J*ov. 1889.] 



FOREST AND STREAM. 



Final. 



Trales beat "White Lips and won. 



. GREAT BEND DERBY. 

 First Series. 

 Mr. M. E. Allison's red dog Reno Redmond 

 heat 



Mr. D. C. Luse's brindle dog Lancaster. 



Mr. E. L. Branch's black dog War Cloud 



beat 



Mr. E. T. Vernon's black dog Jack. 



Mr. M. E. Allison's (Mr. Burgess's) fawn dog Spring 



beat, 



Mr. D. C. Lnse's white and blue bitch Lady in White. 



Mr. D. C. Luse's brindle bitch Lady Barton 



beat 



Mr. M. E. Allison's red dog Rexensnoozer. 



Mr, D. C. Luse's black and white bitch Lady in Black 



beat 



Mr. A. Massey's blue bitch Belle Walton. 



Doan and Smart's brindle dog Dublin Paddy a hi/c. 



Rookwood-Landseer Kennels' blue and white bitch Melo- 

 drama beat 

 Mr. M. E. Allison's red bitch Fanny Oiler. 



Mr. D. C. Luse's (Mrs. Luse's) brindle bitch Little Thought 

 Of beat 

 Mr. M. E. Allison's red bitch Queen Downs. 



Second Series. 

 Reno Redwood beat War Cloud. 

 Lady Barton beat Spriug. 

 Lady in Black be;\t Dublin Paddv. 

 Melodrama beat Little Thought Of. 



Third Series. 

 Lady Barton beat Reno Redwood. 

 Lady in Black beat Melodrama. 



Final. 



Lady Barton and Lady in Black divided first and second. 



Windings— Derby: First. $200; runner-up, $75; third, S50: 

 fourth, $25; fifth, $20; sixth, $15; seventh and eighth, 810. 

 All-Aged: American field Cup; first, $500; runuer-up, $150; 

 third, $100; fourth, $50. E. HoceH. 



DOG TALK. 



HE DREW the line at dogs: Metamora Cole, colored, 

 who said he had been a dog catcher for nine years, was 

 tried in the Criminal Court yesterday on the charge of steal- 

 ing a dog, valued at $40, the property of W. Stewart Diffen- 

 derffer, says the Baltimore Sun. The jury were out nearly 

 three hours, and were dischargtd, as they were unable to 

 agree. Cole testified that he had been honest in his busi- 

 ness. "I have caught dogs on the pavement of the City 

 Hall," he said. "I caught Mayor Latrobe's little dog and 

 Police Captain Cadwallader's little dog, and bavenever been 

 arrested for stealing a dog. I wouldn't steal a dog." 

 "Would you steal anything else?" asked Mr. Michael A. 

 Mulbn, who was assisting the State. "Yes, sir." candidly 

 replied Cole, amid general laughter. 



About the American Kennel Register.— In Mr. Peshall's 

 letter last week was a statement which it was our intention 

 to correct by a note in that issue. Mr. Peshall said, 

 "Through my many interviews and efforts made with Mr. 

 Grinnell, of the Forest and Stream Publishing Co., Mr. 

 Grinnell, through Dr. Perry, offered the A. K. R. to the 

 A. K. C. for the sum of $500, which offer was shortly after 

 accepted by the A. K. C, and the rival register ceased to 

 exist." In this Mr. Peshall is mistaken. The sale of the 

 A. K. R. was not effected through his influence, uor was it 

 ever offered through Dr. Perry to the A. K. C. It was sold 

 to Dr. Perry, and his subsequent disposal of it to the A.K.C. 

 was entirely his own concern. 



In one of the New York courts a case has been decided 

 awarding $500 damages to a bicycler who was injured by a 

 dog. "Judge Barnard finds that the defendant harbored the 

 dog, and although he was owned by his son-in-law, Hoolo- 

 han, the defendant is liable for the damage for harboring a 

 vicious dog, knowing him to be vicious. The proof shows 

 that before the plaintiff was hurt the dog had attacked 

 others, who told Kennedy of the viciousness of the dog, and 

 instead of disposing of him he still harbored him." 



