382 
F O K E S T A N J) S '1' K E A M 
July, 1919 
In transactions between strangers, the 
purchase price in the form of a draft, 
money order or certifted 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 
AIREDALES FOR SALE— ONE HIGH-CLASS 
stud dog two and a half years old, Elruge Mon- 
arch both sides of pedigree; long head, darkest 
of eyes a proven stud; a winner and sire of win- 
ners. $150 — worth $200. Fifteen months old 
bitch, Ch. Soudan Swiveller strain, in whelp to 
above dog, splendid color, hardest texture of coat, 
small ear, game as a tiger, $50. Yearling bitch 
by International Ch. Kootenay Chinook, $35. Full 
particulars on request. Must sell on account of 
e.xpiration of lease. John M. Blayney, 1512 58th 
St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 
LIONHEART AIREDALES HAVE EARNED 
a national reputation for gameness, intelligence, 
and high standard of appearance. They are mak- 
ing good on both fur and feathered game iii prac- 
tically every State in the Union and Canada. 
Registered puppies that are bred to hunt and_ fit 
to show, now ready for delivery. Lionheart Ken- 
nels (Reg.), Anaconda, Mont. (Formerly Washoe 
Kennels). 
BEAGLES 
FOR SALE— PAIR TRAINED BEAGLES, UN- 
related, $25. Pair ready to train, $12; female 
pups, $3. H. G. Mozena, Clarington, (). 
COCKER SPANIELS 
COCKER SPANIELS, HIGHEST QUALITY 
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. 
DOG TRAINING 
I EDUCATE FIELD TRIAL AND SHOOTING 
dogs, preserve character, demand perfect obedi- 
ence. Gave five dogs new records past season. 
Edw. D. Garr, Lagrange, Ky. 
WANTED— BIRD DOGS TO TRAIN. GAME 
plenty for sale. Bird dogs and rabbit hounds on 
trial. O. K. Kennels, Marydel, Md. 
DOGS WANTED 
AIREDALE TERRIERS WANTED, PUPPIES 
and grown stock, either sex. Must be healthy, 
thoroughbred, reasonable. Give full particulars. 
If you wish to buy an Airedale, write for our 
sales list. Airedale Exchange, Box M, La Rue, O. 
RUSSIAN WOLFHOUND WANTED, GROWN 
or a couple of puppies. State price and particu- 
lars. Address Lejier, Station J, Box 33, New 
York City. 
WANTED TO BUY TWO OR MORE GOOD 
bear hounds — must be guaranteed or sold on trial. 
If you have the stock, write me, otherwise do not. 
W. H. Campbell, Pueblo, Colo. 
FOX TERRIERS 
FOR SALE— A LITTER OF EXTRA WELL 
bred wire haired fox terrier puppies. Registered. 
Geo. W. Lovell, Tel. 29-M, Middleborn, Mass. 
GUN DOGS 
ENROLLED ENGLISH SETTER PUPPIES OF 
the world’s best breeding. The dam is the great 
field trial and bench setter, Theodores Sally, 
handled and trained by W. D. Gilcrest. The sire, 
a straight Llewellyn and a shooting dog par ex- 
cellence. You can’t beat the combination. Lion- 
heart Kennels, Anaconda, Mont. 
GUN DOGS 
LLEWELLYN FEMALE PUPPY, BY RIGO- 
letto; dam, Paliacho’s Bessie II; beautifully 
marked white, chestnut and tan; whelped Sept. 
28, 1918; unexcelled blood lines for high-class 
brood bitch; right age to start work for fall 
shooting; photo if desired; $75; no trades. F. A. 
Best, 33 East 13th St., Tulsa, Okla. 
PEDIGREED ENGOSH POINTER PUPPIES 
bred from finest shooting stock, $10 and $12 each. 
J. M. Drumm, Mercersburg, Pa. 
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, Varmint 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. 
TWO ENGLISH SETTER PUPS FOR SALE— 
Male and female. One blue Belton markings dog, 
white beach ticked. High tax. Will sell female 
very cheap. Guaranteed or money refunded. H. 
W. Thompson, Putnam, Conn. 
WESTMINSTER KENNELS, TOWER HILL, 
111., offers coon, skunk, opossum dogs; crackerjack 
rabbit hounds, $15.00. Dogs just beginning to 
trail, $10.00. Ten days’ trial allowed. 
HOUNDS 
CHOICE COON HOUND PUPS, BRED FOR 
seven generations from tree and hole barkers; 
males, $6.00; females, $4.00. Isaac Tolbert, Mal- 
ta, Ohio. 
CLOSING OUT THIS MONTH— SEVERAL 
fine trained fox hounds, rabbit hounds and royal- 
ly bred puppies; thoroughly trained, seasoned and 
experienced coon, skunk, oppossum and squirrel 
dogs at cost. Stamp brings description and special 
closed season price on any kind hunting dog you 
want. Powell Valley Kennels, Jonesville, Lee 
County, \'a. 
