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BEETHOVEN RELICS 0N VIEW New Theater Also to Give a Play Based on His Life, INTERESTING BITS OF HIS DOINGS Work of Freueh London b an and Given —A nductor’ n Becrbobm Tre ecdotes of the ¢ Eecentricities, NEW YORK. April o who wrote “Beethover Dramatic Blography" | production at the New says that with the manuscript inder hix arm he was waiting chamber of one of the director theater. While interview, volumes, and taking come immediat graphical notes friends Wegelor lished in 1862 by 1 that in these anecdote such dramatic Al that 1 forgot about the play T had brought (o the and with the volume in hand convinced that 1 had discover my next dramatic 1 meditated over it a long time. | siructed more than ten scenario f selecting one commenced the pluy August 1, 1906, and working night and day on November 2 placed 1t on the desk M Antoine, director of the Odeon next day @ letter from him me Its reception and accept Although the Beethoven such prompt attention urtll two years afterward, having it production at the Odeon. it Odeon that Sir Beerbohm “Beethoven,” acquired the En, and atterward produced it at His Majosty theater in London ‘Beethoven,” as glven at His Majesty's theater, was magnificently &taged, but th management of the New theater hopes to attain an even higher point of historical accuracy. This attention to verity has gone even to the point of a reproduction of ono of Beethoven's planos, photographs of old prints being used as a working basis, In the green room of the New theater Winthrop Ames shows some thoven relics which are being listed before put on view, the remainer having already been seen in the foggy corridor in & double 10w of glass topped tables This room, the most interesting and beau- tiful of the New theater's allotment of space devoted to the public, was decorated under the supervision of William K. Van derbilt, who presented the five celling Rene have | theater April of n the of u b there “I noted he explains in a recent some b dust-covered be bio his pub- absorbed { Beethoven and Ferdinand Dentu. o co it in there was water all theater the the room a source ¢ attempt nally ot announced it wax not produced paintings by Baudry, the draperies of old |tles of the artistic temperament and was | firmiy blue velvet and the other furnishi At one end, ralsed by half a dozen steps and o pedestal, is a marble bust of Beethoven -the familiar Teuton featured, shock headed one—and on the other platform, the lecgth of the corrldor between or- chestra is placed during the intermissions the BEETHOV BEETHOV FROM THE |of the plays, while the relics are on view, | made | its repertoire limited during this period to |the great composer's work. M. Fauchois,”” says Mr. Ames, “hus the Ree- |only emphusized the well known fact that [This in turn ref “truth’is strang: about for the ing them and that one makes in | sphere of this kind, | wood and others of t | sistea found enough intercsting and material to make several plays, Beethoven had all the peculiari- than fiction.” In Jooking relics,’ for the data explain- in the wsual zigzag tours working up an atmo- Mr. Van Ness Har staff who have as- me have dramatic for |led by it into all sorts and tional eplsodes and suffered from the sequences of these with all the that a mature is capable | gentler Goethe, whose friend Le of him, you recolleet, that he Jtirely untamed person, his c Kkinds of emo- ¢ The | such The |4 lane for n was, ‘an Iticilsm being | and he naturally | | himsert, EN'S PIANO SUNDAY BEE \PRIL 10, van Be birth, ‘T that his famil contesting bilit thoven) belic duceived t from toe trequently that b reall teh, urt peo- ing was noble an’ arc fact At one time in the question of wa o d and and was D a case in the n fam examir he heart, saying noutiuty s The private fre " Beethoven collect Mass.; of Jubes Henry K. thers; the ane manuscripts, etc., frum re lbraries here in New York soveral individual collec- tthes ceme Fox Krehbiel dotal n the Cam istave and data verifications of search in the in Boston and In difterent the (nteresting and is & white linen thoven shortly before linen, slightly yellowed woven, there iy tons in Among relics valuable of blouse worn death time not a stitch garment. The laundry of the forgettul mind, *emphasized One of these is reproduction of a painting the Countess Giuletta Guicelerdi, of whose window used stand, absotbed watching fof of the ‘chere amie the the throes of 1position, ablivious to time by the by The tinely and broken in the entire tag still attached sy ness of the compo: by sevgral ancedotes fllustrated in th, mude tside | often 1 the ! broken engagements It is o this fickle coguett: "hn\vu licated the ‘Moonlight Sonata.’ It of the ma traged) of the composer’s Iife that the Countess Giuletta after having enjoyed his friendship should | prefer the society of a writer of ballet musie, who incidentally borrowed f him. ' ‘Another absentmined anecdote Hius- trated by a bit of paper covered with char | conl marks 1s used by one of his contem- porles eltiele who says ‘We afternoon to th vorstadt mounted to the second of the zpanlerhaus, We rang; nay We lifted the latch the anteroom empty door of Beethoven's ply. We entered, but what a scene presented itself. The wall was hung with huge sheets of paper covered with charcoal marks and Beethoven was standing before it with his back turned toward us, forget- ful of the engagement he had made, forget- which took place | ful of all—everything in the world in fact This is referred to in a Oppressed by the excessive heat he had among the relics written | gjvested himseif of all but his shirt and friends to his hiographer. | was bustly employed writing notes on the to another epistle which | wal) with lead pencil, beating time ana himself tina striking his stringless plano. which | We looked at each other in amazed per- plexity. 1 said to Atterbom: ““Would you them | as o poet like to take the con- *the WIth- | sofousness of having perhaps arrested the to stand | jotriest flight of genfus? could not | wu o I Beethoven o in shadow on abrolutely pass or that Bee- was Y mone | y Dr went ¢ and viz Aleer story Hehma . open, at the no The We room; knocked PICTURE BY BINENBA after an incident at Toplitz in 1812 letter contained by one of his Beethoven ! Arnim, in ote to v chords on he says “Yesterday on our way home we met the | whole imperial family; we | erossing off, when G drew his arm mine in order | astae, ana T would 1 on him to make another step in I pressed down hat more on my head, buttoned up my gree d crossing h behind me 1 made my through the thickest nortion of the crowd. Princes and courtiers formed Archduke Rudolph took off {his hat and the empress bowed to me first These great ones of know me. To ! |my infinite amusement 1 saw the proces. | |sion defile pust Goethe, who aside | with his hat off, bowing pundly. 1 lafterward took N sharply task for this; I gave him no quarter.' “Many anecdotes of a like continues Mr. Ames, been and studied apparently Mr. ¥ assumes on the part of the public a llke knowledge, some of which 18 to ba desired by those who are to like the Beethoven biography. Other- wisu the eccentricities might exag- serated stoge purpos “This Beethoven play Beethovenians really cighty-seventh anniver the 2th of March, 1527, when his friend Huttenbrunner kept waich him Toward (he fte unusual storm took h sudden of s in ot - away some way from You can at leas say what " ve sien Beethoven create.’ Lot | prevait wdvance. my | coat iipaciay | my nds carth stood prof to a natur tound ruchols by seem BEETHOVEN IN HIS SINXTEENTH YEAR ond oviinly us leave Unheard and unseen we de- commemorate the | ary of his death on of parted. The comments of the observers | Beethoven relics are not without interest and instruction. A woman whose elaborate | coiffure out-Herods Herod, easts a single soulful glance at the marble bust, portraits and prints, all showing Beethoven's gen erous supply of hair, then at the meagre lock—the most valuable article, commer- ially speaking, in the collection—whe roused | card rs the inscrip “Halr f raising his | Beethoven's head, received from himsel shook it at | by Anton Holm, April 25, 1526, turns to a which the | companion and exclalms: “Ain't it a shame slock came. ,For almost half a minute he |—such beautiful hair all gone!" maintained position, then all at Before a reproduction of fell back on his pillow breathless, 1if | life mask, which accurately photographed, Cho favorite portralt of Beethoven, | shows the divisions where the plaster which was by Kruell and ‘s constantly tions have been put together, another ob- produced in photographs, seems server exclaims at the great “raps’ in the continues the ot composer's head and argues therefrom the | Uieater, “to express well tho probability of “frightful headaches. ing nobility of heart and soul wi At the