November, 1917 
FOREST AND STREAM 
571 
and indentations of its shores; and every 
elevated spot of dry, solid ground is cov¬ 
ered with trees exactly as are the little 
islands that so thickly stud the surface of 
the Nova Scotia lakes. Most of the lakes 
in the country are shallow, and in many 
of them the process by which they become 
filled up can be seen at work. The ground 
rises considerably in the center of these 
barrens, which is, I believe, the case with 
all bogs and peat mosses. I have never 
measured any of their areas, neither have I 
attempted to estimate the extent of the 
curvature of the surface; but on a barren 
where I hunted last year, of about two 
miles across, the ground rose so much in 
the center that when standing at one edge 
we could see the upper half of the pine 
trees which grew at the other. The rise 
appeared to be quite gradual, and the effect 
was as if one stood on an exceedingly small 
globe, the natural curvature of which hid 
the trees on the opposite side. 
OW to return to our 
calling. We got out 
upon the barren, 01, 
rather, upon a deep 
bay or indentation 
of a large barren 
about four o’clock in 
the afternoon, and 
made our way to a 
little wooded island, 
which afforded us shel¬ 
ter and dry ground, 
and which was within 
easy shot of one side of the bay. Then 
we made a sort of lair for ourselves— 
a little bed. You pick out a nice shel¬ 
tered soft spot, chop down a few sapin 
branches with your knife, gather a quan¬ 
tity of dry grass or bracken, and make 
as comfortable a bed as the circumstances 
of the case will permit. 
Having made these little preparations, I 
sat down and smoked my pipe while the 
Indian climbed up a neighboring pine-tree 
to “call.” The only object of ascending a 
tree is that the sound may be carried fur¬ 
ther into the recesses of the forest. The 
instrument wherewith the caller endeavors 
to imitate the cry of the cow consists of 
a cone-shaped tube made out of a sheet of 
birchbark rolled up. This horn is about 
eighteen inches in length and three or four 
in diameter at the broadest end, the narrow 
end being just large enough to fit the 
mouth. The “caller” uses it like a speaking 
trumpet, groaning and roaring through it, 
imitating as well as he can the cry of the 
cow-moose. Few white men can call really 
well, but some Indians, by long practise, 
can imitate the animal with wonderful suc¬ 
cess. Fortunately, however, no two moose 
appear to have precisely the same voice, 
but make all kinds of strange and dia¬ 
bolical noises, so that even a novice in the 
art may not despair of himself calling up a 
bull. The real difficulty—the time when 
you require a perfect mastery of the art— 
is when the bull is close by, suspicious, and 
listening with every fibre of its intensely 
accurate ear to detect any sound that may 
reveal the true nature of the animal he is 
approaching. The smallest hoarseness, the 
slightest wrong vibration, the least unnatu¬ 
ral sound, will then prove fatal. The In¬ 
dian will kneel on the ground, 'putting the 
broad end of the horn close to the earth, 
so as to deaden the sound, and, with an 
agonized expression of countenance, will 
KENNEL MART 
KENNEL MART 
COON HOUND pups, best blood and breeding, 
$5.00 up. Trades considered. Alfred T. Enty, 
Kitanning, Pa. 11 
ONE CHOICE MALE PUPPY—Dam by Ch 
Lewis C. Morris; sire, by Oconoc Raphe by Man- 
tobia Rap and Nellie Mason. No better puppy 
living. Whelped, April 12, 1917; in the pink of 
condition. Country raised, $25.00. Also will sell 
a few trained dogs at a bargain, too M. G. Yor- 
ton, Newell, N. C. (11) 
FOR SALE—Trained and untrained hounds. 
From mountain section North Arkansas. Address. 
Noah King, Calico Rock, Ark. (2 112.17) 
BEAGLE HOUNDS, puppes. broken and started 
dogs. David Bunn, Honey Brook, Pa., Star 
Route. (l t) 
FOR SALE—Puppies whelped May 2nd. half 
English beagle, sired by old-fashioned black and 
tan foxhound. 23 in. earage. Photo 10c. Stamp. 
