62 
FOREST AND STREAM 
January, 1918 
THE KENNEL MART J 
MISCELLANEOUS 
MISCELLANEOUS 
SPORTING AIREDALES—12 BITCH PUPS, 
choice of 3 litters from registered, working 
parents of imported blood, $10.00 each, worth 
$25.00. Send money with first letter. Also two 
14 month bitches, winning sire and dam, $30.00 
each. Washoe Kennels, Anaconda, Mont. 1 t 
WANTED—STORIES OF DOG LIFE, HIS 
deeds of heroism, and constancy to his Master. 
Have you owned a dog? One that was constant, 
that loved you and knew how to express his de¬ 
votion and seemed so strangely human? Then 
write me a short story and tell me what he did 
to make you love him most. M. F. Matheny, 
Charleston, W, Va. l.t.c. 
AIREDALE PUPPIES—CHAMPIONS ON 
both sides. Sired by Soudan Swish by Soudan 
Swiveler; dam, Ryburns’ Rip by Ryburn Swell. 
Males, $40.00 each and females $25.00. Satis¬ 
faction or money refunded. Address, D. is. 
Armstrong, Watertown, N. Y. 
AIREDALE PUPS FOR SALE—W. BEBEE, 
4200 6th Ave., Des Moines', Iowa. 1 t 
COUNT GLADSTONE GLAD—NOTED BENCH 
and Field Trial Winner and producer. Last son 
of Ladys Count Gladstone available. Will only 
allow few more bitches before taking out ot 
public stud. R. L. Keesler, Hamsville, Pa. 
FOR SALE—HIGH-CLASS FOX, RABBIT 
hound, on trial. Write Stissing Stock Farm, 
Bangall, N. Y. 1LK - 
* FOR SALE—REGISTERED AIREDALE TER 
tiers: One female three years old a good hunter 
Two males and one female three months old 
Puppies of either sex. H. B. Merkle, Hartville, 
Ohio. 1 ' tx 
THE LLEWELYNS CAESAR BELLE—BY 
Paliachio—Rubys Dan’s Belle, 4 years last August. 
Dam of Roderick Random. Placed in last years 
Derbys and winner of the Candy Kid Cup. Hun¬ 
dreds of quail killed over her good brood bitch, 
fast, wide and game. $125.00. Bitch by Bens 
Sport—Ceasar’s Belle. Whelped May 14, 1910. 
Handsome, not gun shy or spoiled. Making ot a 
good one, $75.00. Lowry Nichols, Florida Ave., 
Mt. Lebanon, Penn. •‘-t. 
BEAGLE PUPPIES WINNERS—$3.50 AND 
$4.50 each. Broken Dogs cheap. Week’s trial. 
m! Baublitz, Seven Valleys, Pa. It 
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. L. 
Yorton, Newell, N. C. l.t.K. 
HOUNDS—COON, FOX, WOLF, RABBIT 
hounds. Pedigreed and eligible to registry. Broke 
dogs sent on 10 days’ trial. Satisfaction guaran¬ 
teed You must be acquainted with your dog 
to get the best results. Prepare by ordering a 
good dog now. Otis Slater & Sons, Oconee, Ill. 
(2 t 1-18-L ) 
T?TK/I \ PSORIASIS, CANCER, GOI- 
iLiVlAV tre> tetter, old sores, catarrh, 
dandruff, sore eyes, rheumatism, neuralgia, stiff 
joints, piles; cured or no charge. Write for par¬ 
ticulars and free samples. Eczema Remedy Com¬ 
pany, Hot Springs, Ark. _ (12 t 5-18) 
ECZEMA, EAR CANKER, 
goitre, cured or no charge. 
Write for particulars describ¬ 
ing the trouble. Eczema Remedy Company, Hot 
Springs, Ark. (12 115-18) 
FOR SALE—TRAINED AND UNTRAINED 
hounds. From mountain section North Arkansas. 
Address, Noah King, Calico Rock, Ark. (2 t 12-17) 
RABBIT HOUNDS FOR SALE. TRIAL AL- 
lowed. Comrade Kennels, Bucyrus, Ohio. 
(4 t 3-18) 
SIXTY-MINUTE WORM REMEDY FOR 
Hogs—A vegetable compound, capsule form; 
harmless. Results guaranteed. Prepaid, 8 doses 
50c; 18, $1; 50, $2; 100, $3.50. Chemical Prod¬ 
ucts Co., Box 1523, Minneapolis, Minn. (3 t 1-18) 
HOUNDS FOR ANY GAME. TRIAL GUAR- 
anteed. Three States Kennels, Somerset, Ky. 
(3 t 2-18) 
MOMONEY II—NO. 33340 F. D. S. B. PURE 
Llewellin at Stud fee $20.00. By the great MO¬ 
MONEY—dam by CHAMPION MOHAWK II 
and a COUNT WHITESTONE bitch. Puppies 
out of choicely bred bitches priced reasonable. 
On approval. J. V. Michalek, Victor, Iowa. 
(5 t 2-18) 
HOUNDS—COON, FOX, WOLF, RABBIT 
hounds. Pedigreed and eligible to registry. Broke 
dogs sent on 10 days’ trial. Satisfaction guaran¬ 
teed. You must be acquainted with your dog 
to get the best results. Prepare by ordering a 
good dog now. Otis Slater & Sons, Oconee, Ill. 
(2 t 1-18-C) 
TRAINED PEDIGREED BEAGLES, STARTED 
and puppies, also rabbit and foxhound; trial. 
Keystone Kennels, Columbia, Pa. (1 t) 
FOR SALE—ENGLISH SETTER PUPPIES. 
Sire and Dam are excellent bird dogs with the 
best of breeding. Registered. L. Bowker, Edge- 
wood Ave., Methuen, Mass. (It) 
FOR SALE—FARM RAISED BIRD DOGS. 