Chief Detective Wade has been following a hot trail close 

 upon the heels of literary thieves, and he tells us that part 

 of the article by "Merlin," which we copied the other day 

 from the English Kennel Gazette, was stolen by "Merlin" 

 from a Boston Herald, paper by Dr. J. Frank 'Perry, the 

 authority on canine disease. Dr. Perry will please take it 

 as a compliment to himself that we recognized the merits 

 of his paper, though it came to us tricked out in the dis- 

 guise of a plagiarist. 



Mr. C. Bunn, of Peoria, 111., has purchased from Mr. Chas, 

 W. Cunningham, Kensington, Eug , the mastiff dog Or- 

 monde, a half brother to ehamnion Minting. He was 

 whelped April 7, 1886, and is by Victor Hugo and out of 

 Cambrian Princess. He won second in the puppy class at 

 Crystal Palace, 1887, and first and cup at the show held at 

 Southampton m September. 



The types made us say last week that the English Kennel 

 Club had decided that any Irish setter whelped after Dec. 

 31, 1889, if cropped will not be eligible to compete at any 

 Kennel Club snow. The reader will please substitute terrier 

 for setter and then the item will be correct. 



About the Eastern Coursing Meet Mr. Huntington writes: 

 "The hares not yet having arrived as ordered, oiir meet will 

 be postponed. Will advise you of exact date, which will 

 be as soon as a few days' familiarity with the locality will 

 enable them to run well." 



The Eberhart Pug Kennels, Cincinnati, O., have recently 

 received from Miss A. H. Whitnev, Lancaster, Mass. the 

 pus dog Sir Loris, bred by Mrs. Foster, of Bath, Eng-, He 

 is by champion Loris and out of May Queen. 



Mr. R. B. Sawyer, Birmingham. Conn., has sold to Mr 

 John H. Mathews, New York, the well-known bulldogs 

 Portswood Tiger and Lion, and the bitches Soudan and 

 Thespian. 



Mr. H. L. Goodman will judge the dogs at the Denver dog 

 show next month. 



BULL-TERRIER IMPORTATION.— New Haven, Conn.. 

 Nov. 1.— Editor Forest and Stream: I have just received 

 from England, per S S. State of Nebraska, the well-known 

 medium weight bull-terriers Chessnetts Flyer (first and 

 special Birmingham, 1888; first and special Brighton, first 

 South Hampton, 1889, and many other prizes) and Young 

 Bendigo, second Birmingham and second Aquarium. Both, 

 dogs are under 301bs.— Frank F. Dole. 



WHITE TOE NAILS IN M A.STIFFS. — Editor Forest 

 and Stream: Some weeks since I wrote you as to the absurd 

 ideas novices often entertain as to the above, and I sent a 

 copy of Forest and Stream to Richard Cook, Esq., the 

 Secretary of the Old English Mastiff Club of England. I 

 append an extract from his reply: "Your remarks on white 

 toe nails are quite to the point. It was in the spring of last 

 year that a gentleman having used Ilford Chancellor and 

 had a fine litter, was actually going to kill them because 

 most of them had some white marks on feet or chest. He, 

 however, sent tor me. and I very soon disabused him of that 

 nonsense. I wonder who ever saw a Beau puppy without 

 some white on it." Iliad no idea that this notion had taken 

 hold in England as it has done here, and after the instance 

 Mr. Cook gives, it seems to me that it is high time for the 

 Old English Mastiff Club to "distinguish and divide" on 

 this.— W. Wade (Hulton, Pa., Oct. 29> 



DENVER DOG SHOW. — We have received the premium 

 list of the first annual dog show of the Continental Kennel 

 Club, to be held at Denver, Col., Dec. 5 to 7. Challenge 

 classes, dogs and bitches to compete, with prizes of $10, are 

 provided for mastiffs, St. Bernards, deerhounds, greyhounds, 

 pointers, English setters, Irish setters, Gordon setters, cocker 

 spaniels, collies, bulldogs, bull-terriers and fox-terriers. The 

 prizes in the open classes are $10 and $5, and the same for 

 puppies. Valuable specials are also offered, among them 

 being one of $250 by the citizens of Denver for the best ken- 

 nel of five dogs of one breed owned outside of Colorado. 

 Entries close Nov. 20. The address of the secretary is A, L. 

