Mat 14, 1885-1 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



315 



notice, stating time of meeting and the business for which 

 such meeting is called. 



OFFICERS. 



The officers of this club shall consist of a president, a vice- 

 president, a secretary:, a treasurer, an executive committee of 

 eleven members, and a finance commit tee of three to be elected 

 by tlie executive committee from its members. 



DUTIES OF OFFICERS, 



The president or vice-president shall preside at all meetings. 

 The secretary shall keep the minutes of all meetings of tbe 

 club, shall conduct the correspondence, and have charge of 

 and be responsible for all books and papers. The treasurer 

 shall have charge of all moneys belonging to the club, which 

 shall be deposited in some Jersey City bank, subject only to 

 drafts signed by the treasurer, and countersigned by the sec- 

 retary. "The treasurer shall pay all bills when properly ap- 

 proved, and submit a report thereof to the finance committee 

 when called upon by them to do so. 



FEES. 

 The iuitiatlon fee shall be $5, and the annual dues $5. No 

 member whose dues remain unpaid shall be entitled to vote 

 at the annual meeting, aud any member in arrears for dues 

 shah not enjoy the privileges of membership until said dues 

 are paid, and' any member in arrears for dues three months 

 shall thereby stand suspended, 



EXPENSES. 



Any expenses incurred by the treasurer, secretary or by the 

 executive committee, for or in behalf of the club, shall be de- 

 frayed out of the funds of tho club. 



PAYMENT OF BILLS. 



All bills must be presented to the treasurer, who shall have 

 them approved by the finance committee, who shall affix their 

 signatures and date of approval, after which the treasurer 

 shall be authorized to pay. 



DISCIPLINE. 



The executive committee shall have power, by a full vote 

 present, to suspend from membership any person who may 

 be found guilty of fraudulent or dishonorable action in con- 

 nection with dogs, and shall report the name of said rnembor 

 at the next annual meeting, and the cause for which such 

 member may have been suspended, when said member may 

 be expelled or reinstated, as the club shall decide by a major- 

 ity vote. Anv person violating this constitution or the rules 

 of the club shall forfeit their membership. 



REPORTS. 



An annual report and abstract of the accounts, duly 

 audited by tbe finance committee, shall be open to inspection 

 of members of the club at the anuual meeting. 



SPECIAL. 



!No expenses shah be incurred by any committee of this 

 club beyon I fifty per cent, of the amount in the treasury 

 at the last anuual meeting, unless a further sum shall be 

 voted by the club at a special meeting; and at no time shall 

 any expense be incurred bringing the club in debt beyond the 

 amount in the treasury. 



AMENDMENTS. 



No addition, alteration or amendment to this constitution 

 shall be made except by a two-thirds vote of the members 

 present at the regular annuaJ. meeting of the club. At least 

 thirty days' notice of any proposed change must be given to 

 the secretary, who shall at once notify in writing the mem- 

 bers of the club. 



THE BENCH SHOW NOVICE. 



THE feelings of a novice who exhibits a dog at a bench 

 show for "the first time and gets around "O" are not to 

 be envied. 



He always manages to reach the show bright and early on 

 the opening day and goes carefully over the class hi which his 

 dog is entered, comparing each canine with his own. To the 

 novice this comparison inevitably confirms the opinion formed 

 when he entered his dog that the first or second prize will 

 surelv fall to him. 



When his class is called for judging he leads his dog into the 

 ring with a pitying glance at the other exhibitors. But after 

 a little while he becomas convinced that the judge, for some 

 unaccountable reason, is strongly prejudiced against his dog. 

 No matter how cunningly he maneuvers to get the animal 

 directly in front of the judge a passing glance is all that dig- 

 nified personage will condescend to give him. A great lump 

 conies up into his throat as he thinks of the many weeks he 

 has spent in conditioning his dog and how he has groomed 

 him until he has felt personally acquainted with each partic- 

 ular hair of his coat. And for what purpose ! The judge will 

 not even loox at him closely. 



At last the prizes are awarded. A dog is given "first" that 

 the novice considers the poorest one of the class, and his own 

 does not even get a c. 



As he augrdv leads his dog back to his stall he meets plenty 

 of disappointed exhibitors who console with him. "Wnat a 

 shame," says one. "'It is an outrage," exclaims another. "No 

 exhibitor outside of the ling can win," chimes in a third. 

 "Come with me and I'll show you some judging even more 

 fraudulent than in your class," says a fourth. 