C. C. Bregenzer, Kankakee, Ill. 
FOR SALE—Full blooded coon hound pups, 
$3.00 and $4.00. Joseph Keever, Jr., Cambridge 
City, Ind., R. B. (1 t) 
FOR SALE—Black and white pointer dog. Irish 
setter dog, both year old. Papers, liver and white 
pointer pups, whelped April 24th. No better dogs 
can be bought. All point and retrieve; have field 
experience. Photos. G. C. Henry, Porterville, 
Cal. 11 
FOR SALE—High-class fox. rabbit hound, on 
trial. Write Stissing Stock Farm, Bangall, N. Y. 
(2 t 12 17) 
SOME VIGOROUS Kentucky bred Airedale 
punnies. Splendid breeding and great individuals. 
Will be shipped on approval to responsible parties! 
W. A. Cornette, Hopkinsville, Ky. (1 1 C) 
MUST SELL my trained pointer, 4 years, $30; 
new $35 Knickerbocker double, $25. A. York, 
Saco, Me. 11 
FOR SALE—Two female setters, ten months 
old, just right to break); papers furnished. F. 
Wright, 19 Monroe St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. It 
LEMON AND WHITE POINTER BITCH, 14 
months old; eligible: nicely started, $10, for quick 
sale. E. D. Barrett, Polk, Pa. 11 
AIREDALE PUPS for sale. Charles Walton, 
Boneder, Colo. (2 112-17) 
BEAGLE PUPS, 2 to 8 months old, broken and 
partly broken dogs and bitches. W. F. Kline- 
durst, Seven Valleys, Pa. 1 t 
BARGAINS—Two weeks’ trial, all kinds of 
bunting dogs. Write for list. H. E. Williams, 
Newport, Pa. It 
MOMONEY II—No. 33340 F. D. S. B. Pure 
Llewellin at Stud fee $20.00. By the great 
MOMONEY—dam bv CHAMPION MOHAWK 
II and a COUNT WHITE^TONE bitch. Pup¬ 
pies out of choicely bred bitches priced reason¬ 
able. On approval. J. V. Michalek, Victor, 
Iowa. (5t-2-18) 
QUALITY AIREDALE FEMALES— 4 months 
old. Only a few but very classy. Champion bred 
and imoorted strains. $12.00. Rev. Wm. J. 
Macauley, Trempealeau, Wis. (2 111-17) 
FOR SALE—Well broken Setter trained on 
Partridge, Pheasants. Grouse and Woodcock. Re¬ 
trievers. Price $40.00. Thoroughly broken Coon 
and Onpossum Hound, fine hunter and trailer; 
price $30.00. Pair of Beagles, well broken on 
rabbits; fine hunters and trailers. Price $25.00. 
J. B, Jordan, Ashburn, Virginia. (2 t-11-17) 
AD., FOX, COON AND RABBIT HOUNDS, 
broke to gun and field, puns at all times. Stamns 
for photos and reply. Ferrets at $4.00 each. 
H. C. Lytle, Fredericksburg, O. 3 112-17 
WASHOE AIREDALE PUPPIES are bred 
from working parents of imported blood. We 
guarantee them to deliver the goods. Litters 
from our two lead bitches now for sale. Washoe 
Kennels, Anaconda, Montana. 
REGISTERED GREYHOr' TT > PUPPIES for 
sale from the FASTEST ai EST strains 
in America. The LARGE T' rkansas Val¬ 
ley Kennels, Cimarron, Ka . .s (2 t 12-17) 
17 f* ’y F1V/T A Psoriasis, cancer, goitre, tetter, 
old sores, catarrh, dandruff, 
sore eyes, rheumatism neuralgia, stiff joints, 
piles; cured or no charge. Write for particulars 
and free samples. Eczema Remedy Company, 
Hot Springs, Ark. (12 t 5-18) 
MANGE 
trouble. 