 Weston, 910 Seventeenth street, Denver, Col. 



WHERE LOST DOGS GO. — Aurora, N. Y., Oct. 29.— 

 Editor Forest and Stream: I occasionally read laments 

 over the loss of a valuable dog strayed or stolen, which is 

 never found. The dogs miy have found their way into 

 some medical college, and there undergone a torture (vivi- 

 section) and death as practiced by a lot of inhuman wretches 

 in the guise of gentlemen, who would make an Apache war- 

 rior turn green with envy. I was informed by a student in 

 one of the medical colleges of our neighboring city that 

 there were quite a number of English aud Irish setters cut 

 up alive there last winter. They seem to prefer a kind and 

 gentle dog, as they are too cowardly to tackle a large, fierce 

 dog.— G. W. H. 



INDIANA TRIALS. — Bicknell, Ind., Nov. 4. -The third 

 annual field trials of the Indiana Kennel Club began to-day 

 with the Derby for setters. In the preliminary running 

 against a scale of points for a place in the second series, 

 Zulu, King Leo's Boy, Modesty, Braxton Bragg and Clo- 

 chette were thrown out. The drawing for the second series- 

 resulted: Hope's Riy against Sam O, Nannie B. against 

 Simonides, Tempa Cambridge against Lilly Bdrgess, Daisy 

 Girl against Fraukie Folsom. In the absence of Mr. D. C. 

 Berguudthal and Col. A. G. Sloo, Mr. P. T. Madison and J. 

 B. Stoddard acted as judges with Royal Robinson. 



PROLIFIC POINTERS. — Bostou, Oct. BO.— Editor Forest 

 and Stream: This may be of interest to pointer breeders, 

 showing how prolific a strain maybe: Rhoda out of Belle 

 Randolph by Naso of Kippen whelped 11 (8 dogs) Jan. 18, 

 1889, not being a year old at that date. Aug. 1± she whelped 

 12 (8 dogs) by Duke, owned by W. H. Thorn, S-dem, N. H. 

 Naso's Belle, winner of several prizes, litter sister to Rhoda, 

 whelped Sept. 4, 1889, 11 (8 dogs) by Reading Kennels' Spot 

 Dash, all being evenly marked and so alike as to make a 

 choice almost impossible. — C. W. Hodgkins. 



PHILADELPHIA K. C. FIELD TRTALS-Philadelphia 

 Nov. -2.— Editor Forest and Stream: The field trials of the' 

 Philadelphia Kennel Club will be held at Richland. Vir- 

 ginia, commencing Monday, No. 11. The entries are nu- 

 merous and there is excellent prospect of successful trials.— 

 Francis S. Brown, Sec'y. 



KENNEL NOTES. 

 Notes must be sent on prepared blanks, which are fur- 

 nished free on receipt of stamped and addressed envelope 

 of large letter size. Sets of 200 of any one form, hound for 

 retaining duplicates, are s*»nt for 30 cents. 



BRED. 



<fW° Notes must he sent on the Prepared Blanks. 



Bonnie Doon— Clipper. McEwen & Gibson's (Bymn, Ont.) collie 

 bitch Bonnie Uoon (Bonnie Dunkeld— Bonnie Knowe) to Jas. Wat- 

 son's Clipper (champion Eclipse— Nesta), June M. 



Daylight— Red Gauntlet. McEwen & Gibson's (Bvron, Ont.) col- 

 lie biich Daylight (Uaractaeus— Pitch Dark) to their Bed Gauntlet 

 (champion Charlemagne— Hasty). June 28. 



Ailsa— Red Gauntlet. McEwen & Gibson's (Byron, Ont.) collie 

 bitch Ailsa (champion Scotilla— Bonnie Knowe) to their Red 

 Gauntlet champion Charlemagne—Hasty) Julv3. 



Jess— Red Gauntlet. McEwen & Gibson's (Byron, Ont.) •ollie 

 bitch Jess (Heather— Madge) to their Red Gauntlet (ehamnion 

 Charlemagne-Hasty). Oct. 14. 



Madge— Red Gauntlet. McEwen & Gibson's (Bvron, Ont.) collie 

 bitch Madge (Highlander— Busty) to their Red Gauntlet (cham- 

 pion Charlemagne— Hastv), Nov. 2. 



