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DOGDOM 
America’s Greatest Dog Magazine 
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F. E, Bechmann, Publisher 
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In writing to Advertisers mention Forest and Stream. 






Sent 

Noble 
Curing Noble 
How a Valuable Dog Was Saved from Gun Shyness 
By LOU SMITH 
MORE gun shy dog _ than 
A Noble, the big, husky hound, 
was never seen. The first time 
I saw him Policeman Lou Oliver, then 
a youngster who had never worn a blue 
coat with brass buttons, brought Noble 
down from Trumanansburg, New York, 
to Ithaca and entered him in a fox 
chase which started up on South Hill, 
led down into the Inlet Valley and 
finished on the Ithaca Fair Grounds. 
There must have been twenty-five dogs 
in that race and many of them were 
fast dogs, too, but when the bunch 
swept down the finish that sleek young 
hound, Noble, was an easy winner. I 
took a liking to him, bought him, used 
him for rabbit and fox that fall and 
winter, shipped him up into northern 
New York where I had a hunting camp 
and the second winter we ran him up 
there, killing a lot of snowshoe rabbits 
and a fox or two ahead of him, and 
when spring came Noble was left at 
camp with Ed Slocum, the caretaker. 
The following fall Ed shipped Noble 
to me and I loaned him to Herman Pae- 
tow, an Ithaca gun maker who was 
fond of rabbit hunting, and Herman re- 
ported that dog as being so gun shy he 
would stop running a cotton tail when 
bunny turned and started back toward 
the man with the gun, and we could 
feel a couple of coarse shot just under 
Noble’s skin on his head, so we con- 
cluded Noble had been filled full of shot 
by some neighbor up in the north coun- 
try. In those days we could use ferrets 
and rabbits were thick. 
Every time a rabbit was started we 
waited until Noble holed the rabbit, 
then one of us would get off to one 
It will identify you. 
side with a gun while the other fellow 
dropped the ferret in and held Noble 
close to the hole, and when the rabbit 
bolted right under that dog’s nose the 
temptation was so great he would run 
the rabbit by sight until the gun 
cracked; then he would stop and lie as 
close to the ground as he could. Our 
next move was to rush up, get the rab- 
bit, let the dog muss it up as much as 
he would, make a big fuss over the dog 
and go on with the dog creeping along 
behind us. 
After perhaps twenty minutes he 
would go to hunting again and we 
would repeat the tactics as many times 
as possible after dressing a rabbit as 
soon as killed and giving Noble the head 
to eat. With much patience, never a 
cross word but many kind ones and not 
a few pats we eventually cured Noble 
of his gun shyness. 
FINALLY he came to associate the 
crack of a gun with a rabbit roll- 
ing over and a dainty morsel to eat and 
until he went to the happy hunting 
ground a decade later there was never 
a trace of gun shyness in Noble. 