yellow leaves of his dairy, filled | Beethoven's pessession and which ne tem- | with the recurrent comedies of tragedies, mood of irritation, no disappoint- | according to the point of view, of the com- ment in life or work, can eradicate to the | poser's daily life, groups or housewives ex- | sceing eye. Beethoven's family wae a poor | change meaning looks and smiles. but the ‘van’ in the names (Ludwig on the beside Iat plac noon an was a rd the midst a8 scund of composer lightnis At the urred of thunder ently uned up in his bed and, clenched fist as if in defian the point of the compass from ighttul this the clous be tion n this once | a the celebrated re- ways to the New h were | One housewife points to the letter “M-J | | / LEETHOVES RELICS IN THE FOYER, | ten by Becthoven to a woman who had | tatned for him a housekecper whose only | fault seems to have been the telling of a | lle. In it he says: “Whoever tells a lie | not pure of heart and such a person cannot | cook a clean soup.” The housekeeper avers | that the composer is quite right and that | as a deciple of the New Thought cult she firmly believes that all indigestion Ls directly | traceable to the wrong point of view toward | Mfe held by the kitchen staff. | "To the casual glance it is rather diffi. cult to distinguish the letters having gard to the tradition that a genius must be a Dbad penman. Having once separated them, however, these scraps and pleces of musical notation are apparently of intense interest to the orchestrally inclined spec tators, who ejaculate in astonishment at the blank pages with a note here and here, musical shorthand with scarcely an slaboration of motifs, with a measure at the beginning of a page sometimes, and another at the end, a void which the experienced composer reread his ! composition, as from a hurried line a novel- ist might reconstruct a story thought out {in the mind | There 15 a | Jotted down a betwoen, bit in of the Ninth Symphony this hurried manner, re- | markable for what it does not reveal rather | than what it does. The Ninth | was first performed in 1846 in Castle Gar- den by the New York Philharmonic so- | clety, which had been organized four years | previously. When it is remembered the | herculean efforts that Wagner was obliged to make to get permission to perform it in | Dresden in this same year It speaks well for the culture of “North America,” as Beethoven always called the United States. He wrote in one of the exhibited lette “If it please God to r my health, which 1s already improved, I may yet avail myself of the several propositions made me, not only from Kurope, but North America, and thus my finances may again pro The ref to the offer made him Haydn Society of Boston the text of which Symphony store even rencs to this country is relative e Handel and an sric was o be furnished by them. This was one of the few offcrs Bedthoven hud from outside Austria | musical compositions. His work inth symphony epting this commissicn | tended to undertaks it | worthy that the best life of Beethoven and that crowned by the German gover | ment was written by an American, Alex- nder W. Thayer of Massachusetts, by t for ora on the prevented from although he 1t 18 also not him ac- a life in| sacrificed English, work to which the ¢ his means. Although r gladly written in remsed in loudness P Ature ab \ 24ndo he sy, 1 at a suda A ilegibla b Kr Bee gnve o small with a sa thi piano ace prince 1o cha positio pected the composer 1 after it over gratulations and that way agalr “Usually contir “Beethoven other musioians. A clan, walked all the v Vienna o him with like you wiseacres find know about them? Yo ergy, the bold wing of 1 able to follow me." Another scrap, this the Third Symphony, krc Symphony,” was origina Napoleon ut the time wh lieved that the Little the liberator of France. B poleon’s name at the hea script and was on the point K Those an outb was t b play thority was 1 5t au to = remark nd what rroet kMea the who me of sending was first publishe® In German A very well known tached to one of the opera tremely interested in these nd tells Interesting com of leading n repeat tled orchestra lcader at ex Muuw‘“ of the houses musical facts some methods conducting, he . and commanded ol does his herd, and as dea quickness of temper overtook him he grew overbearing, exacting and extrava- His whole body was used to indicate | effccts he desired. The performers | !m der him were obliged to avold