This last person drags the novice down the aisle of benches 

 before a stall in which is a dog wearing a blue ribbon, and 

 then to one containing a dog without a card of any kind; and 

 he is asked if he could explain how any judge could honestly 

 prefer the former to tne latter dog. The questioner is the 

 owner of the dog who did not win. Knowing nothing of the 

 breed in question, the novice after gazing at the two animals 

 for full one minute answers, "it's wrong, very wrong— it's out- 

 rageous." 



Brooding over his wrongs for a couple of horn's he at length 

 determines that the judge shall look at his dog, so he hunts up 

 that much-abused person and accosts him with: 



"Sir, will you look at my dog and tell me why he was not 

 noticed," 



The judge, always obliging, says "Certainly," and goes with 

 him to the stall. 



Fault after fault is pointed out to the novice fmany of which 

 the latter considers points of real merit) until at length he 

 begins to think that the judge is actually trying to make 

 him believe that his dog has a combination of all the bad 

 qualities that an animal of his breed could have. 



"Has my dog any good points?" ironically asks the novice 

 finally. 



"1 am afraid he has but very few," replies the candid judge. 



Then the novice takes his dog off the bench and after a fight 

 with, the door-keeper about the deposit money, pulls out nve 

 dollars, saying, "The show is a d— d swindle," goes home with 

 his canine friend and under a non-de-plume berates the judge, 

 the prize winning dogs and the show, in the sporting papers. 

 Paul Logic. 



THE PHILADELPHIA DOG SHOW.— As the entry books 

 for the Philadelphia Kennel Clu o's show are being footed up 

 we find we will have between 500 and 500 dogs. The quality 

 of both setters and pointers will be of the highest order, and it 

 is a question whether such a number of cracks will ever mei 

 together again. Several packs of foxhounds will be on ex- 

 hibition and will be displayed in a circular inclosure in the 

 center of the room. Special arrangements will be made with 

 the railroads for carrying dogs, full particulars of which will 

 be sent to exhibitors with their tags and identification tickets. 

 — Hoiro. 



THE TORONTO DOG SHOW. 



[Special to Forest and Stream.] 



Toronto, Ont., May 13. 

 Editor Forest and Stream: 



The best show ever held in the Dominion opened this morn- 

 ing. The pavilion of the Horticultural Gardens, in which the 

 show is held, is located in a splendid park, which is thrown 

 open to exhibitors and affords the best exercising placed have 

 ever seen at a show. There are about three hundred and 

 si xty dogs, but a large number of entries were refused. Quality 

 of dogs very good. In the champion setter class for dogs 

 Bockm^haiii beat Paris and Leicester, and in the bitch class. 

 Belle, a good bitch, beat Liddersdale and Blue Belle. All of 

 the judges are here. Not many mistakes so far. Among the 

 cracks not yet judged areMemnon, Beaufort, O'Shea's hounds, 

 Mr. Thayer's bulldogs, and others. The weather is splendid. 

 Warmer than in New York. All running smooth. A little 

 confusion just at first. You will see the quality is better than 

 at any previous show held in Canada. 



AWARDS TO 2 O'CLOCK P. Ml, MAY 13. 



ENGLISH SETTERS. -Challenge Class— Do„s: Frank Wiadholz's 

 Rockingham. Biichex: L. H. and M. A. Suo'th's Belle.— Open— Dogs: 

 1st, L. H. and M. A. BfttftVs Bristol; 2d, T <!. Davey's Prince Phoebus; 

 3d, P. G. Hughes's Paris III. Bitches: 1st, T. G. Davey's Genevieve; 

 3d, O. T&ttetfs Countess Dash; 3d, O. Totteu's Lady Princess. Pup- 

 pies Under 18 Months -Vugs: 1st, T. Gt. Davey's Jupiter; 2d, O. Tot- 

 ten's Rosedale. Hitches: 1st, George Sec-field's Diana; Sd, Dan 

 O'Shea'- Hastey. 



IRISH SETTERS.— Challenge Class— Max Wenzel's Chief.— Open 

 - -D<>, is: 1st, Robert DouRlttSS'B Comet; 2d, Max W enzel's Chief, Jr.; 

 •~d. Sam BtaaefS Sam. Bitches: 1st, Max Wenzel's Yoube. No sec- 

 ond. Tttppiesi 1st, Jas. Kennedy's Dan; 2d, J is. Stewart's Don. 



