HAVE YOU TRIED 
SPRATT^S 
F I B O 
S P R AT T ’ S 
The most appetizing granulated 
dog food on the market. 
Owners of Pekingese, Toy and Shy 
Feeders will find that this food, as a 
change of diet, has no equal. 
Write for samples and send 2c. 
stamp for catalogue “Dog Culture”. 
PATENT LIMITED 
NEWARK 
NEW JERSEY 
ENGLISH SETTERS 
and POINTERS 
A nice lot of good strong, 
healthy, farm raised puppies 
of the best of breeding 
GEO. W. LOVELL 
Middleboro, Maas. 
Tel. 29-M. 
SEA CUFF. PHEASANTRY 
W* have nearly all.of the rare pbeaa. 
ants and eranas. also white, Java and 
black shouldered Japanese Peafowl, 
Mandarin duoks. Epos in Season for 
sale. , Write for priQes and partiou- 
iars. -• 
BALDWIN palmer 
flBs Unm, 5 « CWi, Um bUnd, If, T. 
Mrmhrr ^ the G^e HniM dt 
CHAMPIONS AGAIN 
213 Feet is the New World’s Record Jump 
Made on Northland Ski, Afarch U, 1919, at 
Dillon, Colo. 
Write for Catalog — Free. 
NORTHLAND SKI MFC. CO. 
mis and Hampden Ave., St. Paul, Minn. 
i DENTS XOmmOiS^PILLS 
your dog is sick, 
all run-down, thin and unthrifty, if his 
coat is harsh and staring, his eyes rnat- 
terated, bowels disturbed, urine high 
colored and frequently passed — if you 
feel badly every time you look at him 
— eating grass won’t help him. 
DENT’S CONDITION PILLS 
will. They are a time-tried formula, 
that will pretty nearly make a dead 
clog eat. As a tonic for dogs that are 
all out of sorts and those that are 
recovering from distemper or are 
affected with mange, eczema, or some 
debilitating disease, there is nothing 
to equal them, PRICE, PER BOX, 
50 CENTS. 
If your dog is sick and you do not 
know how to treat him, write to us 
and you will be given an expert’s 
opinion without charge. Pedigree 
blanks are free for postage — 4 cents a 
dozen. Dent’s Doggy Hints, a 32- 
page booklet, will be mailed for a two- 
cent stamp. The Amateur Dog Book, 
a practical treatise on the treatment, 
care and training of dogs, 160 pages 
fully illustrated, will be mailed for lo 
cents. 
THE DENT MEDICINE CO. 
NEWBURGH, N. V.; TORONTO, CAN. 
Raise Hares for Us 
Tmniense profits quickly and easily 
made. We furnish stock, and pay 
$‘100 to cafh: also expressajre. 
when three months oM. rontnmt. h-'ok 
on ralRlnR. FRER Thorson Ribbit Co.» 
Dept. 7, Aurora, Colo. 
national meeting place and exchange for 
all sportsmen, trap shooters, anglers, gun 
club members, hunters and guides, in 
fact, all who are interested in the great 
outdoors. 
Sportsmen in planning their future 
trips are invited to call upon Sportsmen’s 
Headquarters for any information they 
may desire on such topics as where dif- 
ferent kinds of fish and game are to be 
found, the best routes to take, the best 
hotels in the localities selected, the best 
places to secure guides, the sporting 
equipment they will inquire, the ammuni- 
tion or tackle best adapted to all kinds 
of fish or game, regulations of the dif- 
ferent states on hunting licenses, game 
laws and restrictions, the character of 
various game countries, the seasons for 
hunting and fishing in different sections 
and any of the thousand and one bits of 
information they may desire. 
Whether the Sportsman calls person- 
ally or writes, he will be furnished with 
the desired information. Sportsmen’s 
Headquarters is to be the national 
quarters that all sportsmen may regard 
as theirs, a place to drop in and make 
themselves at home and a place to utilize 
to the full for their information and as- 
sistance. It is prepared to render them 
complete service along the line of all 
outing equipment. 
Mr. Thomas A. Davis, widely known 
to sportsmen throughout America, is in 
charge of Sportsmen’s Headquarters. He 
will be assisted by Mr. J, H. Cameron, 
who has had a long experience with 
sporting goods, and by Mr. R. H. Boyd, 
an authority on all subjects pertaining to 
the great outdoors, who was for ten years 
with one of New York’s leading sporting 
goods houses and who is an out-of-doors 
man of long experience. These men know 
the sportsmen’s needs and how to satisfy 
them and they are at Sportsmen’s Head- 
quarters expressly to do that to the ut- 
most. 
AVIATORS SPOTTING FISH 
To the Editor of Forest and Stream : 
HE aeroplane as a means of spotting 
a school of fish is no longer a pos- 
sibility. Actual tests have met with suc- 
cess. Operating from the Naval base, 
near Norfolk, the fliers go out and flying 
at a height of 500 feet find that they 
can see a school of fish anywhere within 
a radius of half a mile. The Navy is 
now working in co-operation with the 
Department of Commerce and the idea 
is to help make fishing more certain 
not only as a sport but as a means of 
increasing the nation’s food supply. 
The plan will be put to commercial 
uses just as rapidly as the Navy is able 
to increase its enlisted personnel to au- 
thorized strength for enlisted men. Of- 
ficers will be used for observers on these 
fish hunting flights. 
Flying of this kind will be carried out 
according to a systematic schedule. For 
those who love the air and the sea it 
will offer great sport. 
After acting as guides for the fisher- 
men, the aviators could also give warning 
when storms were approaching and in 
other ways serve the fishermen. 
Edwin J. Heath, Maryland. ; 
