680 
FOREST AND STREAM 
November, 1918 
AS A CHANGE TRY 
SPRATT’S WAR RODNIM No. 1 
> 
A granulated dog food 'of 
great value containing a 
large percentage of meat. 
AS A STAPLE DIET WE RECOMMEND 
SPRATT’S WAR RODNIM No. 2 
A granulated food which is daily becoming 
popular among dog owners 
Write for sample and send 2c stamp for “Dog Culture” 
SPRATT’S PATENT, LIMITED, Newark, N. J. 
San Francisco; St. Louis; Cleveland; Montreal 
I 
DENT S CONDITION PILLS 
If your dog is sick, 
all run-down, thin and unthrifty, if his 
coat is harsh and staring, his eyes mat¬ 
terated, bowels disturbed, urine high 
colored and frequently passed—if you 
feel badly every time you look at him 
—eating grass won’t help him. 
DENT’S CONDITION PILLS 
will. They are a time-tried formula, 
that will pretty nearly make a dead 
dog eat. As a tonic for dogs that are 
all out of sorts and those that are 
recovering from distemper or are 
affected with mange, eczema, or some 
debilitating disease, there is nothing 
to equal them. PRICE, PER BOX, 
50 CENTS. 
< If your dog is sick and you do not 
know how to treat him, write to us 
and you will be given an expert’s 
opinion without charge. Pedigree 
blanks are free for postage—4 cents a 
dozen. Dent’s Doggy Hints, a 32- 
page booklet, will be mailed for a two- 
cent stamp. The Amateur Dog Book, 
a practical treatise on the treatment, 
care and training of dogs, 160 pages 
fully illustrated, will be mailed for 10 
cents. 
THE DENT MEDICINE CO. 
NEWBURGH, N. Y.; TORONTO, CAN. 
WANTED—Pointers and setters to train; 
game plenty. For sale trained setters, also 
some good rabbit hounds. Dogs sent on trial. 
Dogs boarded. Stamp for reply. 0. K. Ken¬ 
nels, Marydel, Md. 
ENGLISH SETTERS 
and POINTERS 
A nice lot of good strong, 
healthy, farm raised puppies 
of the^best of breeding 
GEO. W. L.OVELL 
Middleboro.JMass. 
Tel. 29-M 
IS THIS WORTH THE PRICE? 
Stop your dog breaking shot and wing. Teach 
him what whoa; means. No long trailing rope or 
spike collar. Our field dog control is not cruel. 
Can be carried in pocket and attached instantly 
to dog’s collar. Dog can’t bolt. Fast dogs can be 
worked in close and young ones field broken in a 
week. Works automatically—principal South 
American Eolas. Sent postpaid with full direc¬ 
tions for $2. Testimonials and circular sent on 
request. 
MAPLE ROAD KENNELS 
NEW PRESTON, CONN. 
Oorang Airedale 
Terriers 
The 20th Century 
All - Round Dog 
Choice Stock for Sale 
Six Famous Oorangs at Stud 
Oorang Kennels 
Dept. H. La Rue, Ohio 
it, one flew out which I killed and he still 
stood firm until I pushed him on with my 
foot and he made a dash and caught its 
mate. 
He is a black and white Breton spaniel, 
a breed the size of a rather small setter, 
and except that they are born with short 
tails, very much of the appearance of a 
setter. He is very good on partridges, 
having only overrun or flushed two coveys 
in all of last season, in I don’t know how 
many points, but it must have been con¬ 
siderably over 500. On snipe he is fair, 
pointing about two out of three, but as it 
was his first season’s working on snipe I 
am satisfied, and think that with experi¬ 
ence and a little age, for he is only two 
years old now, will make a good snipe dog. 
On woodcock he is good but like all dogs 
over here has never been taught to point 
or rather to hold a point over them, but I 
guess that I can teach him that when I get 
him back to the States. Over here it is 
much better to have a dog that flushes 
them, otherwise you would have no chance 
to shoot. He will retrieve anything frorr 
anywhere, although one time it took ^ 
great deal of coaxing and a touch of the 
whip to make him retrieve a long-billec 
curlew I had shot that fell into the mid 
die of a. mill pond. He would swim out tc 
it, smell it, and would turn around disapj 
pointed to find it bad and come to th| 
shore, but on the third trip brought it bac^ 
disgustedly in his mouth and gave it t| 
me. 
I have been very fortunate the pasj 
month in having my Sundays off, and hav 
been spending them trout fishing, for I g^ 
very tired of a week’s work in the cit; 
I have to go three hours Saturday nigti 
on the train to a place in southern Brittanl 
called Norient, and fish in the Scott rive, 
There are lots of trout in it, all of the v? 
riety that we call German or Brown trou 
and they are excellent sport. Last Sunda 
I caught ten or twelve dan, which are vet 
much like our fall-fish at home, and talj 
a fly splendidly. They were all betwee 
nine and eleven inches long, for you car 
keep a trout under nine inches over her 
The Sunday before I was at a place calk 
Quimperle where the trout run larger b 
are not so plentiful and caught for—01 
n'/i inches, one 15 inches and two 13 
inches long. 
Well, I must close and get to work agai 
Happily the present drive, over which te 
ritory I have been dozens of times last f;l 
and summer when working on the Hospit 
Train, seems to be stopped, and the situ 
tion is once again better. The Germai 
are still strong but can’t last forever, a: 
everybody is confident that we will tu 
them with a grand counter offensive whl 
the proper time comes. Hoping that y| 
will find time to drop me a line soon aga. 
with my congratulations on your beauti l 
dog and thanks for the picture. 
Yours sincerely, 
William Baird Stuart 
Be patient in training the young di 
Your knowledge is no match to his instir 
Send us in accounts of your pets and yefl 
experiences in training dogs. We will 8 
glad to print them. 
