254 
FOREST AND S T R E A ]\1 
May, 1919 
THE KENNEL MART 
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 of- 
fice with the understanding that it is not 
to be transferred until the dog has been 
received and found to be satisfactory. 
AIREDALES 
FOR SALE— “BADLAND RUSH,” A FINE 
registered one year old Western Airedale Terrier; 
a fine, healthy Airedale with best of training. 
Price $35.00 if taken at once. S04 \\'isconsin St., 
Charles City, Iowa. 
FOR SALE— LITTER OF REGISTERED 
Airedale pups, good as the best, better than the 
rest; males, $15.00; females, $10.00; for these. 
Write, F. W. Aikins, Viroqua, Wis. 
“SPORTING AIRDALES”— ALWAYS A FEW 
puppies from parents that combine the greatest 
winning blood-lines in Airedale history with real 
hunting ability. Our breeding stock has an in- 
ternational reputation which is your protection 
against receiving inferior dogs, stales $25.00 up. 
Lionheart Kennels (Reg.), Anaconda, Jlontana. 
(Formerly Washoe Kennels.) 
COCKER SPANIELS 
COCKER SPANIELS, HIGHTEST QALITY 
English and American strains; hunting, attractive 
auto and family dogs; puppies, males, $15; fe- 
males, $10. Obo Cocker Kennels, “Englewood,” 
Denver, Colorado. 
COLLIES 
THE LARGEST AND BEST COLLIES IN 
this country for their age sent on approval. 
Book on the training and care of Collies, fifty 
cents. Dundee Collie Kennels, Dundee, Mich. 
WHITE COLLIES, BEAUTIFUL, INTELLI- 
gent, refined and useful; pairs not a kin for sale. 
The Shomont, Monticello, la. 
GUN DOGS 
FOR SALE— SIX MALE, TWO FEMALE, 
liver and white pointer puppies. Good hunting 
stock. Nelson Morey, 1 Hasen Street, Milford, 
Mass. 
LLEWELLIN, ENGLISH, IRISH SETTER 
pups and trained do-gs, also Irish Water Spaniels, 
Chesapeake Bay Retriever, Pointers both in pups 
and trained dogs. Inclose stamps for price lists. 
Thoroughbred Ken nels, Atlantic, Iowa. 
HOUNDS 
CLOSING OUT THIS MONTH— SEVERAL 
fine trained Fox Hounds, Rabbit Hounds, and 
Royally Bred Puppies: Coon, Skunk, Opossum 
and Squirrel Dogs at cost. Stamp brings descrip- 
tion and price of the dog you want. Powell Val- 
ley Kennels, Jonesville, Lee County, \'irginia. 
HOUNDS 
FOR SALE— AT ALL TIMES. HOUNDS FOR 
any game. Trial allowed. Sen<l stamp for list. 
Mt. Yonah Farm Kennels, Cleveland, Ga. 
NORWEGIAN BEAR DOGS— IRISH WOLF 
Hounds, English Bloodhounds, Russian Wolf 
hounds, AVnerican Fox Hounds, Lion Cat, Deer, 
Wolf, Coon and Varmint Dogs; fifty page highly 
illustrated catalogue, 5^ stamps. Rookwood Ken- 
nels, Lexington, Ky. 
WESTMINSTER KENNELS, TOWER HILL, 
Illinois, offers Fox, Wolf, and Coyotte hounds 
that will get their share of the race in any com- 
pany. Also Coon, Skunk, Opossum and Rabbit 
Hounds. Ten days’ trial allowed. Young dogs 
just beginning to trail, nine dollars each. Also 
choice puppies. We take Liberty Bonds and 
W. S. S. 
MISCELLANEOUS 
DACHSHUNDE KENNELS — WEIDMANNS 
heil. G. R. Rudolf, Cuba, Mo. 
HOUNDS AND HUNTING — MONTHLY 
Magazine featuring the hound. Sample free. 
Address Desk F, Hounds and Hunting, Decatur, 
111 . 
MANGE, ECZEMA, EAR CANKER GOITRE, 
sore eyes cured or no charge; write for particu- 
lars. Eczema Remedy Company, Dept. F., Hot 
Springs, Ark. 
THE BLUE GRASS FARM KENNELS OF 
Berry, Ky., offer for sale Setters and Pointers, 
Fox and Cat Hounds, Wolf and Deer Hounds, 
Coon and Opossum Hounds. X'armint and Rabbit 
Hounds, Bear and Lion Hounds, also Airedale 
Terriers. All dogs shipped on trial, purchaser 
alone to judge the quality. Satisfaction guaran- 
teed or money refunded. Sixty-eight page, highly 
illustrated, interesting ■ and instructive catalogue 
for 10c in stamps or coin. 
TRAINED BEAGLES, RABBIT HOUNDS, 
fox hounds, coon, opossum, skunk, dogs, setters, 
pointers, pet, farm dogs, ferrets, guinea pigs, 
fancy pigeons, rats, mice, list free. \ iolet Hill 
Kennels. Route 2, York, Pa 
WANTED— BIRD DOGS TO TRAIN. GAME 
plenty for sale. Bird dogs and rabbit hounds on 
trial. O. K. Kennels, Marydel, Md. 