being led | ray by the impetuosilty of the master, | eer's | hoven | his players | drove ss and | gant the ob- ” 5 |ature, who thought only of Lis own composi | v COMPOSILion |, o, house where It had_been used by the and constantly labored to deplet the exact iexpression required by the most violent gesticuletiony Thus, when the passage vas loud he often beat time downward when his hand should have been up. dimuendo he was In the habit of marking by contracting his pereon, making himself emaller and smaller ntil when a planis- | | simo was reached he scemed to slink be- th tho conductor's desk. As th | soun | | ! emperor to Paris when Napoleon In a sudden rago 1 up the title page ar pled feet, saying, “This m l tyrant and will trample all hu under foot.” The by the blurred Sonata” carried where declarcd ) ethoven tor it undae. hi fha right tred is show Appassiona er party met Napoleon h: bit bf the from the Beethoven dir a rage ha quar sentatives in Germany, quartered for ti time on Prince Lichnowsky. It was pu In a bag and rained on during the night Jjourney to the nearest post town There 18 still another bit of rescued from the Kitcher lcal liter of a lodg t a A of the manu nself 3 ed with some of Napoleon's repre 000k to wrap up some comestible, smoky and stained. There is a facsimile of 1t will which none has been able to deciphe: entirely, the key to the plano played b Beethoven during his childhood at Bonn, the almanac with original notes, and an in teresting photograph of the daughter of Beethoven's nephew, Karl, which striking resemblance to the composer him. self, A PASTORAL SYMPATL TOM REED MADE HIM WHAT HE IS Foremost Parliamentarian in it Not the World, Helmsman of the Amer- ica, und the ase of Representatly WASHINGTON, April %~In the ( slonal directory Asher €. Hind being talked of as a possihl Speaker Cannon. lled the “clerk the speaker's table.” This might mean that he ran errands or carried ice water to Uncle Joe, that he @id odd around the house. But it doesn't matter of fact, Mr. Hinds Is the mentary helmsman of the house. Uncle Joe Cannon wouldw't think of tak ing up for consideration a bill on there was a possibility of Involve unless Mr. Hinds was standing beside desk. Mr. Hinds s the pllot who has gulded many a legislative craft to a safe harbor of precedents. Folks who know say that Mr. Hinds the foremost parllamentarian in the United States, if not in the world. Not he familiar with the rules. dents and usages of the deliberatiy of this country, but he has an intimate acquaint ance with those of the leading foreign nations. When anything comes up, as sometimes happens, for which there been no precedent in the lower of the national legislature, he generally able to find some grounds upon which t base his advice to the ficer from the parliamentary ign governments. The average visitor gallery the house would imagine, watching Minds, that he was amusing himself listenlng to the debate progress floor. He stands just to the right of th speaker's desk throughout the procoed ings, keeping an alert watch on everything that goes on in the chamber. Usually be fore the speaker has grasped the meaning of & motion or a point of order Mr. Hinds has comprehended it, dissected it, analyzed it decided the procedure and told the speaker what to do. Mr. Hind's friends say that he has an axcellent chance of being elected to suc- who is successor to or Jobs As a which debate is only s pr bodies has branch presiding history of f In the of Mr by on the to MANATTHESPEAKER'S RICAT Asher C. Hinds, Who is Talked Of for Cannon’s Place, ceed Representative Amos L. Allen of the First Maine district. This may be true, but Mr. Hinds would have a much better how if he could get away right now and | attend to his fences. The average member | of the Washington when he | sees fit back when he gets| ready. Particularly Is this true if there| isn't much going on in the body and he recelves word from his district that body Is using the hammer. If the is busy and it requires an excuse he askes consent thr family Hinds Some mef house leaves and comes some- hou to get to be| weeks on account of ill- | an away unanimous excused for in the Jut Mr valuable he that other they t can't leave. He | bers of the house be elected to congress, would ate a ch parllamentarian. And that nk, would be very difficul Mr. Hind This st It was of the presiding Asher Hinds Hinds Hinds in in won't el because for an search, indecd. | nec