle 

 dshlp frame neirdcck. However, I propose to 

 and expect, to begin work soon. X. 



a mind (bat a yacht in actual relief will give to 

 Impression from the projections on paper. The 

 11 noi appe <r half as much In relief, and her top- 



.-orild not have h-f aeg.al to Hie ends, mid the work of the 



. ii i. part have been thrown away. The flare also gives 



wider house, and more floor to cabin In consequence. 



on Sri; Sam just to hand. 1 want to compliment you 



1 i be solid! hi nit i like Per much. and. 1 1 081 that she 

 cruaoer of many more. I like the after body very 

 ,- ihai that shape of frame io about the thing. I agree 

 we must sees a compromise between the narrow 

 ml our own ilaf, bottoms, and 10. of. your design meets 

 ly. ClTOlSBR. 



a perfect, g 



D Stbkasi, which I have taken 

 irliclos on all sublccts as the 

 lg time (or the little cutter, 

 E. C, W. 



,. .gov 



plans "ot'Feb. it, how would it do to add ten teet to extreme 

 lenorh, locate iiietii-oent re and centre, of gravity on load-water line 

 and ' hall.tst with lead on the keel? CORINTHIAN. 



[The centre of gravity can readily be brought down to the water- 



lii,e bo u.-liba ,Jcoatg_g- ..g,d mere rrOO if, Cr iii.cfco.iic :- f, r.fi ol 

 Of r--S V- f ■-..: coco - to- e. ■:.-■!. e fen ., 0111, , ougleS, O the i .da I 



would be decidedly too ■rank when near the plumb, a slight 

 shift of crew, etc., sending her down to And bearings. Ii loft. Is 



