318 
FOREST AND STREAM 
Sept. 6, 1913. 
Kennel. 
Spratt’s Patent 
Manufacture specially prepared foods for 
DOGS PUPPIES 
CATS PET STOCK 
GAME BIRDS 
FISH ETC. 
Send 2c stamp for "Dog Culture” 
which contains valuable information. 
"Poultry Culture” sent on receipt of 10c. 
“Pheasant Culture” 25c. "Cat Culture” 10c. 
SPRATT’S PATENT LIMITED 
ractory and Chief Offioes at NEWARK, N. J. 
Breeders, Exhibitors and Owners with 
DOGS 
FOR 
SALE 
Should Advertise Them in the Sunday 
NEW YORK HERALD 
The Best Dog. Poultry, etc. Page Published, containing each 
week the latest news and gossip written by recognized experts. 
Your advertisement on this news page will be read by both 
the Professional and Amateur Dog Lover and Bird Fancier. 
IDTERTIHING RATE SO CENTS PER AGATE LINE 
Further information on request. 
NZW VMK HERALD .... NEW YORK CITY 
Book on Dog Diseases 
AND HOW TO FEED. 
Mailed FREE to amy addreaa by the author. 
H. CLAY GLOVER, D. V. S. 
II* W. 31st Street 
NEW TOM 
IRISH WATER SPANIELS 
FOR SALE 
A litter sired by the celebrated imported winner, Sligo, 
144,673, and out of Biddy Maloney (Imported Bailey- 
water Brien x Nora McShane). This is best breeding in 
the world. These pups are all strong and healthy, and 
will be the right age to break this fall. Dogs, $35.00. 
Bitches, $25.00. MIDRIFF KENNELS, Dallas, Pa. 
FOR SALE 
English Setter Grouse B., 28582 F.D.S.15. Medium size. 
White, orange and ticked, 4 years old in September. 
Ruff, slightly larger English setter, tan body, white feet 
and breast, nearly 3 years old. Both are fine lookers, 
trained on grouse and woodcock, some quail experience. 
Steady and staunch. Fine tender retrievers. Drop to 
shot and wing. Very easily handled. On trial to respon¬ 
sible parties. References. 
C. F. BROCKEL, Danbury, Conn. 
DOGS FOR SALE. 
Do you want to buy a dog or pup of any kind? If so, 
send for list and prices of all varieties. Always on hand. 
OXFORD KENNELS, 
35 North Ninth St., Philadelphia, Pa. 
FOR SALE. 
Champion Lake Dell Damsel and Endcliffe Briarwood 
(English name, Fountain Ranger), both winners and 
world beaters. Address DR. L. C. TONEY, 204 Currier 
Block, Los Angeles, Cal. 
FOR SALE—IRISH SETTERS 
Pups eight weeks old. Ben Low Strain. 
MICHAEL T. TOOMEY, Berwicks House, Rutland, Vt. 
IMPORTED NORWEGIAN BEARHOUNDS, Irish Wolf¬ 
hounds. English Bloodhounds, American Foxhounds, 
Deer, Wolf and Cat Hounds. Illustrated catalogue for 
5c. stamp. ROOKWOOD KENNELS, Lexington, Ky. 
WANTED—A well-bred English Bulldog, good watch 
deg, congenial companion, house broken, registered 
Write full particulars with price to 
LOUIS C. NEWHALL, Yarmouthport, Mass. 
lickety-spit down stream, right side up, and with 
the duffle bags still in her in spite of the fact 
that they were not fastened. 
Henny thought she would be caught in an 
eddy, and swept into a cove about a hundred 
feet below, and yelled to Pete to get there and 
catch her, but there was an arm of the stream 
entering at that point and fully twenty-five feet 
of raging torrent between him and the main¬ 
land that formed the point, but he splashed 
around and finally got over there, but in the 
meantime the canoe had gone on down stream, 
and Jack and Ed. finally caught it about a half 
a mile below. Ilenny and Charley got in their 
boat and chased down after ours, and there I 
was in the middle of that swamp and on the 
wrong side of the stream, and as far as I could 
see the only way out was to do a monkey stunt 
of swinging from bough to bough until I got to 
some kind of solid land. Well, I tried to ford 
another arm of the stream, but nothing doing, 
so I took it on a looping trot through the brush, 
as I thought I might be able to get down and 
catch the canoe on my side, but a looping gallop 
through a swamp isn’t as poetical as it sounds. 
I'd leap on to a hammock and it would turn 
over, sending me sprawling flat into the nice 
oozy, mushy, guzzy-woosy mud and slime; then 
a bunch of the tangled feeds would send me 
floundering, and finally I found that I'd have 
to dive in over my head to get to the mainland 
again; so it was “did” and I guess I traveled 
about a thousand yards (more or less) before 
I swam across that fifteen-foot bit of water. 
