Oct. 27, 1906.] 
FOREST AND STREAM 
679 
VS- w 
AUTOLOADING SHOT GUN 
P : 
and re-loads. Solid breech protecti 
just before trigger-finger prevents 
of double guns if you prefer. 
The Ideal Dacf(_ Can—Lisl Tr ■ 
REMINGTON ARMS C 
Agency, 315 B'way, New York City. Sa 
came detached from the fish. It was known that 
a devil fish was the propelling power because it 
was seen, and as it was at the anchor end of 
K_ennel Special . 
Ads under this head, 2 cents a word a time (or 3 cents 
DOG DISEASES 
the rope it was thought that it had swallowed 
the anchor. 
The anchors used at Tarpon or Aransas Pass 
are shaped more like grab hooks than the regu¬ 
lation ocean anchor. They have five or six 
prongs, bent in, something like fishhooks. The 
front part of the devil fish, or its head, if it has 
one, is crescent shaped. The two flippers with 
which it fans its food into its mouth, situated at 
the sides of it, are several inches in advance or 
front of the center of the mouth. This makes 
the crescent. The fish in each of the instances 
mentioned swam under the boat from stern to 
bow. The anchor rope being in its path was 
caught in the crescent as if it were a groove. 
Proceeding to the anchor end of the rope, the 
anchor was lifted and its prongs caught the mon¬ 
ster under the jaws. I interviewed boatmen and 
honest men who witnessed both runaway cases. 
This addenda is made to the story of the capture 
of the devil fish, not only because it is interest¬ 
ing, but in that spirit of vindication and defense 
which every fair man should exercise in behalf 
of persecuted others. The story of a devil fish 
capturing and running away with a boat has been 
hailed with ribald hootings from one end of the 
land to the other. Perhaps those who told it 
have been utterly cast down among their neigh¬ 
bors. We who were so unfortunate as to be 
in capitals). Cash must accompany order. 
For Sale.—Full-blood English BEAGLE Hounds, Hunt¬ 
ers that are hunted. OAKLAND BEAGLE KENNELS, 
Pontiac, Mich. 
Norwegian bearhounds, Irish wolfhounds, deer and cat 
hounds. English bloodhounds, American foxhounds. 
Four-cent stamp for illustrated catalogue. 
ROOKWOOD KENNELS, Lexington, Ky. 
FOR SALE.—Pointer dog, liver and white, five years old, 
well broken on quail, pheasants and woodcock; backs, retrieves 
and obedient to whistle and command. Dam, Bell of Hessan; 
sire, Kentis Chip. Price, ?50.00. A. P. HULL, Box 153, 
Montgomery, Pa. 
For Sale.—Dogs, hogs, Pigeons, Ferrets, Belgian Hares. 
8 cents for 40-page illustrated catalogue. 
C. G. LLOYDT, Dept. “M.,” Sayre, Pa. 
FOR SALE.—Thoroughly trained pointers, setters and 
hounds. Can furnish you a good one at a moderate price 
at any time. GEO. W. LOVELL, Middleboro, Mass. 
FOX HOUNDS, RABBIT HOUNDS, Coon Hounds, 
Partridge Dogs that stay at tree. B. L. CALL, Dexter, 
Maine. 
PEDIGREED FOXHOUNDS.—Trained and untrained 
coon, wolf, bear, squirrel and rabbit dogs. Finely trained, 
experienced and reliable. Guaranteed. D. E. HOPKINS, 
Tmboden. Ark. 
AND 
HOW TO FEED. 
Mailed FREE to any address by the author. 
H. CLAY GLOVER, D. V. S., 1278 Broadway, New York. 
DO YOU HUNT? 
Trained COON. FOX a.nd DEER 
HOUNDS ForSale. Reasonable Prices 
Here in Arkansaw we have millions of 
Coons, Foxes and Deer at our door to 
train our hounds with, and we train them 
too. They “ Deliver the Goods.” A few 
trained Rabbit and Squirrel Dogs. Also 
untrained Pups. For particulars address 
SPRING RIVER KENNELS 
Box 27, Imboden, Ark. 
IMPROVED SPIKE COLLAR. 
For use in dog training. Price, $2.00. By 
mail, $2.10. Send for circular. 
B. WATERS. 
346 Broadway. New York. 
TRAINING vs. BREAKING. 
mixed up in this devil fish sensation know some¬ 
thing of the agony of men who feel that their 
character for truth has been utterly destroyed. 