Toadies— Myrtle. Geo. W. Dixon's (Worcester. Mass.) pug bitch 

 Toodles (A.K.R. 2147) to Mr. Stack's imported. Mvr tie, Nov. : 2. 



Juno— Beaumont. J. B, Rbossom's (New York") Gordon setter 

 bitch Juno (Glen I.— Flirt) to Beaumont Kennels' Beaumont (Kon- 

 ald III.— champion Floss), Oct, 31. 



WHELPS. 



^SP" Notes must be sent on the Prepared Blanks. 



Bonnie Doon. McEwen & Gibson's (Bvron, Ont.) collie hitch 

 Bonnie Doon (Bonnie Dun Held— Bonnie Knowe), June H, six (four 

 dogs), by Jas. Watson's Clipper (Eclipse— Nesta). 



Daylight. McEwen & Gioson's (Bvron, Ont.) collie bitch Dav- 

 ligbt (Caractacus— Pitch Dark), Aug. 30, five (one dog), by their 

 Red Gauntlet (Charlemagne — Hasty). 



Ailsa. McEwen & Gib^ou's (Rvrou, Ont.) collie bitch Ailsa 

 (Scotilla— Bonnie Knowe). Sept. 3, six (three dogs), by their Red 

 Gauntlet (Charlemagne— Hasty). 



Lulu 1Y. Michael Flynn, Jr.'s (Bristol, R. I.) Irish setter bitch 

 Lulu IV, (Shay's Dick— Lulu), Nov. 3, eight (seven dogs), by hie 

 O'Donovan Rossa (SarsQeld— Nino); two dogs and one bitch since 

 dead. 



Brunette. Chas. York's (Bangor. Me.) Yorkshire terrier bitch 

 Bruuette (Bob— Judy B.), Oct. 25, live (tbree doss), by P. H. 

 Coombs's Bradford Harry (Crawshaw's Bruce— Beal's Lady). 

 SALES. 



Notes mustbe sent on the Prepared Blanks. 



Portswood Tiger. Brindle bulldoer, whelped Oct. 1, 1885, by Paul 

 Clifford out of Hussey, by R. B. Sawyer, Birmingham. Conn., to 

 John 1L Mathews, New York. 



Lion. Brindle and white bulldog, whelped June 30, 1882. by 

 Gambler out of Nell, by R. B. Sawyer, Birmingham, Conn., to 

 Jobn H. Mathews, New York. 



Thespian. Red bull bitch, whelped 1SS5, by Monarch out of Betsy, 

 by R. B. Sawyer, Birmingham, Conn., to John H. Mathews, New 

 York. 



Soudan. White bull bitch, whelped Oct. 4, 1884, bv Billy out of 

 Zoo. bv R. B. Sawyer, Birmingham, Conn., to John H. Mathews, 

 New York. 



Lord Elsmere. Silver fawn pug dog, whelped Sppt. 1, 1889. by 

 Joe IL out of East Lake Virgie, by Eberhart Pug Kennel3, Cin- 

 cinnati, O., to Irauk Searight, Nashville, Tenn. 



KENNEL MANAGEMENT. 

 (J^"* No Notice Taken ot Anonymous Correspondents. * 



M. C„ San Francisco.- A setter dog, six years old, eyes brown 

 befoie affecied; six m->nths a^o the eves ncgan tn turn blue, and 

 are neatly all blue but a small rim of brown on the outer edge. 

 The dog ca,n see a very little. The blue is transparent and does 

 not look like a skin grown over the eye. Please if possible give 

 the cause and a remedy. Ans. Opacity of the cornea for some 

 reason. It might be of service to use an eye wash of zinc sul- 

 phate 2 grains to the •unce. See an eye doctor. 



lhaating 



RANGE AND GALLERY. 



NEWARK, N. J.— The tournament scores in the Association 

 matches for the past week stand as fullowa: 

 Monday, Oct. 28. 



North Ward. 



E Lewis 102 



0 Eijrfish 107 



B Stjtts 94 



W Sherk 104 



W Hague 101 



F Hortsman 108 



O Willet 104 



H Cooper G3 



E Perkins 95 



Electric. 



