486 
FOREST AND STREAM. 
[Marcu 24, 1906. 

Kennel Special. 
Ads under this head 2 cents a word a time (or 3 
cents in capitals). Cash must accompany order. 


For Sale.—Full-blood English BEAGLE Hounds, Hunt- 
ers that are hunted. OAKLAND BEAGLE KENNELS, 
Pontiac, Mich. 
Norwegian bearhounds, Irish wolfhounds, deer and cat 
hounds. English bloodhounds, American foxhounds, 
Four-cent stamp for illustrated catalogue. 
ROOKWOOD KENNELS, Lexington, Ky. 
Dogs, Hogs, Pigeons, Ferrets, Belgian Hares, for sale, 
all kinds. 8 cents for 44 page catalogue. a. 
LLOY DI3 wayres. ba: 



CLEARANCE SALE.—I have a number of well broken 
dogs in pointers, setters and hounds that I will sell 
cheap rather than carry them over. GEO. W. LOVELL, 
Middleboro, Mass. 

FINE POINTER PUP. Makes a staunch point. Never 
hunted. Price $30.00. P. H. LLABMIK, Room 1203, 
56 Liberty St., New York City. tf 
DOGS AND HOGS FOR SALE. ALL KINDS. 
Pigeons, Ferrets and Rabbits. Send 8 cents for aie da 
CHARLES H. LANDIS, 
510 Moss St., Reading Pa., Dept. J. 14 
For Sale—Scotch Collie pups. R. E. GREENFIELD, 
Plano, Ill. 15 
FOR SALE by widow of sportsman—Y oung LLEWEL- 
LYN SETTER DOG and 12-GAUGE LEFEVER HAM- 
MERLESS Trap gun. No doubt of their quality. First 
draft of $50 takes them. ANDY TOWMEY, Akron, ce 




TWENTY-FIVE THOROUGHBRED FOXHOUNDS, 
BEAGLES, POINTERS AND COON DOGS, ALL 
AGES. THOS. C. MILHOUS, KENNETT Bovey 
PA. 2 

St. sais World’ s Fair, 1904: Gold Medal & Highest Mgacd 
Paris Exposition, 1900: Gold Medal & Highest Award 
SPRATT’S PATENT 
AM. (LTD.) 
Manufacture specially prepared foods for 
DOGS, ~PUPPIES, 
CATS, RABBITS, 
POULTRY, | 
PIGEONS, GAME, 
BIRDS, FISH. 
Write for Catalogue, “Dog Culture,” with practical 
chapters on the feeding, kenneling and management of 
dogs; also chapters on cats. 
Spratt’s Patent Tid S, 4th Sty'St Lous, Mod” 
(America) Ltd. 1324 Valencia St., San Francisco, Cal. 


DO YOU HUNT? 
e 
Trained COON, FOX and DEER 
HOUNDS For Sale. Reasonable Prices 
Here in Arkansaw we have millions of 
Coons, Foxes and Deer at our door to 
train our hounds with, and we train them 
too. They ‘‘ Deliver the Goods.’’ A few 
| trained Rabbit and Squirrel Dogs. Also 
{ untrained Pups. For particulars address 
'SPRING RIVER sei eS 
Box 27, Imboden, Ark. 
BOOK ON 
DOG DISEASES 
AND 
HOW TO FEED. 
Mailed FREE to any address by the author. 
H. CLAY GLOVER, D. V. S., 1278 Broadway, New York. 
IMPROVED SPIKE COLLAR, 
For use in dog training. Price, $2.00. 
mail, $2.10. Send for circular. 
B. WATERS, 
346 Broadway, New York. 
Have Youa Dog? 
_, Then let us send you Polk Miller’s 
\\ celebrated Book on Dogs; How to 
Take Care of Them; the eloquent Sen- 
Nator Vest’s masterful Tribute to 
ia Dog, and es Yellew Dog’s Love 
yf for a Nigger” (famous poem). We will 
R: Wy) 7 send you allof the above for 10c just to ad- 
wie, vertise Sergeant’s Famous Dog 
Ye fe Remedies. Address POLK MILLER 
DRUG CO. 859 Main St. Richmond, Va. 






WS 
OM 2 LP po 

Tacidermists. 

J. KANNOFSKY, 
PRACTICAL GLASS ape as: 

and Manufacturer of 
Artificial eyes for birds, animals and manufacturing pur- 
poses a specialty. Send for prices. All kinds of skulls for 
the fur trade. 369 Canal St., New York. 
Please mention Forest AND STREAM. 
SAVE YOUR TROPHIES. 
Write for our Illustrated Catalogue, 
“Heads and Horns.” 
It gives directions for preparing and preserving Skins, 
Antlers, etc. Also prices for Heads and Rugs, Birds and 
Fish, and all kinds of work in Taxidermy. 
Ward's Natural Science Establishment, 
ROCHESTER, N. Y. 
ROWLAND, 
TAXIDERMIST, 
A specialty in mounting Moose, Elk, Caribou and ae 
heads. ‘all and examine work, 
No. 182 SIXTH AVENUE, 
Tel. 4205 Chelsea. Near 18th St., NEW YORK. 

s a AL TDOOR -E : 
TRAVEL, NATURE STUDY. SHOOTING, FISHING YACHTING. 