Ark. 
Eczema, ear canker, goitre, 
cured or no charge. Write fot 
particulars describing the 
Eczema Remedy Company, Hot Springs, 
(12 t 16-18) 
ONE FIRST CLASS FEMALE FOX HOUND 
trained on rabbits $20.00, or trade for good saddle. 
One male pup started on rabbits $5.00. Makin 
Monson, Box 145, Dunbar, Wise. 1 t 
BLUE BELTON SETTER—New England bred 
and trained, finished on southern quail. Staunch 
and good retriever, about three years old. $175. 
Picture on request. Address J. C. Carr, 50 Con¬ 
gress St., Boston, Mass. 11 
BEAGLE PUPPIES WINNERS—$3.50 and 
$4.50 each. Broken Dogs cheap. Week’s .trial. 
M. Bamblitz, Seven Valleys, Pa. (11) 
MAGAZINES WANTED 
LIBRARIAN of the Carnegie Free Library, 
Pittsburgh, Pa., wants copy of Forest and Stream, 
June, 1916, issue (1 t-K) 
MUSIC 
HENNINGS’ Artist Violins Perfection in tone. 
Finest workmanship. Ten days’ trial free. G. 
Henning, Miami, Fla. 11 
"MY LOVE IS FOR THEE,” the sweetest song 
ever written, 10c. We arrange music to words. 
Sovereign Publishing Co., 160 Sycamore, Buf¬ 
falo, N. Y. _It 
PATENTS 
PATENTS—R. Morgan Elliott & Co., Patent 
Attorneys, Mechanical, Electrical and Chemical 
Experts, 722-727 Woodward Bldg., Washington, 
D. C. It 
PHOTOGRAPHIC SUPPLIES 
SAVE CAMERA MONEY. Deal with special 
ists. Everything in photography. The greatest 
camera book ever issued, free on request. Write 
for it today. Every item sold under our liberal 
ten days’ free trial offer. No camera user can 
afford to be without the famous Bass Book of 
1001 bargains. Highest quality printing and de¬ 
veloping. 10c a roll. We prepay all charges on 
printing and developing. Special: 6X_ Turner 
Reich Pirsm Binoculars in leather carrying case, 
$35.00, prepaid. Money back if not satisfactonr. 
Write today. Bass Camera Company, 109 F. 
Dearborn St., North, Chicago, Ill. (It) 
POEMS AND LITERATURE 
"THE CALL ACROSS THE SEA,” 5c. Agents 
wanted big money. Sovereign Publishing Co,. 
160 Sycamore, Buffalo, N. Y. 
REAL ESTATE 
FOR SALE—Well located Wisconsin cut-over 
land for nice Iowa farm. Good terms, low price. 
Write owner, Dr. A. A. Lynn, Waterloo, Iowa. 
(It) 
111ACRE FARM, $175.00 per acre; will 
take automobile. J. Coder, Ames, Iowa. (11) m 
$5,00 DOWN, $5.00 monthly, seven acres, fruit, 
poultry, fur farm, river frontage, Ozarks, $100.00. 
Hunting, fishing, trapping. Address 1973 North 
Fifth, Kansas City, Kans. 1 t 
ORANGE, grapefruit and avocado groves, vege¬ 
tables, rich lands, lots, bunalows; big profits; 
fine winter climate. Buy a farm, grove, lot or 
home; also fishermen’s and hunter’s paradise. 
C. C, Ausherman & Co., Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. 
CALIFORNIA little farms near Los Angeles 
for sale on easy payments. Write E. R. Waite, 
Shawnee, Oklahoma. 1 t 
FOR SALE—Several fine improved Southeast 
Missouri farms, also unimproved lands, reason¬ 
able prices, good terms. Write for list. Address 
Ira S. Rice, Essex, Stoddard County, Mo. 1 t 
