384 
FOREST AND STREAM 
August, 1921 
Place your order now for 
SPRATT’S FISH AND 
MEAT FIBRINE 
DOG CAKES 
They are invaluable as a change of diet especially 
during the summer months. 
Write for sample and send 2 cent stamp for catalogue 
“Dog Culture.” 
SPRATT’S PATENT LIMITED 
NEWARK, N. J. 
San Francisco, Calif. St. Louis, Mo. Montreal, Canada 
Factory also in London, Eng. 
OORANG AIREDALES 
Oorang Airedales are loyal pals for man, 
woman and child; faithful watchdogs for 
automobile, camp home and estate; ideal dogs 
for farm and ranch; excellent ratters, water- 
doga, retrievers and hunters. Choice stock 
for sale. Also Fox-Hounds, Coon-Hounds, 
and Big Game-Hounds. Delivery and satis- 
faction guaranteed. Descriptive booklet 
muled for ten cents. 
OORANG KENNELS 
The Largest Breeders of Airedales in the Wcrld 
Dept. H, LA RUE, OHIO 
TheBlue Grass F armKennels of Berry, Ky. 
offer for sale Setters and Pointers, 
Fox and Cat Hounds, Wolf and 
Deer Hounds, Coon and Opossum 
Hounds, Varmint and Rabbit 
Hounds, Bear and Lion Hounds, 
also Airedale Terriers. All dogs 
shipped on trial, purchaser alone 
to judge the quality; satisfaction 
guaranteed or money refunded. Eighty-four page, 
highly illustrated, instructive, and interesting 
catalogue for ten cents in coin. 
r~nAisE — 
SILVER 
WE BUY ALL YOU 
Send $lfor book of secrets for raising silver fox, and blue print 
2 f i- f jvv.fost. J-P.DUffUS.SllVtR fOX STORE new yopk.n.y 
Is This Worth the Price ? 
Stop your dog breaking shot and wing. 
Teach him what whoa! means. No long 
trailing rope or spike collar. Our field 
dog control is not cruel. Can be carried 
in pocket and attached instantly to dog's 
collar. Dog can’t bolt. Fast dogs can bt 
worked in close and young ones field 
broken in a week.. Works automatically 
— principal South American Bolas. Sent 
postpaid with full directions for $2. Testi- 
monials and booklet, Makinq a Meat Doa 
sent on request. 
MAPLE ROAD KENNELS New c *r n 
BIG MONEY IN FOX 
RANCHING 
New Organization, $5# 
Shares. You can get for 
$10 per share cash and $5 
per month. Five Plans, one 
of which will suit you. 
Govt. fostered Industry. 
Big Returns. Write for 
GREAT NORTHERN FUR 
RANCHING ASSO., Inc. 
First National Bank Bldg. 
Dept M Greenville. Pa. 
MALE POLICE DOG PUPPIES 
SERB— Lewanno’s Detlef v.d. Schwindefurt, Bon 
of Nores v.d. Kriminalpolizei. 
DAM— Rollin’s Heidi. AKC 291467 SDC 207 
granddaughter of Ch. Nero Affolter. 
WOLF GRAY— SABLE AND TAN MARKINGS 
Whelped April 8, 1921. Price $125.00. 
ARTHUR F. ROLLIN 
1090 Bedford Ave. Brooklyn, N. Y. 
A 
BOOK ON 
DOG DISEASES 
And How to Feed 
Mailed free te any address by 
America’s 
the Author 
Pioneer 
H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc., 
Deg Medicines 
118 West 31st Street, New York 
the fountain pond, but hadn’t had any 
luck so far as Yank was catching them 
as fast as they were put in the water. 
P ERHAPS the question, why the 
Chesapeake is better than other re- 
ceivers, arises in your mind. To 
answer that question I will first have 
to state that the ordinary retreiver 
relies on sight alone to retreive game. 
This is not, however, true of the Chesa- 
peake, who combines the keenest sense 
of sight in marking down fallen birds 
with a sense of smell that means no 
dead birds lost in the thick grass, nor 
cripples escaping by changing their po- 
sition after falling. 
I had this most forcibly impressed 
on my mind some three years ago 
while hunting geese on the Gulf Coast 
below Galveston. A high-flying goose 
came over and the best that I could 
do was to wing tip him with the re- 
sult that he sailed along and hit the 
ground in some tules, a good five hun- 
dred yards away. Rose, my Chesapeake 
bitch, ran to a nearby hummock in the 
marsh and marked him down and then 
started full tilt to retreive. 
On account of the hard going I ar- 
rived only in time to see the latter part 
of her search. She had thoroughly 
worked out the patch of dense tules 
in which I knew that the goose had 
dropped, yet without result. As she 
came out of the tules I saw that her 
nose was to the ground and that she 
was making for a small tule patch 
about thirty yards distant. In she 
went, nose still to the ground, and out 
waddled Mr. Goose for about twenty 
feet, when seeing me, he again took 
to the tule patch, in rear of Rose. 
It was but a few seconds before Rose 
came out at the same point that the 
goose had. She proceeded to track him 
to the point at which he turned back 
into the tules, when in she went and 1 
came out with Mr. Goose securely but 
tenderly held in her massive jaws. This 
demonstration satisfied my mind on two- 
points concerning the Chesapeake: first, 
that they have a sense of smell and 
use it, and second, I consider it a point 
in favor of the hound ancestry tradi- 
tion. 
Chesapeake dog men know that their 
dog has not received his just dues. It 
is their duty to place him before the 
American sportsman in his true light. 
A few lovers of the Chesapeake have 
formed the American Chesapeake Club, 
W. H. Orr, Secretary, Clear Lake, Iowa, 
for the purpose of “promoting the 
breeding of working dogs and attach- 
ing great importance to the dog’s abil- 
ity to retreive game and the manner in 
which he retreives it.” 
Hunters who contemplate getting a 
duck retreiver will do well to choose a 
Chesapeake. He costs no more than 
other dogs and he combines with all 
their good qualities some that are pe- 
culiarly his own. His loving, kind dis- 
position combined with his fearless, un- 
tiring retreiving in all kinds of country 
and conditions of weather make him 
what he is, the peerless American re- 
treiver. 
In Writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. It will identify yen. 
