Dec. is, 1906.! 
9 6 7 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
Remington. Autoloading Rifle 
The powerful penetration of this arm is shown by the two accompanying cuts. 
On the left, machine steel 5-16 of an inch thick, cleanly penetrated by the .35 calibre 
bullet. The bone on the right, equal in size to the femur of the moose, shows the 
shattering power of two shots in live tissue. Self-loading, with solid breech and 
safe safety. 
List price, $30. For sale by all dealers, subject to 
discounts. A full line of "Double Darrel Shotguns. 
THE REMINGTON ARMS COMPANY 
Agency, 315 Broa.dwa.y, New. York City 
ILION. N. Y. 
SaJes Office, Sa.n Francisco, CaJ. 
programme judging at the New England Ken¬ 
nel Club shows. The scheme was tried and found 
wanting. Henceforth exhibitors who come to 
Boston will have ample time after the second 
day of the show to seek out the many places of 
historical interest in the city and in its immediate 
vicinity. 
There will be a long list of valuable specials 
offered by the club as an extra inducement for 
all the devotees of the dog to come forward in 
aid of the promoter of doggy interests. An¬ 
nouncement has already been made that one of 
the most valuable trophies ever offered for com¬ 
petition will be put up by the club for the money 
and ribbon questers of the Boston terrier classes 
to battle for. The prize will not cost less than 
$250, and will be without, string attachment. 
Particulars regarding this grand premium will be 
announced in the prize list and in the sporting 
press in the near future. In addition to this 
incentive for the Boston terrier fancier to hike 
east on a prize-looting expedition, generous 
money specials will make other popular classes 
especially enticing. 
At a recent meeting of the club J. M. Grosve- 
nor, Jr., well known among exhibitors the coun¬ 
try over, was elected president, his old position 
as treasurer being filled by the election of Henry 
L. Blake. Charles H. Taylor, Jr., succeeds Gen. 
William B. Emery as club. secretary. The dog 
show committee comprises J. M. Grosvenor, Jr., 
Chairman; Charles H. Taylor, Jr., and Henry L. 
Blake, with seventeen others, and every man of 
the committee has buckled down to work with 
the intention in mind of trying to round up a 
most encouraging entry. The club’s delegate to 
the A. K. C. is Gen. William B. Emery. 
Suggestions from specialty clubs and exhibi¬ 
tors regarding classification are invited by the 
dog show committee, and as a help-along to 
make smooth the way of preparation, specialty 
clubs have been asked to forward, as soon as 
possible, lists of memberships and the names of 
their accredited judges. The Boston office of the 
New England Kennel Club is in the Globe Bldg., 
244 Washington street, and J. N. Taylor is the 
secretary for the show. 
K.ennel Special. 
Ads under this head, 2 cents a word a time (or 3 cents 
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. 
A few good young setters left. FRANK FORESTER 
KENNELS, Warwick, N. Y. 24 
FOR SALE.—PURE BRED BEAGLES. Have been used 
in a drag hunt all this fall, and are now doing well on 
rabbits. Size ranges from 14 to 15 inches. Very speedy. 
Apply to ENDEAN KENNELS, East Walpole, Mass. 
24 
FOR SALE.—Registered Chesapeake Bav pups, four 
months old. MAURICE SCHINDLER, Sisseton, S. D. 
For quick sale.—Several trained pointers, setters, coon, 
fox and rabbit hounds, at half values. Box 147, Newton, 
N. C. 
Hounds for Sale.—Eight fox and one deer hound. Good 
hunters. E. P. BAILEY, Breeder and Trainer, Kennett 
Square, Pa. 
A fine, broken Pointer dog for sale. A. W. PEARSALL, 
Huntington, N. Y. tf 
MODERN TRAINING. 
Handling and Kennel Management. By B. Waters. 
Illustrated. Cloth. 373 pages. Price, $2.00. 
This treatise is after the modern professional system of 
training. It combines the excellence of both the suasive 
and force systems of education, and contains an exhaus¬ 
tive description of the uses and abuses of the spike collar. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
St. Louis World’s Fair, 1904: Gold Medal & Highest Award 
Paris Exposition, 1900: Gold Medal & Highest Award 
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 ->n the feeding, kenneling and management of 
dogs; also chapters on cats. 
Spratt's Patent I 
(America) Ltd. j 
450 Market St., Newark, N. T. 
714 S. 4th St., St. Louis, Mo. 
1324 Valencia St., San Francisco, Cal. 
: book, ojsr 
DOG DISEASES 
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 
Twined COON, FOX a.nd DEEI 
HOUNDS For Sale. Reasonable Price 
Here in Arkansaw we have millions < 
Coons, Foxes and Deer at our door t 
train our hounds with, and we train thei 
too. They “ Deliver the Goods.” A fe 
trained Rabbit and Squirrel Dogs. Als 
untrained Pups. For particulars addrei 
SPRING RIVER KENNEL! 
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. 
He Saved the Fawn. 
A case of genuine philanthropy was exhibited 
at the Southern Pacific depot yesterday on the 
arrival at the express office of a consignment of 
three live deer from Collingsgrove, Ore., to 
Lincolnville. Kan. One of the little animals was 
apparently at the point of death, and an intoxi¬ 
cated individual who saw it declared that he 
could cure the animal. w 
He went back uptown and purchased a nurs- 
'g bottle and a quart of fresh milk, and spent 
arly an hour in nursing the stricken fawn, 
le animal was alive when it continued its long 
jurney. and if it arrives safely at its destination, 
it will be solely due to the philanthropist who 
claimed that he did it for sheer love of the ani¬ 
mal kingdom.—Sacramento Bee. 
THE KENNEL POCKET RECORD 
Morocco. Price, 50 cents. 
The “Pocket Kennel Record” is, as its name implies, a 
handy book for the immediate record of all events and 
transactions which take place away from home, intended 
to relieve the owner from the risk of trusting any im¬ 
portant matter to his memory. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
TRAINING vs. BREAKING. 
Practical Dog Training; or, Training rs. Breaking. By 
S. T. Hammond. To which is added a chapter on train¬ 
ing pet dogs, by an amateur. Cloth, 165 pages. Price, $L 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
HORSE AND HOVND 
By Roger D. Williams, Master of Foxhounds, Iroquois 
Hunt Club; Keeper Foxhound Stud Book; Director 
National Foxhunters’ Association; Official Tudee 
Brunswick Hunt Club. 
"Horse and Hound” is encyclopedic in all that per¬ 
tains to foxhunting. It has chapters as follows: Hunt¬ 
ing. The Hunter. Schooling of Hunters. Cross- 
Country Riding and Origin of the American Hound. 
Breeding and Raising Horses. The Kennel. Scent. The 
Fox. Tricks and Habits of the Fox. In the Field. 
Hunt Clubs. The style is clear and crisp, and every 
chapter abounds with hunting information. The work is 
profusely illustrated. Price. $2.50. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
Canoe and Camp Cookery. 
A practical cook book for canoeists, Corinthian sailors 
and outers. By “Seneca.” Cloth, 96 pages. Price $1.00. 
FOREST AND STREAM PUBLISHING CO. 