TERRIERS 
DOGS! DOGS! DOGS! ALL KINDS! FOX 
Terriers, Bulls, Airedales, Collies, Irish Terriers, 
etc., male and female pups. I handle more dogs 
than any other man in the country. (luick sales 
and small profits. Specify the kind of dog you 
want. I will positively fill your order. Leo 
Smith, 309 Barrow St., Jersey City, X. J. 
IRISH TERRIERS— PAIR OF UNRELATED 
ones for sale, also puppies from champion stock. 
Pennwood Kennels, Reg , Sparrows Point, Md. 
A Country of Fish and Game 
A Paradise for the Camper and Angler 
Ideal Canoe Trips 
The country traversed by the Reid Newfoundland Company’s system is exceedingly rich in all 
kinds of Fish and Game. /Ml along the route of the Railway are streams famous for their Salmon 
and Trout fishing, also Caribou barrens. Americans who have been fishing and hunting in New- 
foundland say there is no other country in the world in which so good fishing and hunting can 
be secured and with such ease as in Newfoundland. Information, together with illustrated 
Booklet and Folder, cheerfully forwarded upon application to 
F. E. PITTMAN, General Passenger Agent 
REID NEWFOUNDLAND COMPANY ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND 
NEWFOUNDLAND 
NORTHERN NEW HAMPSHIRE 
Conn. Lakes and Indian Stream Country 
Fishing, Nlay 1 to .Sept. 1. Hunting, Oct. 1 to Dec. 
15. I-ake trout, salmon, square tail, deer, bear 
and birds. Parties placed in lodges, log cabins, 
camps and tents. Arrangements made for hunt- 
ing, fishing, camping, cruising or any outdoor 
wilderness sport in season. 
Wrte for information, rates etc. 
VARNEY BROS., Guides, PITTSBURG, N. H. 
Prom Fattemi and printed 
iDatructions. Save coat. 
Work E»»y. MaU-rials fur- 
niehed. Also finish coats. ri 
Send for Catalo^e -* 
and prices. 
F. H. Darrow Steel Boat f'-o. 611 Perry St.. Albion. Mich* 
A REJUVENATION 
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 217 ) 
trimmed it down for him, and succeeded 
in getting a vigorous strike from a pick- 
erel but did not hook it. “Hook’s too 
small, that’s why,’’ said the boy, “like 
mine ’tother day. 
“When you go after them birds you 
want a big hook, they got a mouth just 
like a goose on’y bigger, an’ when you 
hook one you best boss him in fast as 
ever or off he goes. It’s one thin’ I don’t 
like about this hole, you can’t never tell 
just what will take holt an’ what you 
ain’t fixed for is what most like will 
come. What I most like is to know what 
you’re after and then fix for ’em. 
“Say,” he exclaimed, “there was a 
feller stoppin’ over at Doane’s house last 
season and he fished all over here. He 
had a pole bout like a straw an’ long 
as ever. One day he took two good trout 
down by the gravel bed beloAv. He had 
’em when I got to him. Gosh I don’t 
know how he done it — he used feathers, 
flies he called ’em, an’ no Avorm on ’em. 
He didn’t take no more after I got 
there. He was a dude, all togged up, 
an’ he took a callin’ me ‘buckskin,’ what 
for I don’t know but it made me mad and 
to get square, when he put his basket 
down, I watched my chance and slipped 
two ‘catties’ in an’ took out his trout an' 
lit out for home lickity split. Gosh but 
I bet he was mad. I never seen him but 
once more and he was on one side of 
the creek an’ I was on the other an’ I 
took care to stay there. He said he had 
some hooks I could have if I would wade 
across but I told him I was delicate and 
afraid I’d take cold, he, he.” So the boy 
rambled on, the man taking many cues 
from the way in which he managed his 
rig and how he adjusted bait and when 
time for quitting came the boy had the 
best string. “On’y cause I had the bet- 
ter hook,” he said, “an’ know better 
where to fish. You can do jes’ as well 
next time, cause you’ll know, an’ say, 
if you’ll tell me when you will come 
again I’ll bring you one of my hooks and 
you will have better luck.” 
T he sun had gone down behind the 
hills as the man went back to his 
abode. He was learning a lesson. 
Never had he spent so gladsome an aft- 
ernoon since his boyhood days. In the 
boy he saw a reflection of himself at 
that period in life but the boy had a 
touch about him which he felt he never 
possessed. The real soulfulness of the 
game seemed to him to be that no matter 
what the specimen taken the boy Avas 
gloating over it and, as he afterward 
told him, “Why shouldn’t I love ’em, we’ve 
growed up together in the neighborhood, 
an’ I bet no fancy fish you know of will 
beat some of the common kind, as you 
call ’em, an’ I’ll show you some day.’' 
And so the man w’ent home that night 
with happy thoughts and, as he had not 
done for many weary months, wrapped 
the drapery of his couch about him and 
“Lay down to pleasant dreams.” 
Mr. Hulit will continue these articles 
on the rejuvenated angler in following 
numbers of Forest and Stream. — 
[Editors.] 