sea people born parlia are no such Reed himself, | mentarians and | tory, who made He didn't teach He just made tor One, it Ther B pariia- | of his-| he Is. rentarian, freak one Thomas greatest what at he knows, ht and day Hinds kept to know procedure, rules and other man In this country and yet he keeps on studying just the same night and day, He tell you 0 in study years the up. He ded about parliamentary precedents nij habi is cone now more | than any can how the Romans used senate and how the | members of the rump parllament conducted | themselves, He knows the pr of intinental eon and hardly a situation, h trivial the legislative proceedings which he has precedents and In the standard the subject of whieh he is the author Asher Hinds started out as a newspaper man. He was born at Benton, Kennebec county, Maine, In 156 and that makes him {7 His father was a farmer, but he wasn't that way 1583 behave in their ceedings | there is that in the « his head arise in not mo) work | on of inclined In he was college and began work on the Portland be thorough he learned the mechanical part from typeseiting to press- dido’t make much of a Bit with and he was glad to quit to [ take & straight reporter's job. In the win. | ters of 15% 10 18% he was legislative cor- | respondent at Augustus, the state capital | of Maine, first for the Advertiser and then | for the Portlana Daily Press Tom Reed was elected speaker of the house in 1589, and In 189, after Mr. Hinds' legislative work was over he came (o graduated from ! his newspaper Advertiser. Just to of the business, work. But thi him Washington as clerk for Mr. Reed. In reality he was an assistant to the speaker's | has had the formal approval of the house. private secretary, Amos L. Allen, now It is not generally known that the dem- representing the First district of Maine, | oeratic and republican leaders of the house successor In the house to Thomas B. Reed, | and senate agreed that Mr. Hinds was en- and whom Mr. Hinds, with the consent Of | titled to rich reward for his work in pre- Allen, wants to succeed. He didn't Ao | paring the *Precedents.”” He recelved $20,000 his newspaper work, but did a lot of cor-| for the work, which was the result of night respondence from Washington for Maine| anq gay etfort to perfect himself in the newspapers, and in the summer resumed | quties of ‘clerk at the speaker's table." his Portland connection, [ Mr. Hinds never seeks the limelight. He When the republican pa I8 quiet and gentle, soft spoken and mod- power at the "’“’“"“'”'"‘l < est. Oné could talk to him for a weck and Sarda A‘::’-glt A ha Mr. Reed | never learn from Hinds himseit that he 184, after the great republican victory of | that year, Mr. Reed offer.d him the job|Prehensive and absolutely unique fund of 00 Oclsck mt: tha Abcaker's \tabls v | information rning the Intricacles of 18 Dlace s e parliamentary law different from the | PaT he had "previously held. It demanded he suggestion that Mr. Hind Imate knowledge of parliamentary | ® 800d man to put in the sp and of the rules and the precedents of [ I the event of that office the house. Mr, Reed made it a condition | Purely parliamentary one has brought Mr. of the appointment that Hinds should in-| Hinds into the public eye of late and he form himself on the subject as thoroughly | has not relished it. While it is conceded as possible before the next meeting of con- | that the day is not far distant when the gress in December speakership will be diversted of all par- How well he would do this even Mr. Reed | tisanship and made purely parliamentary, did not guess. Immediately Mr. Hinds be- | members of the house seem to agree pretty gan to collect the precedents of the house.| generally that it that time ever comes no writing them Jargely with his own | better presiding officer can be found than hand, in order that the reasoning might be | Mr. Hinds, accurately but conclsely expressed in form to be bound in scrap books. This neces- sarlly Involved an exhaustive search of hundreds and hundreds of volumes of de- bates, jou and reports He carried on the work in the days and evenings when the housé was not in ses Even during sessions when the ature of the siness would per- mit, and during of congress at his home ln Woodford, or his summer home on Chebzague island, he was busy. As s00n as completed a precedent was clussi- fled in his scrap book o &s to be available in the daily business of the house. The