428 
Forest and Stream 
In transactions between strangers, the purchase price in the form of a draft, money order or 
certified check payable to the seller should be deposited with some disinterested third person or 
with this office with the understanding that it is not to be transferred until the dog has been 
received and found to be satisfactory. 
AIREDALES _ 
“AIRED’ALE~ pups THAT ARE “AIRE- 
dales.” “Trump Cards" from noted families. Dr. 
Knox, Box r>ll, D.-Wibury, Conn. 
■ AIREDALE PUPPIES BY WINNER OF '6 
firsts, at !l months. Dams by international cham- 
pion,’ $15 to $■'!<>. Police puppies, $40 to $50. 
Everything pedigreed, farm-raised; satisfaction 
guaranteed. J. Carnagey Farm Kennels, Bel- 
ton, Mo. 
AIREDALE P U P P I E S — REAL FARM- 
raised hunting stock. Pedigreed, eligible to regis- 
tration. Satisfaction guaranteed. Sauer's Kennels, 
Dept. A. Powhatan Point, Ohio. 
LIONHEART AIREDALES— SUPREME IN 
courage and intelligence; modern in “(luality” and 
appearance ; with the one-man disposition, nose, 
hunting ability and general usefulness of the old 
school Airedale. We can prove it. Sales list and 
literature on request. Lionheart Kennels, Victor, 
Montana. 
CHESAPEAKE BAY DOGS 
FIVE TRAINED CHESAPEAKE BAY DOGS 
for sale. Trained by an e.xpert. Best .of breeding. 
Both sire and dam real duck dogs. Sire, Barrous 
.lack; dam. Carney’s Fannie. Satisfaction gua'an- 
teed. Pedigree furnished. Price $1.50. Harry J. 
Carney, New Hampton, Iowa. 
GUN DOGS 
Nm 1 — Registered 2-year-oId, Llewellyn setter 
dog. Thoroughly trained and a fine retriever. 
Price $2.50. . . 
No. 2 — Native setter dog, an experienced quad 
and chicken dog, absolutely reliable and a fine 
retriever. Price $150. 
No. 1? — Registered 2>/2-year-old Llewellyn setter 
bitch ; proven brood bitch, well trained shooting 
liog now showing in whelp to son of Moinoiiey. 
Price $200. 
No. 4 — Registered, year old, setter bitch. L n- 
trained and unspoiled. Showing in_whelp to reg- 
istered dog. A bargain. Price $125. 
No. 5 — Native pointer dog. A high class shoot- 
ing dog in every way and a dandy retriever. 
Price $150. 
No. 6 — Registered 2-year-old pointer dog. Well 
bred, fine looker, finished shooting dog and a nat- 
ural retriever. Price $2.50. 
No. 7 — Registered, year old, pointer^ bitch. 
Wide, fast, points, backs and retrieves. Showing 
in whelp to son of Ch. Comanche Frank. A real 
good one. Price $150. 
No. S — Registered 2-year-old pointer bitch. A 
high-class brood and shooting bitch in every re- 
spect now showing in whelp to registered stud. 
Price $250. 
D. R. C.\PPS, .‘Vmite City, La. 
ARKANSAS KENNELS ~OF “RUSSELL- 
ville, Arkansas, offers for sale pointers and setters, 
fox and cat hounds, good cur dogs, coon and 
opossum hounds, varmint and rabbit hounds, 
trained and tried dogs. Delivery and satisfaction 
guaranteed. 
BIRD DOGS. HOUNDS, ALL KINDS: 
Airedale terriers. Trial. Guaranteed. lOO-jiage 
illustrated catalogue 10c. Blue Grass Farm Ken- 
nels, Dept. IS, Berry, Kentucky. 
ENGLISH S^TER PUPPIES, SIRED BY 
“Master Boaz," out of “Lorna Doone," whelped 
June 5th: all papers. Price, $40 each. A. H. 
Hibbard, East Woodstock, Conn. 
for sal E— ENGLISH LLEWELLYN , 
Irish setter pups, trained dogs, pointers. Irish 
water spaniels and Chesapeake Bay retrievers, both 
pups, trained dogs : enclose 0 cents stamps for lists. 
Thoroughbrefl Kennels, Atlantic, la. 