I FISH WATER SEANIELS,— 1st, H. E. Kersteman's Rocky; 2d, 

 Jolflj Fitzgerald's Totvy. 



CLUMBERS.— 1st, C. E. Robinson's Judy. 



FIFLD SPANIELS.— Ch\mp!ON— Blaok or Liver, 2Blbs. and Over 

 —J. Luckwell's Bob, Jr.— Open— Dogs; 1st, J.W.Kelly's Lad o' Devon; 

 gd.CC Thompson's Raven; 3d, John Wilson's Beau II. Bitches; 

 1st, J. A. Roche's Fan [I.; 2d, J. hu Wilson and R. Tiunrag, Jr.'s 

 Str.ituaven.— Any other Color— 1st, A. Pearce's Sappho; 2d, James 

 Cowers Jumbo. 



(JO DEB B SPANIELS.- Under 28lbs., B^kVK-Dngs; 2d, Andrew 

 Laidlaw's Rex; 31, Henry Talford's Black Graf. Bitches: 1st, 

 Andrew Laidlaw's Belle; 2d. James Luckwell's Woodland Queen; 3d, 

 J. W. Kelly's Wooasiock Gipsey.— Any Other Color— 1st,, Andrew 

 Laidlaw's Dart; 2d, P. P. Curtis's Sport; 3d, Geo. H. McFarlane's 

 Drum. 



FOX -TERRTERS.— Challenge Class— Dogs: Raby Tyrant. Bitches: 

 Richmond Olive.— Open— Dotis: 1st, Jolm E. Thayer's Surprise; 2d, 

 D. G. Booth's Venator; 3d, W. M. Langdon's Brokenhurst Reveller. 

 Bitches: 2d, YV. R. Bingham's Daisy; 3d. W. M. Langdon's Flirt.— 

 Wire-Haired— 1st, A. St. G. Boulton's Bristles; 2d, J'. Richmond's 

 Jasper. Puppies: 1st, J. Thayer's Di: 2d, W. R. Bingham's Blanch. 



MASTIFFS —Dor/s: 1st, 0. H. Mason's Neyison; 2d, Hugh Scott's 

 Nelson. Bitches: 1st, 0. H. Mason's Miss Neyison; 2d, H. J. L. 

 Lawes'sNorah. 



ST. BERNARDS.— Dogs: 1st. J. W. Burgess's First Choice. 2d, 

 Fred W. Rothera's Priam. Bitches: 1st and 2d, Fred W. Rothera's 

 Daphne and Orta. X. 



A CLOSE CALL FOR SCOTTIE.— Napier, New Zealand, 

 March 22.— Placidly perusing Forest and Stream to-day, I 

 am incited by a column of remarkable shots to narrate a 

 little incident which occurred some thirteen years ago, when 

 I was managing one of the largest sheep and cattle runs in the 

 Province of Otago, in the South island of this colony. One 

 morning the station butchers told me that some sheen were 

 wanted in the yard for killing, and it happened that the only 

 dog then at the home station was a clever, but capricious old 

 collie of my own, named Scottie, who rarely did any work. 

 The killing wethers were, however, in a tbirty-acre paddock, 

 and 1 essayed to get them into the yards: but Scottie was in 

 one of his inoperative moods and made a hash — in fact, several 

 hashes— winding up with a dead failure of the performance; 

 with the final result that, having got a (not very severe) 

 thrashing', he retired from public view, aud that I instructed 

 the butchers to run in a bullock to kill. On my return in the 

 evening old Scottie came sheepishly up to me after the manner 

 of the average "chidden hound;" and, on inspection, 1 found 

 that he had received a fearful wound, which at hrst sight ap- 

 peared to be right through the middle of his neck, but which 

 after inspection showed to have just missed the vital parts. I 

 questioned all the men about the place, but they, yvith one 

 consent, at first pleaded total ignorance. Eventually, how- 

 ever, the stockman admitted that the first shot he tired at the 

 bullock missed the mark, and that, immediately on the shot, 

 old Scottie had jumped up howling from a little grassy hillock 

 not many yards off and about in the line of fire, where he was 

 lying unnoticed, and had run away. This was all the evidence 

 I could collect, but there could be no moral doubt that the 

 bullet went through that dog's neck. Strange to relate, no 

 serious injury was inflicted; the wound sloughed for some 

 time and gradually healed, and the old dog's spirits and appe- 

 tite were but little affected. — L. M. 