Anyway, when I got to the flats or meadows 
where the fellows had caught the canoe and 
landed, I found that Pete was pretty nearly 
“all in’’ and had a bad chill and had gone to 
a little “Wop’’ hotel in Suffern, which was only 
a short distance from where we were stranded, 
and the other fellows had hauled out their 
canoes and were preparing to stay at Suffern 
over night. When I reached the spot where 
they were, they asked me if I had seen the other 
paddle, and as I dimly remembered seeing it 
stuck in the bushes at the spot where Pete 
landed, I started back for it on the run, fol¬ 
lowed by Jack, and after considerable scouting 
around and another swim I got it and hiked 
back to the canoe to change my wet togs. This 
done, we bunked the canoes in some bushes, 
took the paddles and our duffle, and hiked it 
for the hotel. Beg pardon, but that’s what was 
painted on the side of the bar entrance. 
That night we spent in Suffern. Six in a 
room with two double beds. Pete was all right 
in a very short time, and after supper we all 
went to the movies, but almost got fired out 
because we only paid ten cents admission, and 
unknowingly seated ourselves in the fifteen-cent 
seats. After that we stopped in one of the 
“wagon lunches’’ and had some eats, and then 
turned in, three in a bed, about io p. m. Our 
clothes were draped all over the steam heater 
in our room, the halls, dining room and parlors 
and around the stove in the kitchen, and make 
believe that there wasn’t a beautiful odor from 
those moccasins and mud-coated khaki trousers, 
etc. All during the night a cute little switch 
engine tooted and bumped, switched and un¬ 
switched, backed and filled right under our win¬ 
dows, which looked right out on the Erie R. R. 
freight yard, and we have a card index com¬ 
plete up to date showing the destination and 
routing of each and every car that went out o-f 
that yard that night, as the yard foreman kept 
us informed from his position in the switch 
house window as he yelled to the train hands. 
Well, it wasn't long before the middle fellow 
in each bed was about baked on both sides and 
objected to being done any more, so finally they 
both got up and made themselves at home in 
another empty room, and then the two that 
were left in each bed rolled down hill to the 
center and made a bluff at sleeping until about 
6 a. M., when we were called. Most of our 
clothes were semi-dry, and as the sky was nice¬ 
ly clouded over, promising rain, and there was 
a heavy frost over everything, we felt fine and 
tickled to death with the thought of another 
day of swimming and paddling. Anyway, after 
breakfast—beg pardon, but it was supposed to 
be that, even if the portions were only sam¬ 
ples, and even if Spenner did have to have the 
harmonica played while he drank his coffee — we 
felt very much better, and at 8 o’clock started 
down stream for the run to Mountain View 
and the end of the trip. 
Sunday’s run proved to be uneventful, al¬ 
though it generally was the roughest part of 
the trip. No one took any water on board to 
speak of, and although it was clouded and cold 
all day, it did not rain until we reached our 
destination. We shot all the dams we came to 
with two men in the boat and all the duffle and 
finally reached Pompton Lake and had to paddle 
across that and arrived at the big forty-foot 
dam about noontime. We carried around that 
and stopped for a bite to eat, and then after 
the crowd had gathered on the bridge to wit¬ 
ness the fun, we launched the canoes in the 
whirlpools and mist at the foot of the falls and 
started out to shoot the rapids below, and be¬ 
lieve me, they were some rapids. An old bridge 
lying in the stream and having its girders 
twisted and sticking up just below the new 
bridge made it a particularly bad spot, and it 
was really dangerous, as the force of the water 
would have smashed one to pieces, not to men¬ 
tion what it would have done to a canoe and 
outfit, if we had overturned and been washed 
against any of the iron work. 
Kennel. 
WANTED—Pointers and setters to train; game plenty. 
Also two broken dogs for sale. 
H. H. SMITH, O. K. Kennels, Marydel, Md. 
Trained Beagles, Rabbit Hounds. Fox Hounds broke 
on rabbits and fox. Coon, Opossum, and Sk»nk 
Hounds; Setters, Pointers. Several hundred ferrets. 
Guinea Pigs. BROWN KENNELS. York, Pa. 
AMERICAN KENNEL CLUB STUD BOOK 
1 Liberty Street - New York 
THE NEW STUD BOOK 
The Stud Book for 3912 has been published and is on 
sale in this office, in its new form. Beside the regular 
volume, containing all breeds, it has five Sections separ¬ 
ated in Breeds, as follows: 
Section I.—Beagles, Bloodhounds, Chesapeakes, Deer¬ 
hounds, Foxhounds, Greyhounds, Griffons (Sporting), 
Pointers, Retrievers, Setters, Spaniels, Whippets, Wolf¬ 
hounds, also Great Danes and Dachshunde to balance the 
sections. 
Section II.—Bulldogs, Chow Chows, Dalmatians, 
French Bulldogs, Mastiffs, Pinschers, Poodles, St. Ber¬ 
nards, and all the Toy dogs. 
Section III.—Collies and Sheepdogs. 
Section IV.—Airedales, Bedlingtons, Manchester, 
Bullterriers, Dandie Dinmonts, Foxterries, Irish Terriers, 
Scottish Terriers, Sealvham Terriers, West Highland 
White, and Welsh Terriers. 
Section V.—Boston Terriers. 
The sections are $1 each, and the regular volume $6. 