It may be suggested that I have all I can do 
to vindicate our party without rushing around 
trying to re-establish the lost characters of 
others, but though we may stand far down in 
public esteem, there are those below us who 
stand abashed and silent, and common "humanity 
forces me to extend them a hand to pull them 
up. I know I risk much in presumption to verify 
another story after telling my own, but I will 
get credit for it somewhere, 'I hope, even if I and 
all I have said, are discounted here. 
Two gentlemen were traveling in one of the 
hill countries of Kentucky not long ago, bound 
on an exploration for pitch pine. They had been 
driving for two hours without encountering a 
A few good young setters left. FRANK FORESTER 
KENNELS, Warwick, N. Y. 19 
VERY HANDSOME ENGLISH SETTER BITCH, 
beautifully bred. Fast, stylish, staunch on point and 
back, particularly fine nose. Obedient. Price $150.00. I 
have hunted her two winters in Florida on quail and 
snipe. DR. GLOVER, 1278 Broadway, N. Y. City. 17 
DOGS trained and shooting furnished patrons. W. T. 
MITCHELL, Green Bay, Virginia. 
Hounds for Sale.—Eight fox and one deer hound. Good 
hunters. E. P. BAILEY, Breeder and Trainer, Kennett 
Square, Pa. 
COCKERS.—Pupoies and grown stock for sale. SHOW 
TYPE, pet type, FIELD TYPE. ARTHUR C. 
BURNS, Franklin, Delaware Co., New York. 
St. Louis World’s Fair, 1904: Gold Medal & Highest Award 
Paris Exposition, 1900: Gold Medal & Highest Award 
Practical Dog Training; or, Training vs. Breaking. By 
S. T. Hammond. To which is added a chapter on train¬ 
ing pet dogs, by an amateur. Cloth, 165 pages. Price, $1. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Poultr y Magazine, 
Monthly, 50 to 100 pages, its writers 
are the most successful Poultrymen 
and women in the United States. It is 
The POULTRY TRIBUNE, 
nicely illustrated, brimful each month 
of information on How to Care for 
Fowls and Make the Most Money with 
them. In fact so good you can’t afford 
to he without it. Price. 60 cents per vear. Send at once 
for free sample and SPECIAL OFFER TO YOU. 
R. R. FISHER, Pub., Box.51, Freeport, III. 
human being, when they came in sight of a cabin 
in a clearing. It was very still. The hogs lay 
where they had fallen, the thin claybank mule 
grazed round and round in a great circle, to save 
the trouble of walking, and one lean, lank man, 
whose garments were the color of the claybank 
mule, leaned against a tree and let time roll by. 
“Wonder if he can speak? - ’ said one traveler 
to the other. 
“Try him,” said his companion. 
“How do you do?” said the Northerner. 
“Howdy?” remarked the Southerner languidly. 
“Pleasant country.” 
“Fur them that likes it.” 
“Lived here all your life?” 
The Southerner spat pensively in the dust. 
“Not yit,” he said. 
SPRATT’S PATENT 
AM. (LTD.) 
Manufacture specially prepared foods for 
DOGS. PUPPIES, 
CATS. RABBITS, 
POULTRY. 
PIGEONS. GAME, 
BIRDS. FISH. 
Write for Catalogue, ‘‘Dog Culture,” with practical 
chapters on the feeding, kenneling and management of 
dogs; also chapters on cats. 
Patent ) 460 Market St., Newark, N. J. 
ralCIII 7i4 $ 4th St., St. Louis, Mo. 
) Ltd. ) 1324 Valencia St., San Francisco, Cal. 
Spratt’s 
"Properly for Sale. 
PEA ISLAND GUNNING CLUB.—TWO SHARES 
IN THIS CLUB ARE OFFERED for sale at the par 
value of $400 each. Club house on Pamlico Sound, N. C. 
Goose, brant and duck shooting. LOUIS B. BISHOP, 
M.D., Secretary, 356 Orange St., New Haven, Conn. 
WANTED TO SELL SHOOTING PRIVILEGE on 
5000 acres of land, 75 to 100 flocks of QUAIL. Address 
HUNTER, Rock Hill, S. C. 
FOR SALE. 
One share “Big Lake Shooting Club.” Club House at 
Big Lake, Mississippi Co., Arkansas. A rare chance for 
duck shooters. Full particulars JOSEPH N. PATTER¬ 
SON, care Forest and Stream. 