FOR SALE— AT ALL TIMES. HOUNDS FOR 
any game. Trial allowed. Send stamp for list. 
Mt. Yonah Farm Kennels, Cleveland, Ga. 
FOR SALE— FOX. WOLF, COON HOUNDS 
Walker & Goodman pups; papers. Painter Jip 
N. R. DuVall, 2015 Clark St., Des Moines, la. 
FOR SALES — REDBONE COON AND RAB 
bit hounds, satisfaction guaranteed. W. B. Clark 
Jonesboro, 111. 
FOR SALE— TRAINED AND UNTRAINED 
hounds. From mountain section. North Arkansas. 
Address Noah King, Calico Rock, Ark. 
HOUND PUPS— SEVERAL LITTERS SIRED 
by Capt. Kidd, 20C193; Young Rambo, 206194. 
and Jackson A. T. H. S. B., 2584. Just weaned 
and ready to ship. Otis Slater & Sons, Oconee, 111. 
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(1 stamps. Rookwood Ken- 
nels. Lexington, Ky. 
WOLF, RED AND GREY FOX HOUNDS. 
Game runners, good trailers, from $35 to $50. 
They can catch anything that doesn’t fly. Edw. 
D. Garr, Lagrange, Ky. 
MISCELLANEOUS 
BEAGLES, FOX AND RABBIT HOUNDS, 
trained, $10 up also farm dogs and puppies, $3.50 
up. C. R. Buie, Seven Valleys, Pa. 
COON HOUNDS AND COMBINATION HUNT- 
ers for coon, opossum, skunk, squirrel, etc. Big 
game hounds, rabbit hounds, pointers, setters, 
airedales and fox terriers. Catalog 10 cents. Sam 
Stephenson, Covington, Tenn. 
FOR SALE — FOX HOUNDS, BEAGLE 
hounds, coon hounds, and setters; rabbits, all 
breeds; guinea pigs, ferrets, white mice and rats; 
pigeons and blooded swine. Stamp for circulars. 
C. Louis Behm, Dept. 2, Springfield, 111. 
FOR SALE— ONE BLUE BEAGLE HOUND, 
18 months old; good fox dog and fair tree dog. 
$20 if taken at once. Frank Ricca, 2-4 Towson 
.\ve.. Fort Smith, .■\rk. 
ments were violins, banjo, guitar, tri- 
angle, accordion, jawbone, and the tam- 
bourine and bones of the end men. The 
horse’s “jawbone” was mounted with 
small bells, and was played by rattling 
a short stick between the rami of the 
jaw, which was varied by rasping it 
across the teeth, which were left in the 
jaw for that purpose. 
While the songs and melodies of the 
Virginia Serenaders were very amusing 
and quite enjoyable, they were not much 
in advance of those I had heard in the 
tobacco factories of Richmond and Lynch- 
burg, where they were sung by several 
hundred men, women and children. Dur- 
ing one of my visits to relatives in Vir- 
ginia, I remember seeing the “jawbone” 
and gourd banjo played together by field 
hands, and heard the house servants sing 
such melodies as Old Dan Tucker, Johnny 
Booker of Bowling Green, Dandy Jim of 
Caroline, Jim Crack Corn, Lucy Long 
and Lucy Neale. These same songs were 
part of the repertoire of the Virginia 
Serenaders, and though sung in unison, 
they were rendered with a vigor, rhyme 
and rhythm that placed them on a little 
higher plane of minstrelsy. It was not 
until the appearance of “Dumbolton’s 
Serenaders” that the songs and chor- 
uses were sung in harmony, and more 
refined instruments introduced. Then 
came “Christy’s Minstrels,” soon followed 
by scores of other organizations of more 
or less merit. The banjo had advanced 
or evolved from the original gourd with 
horse-hair strings to its present form. 
I may as well say, in passing, that once 
I saw at a function in Virginia the first 
white man to play the banjo, and in fact 
the one who made the first wooden in- 
strument. He was “Old Joe Sweeney” 
of Lynchburg. He appeared for several 
years at the theaters of the United States 
as well as in England. 
(to BE continued) 
AFTER BEAR WITH 
BOW AND ARROW 
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 331) 
weighed about 150 pounds. That’s not 
what you would call a big bear, but that 
was no fault of ours, and we would have 
killed her even if she had weighed a ton. 
We dragged the carcass up the ravine 
to level ground, and sat down to eat 
lunch. While we were sitting there we 
heard a noise like a horse walking and 
looking around we saw an old black bear 
down the slope, not fifty yards away. 
I had one arrow left and Young had 
two. We loaded up the bows and stood 
waiting, but made no insulting remarks. 
The bear seemed to have business else- 
where and slowly meandered away. 
Young and I did not follow her. We had 
enough bear for one day, anyhow. 