field of procedure in the house ls wide and so varied that the task of col- | lecting the precedents was not completed until 198, making a period of thirteen years for the work. When the “Hinds Precedents” were published they comprised elght volumes of about 1000 pages each. The footnotes to the text alone number many thousands. The work is used by the national house and senate and by state legislatu and has been cited in the courts, notably In some recent cases in New York and Pennsylvan A new manual for the house has also been perfected by Mr. Hinds in the last year. It is based on the law as established by the precedents and constitutes a text book eotirely different from the manual used in the last fifty rs, This work went out of the fifty-first be conc 3 would be ker's chair being made a an One of the Most Destructive of Known Evils Growing in This Count nals sion. the S p— Ordinary good citizens have little notion of the progress which the cocaine habit is making In this country. It is one of the | most destructive drugs known to the world It has its uses as a local anesthetic and in some prescriptions, but it Is as dangerous as it is serviceable. Not many years ago & determined effort was made to wipe out the opium evil In this city, and it seemed to have a good deal of effect. Apparently, the oplum dens were closed, and some good people congratulated themselves upon the succesy of thelr crusade. It is much to be regretted, but it seems to be a fact that a worse evil has taken its place. All sorts of stimulants have their uses at times, but the abuse of them has made thousands mourn. We know In these days that the brain it the seat of all intelligence, | and that it Is not an amorphous organ, but 18 divided up Into many compartments, one | or some of which may be Injured without detriment to others. But cocaine i one of those stimulants which seems to destroy almost every function of the brain, save [ TERRORS OF COCAINE HABIT| !lom a Des Molnes photographer, is Inven | which it distorts to '\\hulémime degree, T cocaine habit (s worse than the opium habit, and its effects are quicker. It cannot be acquired without destruction of mental faculties to a large degree. It {s fnsidious and deadly unless speedily checked. ‘ The police authoritles are to be assisted in every way In closing this terrible avenue toward self-destruction. The druggist who sells cocalne to de- | generates is an enemy of soclety, for no |one knows what the victims of this drug may do to innocent persons. The police seem to be doing the best they can and are bringing offenders to justice. Here is an in- stance where every good citizen should be on the guard and report violations of the law. Indeed, it looks as if the state would | have to take over tho entire sale of such drugs. It Isn't pleasant to contemplate, but [it we can stimulate making antitoxin for | diphtheria, we may do something toward stopping the of cocaine, whose laudable use is occasional.—Philadel- phia Inquirer. PHOTOS TAKEN BY FIRELIGHT Moines Man for Portraits [ imastnation, an un- abuse only Des Perfect in Red System most recent A. Bram. “Firelight pictures” are the novelty in photography, and A them, wore than a year's labor on the Mr. Bramson has perfected the fin- and a day or two ago he recelved a of the ldea and announced his tor of the process which After idea, 1sh copyright discovery. The photograph Is taken in way, the subject being posed fireplace reading a book, for instance finish brings out crimson tins which semble almost perfectly the light thrown out from a real fireplace. The inventor says his idea Is a simple one, and the cost of producing the plcture is the same as for any picture. The hnlnh‘ can be used on any photograph with sur- | prising and pleasing effect. Mr. Bramson has on dlsplay & number of studies which | have been deemed by critics to be beauti- tul. Mr. Bramson says that he obtained his | [1dem for the firelight pictures while wit- | nessing & performance abuut a year ago &t one of the local vaudeville houses. One act comtained a fireplace scene, In which & man sat and looked Into the fire and meditated With no light but that from the fireplace playing upon his features.