FOREST AND STREAM 
487 
Book on Dog Diseases 
AND HOW TO FEED. 
Mailed FREE to any address by the author. 
H. CLAY GLOVER, D.V.S. 
118 W. 31 st Street New York 
AT STUD—POINTER 
Silver Sides . . . . j p 3 [) 8 s 7 b 
Manitoba Rap x King’s Sister. 
White, Black and Ticked. Weight, 45 lbs. 
Stud Fee, $20.00 
John M. Totten, Warwick, N. Y. 
FOR SALE! 
“COMPTROLLER” Blue belton Llewelliin setter, sired 
by Master Ben. Black and tan evenly marked head, 
beautiful color, fast as the wind, good nose, all day 
hunter, has had considerable work on quail South, beau¬ 
tiful looker of superb breeding, good conformation, three 
quarter tail, a lovable companion and will make a $250 
to $300 gentleman’s shooting dog. Prime condition. Price 
$112.50. Wire. 
AMOS BURHANS, 
Box F Waterloo, Iowa. 
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. 
OORANG AIREDALE PUPS for sale. Vigorous young¬ 
sters bred from true sporting stock that are unequaled 
as water dogs, retrievers and hunters of all kinds of 
game. They make trailers, tree barkers and stayers; 
will climb a tree or go to earth and fight anything from 
a ground hog to a grizzly bear. They are raised in the 
open, and -are the hardy, -active -and game kind with -the 
hunting instinct bred in the bone. Having an iron con¬ 
stitution they withstand the hardest usage and make the 
ideal dog for both hunter and trapper. Stamp for reply. 
Oorang Kennels, La Rue, Ohio. 
FOR SALE 
Setters, Pointers and Hounds 
GEORGE W. LOVELL, Middleboro, Mass. 
Telephone 29 -M 
THE OWNER OF EVERY KENNEL IN THE 
UNITED -STATES SHOULD HAVE HIS NAME AND 
address in -the Seventh Annual Volum-e of the C. S. R. 
Blue Book of Dogdom fo-r 1915, which is now being com¬ 
piled. Send for -free blanks and full particulars to 
“COMPILERS,” C. S. R. Co., P. O. Box 1028, New 
York City. 
WANTED —-Pointers and Setters to train. Quail plen¬ 
tiful; first class kennels. References on application. 
JAMES L. PREVATT, Buies, North Carolina. 
Wanted Pointers and Setters to train; plenty of game. 
Have some fine Pointer pups for sale, 12 months old. 
Apply, Manager Mossingford Kennels, Saxe, Va. 
WANTED—Pointers and Setters to train; game plenty. Also 
two broken dogs for sale. 
H. H. SMITH, O. K. Kennels, Marydel, Md. 
IMPORTED NORWEGIAN BEARHOUNDS, Irish 
Wolfhounds, English Bloodhounds, American Foxhounds, 
Deer, Wolf and Cat Hounds. Illustrated catalogue for 
5c. stamp. 
ROOKWOOD KENNELS, Lexington, Ky. 
Rabbit, Fox, Coon, Skunk, Deer, Bear Hounds. 
Ferrets, Mexican Parrots. Catalogue 10 cents. 
List Free. 
BROWNS KENNELS, YORK, PA. 
ment, and all tlie way back they vied strenu¬ 
ously with each other in falling down and 
taking sudden wild toboggan slides over 
treacherous footings. 
It was nearly two o’clock by the time we 
finished dinner. So, after a brief siesta we 
took up our way to the easterly summit. But 
of our party one member was lacking on 
this final climb, and we left Tommy peace¬ 
fully succumbed in the shade of leaves and 
canvas to the sweet spells of Morpheus. 
The atmosphere had cleared since morning 
and the scene that now opened out beneath 
us was free of mist and shining as though 
recently washed by summer rains. Miles 
away to the eastward we described the peak 
of Mount Marcy rising like a faint turquoise 
pyramid against the windless sky. 
Jim was much interested in geology, nor 
was his knowledge on the subject by any 
means trivial. He pointed out to us the 
northerly and southerly trend of the valleys 
and mountains, unmistakable proof that in 
past ages the glacial flows moved from north 
to south. Also, he told us of a morain exist¬ 
ent in the region of Blue Mountain whose 
imposing dome we had seen that morning 
from the westerly lookout; and leading us 
down over a glistening boulder surface worn 
as smooth as the hack of one’s hand by cen¬ 
turies of erosion, he showed us in turn a 
great seam in the granite which had been 
welded together by a wonderful silica deposit, 
and the bench mark of an old survey station, 
inscribed No. 3 Venplank Colvin 1872. 
