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Berkshire put me in the kennel and I did 
not play on the lawn any more; nor did I 
see Lufra again for a long time. I asked 
Grandma Fan about jack rabbits and she 
nearly had a fit. She told me never to 
mention them to her again and that if 
Berkshire ever heard me talking about 
them he would whip me, so I forgot all 
about them. 
The next summer I was not at all well, 
so Berkshire took me out of the kennel 
and put me on a wire in the yard. There 
I could run up and down and eat all the 
grass I wanted. I soon grew better and 
was myself again in a few weeks. Berk- 
shire usec to take me out to a big field 
every day and teach me my lessons. I 
learned to drop when he put up one hand 
and get up when he put up the other, 
to go to him quickly when he told me to, 
to stand up straight and still when he 
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I GOT 2 ‘OR 3. SPLENDID SNARES Ah EaimTn. 
the left as he motioned to me to, and a lot 
of other interesting things. I liked this 
as I wanted to please Berkshire. He 
was always kind and had delicious pieces 
of boiled liver for me when I was good. 
One day after we had been at this kind of 
work for a long time I heard him tell 
Suffolk I was the best yard-broken pup 
he had ever handled and that he was 
proud of me. 
During these weeks Lufra came to see 
me quite often and we had a good many 
long talks, renewing our old-time friend- 
ship. She was still hunting rabbits and as 
enthusiastic as ever. Early one morning 
I somehow or other twisted my chain so 
it unfastened from my collar and I was 
free. I started to find Jack but met 
Lufra and 5 or 6 of her friends with some 
men on horseback. She told me to 
come along and she would show me what 
life really was. 
I did not have anything 
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