B Herron 97 



FSteinmetz 79 



C Dey 95 



A Hagel 103 



FKlinger 105 



Marker 76 



J Fla.nnery 83 



JKalmbach 77 



G Englesman 71 



H Leonard ..94—1,002 Hardenbroch 



Howard. 



J P Laute 107 



J Burger 105 



C Theurich 103 



A Bureer 107 



J Better H3 



FCDietz Ill 



F Switg Ill 



R Neunriorff 105 



J Meyer 109 



A Herman 94-1,005 G Ghent 



Lakeside. 



J Herron 105 



W Clark .104 



B Li m pert 105 



H Rnvrter 104 



T MeGovern 95 



BStreudle 98 



J Parley 84 



B McKeon V7 



C Hoerl 90 



D Mahoney, 



16- 882 



Friday, Nov. 1. 



Sheppard. 



J Fereuson 87 



Stewart 97 



Partridge 102 



McQuoid 101 



Puree 96 



D Ferguson 101 



Bovd 105 



Sprat 105 



Christie 100 



Sheppard 105- 



Monroe. 



Risk 107 



Reich 97 



Minion 96 



Coleman 105 



Koker 103 



Hedin 98 



W id man 113 



Gilliland 87 



Dollinger, 



Annie Oakley. 



G Hunkle 82 



J Thomson 73 



FS- heel 89 



E M-irfii g 109 



F Rothaker 102 



Gries 99 



Bolge 83 



J IVIeCallmu 107 



L Heyl 100 



■ - 60- 907 



Excelsior. 



J Gotthard 97 



C Berger 09 



J Bauer 107 



C Maver. 101 



E Wurtzbach 112 



O Krauss 110 



C Mink, Jr 101 



J Burger 107 



H Buob 105 



1— 990 F Schmidt 102—1,041 



Puritan. 



Albrecht 98 



Bauder ]09 



Geork 107 



Walbejm 103 



C Woiler 110 



Phillips ill 



eib 









Newark. 



Matts 99 



La Rue 98 



Had den 91 



James 101 



Wolff 93 



N Garrigan 93 



Hogle 92 



Ronerts 101 



"richer 97 



Erskine 101— 894 Yaufman .109— 979 



Oakland. 



Bayer 102 



Chapman 107 



Mimer 92 



A Schmidt 109 



Bischotf 109 



Bleier 98 



G Schmidt 103 



Reiss 80 



Grand Jer 91 



Essex. 



Cooper 105 



Jerkins 98 



Weigman 98 



Coppersmith .103 



Neuman 83 



McCraitb 106 



Shackleford 86 



Walsh ....100 



Welter....* 103 



Schultz 85— 976 Weeks 104— 986 



PHILADELPHIA. Oct. 26 —The regular weekly contest for gold 

 and silver medals of the Gaiety Rifle and Pistol Club took place 

 at the club's headquarters, 818 South street, this evening. Mr. F. 

 P. Maher, with his large, allowance, was the winner of the gold 

 medal, while Mr. J. Hunsihger, haviugno comoetitor, was entitled 

 to the silver medal. The official scores of the members at 20yds. 

 standard American targets (reduced), Wurfflein rifles (plain), open 

 sights, off-hand, 10 shots per score, possible 100, were as follows- 



J J Mountjoy 10 7 8 10 9 9 10 9 9 8-^-89 



E Travis 8 6 9 9 10 9 " 