FOR SALE— THOROUGHBRED EITG L I S H 
Llewellyn setter puppies. Whelped April 10, good 
age for fall breaking. From Gladstone, White- 
stone and Rodfield stock. Beautiful black, white 
ami tan ticked, male and female. Registration 
papers for each puppy. W. H. Sultzbach, 
Marietta, Penna 
ONE LITTER OF NINE LLEWELLYN 
setters ; one litter seven pointers ; all ready to ship : 
$25 males, $20 females. Gar-I.en Kennels, Poin- 
dexter, Ky. 
PUREST BRED LLEWELLYN “SETTER 
pups for sale. Price most reasonable. A. Bergt, 
Schuvier, Nebr. 
SETTER PUPPIES“ FOR SALE — REGIS- 
ieretl. The woild’s best breeding. Eugene M., 
Monioney. Candy Kid and Count Whitestonc 
strains. Country-raised. Dr. ('. C. English N* 
L. I,. Dickinson, Booneville, .Arkansas. 
HOUNDS 
BEAGLES, FOX, COON HOUNDS, BROKEN 
puppies. Trial. M. Baublitz, Seven \ alleys. Pa. 
BEAGLES, RABBIT HOUNDS. WELL 
broken, country-raised, best lot broken dogs ever 
had. Broken foxhounds, coon, opossum, skunk, 
squirrel, groundhog dogs, setters, airedales. Cir- 
cular 10c. Brown’s Kennels, York, Pa. 
BEAGLES, RABBIT, FOX, COON, SKUNK, 
opossum, hounds, setters, pointers on trial broken, 
unbroken. Pet and farm dogs, pups, pigeons, 
swine. Catalogue 10 cents stamps. Kiefer’s Gar- 
den Spot Kennels, Lancaster, Pa. 
COON AND OPOSSUM HOUNDS, SET- 
ters and pointers. Rabbit hounds, $25. All on 
trial. List for stamp. Frye’s Kennels, Finger, 
Tenn. 
FOR SALE— AMERICAN REDBONE FOX- 
hound pups, three months old. G. Leatherdale, 
Orillia, Ontario, Canada. ^ 
F^R SALE — COON, OPOSSUM, SKUNK 
and squirrel dogs ; fox, cat and rabbit hounds, sent 
on trial. Catalog and summer price list free. Mt. 
Yonah Farm Kennels, Cleveland, Georgia. 
McLISTER BROS., BRIGHTOnTt^ENNES- 
see. Send coon, opossum, skunk and rabbit 
hounds anywhere on free trial. List 10c. 
PURE -BRED AMERICAN ^XHOUNDS, 
suitable for coon, cat, skunk, opossum, mink, deer, 
fox, wolves and rabbits. Trained and untrained; 
also puppies. July and Walkers strains. Trained 
dogs sold on ten days’ trial. J. E. Adams, New 
Florence, Mo. 
THOROUGHLY BROKEN BEAGLE 
hounds, guaranteed good hunters and not gun-shy. 
Also partly broken. Warren S. Henderson, Down- 
ington. Pa. 
three beagle DOG PUPPIES, FOUR- 
teen-inch stock, beautifully marked, eligible to 
K. C. registry. Twenty-five dollars each. One 
registered bitch, three years old, broken, a wonder- 
ful matron, thirty-five dollars. Mark D. Hoyt, 
Glasgow, Mont, 
TRAINED RABBIT HOUNDS. CTARAN- 
teed, $20 each. Curtis Russell, Guntersville, Ala. 
“TRISlKWOKFHOUNDSrREGISTERED IM- 
ported stock, $.’!0 each, to introduce where un- 
kno wn. Catalog. Rookwood Kennels. Lexington. Ky. 
GUARANTEED COONHOUNDS AND AIRE- 
dales on trial. Vance Martin, Ford, Va. 
POLICE DOGS 
CHOICE BRED POLICE DOGS FROM OUR 
imported stock ; large type, any age desired. Stock 
registered in A. K. C. Rice & Rice Kennels, 
Spencer, Indiana. _ _ 
“for sale ^sporty ghost, WHITE 
black and tan setter dog, whelped Jan. 4, 1022. 