No scrubs .and no “papers” but satisfaction guar¬ 
anteed. Room for one or two to board and train. 
References. R. Shannonhouse, Edgefield, S. C. 
(It) 
FOR SALE—GOOD HUNTING DOGS. G. E. 
Martin, Salem, Ind. 
AIREDALE TERRIERS — TWO TYPICAL, 
healthy, bitch puppies, whelped Dec. 5, 1916, from 
registered parents. Cheap. A. C. Cottell, Sunny 
Crest Farm, New Buffalo, Mich. (1 t) 
POINTER PUPPIES, FIVE MONTHS OLD. 
The kind that will please you. Pedigrees, Photos. 
W. O. Gilbert, Wittan, Conn. (1 t) 
FOX AND RABBIT HOUNDS. TEN DAYS’ 
trial (Brice Hound) will exchange, and Irish 
Setter for 12 ga. gun. Stamp. Jas. Jones, Ches- 
tertown, Md. (11) 
SETTER DOG, POINTER BITCH; BOTH 
natives; both good quail dogs, retrievers. Squirrel, 
possum and rabbit hounds. Imported Lingfield 
Baron (pointer) at stud. Fee $5.00, express office, 
Mills Shoals, Ill. J. M. Cash, Burnt Prairie, Ill. 
(1 t) 
TRAINED COON, SKUNK, OPOSSUM, SOUIR- 
rel, and rabbit hounds, on trial. Young hounds. 
Stamp. Curtis Matz, Carmi, Ill. (1 t) 
FARM RAISED AIREDALE PUPS, GRAND- 
sire imported, Marshall Tinner. Reasonable. 
Write Jay Mentzer, Leroy, Kansas. (1 t) 
ENGLISH SETTERS FOR SALE. EXCHANGE 
one for rabbit hound. Henry Brewster, Jr., 
Cornwall, N. Y. (1 t) 
FOR SALE—FOX HOUNDS, BEAGLES, RAB- 
bit, coon, and skunk hounds. Hillside Kennels, 
Box 56, Toughkenamou, Pa. (It) 
FOR SALE—A WELL-BRED AND WELL 
broken dog, 20 months old, $35.00. H. Peterson, 
39 Owen, Detroit, Mich. (It) 
GREYHOUND PUPS, BEAUTIES, FROM 
registered stock. Arria P. Stone, Littleton, Mass. 
(1 t) 
FOR SALE ENGLISH SETTER 2j4YRS. OLD 
WELL BRED 
Beautiful English Setter, 2)4 years old, all 
white, retriever thoroughly broken, on Woodcock, 
Quail, Pheasants, and Partridge; hunted in South 
last year. Wonderful disposition. Great ranger, 
stands his game all day, absolutely guaranteed 
every way. This dog knows his business. For 
sale $100, worth $500. Gilbert F. Caire, Real 
Estate & Insurance, Huntington, N. Y. (2 11-18-C) 
Trained Rabbit Hounds, Fox¬ 
hounds, Coon, Opossum, Skunk, 
Squirrel Dogs, Setters, Pointers, Pet 
and Farm Dogs. Ferrets, ioc. 
BROWN’S KENNELS, YORK, PA. 
A RED LETTER DAY 
WITH THE WIDGEON 
(continued from page pi) 
were warm enough when we reached the 
house. Mike was all excitement when we 
came in. He knew, of course, that we were 
having good shooting, and when we piled 
the ducks in the corner of the room to keep 
them from freezing, and told him how many 
we had, he broke out, “Didn’t I tell ye you’d 
git them widgeons, if you stuck at ’em, Neil? 
About once in a lifetime you git ’em, and 
this was your chance.” He was right, for 
I have never duplicated that day. 
You who have spent all of a winter’s 
day in a duck blind will know how good 
that hot supper tasted, and will also know 
how that roaring, blazing fire of wreck 
timber in the old fireplace was appreciated 
after supper. 
After the day’s shooting had been ail 
talked over, and things had quieted down, 
Uncle William rose from his chair, and 
walking to the corner of the room picked 
up his gun. Striking a dramatic attitude 
before the fire, he held the gun out at 
arm’s length before him and said, “Michael, 
I thought I had as good a gun as any man 
on the beach, but she ain’t worth a d—n. 
I will take her home and hang her on the 
wall, to shoot crows and hawks with, for 
that’s all she’s good for, but when I come 
here again, I will have as good a breech 
loader as money can buy, for at last I am 
converted.” 
JUDGING FIELD TRIALS ‘ 
While the subject of field trials is being 
discussed, many have observed that they 
should be judged from shooting dog stand¬ 
ards alone. They go a trifle further and 
suggest that speed should be entirely elim¬ 
inated as a winning factor. Granting that 
two dogs are equal in nose, bird sense, 
stamina, and bird finding ability, it is a 
certainty that the decision will eventuate 
on speed and style. Nine times out of 
ten—and probably ten times out of ten— 
the judge has deprecated speed as an as¬ 
set, but he will allow that factor to decide 
the race. A shooting dog judge, too! The 
dog that is in every way equal to his op¬ 
ponent, but quicker, and accomplishes his 
work with more speed, can not help being 
judged winner over his opponent, even 
though the race is run on actual shooting 
dog merits. Speed in his case is just an 
additional accomplishment. 
GROUSE DOGS vs. QUAIL DOGS 
It is foolish in advance to deplore the 
inability of a classy quail dog—a speedy 
fellow—to perform ever acceptably on 
ruffed grouse. With time and proper han¬ 
dling such a performer will ultimately con¬ 
form to the exigencies of grouse hunting. 
But the reverse is never the case. The 
crack grouse dog can never be developed 
into what the South calls a real quail dog 