J M Green 6 10 10 



5 9 9 6 

 9 10 10 9 

 8 7 9 10 

 4 



9 9 9-82 



6 8 7-79 

 _. 5 0 7—78 



6 8 10 9 10 10—78 



" 7-77 



- 8-77 



7 8 9—76 



8 6 6—74 



8-73 



7- 72 



8- 72 



9- 71 

 7—71 

 6-67 



5 9-65 



6 6-64 



5 6-55 



6 10-50 



9 10 10 7 10 5 8-83 

 6 8 10 10 8 9-88 

 6 10 8 8 10 10—82 



T E Shonert 8 4 



F Paul 6 9 H 



G Atkinson 7 7 7 



F M Frees 9 6 7 



W Wurfflein 7 7 10 8 7 7 10 



J A Pollock 7 10 4 8 7 10 6 



W Price 7 6 10 8 9 8 6 



A F Simpson 7 9 7 6 7 6 8 6 6 



W Meagher 6 7 6 6 8 7 9 8 8 



J Hunsiuger 10 6 5 6 10 10 6 6 5 



R Hunsing.-r 5 b 5 6 9 8 8 10 5 



J G Rea 10 6 6 4 6 10 7 7 8 



R Roletta 10 7 6 5 6 8 6 5 



H Beulin 5 7 6 6 6 8 9 4 



G Beutelspacher 5 9 9 6 10 6 4 4 



F Maher 3 5 7 5 4 5 5 10 



A F Wiggins 40455547, 



Special^eash prize for October to be awarded the best increase 

 of individual shooting was Avon by Mr. Jos. M. Green.— Spring- 

 field. 



ST. LOUIS, Mo., Nov. 2.— As the weather grows colder the at- 

 tendance at the regular weekly shoots of the St. Louis Pistol Club 

 hecomes better. From now out a good and steady attendance can 

 be looked for. At the last shoot of the club Bauer proved to be 

 the best man, he defeating Alexander in shooting off the tie. 

 Although the scores were not very good, some of the members did 

 very good shooting, the shooting being much better than it would 

 appear from a glance at the score. Below will be found the score 

 on the standard 20yds. target for pistol practice: 



W Bauer 7 8 9 8 10 9 8 10 8 6—83 



GW Alexander 7 10 7 ~ 



O Neuhaus 8 9 8 



WHHettel 8 9 6 



M Summerfield 9 7 10 



ECMohrstadt 8 8 8 9 8 7 



W J Land 7 10 9 8 8 6 



J A Lee :8 6 8 8 9 8 



A E Bengel 6 7 9 5 9 6 6 



WOMackwitz 8 6 6 10 5 6 10 „ 



Unber Fritz. 



PENNSYLVANIA.— Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 28, promises to be 

 unusually interesting for Philadelphia riflemen, owing to the 

 fact that three special e\ r ents are announced to take place at 

 Hartranft Rifle Range, as follows: 



Three Evencs— Open to all comers, Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 28, 

 1889, commencing at 10 A. M., close at 4 P. M., at 200yds. only, 

 sporting and military rifles. 



Target No. 1— New standard American target, 7 shots per score 

 three scores to count for prizes of 40, 30, 20 and 10 per cent, of en- 



shots for $1, divided pro ratci on 'bullseyes, lessYxpensesVVwo 

 classes, military and any rifles. 



Target No. 3— Elliptical target, open for military rifles only; 7 

 shots per score, 3 scores to count, for prizes of 40, 30, 20 and 10 per- 

 cent, of entrance money, less expenses; $1 original entrance, re- 

 entry 50 cents, unlimited. 



Rules governing this event will be for Targets No. 1 and 2 as 

 laid down by the National Rifle Association, and for Target No. 3 

 as laid down by Blunt. 



All original entries must be made on or before Tuesday evening, 

 Nov. 26, 1^9, at W. Wurffleiu's, 208 North Second street, by 6 P. 

 M.; at E. Travis's shooting gallery, 818 South street, up to 11:30 P. 

 M.. or to J. J. Mountjoy, Hi7 Chestnut street, up to 12 P. M., and 

 must be accompanied by the cash for the original entry. 



WORCESTER, Mass., Nov. 2— This week there was a meet at 

 Broad Mee dow range, of members of the Worcester Rifle Associa- 

 tion. The conditions were not good, and the light was poor, but 

 there was. notwithstanding, some lively shooting. The distance 

 was 200yds., shooting off-hand. The work in detail follows: 

 With Sporting Rifle. 



J S Thomas.... .....9 7 8 10 10 7 8 10 9 8—86 



J Jones 9 8 9 5 8 9 9 7 6 9—79 



With Military Rifle. 



JEarley 4454544544-43 W Smith 5444444333-38 



C L MacomVer 4544453454—42 O Stone.. 3333444443-3$ 



8 7 



7 9 



8 9 



" I 

 7 

 g 



6 10-81 



7 8-80 

 6 9-80 



5- 75 

 8-71 



6- 68 