ENGLISH AND NATIVE FOXHOUNDS.— Editor Forest 

 and Stream: I see that "Homo" wants the standard for judg- 

 ing foxhounds changed, and I heartily agree with him. For 

 my part I should as soon start out to drive a fox over granite 

 hills with a pack of yearling calves as with English foxhounds, 

 but for thoroughbred city fox hunters they are just the thing, 

 as a tame fox or an anise bag is not hard to catch, and the ex- 

 citement of not letting your horse stumble over them is 

 immense. I have one of them witn a pedigree a yard long, 

 about a year old. and as like those shown at the last Boston 

 show as can be, and he is a worker and will make a good show 

 dog, but never will be able to keep in hearing of the best of 

 my hounds, which are part Byron and the others the same 

 style dogs as Dixie Jim and Topsey, shown at Boston. I did 

 think of entering mine, but when 1 saw the prize winners 1 

 was glad I did not, for they would not have been noticed, 

 though between Oct. 1 ana Dec. 10, twenty-seven foxes were 

 killed ahead of them. For an open country I presume the 

 English hound may suit, but I would hke to see how far a 

 pack of them would drive an old dog fox on Monadnock 

 Mountain, where a fox need not step on anything but ledge 

 for a mile at a time, and the music from some of our native 

 hounds on those hard spots is little lite the English yelp. I 

 hope we can have a different standard; if not, good foxhounds 

 will be scarce at dog shows. — H. C. Newell, 



"THE PUG MUST GO."— Must he? The Boston Beacon 

 has said it, but not Beacon street. Puggie must go — yes, from 

 England to America, and for the price of $100 to $500, to de- 

 light the hearts and homes of his new owners in every case. 

 All who know puggie for yvhat he really is, the happy, good- 

 natured, thoroughly sweet tempered, devoted friend and com- 

 panion of children, the waggish, meny pet of their elders, 

 the alert little watchman, the amusing, fearless enemy of 

 tramps and vagabonds, all who know r puggie smile at the 

 idea that Ms popularity is on the wane. We grant the ex- 

 quisite beauty of the silky -coated Prince Charlies and Blen- 

 heims during' the brief period when those troublesome coats 

 are at their very glossiest and best, but memory recalls the 

 handsomest specimen we ever owned clinging by his sharp 

 little teeth to the nose of our little sister, and the picture is 

 no more pleasing than was the real incident years ago. Silly 

 masters or mistresses can make fools of dogs, and there must 

 be a percentage of stupidity among our canine friends to keep 

 pace with humanity, but let us not insult little puggie by sup- 

 posing his whole race stupid. His bright, beautiful eyes and 

 quick movements do not belie his intelligence, and though his 

 countenance is black and wrinkled, his temper is as smooth 

 and serene as ours ought to be. Do not malign puggie. — Con- 

 stant Reader. 



COLLIE AWARDS AT ST. LOUIS.— St. Louis, May 4>— 

 Editor Forest and, Stream: In the report of the St. Louis 

 show contained in your last issue, there is an error in the 

 placing of the awards in the open bitch class for coUies. First 

 went to Nellie instead of Flyaway, as appears in your report. 

 Second to Madge Wildfire, vhe. to Flyaway, and he. to Kate. 

 All are owned by me, and while I esteem Flyaway as a very 

 fair collie, yet the others are a long way in front of her. — J. 

 A. Long. 



A RETRIEVER.— Weldon, N. C— A few days ago I went 

 to my trout lines aud got a catfish off of one of the hooks. I 

 threw it on the bank. When I got ashore I bade my seven 

 months old puppy to bring it to me, and to my great surprise 

 he took it up and brought it as gracefully as if it had been an 

 old cock partridge. I then broke its fins off and sent it up to 

 town to my father's office. Every one that saw it said it was 

 hard to beat for a puppy.— Tar Heel. 



KENNEL MANAGEMENT. 



HtlT" No Notice Tafeen of Anonymous Correspondents. 



