518 
FOREST AND STREAM 
FOR SALE 
Setters, Pointers and Hounds 
GEORGE W. LOVELL, Middleboro, Mas*. 
Telephone 29-M 
PIT GAMES 
* GLOVER’S BLACK DEVIL COCKS 7 Hens, Stags, Pullets, Cocking 
Books, Gaffs, Muffs, Spur Saws, Dubbing Shears and Remedies. Cir¬ 
culars Free. F. R. GLOVER, Box W, Lisle, N. Y. 
Coonhounds and Combination Hunters 
for Coons, Possums, Squirrels, etc. Thoroug-h-l y trained, 
gladly sent anywhere on free trial. J^arge, new, highly 
illustrated catalogue, the finest of its kind ever 
printed, ioc. 
THE SOUTHERN FARM COON HOUND KENNELS, 
Selmer, Tenn. 
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. 
Book on Dog Diseases 
AND HOW TO FEED. 
Mailed FREE to any address by the author. 
H. CLAY GLOVER, D.V.S. 
11S W. 31 st Street New York 
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 clim'b 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. 
IMPORTED NORWEGIAN BEARHOUNDS, Irish 
Wolfhounds, English Bloodhounds, American Foxhounds, 
Deer, Wolf and Cat Hounds. Illustrated catalogue for 
5C. stamp. 
ROOKWOOD KENNELS, Lexington, Ky. 
DUCKS LOVE WILD CELERY AND RICE.— 
My Seeds now ready, also Live Decoys. Free 
Circular. Clyde B. Terrell, Dept. I, Oshkosh, 
Wisconsin. 
WANTED —Pointers and Setters to train. Quail plen¬ 
tiful; first class kennels. Refere-noe* 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. 
KENWYN KOAT XURE 
Cures mange or eczema, and trills flees. $0.50 and $1.00 
sizes sent to any address by parcels post. 
KENWYN KURE KOMPANY, 
Point Pleasant, New Jersey. 
AIREDALES—The Great Twentieth Century Dog. We 
have them of Blood and Quality. We also -breed Fash¬ 
ionable Bred Collies. Write for List. 
W. R. WATSON, Box 202, Oakland, Iowa. 
WANTED— Pointers and Setters to train; game plenty. Also 
two broken dogs for sale. 
H. H. SMITH, O. K. Kennels, Marydel, Md. 
THE OWNER OF EVERY KENNEL IN THE 
UNITED STATES SHOULD HAVE HIS NAME AND 
address in t-he Seventh Annual Volume of the C. S. R. 
Blue Book of Dogdom for 1913, -which is now being com¬ 
piled. Send for -free blanks an-d full particulars to 
“COMPILERS,” C. S. R. Co., P. O. -Box -1028, New 
York City. 
To Buck or Not to Buck. 
journey. His sons subsequently renewed their 
father’s attempt to reach the Pacific, but the Big 
Horn range of the Rockies was their furthest 
attainment. Both expeditions found the northern 
Indians fairly supplied with horses, all the dis¬ 
tinctive animals of the region were encountered, 
the buffalo, the big horn, -wolves, elk, etc., but 
no mention is made of wild horses. Nor were 
such seen by Lewis and Clark, in their expedition 
of half a century later. Fremont’s five expedi¬ 
tions across the continent seem to have revealed 
but one herd ; July 7, 1842, near Stirling, north¬ 
east Colorado he mentions “a small drove of wild 
horses.” Of the many reports of government 
officers, but one other contains such allusion, that 
of Lieut. Abert, naturalist to Col. Doniphan’s 
California expedition of 1846. July 17 he notes: 
“We saw several wild horses, in one group there 
DOORS is bursting with outdoor in¬ 
formation and reading. 
Fishing is covered from baiting; the 
hook to mounting the fish. More 
than fifty separate articles. 
Vacation helps extend from selec¬ 
tion of clothing to healing sunburn. 
Motoring, sailing, swimming, golf, 
tennis, baseball, country life, adventure 
stories, all are included. Every line is 
readable. 
San Francisco, Calif. 
Editor, All Outdoors 
New York 
Dear Sir:— 
My venture in subscribing to All Outdoors 
proves to me for once that "my foresight was 
as good as my hindsight”. The magazine has 
been more of a pleasure than I anticipated. 
The wide variety and accuracy of the illus¬ 
trations, the brevity and pointedness of the 
articles enable me to really cover all phases 
of sport and outdoor life at a glance. 
(Signed) chas. McCullough. 
On sale at all newsstands, 15 cents. Or better, use the 
coupon and be certain of a full year of enjoyment. 
All Outdoors, Inc., 141 W. 36th St., New York. 
I enclose fifty cents for one years subscription to All 
Outdoors including Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter 
numbers. 
Name. 
Address... 
were three.” This was in Western Kansas near 
the town of Larned. At that time there was an 
active overland emigration to Oregon, and the 
animals seen were not unlikely estrays, for, not 
infrequently, a number would be lost by a 
stampede.* 
A consideration of the foregoing reports shows 
that the wild horse was fairly numerous during 
the first three or four decades of the last cen¬ 
tury in Texas, Oklahoma and Indian Territory, 
and that in Kansas and Eastern Colorado, its 
representation was scant. The nursery of the 
animal was probably in Texas, whence the herds 
spread northward, Kansas and Colorado being 
apparently the limit of attainment. It has gen- 