—Des Molnes Capital, produces the usual before a | The | re- IN RANCH DAYS| Homes:enders lln\c! Cattle and Sheep. Much has beeu sald about the effect the agricultural settlement of the lands west of the river upon the live stock in- dustry, and the general verdict has been that outside the big reservation pastures the homesteader has practically destroyed the range stock business, | The marketing of live stock South | Dakota from year to shown | marked growth, but the presumption been that the increase from the farms had been sufficlent to overcome the loss upon | the ranges [ t v n has year method of ascertaining the | ettect of the homestead movement stock is through the assessment 1006 the homestead movement began and | the assessment rolls of that year showed in the range counties—Butte, including the |c present Harding and Perkins, Lyman, Pen- | nington and Stanley—9,246 horses, 204,55 cattle and sheep. Three years of | homesteading has followed, covering all of these counties with settlers until there is | only & modicum of vacant land remaining, and the assessment of 1909 shows for the | sume territory 72680 horses, 211,785 cattle and sheep, or a marked increase of | each sort of live stock. A fu analysis of the cattle returns show an increase of young stock and of milch cows and a decrease of othar cattle The figures show conclusively that the homesteader has not destroyed the live stock industry, but has icreased it. As a matter of he has destroyed the pic- | turesque old-time ranching business and broken up the big bands Into little home | kerds, for he supplies and shelter In of a hard winter, and | has placed the business upon a surer ba than it ever before was While the homesteader has give pulse to general farming in the #ourl reglon and & good deal cropping 1s done, and will increase each }ear, still the section remeins it always has been from the r ages, a great natural pasture, buried in sweet grasses, which affoid summer and winter feed, sncwless in the average year, end the wise homesteader takes advantage real live In |y i which stoyer nsmis- | o of general |, with what motest w of cattle, horses or sheep and develops it as rapldly as po dairying are now and always will be the lines of least resistonce upon which the western Dakota farmer will win success,— Plerre Letter in New York Herald. [ not ence." after acquiring Know in educa aboy in to the sportsman. sooner [to hunt, 11k |tor the canine knows instinct scent | 1earns its littie pec | thes | tinguishing beings |of | He learn [ fw can and obey pride in leaking. valued hunting ability, sought by the hunter in the dog of his natural environment, starts a herd | pride in the ani him well ible. Stock growing and | conaition, tion he can trust a In his S — Dogs of High Degree (Continued from Page One.) as learned to obey his master's com- 1o act accordingly In the case of These devises come under the sys- ng for young dogs, and must the dog's “experi- | in the hunting dog is a This quality is acquired liminary yard training. 1In experlence” the dog learns to haunts of game. This is done field. Usually this form of taken up when the dog is ths old. His actual experience for, like & e man, the he grows older. A dog of 4 had enough “‘experfence’ make him & valuable asset The more birds the dog omes in contact with at an carly age the Ho learns winst the wind, ely that the the breeze. | own dog and eccentricl little dis- as human his dog the making use ble assets in the dog the dog, end the faith. the dog learns to love em of trai be confused with “Experience’ ‘aluable the t the oper t 9 mon a litetime, le ears has h me usually nting he acquires “bird se his mas of the bird Is carried on tra his The master who Dogs fties have persor habits, tully advantage the same By “knowin s has little 10 in its n unter in t an love t n e nter but what took cquipment, in his It I8 a fa- cleaning his and months He swabs she bright cleans and oils the locks and bright H hunting boot he keeps well olled to prevent them from He pays Ligh prices for his equip. too, as B rule. There are and fishing r and hunting coats at hundreds of dollars. Similarly hunter takes pride in dog. Tha nter wants a good looking dog, one that beauty grace, and he also one that hunt Beauty and the qualities He takes wl, guards him well, feeds and keeps him in the hest of The hunter realizes the satisfac- dog. in which treat as companion over the @ thickets. There never was a | his gun tackle or : his dogs shing B barrel oper burr is sur- tock i and ent 1 his rar nd ants can then in having a good one a his little jaunt elds and among t bears a ¢ |mands in reference to the cookie he has| OF | learned game. t 3 , 4 )