H. E. P., Cleveland.— My Scotch collie, 18 months old, has some 

 trouble with his eyes. They seem weak, and at times there is a 

 watery discharge from tbe corners, and at other times, especially 

 mornings, tMe discharge is thick, but never very profuse. The light 

 appears tp hurt him, and he keeps his eyes closed or partially so 

 either when out in the sun or by gas light. The eyes seem inflamed, 

 but I cannot see that the lids are swollen. Ha* been troubled for two 

 months. His hair has come out a little all winter, but he appears to 

 have a good coat. Otherwise appears well, good appetite, v, ry play- 

 ful and active. Ans. As a general tonic give your collie five drops of 

 Fowler's solution of aisenic morning and evening in his food. Keep 

 it up for three weeks. Your dog has ophthalmia. Wash eyes twice 

 daily with a. sponge and warm water. Try the fol lowing wash : Ten 

 grains of boas to one ounce camphor water. Apply with dropper 

 four or five times daiiy. If this does not benefit, use a mild solu- 

 tion of nitrate of silver, two grains to the ounce of water, and apply 

 with camel's hair brush once daily. 



KENNEL NOTES. 



NOTICE TO CORRESPONDENTS. 



Kennel notes are inserted in this column free of charge. To insure 

 publication of notes, correspondents MUST GIVE the following par- 

 ticulars of each animal: 



1. Color. 6. Name and residence of owner, 



2. Breed. buyer or seller. 



3. Sex. 7. Sire, with his sire and dam. 



4. Age, or 8. Owner of sire. 



5. Date of birth, of breeding or 6. Dam, with her sire and dam. 



of death 10. Owner of clam. 



All names must be plainly written. Communication on one side of 

 paper only, and siguetLwith writer's name. 



NAMES CLAIMED. 



E^~ See instructions at liead of this column. 



Conn. By W. T. Newton, Brookline. Mass.. for red Irish setter 

 dog, whelped Nov. 17, 1884, by Major (Keno— Madge) out of Primrose 

 (Eleho— Z Ida). 



May Eye See. By Lehigh Kennels, Lehighton, Pa., for English set- 

 ter bitch, wheloed March 24, 1885 (Romeo— Lara). 



Dottie Dimple. By !-amuel Clark. Kennebunk, Me., for imported 

 Skye terrier bPch, whe'ped April 12, 1882. 



Dandy, By Jas. Benn-ut, Boston, Mass.. for imported Sieve terrier 

 dog. whelped Feb. 16, 1 882. 



Loyos. By Victor M. Haldeman. General Wavne, Pa., for lemon 

 and white English setter dog. wheiped Sept. 12, 18S4, by A. E. Sher- 

 man's Nep out of Josie. 



Beta rave Jackie, Belle, and Fairy. By W. H. Cookson, Hudson. N. 

 Y., for fox-terriers, one dog and two bitches, whelped Feb. 15, 1885 

 (Mixture— Nettle). 



Metis. By Thomas Bratson, Newark, N. J., for orange and white 

 pointer bitch, age not given, by Bon Ton(A.K.R. 1436) outof I. E. 

 Decker's Mav. 



Darkey. By Geo. W. Fisher, Luzerne, Pa., for pug bitch, whelped 

 Aug. 23, 1S84. by Don Juan out of Cbl:e. 



Count On-him. By L.Gardner. Mount Vernon, N. Y,, for white, 

 black and tan English setter, whelped March 28, 1886) by Blue Dick 

 (Blue Dash— Jolly May) out of Biulesque (Belton— Roi^e). 



Hero. Rebel and Custer. By Wm. Loeffler, Preston, Minn, for black 

 and tan, red and chestnut and tan dachshund dogs, whelped March 

 14, 1825, by his Waldmann II. (Faust— Flora) out of B^bette (Bock— 

 Waldine). 



Gust, George, Otto, Louise, Mina and Flora II. By Wm. Lopffler, 

 Preston, Minn., for one black and tan and two red dachshund dogs 

 and one black and tan and two 'ed bitches, whelped April 13, 1885, by 

 his Wairiman II. (Faust— Flora) outof Crawl (Waldmarn— Waldine). 



Faust II.. Crook, Dove, Lilly and diet. By Wm. Loeffler, Preston, 

 Minn., for two red dachshund dogs and one black and tan and two 

 chestnut and tan bitches, whelped April 21, 1885, by imported Berg- 

 tnann out of Diana (Waldmann II.— Babette). 



Planter. By Jas. L. Anthony, New York, for liver pointer dog, 

 whelped Feb. 6, 1830, by Westminster Kennel Club's Sensation (A.K.K. 

 217) out of Black Rose. 



Graphic Kennels. By James L. Anthony, New York, for his kennel 

 of pointers. 



BRED, 



%W" See instructions at head of this column. 



Brimstone— Buckellew. Field Trial Kennels' (New York) English 

 setter bitch Brimstone (A.K.R. 29) to their Buckellew (A.K.R. 30), 

 April 23. 