Eugenes Ghost and Hardin’s Lady Lou, she grand- 
daughter of Eugene M.. nominated and paid up, no 
better breed anywhere at any price, $125.00. Three 
white and chestnut marked dogs, 15 months old, 
all registered and nicely started on quail; will make 
fine shooting dogs ; also some nice pups, both reg- 
istered and unre,gistered at prices to satisfy. All 
these are the right kind and sold under money 
back guarantee : must be sold at once to make 
room for coming litterS. Harmon Farm Kennels, 
Batesville, Miss. 
BIRD DOGS WANTED TO TRAIN 
WANTED— BIRD DOGS FOR TRAINING. 
.■?2 years’ experience in developing high-class 
grouse and qnail dogs: excellent references: terms 
reasonable. A. E. Seidel, Danville, Pa. 
~'W~A~N E D — BIRD~DOGS TRAIN, 
plenty game setters and rabbit hounds for sale, 
sent on trial. Catalog free. O. K. Kennels, 
Marydel. Md. 
MISCELLANEOUS 
BEAGLES A^RE I^PIDLY B^OMIlfG 
the leadin.g sporting dog. Hounds ami Hunting 
have more beagle news than all other magazines 
combined. Sample. 20c.: $1..50 yearly. Desk F, 
Hounds and Hunting. Decatur. 111. _ 
DOG-COLLAR NAME-PLATES STAMPED, 
with name and address, .’!5c. R. P. Neiers, Dept. 
5*. Cascade, Iowa. 
of very dark color; the dorsal fin was of 
great size and speckled with black, and 
in all other ways except in size they 
were similar to ordinary grayling. It 
was the first time, though, I had ever 
seen them run consistently from to 
3>4 lbs. each. 
Dad, who was fishing below me a 
ways with flies, suddenly received a 
savage strike and for a while thought 
one of these trout had departed from 
custom and taken a fly. After a battle 
of close to half an hour, though, the 
landing net was slipped under a gasping 
but still 5’ery defiant steel-head salmon. 
This familiar fighter among fish ap- 
peared to he a bit chunkier than the west 
coast species, and if such a thing is pos- 
sible, possessing more abundant energy. 
The weight was seven or eight pounds. 
Doc, using salmon eggs on a small 
No. 8 hook, got many strikes, in fact 
he seemed to be battling continuously 
with some tugging, jerking, unseen foe. 
The extra size automatic reel used by 
him lent a most humorous twist to the 
fight. The aspect of a maddened fish, 
leaping high from the water and being 
sucked inwardly through the air three 
or four feet was most comical indeed. 
With characteristic good sportsmanship, 
though. Doc released trout after trout, 
saving only two or three that were small 
enough to crowd into the creel and a 
large one of possibly eight or nine 
pounds. 
At camp that afternoon each fisher- 
man had returned with enough fish to 
supply the needs of the whole camp for 
a couple of days. It became a problem 
to find some means of handling the fish. 
A bubbling spring within twenty feet 
of the camp door gave Mac the idea of 
digging out a little pool wherein all the 
fish could be kept alive until the day we 
started back to Nome. An hour’s work 
sufficed to produce a pool a couple of 
feet deep and ten or twelve feet across. 
Next morning, accordingly, everyone 
carried a burlap sack in lieu of the in- 
sufficient creel, and in this were dropped 
what fish we desired to keep. The sack 
was dragged along in the water behind 
with a six or eight-foot rope and proved 
a decided success. 
The little pool at the camp swelled 
to a population of over one hundred in 
the next three days, and in it were no 
less than five varieties, including about 
fifty Arctic trout, a dozen or so of a 
species known as salmon trout, a score 
or more of extra large grayling, an 
equal amount of steel-head salmon, and 
three specimens of the silver salmon, 
a variety common along the coast in salt 
5vater but rarely found so far inland. 
No aquarium with its sluggish and 
blase fish staring stupidly out through 
the glass could compare with this sight. 
We watched them for hours, compared 
their movements, their colors, etc. The 
Arctic trout far out-did the others in 
the matter of beautiful markings and 
iridescent coloring, and with the steel- 
head salmon shared honors as being 
capable of the quickest movement. T 
consider it most unfortunate that the 
many pictures we attempted of this pool 
were not even partially successful. 
(Continued on page 431) 