By far the most extensive and most in¬ 
spiring view we had as yet obtained was 
opened to us from the north side of the 
mountain. No description however eloquent, 
could possibly create more than a faint im¬ 
pression of its magnitude and beauty. 
“I often come here and sit for an hour or 
two at a time,” said Jim, “and just let my 
imagination travel as far as it likes without 
losing itself.” 
And indeed, when we gazed over that vast 
sea of tree tops, we could well appreciate the 
meaning he wished to convey. 
Directly below us, sipread out in the shape 
of a deer skin, lay Eaton Lake; Grampus 
Lake, Mud Pond and Rock Pond we could see 
glimmering at different points; but most en¬ 
chanting of all were the bright blue waters 
of Long Lake winding eastward like a great 
mountain river toward the wild bear-haunted 
peaks of the Seward Range. The village, 
scattered in minature detail on the eastern 
shore appeared the one civilizing touch in a 
landscape otherwise as remote and unblem¬ 
ished as any of those which were once re- 
Coonhounds and Combination Hunters 
for Coons, Possums, Squirrels, etc. Thoroughly trained, 
g-l-adly sent anywhere on free trial. Large, new, highly 
illustrated catalogue, the finest of its kind ever 
THE 6 SOUTHERN FARM COON HOUND KENNELS, 
Selmer, Tenn. 
KENWYN KOAT KURE 
Cures mange or eczema, and kills flees. $0.50 and $1.00 
sizes sent to any address by parcels post. 
KENWYN KURE KOMPANY, 
Point Pleasant, New Jersey. 
vealed to the pioneer settler of the 
Adirondacks. 
A group of curiously shaped little peaks 
rising like a cluster of beehives along the 
northeasterly horizon attracted our attention. 
“Those are called the Haystacks,” replied 
Jim to our inquiry. “They’re right near 
Sperry Pond where there’s a big fish 
hatchery.” 
All afternoon we lingered on the mountain, 
loth to tear ourselves away from the majestic 
reaches of earth, and sky and water. The 
sun lowered in the west and the blue cloud 
shadows deepened on the slopes of Santanoni 
and Kempshall. Gradually the forest seemed 
to turn green-gold in color. Little clouds, 
floating low along the sky-line, became flushed 
with pink, till they resembled the breeze 
blown petals of a rose. 
“This is a nice job you’ve got here, Jim,” 
I remarked previous to our departure for the 
lake. 
“You bet it is,” he answered heartily. “I 
don’t know any one I’d like much better. You 
see I can sit right up on one of these look¬ 
outs and take a bird’s-eye view of my little 
farm whenever I want to know how things are 
going down there. In case I get fidgety about 
my wife or the girls or the boy, 1 just come 
back here and call ’em up on the phone,” he 
concluded, pointing to a box which hung on a 
nearby tree. 
“Where’s Tommy”? I inquired as we were 
about to start away. 
“I guess she’s sleepin’ yet, aint she?” piped 
up Wallace Junior. 
“No, I’m not either,” came a voice from the 
interior of the tent; and presently we were 
joined by a pink-cheeked, bright-eyed indi¬ 
vidual whose reproachful denials as to th® 
number of hours she had slept failed, how¬ 
ever, to prove convincing. 
“Good-bye, and good luck to you,” shouted 
Jim after us as we started down the trail. 
“Good-bye,” we shouted back. Then we set 
out at a stiff pace, stopping only once for a 
drink of water. When we came out on the 
lake the sun had set. It had taken us just 
(fifty minutes to come down the mountain, as 
compared to three hours in going up. 
(To be continued.) 
Sleeping Bag 
with Pneumatic Mattress 
the most satisfactory camp bed made. Can be 
used anywhere and when deflated occupies 
little space. 
SLEEP OUT OF DOORS 
No sleep is more healthful or restful than sleep 
in the open, provided your bed Is right. Per¬ 
fection Sleeping Bags fill every requirement. 
Ask for Catalogue of our guaranteed Mattresses 
for home, camp, yacht and automobile use. 
Mailed free. 
Pneumatic 
PIGEON SHOOTING—Capt. A. W. Money. Con- 
aiders work at the traps from the ground up—choice 
of gun, position, sighting, trigger pulls, calling. It 
gives the experience of a leading live bird expert and 
lays down rules by which the tyro may become an 
expert trap shooter. Cloth, illus., 150 pages. Postpaid, 
75 cents. 