CORRESPONDENCE. 
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entertainment, instruction and information between 
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tions on the subjects to which its pages are devoted. 
Anonymous communications will not be regarded. The 
editors are not responsible for the views of correspond: 
ents. 
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single copies, $3 per year, $1.50 for six months. Rates 
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Three Copies, $7.50. Five Copies, $12. 
Remit by express money-order, registered letter, money 
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Fereign Subscriptions and Sales Agents—London: 
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ADVERTISEMENTS. 
Inside pages, 20 cents per agate line. 
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FOREST AND STREAM PUB. CO., 
346 Broadway, New York. 
Special rates for 



+ 
TORONTO’S WHITE-HEADED CANOEISTS 
FOREGATHER. 
Concluded from page 474. 
” 
it with a white ash breeze,” now peacefully forked 
the succulent bivalves into thirty such gaping 
mouths as only canoeists who have kept them 
limber by much laughter could ever own. 
The Outside Visitors. 
While the celery and olives were being toyed 
with there appeared at the door a six-foot-four 
specimen with white head and black mustache, 
and many were the aueries, “Who’s that?” With 
a yell two or three recognized the newcomer as 
“Billy” Cooke, and he got a reception that made 
us all feel that we were kids again. 
A few minutes later, while we were all munch- 
ing the corn off the cob, another member gently 
pushed open the door and in walked W. H. P. 
Weston, who has been located in Chicago for six- 
teen years. For a few minutes you never heard 
such velling and cheering as greeted “Whiskers” 
or ‘“W. Horse Power,” as his arrival was quite 
unexpected and everyone recognized him. he 
being one of the three or four present whose ap- 
pearance has not changed as the years speed on. 
Some time later, when the air was fragrant with 
Gorgonzola cheese and yarns, in walked Dr. 
Harry Mackendrick, from Galt, and he, too, re- 
ceived a reception that warmed the cockles of his 
heart. 
The Menu Card 
Is the work of Mr. John D. Kelly and illustrates 
how some of the old-time paddlers, pot-hunters 
and cruisers have changed from the 16x30 game. 
“Jack” has certainly not forgotten how to sketch 
a canoe or the mugs of his old friends since he 
started as club artist in 1886. May his pen long 
be spared to depict our weaknesses. 
No. 12 Illustrates how the T. C. C., with over 
500 members, encourage dinghy sailing as a side 
line. 
No. 2. G. R. Baker, otherwise “Bob,” has de- 
serted the paddling canoe for a gasolene launch 
and camera. In the latter game he becomes so 
engrossed as to bunt the rising generation a bit. 
No. 3. D. B. Jacques, who “attended the 1886 
A. C. A. meet to try to capture the sailing trophy. 
with a heavy centerboard canoe. “I thought I 
was anchored” was the way he described the way 
he also ran. The artist puts him in a coal scuttle 
because six days a week he is busy turning coal 
into golden dollars for his numerous family. 
No. 4. Robert Tyson old A. C. A. members 
will remember as No. 66. He still camps, cruises 
and runs barefooted while doing so, and is yet a 
firm believer in the benefits of stewed prunes as 
a main article of diet while cruising. 
No. 5. Hugh Neilson, with Tyson and Nichol- 
son, were three of the six men who formed the 
T. C. C. The artist depicts him as astride a 
camera, one of his chief hobbies, discussing the 
merits of a cake of soap which he carried to the 
Crosbyside A. C. A. camp and to several suc- 
ceeding ones. 
No. 6. In memoriam, makes us all feel sad 
when we think of the happy days spent hiking out 
to windward in the cranky, shallow craft with 
standing sails, while we ripped along at a rate 
that to- “day would make our few remaining hairs 
stand on end should we be brave enough to even 
risk our hides in such a craft. Alas! 
No. 7. Dr. E. E. King, a past commodore of 
Tei GG, Athewarise tas depicted the genial mug 
which surmounts his 240 pounds of good natured 
ability to lay hardwood dancing floors et al. for 
the club, as astride a prancing steed dressed in 
his regimentals as surgeon-major of the Royal 
Grenadiers. : 
No. 8. Is Henry Wright, - alias “Jock Mc- 
Craw.” I don’t know whether “Jock” plays the 
pipes or not, but he is Scotch enough to eat hag- 
gis and portitch and has never left behind him 
the accent of his forefathers. His voice, too, is 
fine as in days of yore, and the way that bunch 
of old hard heads whooped it up in the chorus 
several times during the evening was indeed a 
pleasure to hear. “Tyson’s canaries” they were 
called twenty years ago when Tyson had the club 
singing class, and I believe that, like old wine, 
