574 
OORANG 
AIREDALES 
The 20th Century 
All-Round Dogs 
Choice Puppy Stock for Sale 
Twelve Famous Oorangs at Stud 
Also 
Oorang Dog Remedies 
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Oorang Dog Supplies 
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Oorang Kennels 
World’s Largest Airedale Breeders 
Dept. H LA RUE, OHIO 
Winner of all-American 
Endurance Race. Litter 
brother to Champion 
Mary Montrose. Peer- 
less on the bench and 
in the field. Dogs 
trained and handled. 
Setter, pointers and 
Walker hounds for sale. 
20,000-acre game pre- 
serve. 
EDWARD D. GARR 
Lagraoge, Kentucky 
English Setters, Pointers 
and 
Wire Haired Fox Terriers 
Puppies and grown dogs 
of the best of breeding 
FOR SALE 
Good dogs at stud 
GEO. W. LOVELL 
MIDDLEBORO, MASS. 
Tel. 29-M 
Dent’s 
Con 
Pills 
A marvelous tonic for dogs that 
are out of sorts, run down, thin 
and unthrifty, with harsh staring 
coat, matevated eyes and high 
colored urine. There is nothing 
to equal them for distemper, 
mange, eczema and debilitating 
diseases. You will notice the 
ditfereuce after a few doses. 
At druggists or by mail, fifty cents 
The Dent Medicine Company 
Newburgh, New York Toronto, Canada 
A practical treatise on dogs and their treatment. 
Forest and Stream 
AN AIREDALE ON GROUSE 
JANE WENT ALONG WITH THE SETTERS 
AND SOON CAUGHT ON TO THE GAME 
By GEORGE H. ELY 
HEN up in Northeast- 
ern Pennsylvania ten 
years ago, from a 
home community 
where grouse were 
once plentiful but 
now extinct, I could 
scarcely believe that 
birds could anywhere 
be found so abun- 
d a n 1 1 y . In these 
mountains during 
1920 and 1921 they actually increased, 
and reports from natives up there now 
say that there are more than ever. Con- 
sider for a minute that Pennsylvania, 
notorious for its machine politics, has 
one efficient machine, the State Game 
Commission. It’s up to us to back this 
department in a continuation of its wise 
policies, and see that its recommenda- 
tions are carried out. The increase in 
game of all kinds is due to limited bags, 
short open seasons, closing entirely of 
certain sections for limited periods, to 
allow natural increase, to help the 
bought and liberated birds get accli- 
mated, the hunters’ license fees that have 
made available funds for the purchase of 
stock birds, and the absolute abolishment 
of market shooting. No matter what 
niche in life we fill or rattle ’round in, 
the wild life of the state is worth our 
attention at the polls and in the woods 
and fields. If we see that the letter of 
the law is obeyed, as well as the spirit 
of sportsmanship, we and our children 
will see shoPting for recreation increase, 
and the non-shooter have all the song, 
ornamental and useful birds he wants. 
The crowd of hunters in that section 
of Pennsylvania included farmers, rail- 
roaders, bankers and lawyers. Every- 
body had a gun. Little twenties to big 
twelves. Six and three-quarter pounds 
of sixteen is big enough both to kill and 
carry in this kind of hunting. We had f 
three dogs ; a Gordon setter, an English 
setter and an airedale. Hunting actually 
started at the borough limits, and one 
morning we killed a bird twenty minutes 
from breakfast. No particular kind of 
cover held game exclusively. 
Our first morning out, the first bird 
rose behind some hemlocks fully fifty 
yards ahead, with apparently a non-stop 
pass for the far west. Long, strong 
flights seemed to be the vogue. Seldom 
could we surely mark down, a grouse ' 
and start it a second time. The com- 
plimentaries on the first game started, 
and of course, completely out of range j 
when it cleared the hemlocks, set the 
dogs crazy. Both setters had to be 
fanned before they would settle. The ! 
airedale told her boss that “her heart 
was God’s little garden,” and got away 
with it. ' 
At the foot of the mountain, the Gor- 5 
don made his first point by a clump of 1 
cedars. His owner walked in and ' 
flushed the bird, but a companion on the 
outside made the shot and killed a cock ]i 
bird in fine condition. At the same time i 
a chap far out without a dog jumped 
two and dropped one. The day was 
clear, with a high wind. The birds I 
were wild and did not lie well to the | 
dogs, most of them rising ahead out of ' 
range. 
■^HE next morning was better; cold ; 
enough, but no wind — a fine Novem- 
ber day. In about ten minutes from the n 
house the guide snapped down a cock . 