Johy Daisy— Buckellew. Field Tiial Kennels' (New York) Enplish 

 setter bitch Jolly Daisy (A.K.R. 955) to their Buckellew (A K.R. 30), 

 May 1, 



Bessy— Bunny. Haven Doe's (Salmon Falls, N. H.) beagle bitch 

 Bessy t A.K.R. 1117) to his Bunny (A.K.R. 1118). April 29. 



Nelly— Donald II. Dr. S. Fleet Speir's (Brooklyn, N. Y.) pointer 

 bitch Neby (Tarn O'Shanter— Nelly II.) to Clifton Kennels' Donald II. 

 (Donald— Devonshire Lass), April 30. 



Frost— Dashing Rover. Dr. W. A. Strother's (Lyndburg, Va.) Eng- 

 lish setter bitch Frost to Dashing Rover (Count Wind'em Noma). 



Leah— Dashing Rover. Dr. W. A Strotuers' (Lynchburg, Va.) Eng- 

 lish setter bitch Leah (Gladstone — Frost) to Dashing Rover (Count 

 Win d 'em— Noma). 



Waliixie— Prince. B. F. Seitner's (Dayton, O.) dachshund bitch 

 Wallixie (Waldman K.— Fiauleiu Waldeck) to his Prince, April 2?. 



Viola— Nip. J. H. Winslow's (Philadelphia, Pa.) pointer bitch 

 Viola (Sensation— Lilly) to G. F. Jordan's imported Nip (filkington's 

 Lake— Duke of Portland's Juno), April 17. 



Leo— Dan. The Elm City Kennels' (New Haven, Conn.) greyhound 

 bitch Leo to their Dan (Hector-Beauty), April 21. 



Dora— Don. C, R. Bernard's cocker spaniel bitch Dora (Romeo- 

 Dora) to Elm City Kennels' Don (Dot— Floss;, May 3. 



Countess— Bang Bang. The Weslminster Kennel Club's pointer 

 bitch Counte»s (Sensation— Lass) to them Bang Bang (A.K.K.. 394), 

 April 8. 



Lotta—Bang Bang. John Vail's pointer bitch Lotta to Westmin- 

 ster Kennel Club's Bang Bang (A.K.R 694). 



Pocahontas— Bang Bang. F. R. Hitchcock's (New York) pointer 

 bitch Pocahontas to Westminster Kennel Club's Bang Bang (A.K.R. 

 394), April 24. 



Lady Croxteth— Bang Bang. B. F. Seitner's (Dayton, O.) pointer 

 bitch Lady Croxteth (Croxteth— Lass; to Westminster Kennel Club's 

 Bang Bang (A.K.R 394), April 27. 



Trinket— Bang Bang. E. F. Stoddard's (Dayton, O.) pointer bitch 

 Trinket to Westminster Kennel Club's Bang Bang (A.K.R. 394), 

 May 2. 



Lassie— Robert le Diable. Westminster Kennel Club's pointer bitch 

 Lassie (A.K.R. 208) to E. C. Sterling's Robert le Diable (Croxteth— 

 Spiuawav), May 2. 



Princess Pearl -Gladstone. W. R. Traver's (Washington, D. C.) 

 English setter bitch Princess Pearl (A.K.R. 1460) to champion Glad- 

 stone, April 20. 



Dottie Dimpli— Dandy. Samuel Clark's (Kennebnnk, Mp.) im- 

 ported Skye terrier bitch Doitie Dimple to James Bennett's Dandy, 

 April 23. 



Darkey— Boggey. George W. Fisher's (Luzerne, Pa.) pug bitch 

 Darkey (Don Juan— Chioe) to John Mahoney's imported Boggey, 

 April 27. 



Kate Claxton— Duller Bey. A. J. Crovatt's (Rrunswick, Ga.) Eng- 

 lish setter birch Katu Claxton (Guy Mannering— Flash) to A. Wylly's 

 Duller Bey (Druid— Princess Draco), April 6. 



Lady Bell— Robin Adair. Clifton Kennels' (Jprsey City, N. J.) 

 pointer bitch LadyBell (A.K.R. 1788) to their Robin Adair (Faust- 

 Madge), March 21. 



Lady Bang— Donald II. Clifton Kennels' (Jersey City, N. J.) pointer 

 bitch Lady Bang (A.K.R. 698) to their Donald II. (Donald— Devonshire 

 Lass), April 20. 



