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| | Bobbie - The Wonder Dog Of Oregon
By G. F. Brazier,
Silverton, Oregon
If you were a young lad and became separated
from your friends in a strange land, 2500 miles from home, where you could
only make yourself understood by signs, do you suppose you could manage to
travel--most of the way on Foot-back to your own fireside? And what if you
were a dog?
This is the story of Bobbie, the "wonder dog of Oregon," as he has been
fitly called, after the most extraordinary achievement of intelligence,
persistency and loyalty ever recorded to the glory of dogdom and to the
confusion of those stupid people who still say that a dog is only a dog,
chiefly interested in bones.
Here follows the tale as set down by his master.
My wife, my two stepdaughters, Nova and Leona, and myself, were living
at a farm on the Abiqua when we bought Bobbie, a naturally bobtailed
Scotch collie with a mixture of a third shepherd. He was then just six
weeks old, a rollicking, full-of-fun puppy, and we all loved him. He was
not the only dog in the house, for we had a fox-terrier, Toodles, who had
made the journey out to Oregon with us when we motored there from Indiana,
and won our hearts by his watchfulness and faithfulness. Bobbie and
Toodles became great friends.
The farm we rented was "In hops," and as we had come West to be
outdoors and regain our health, we all worked in the hop fields, both dogs
playing near and having the time of their lives. We moved often, following
the market demands, and very soon Bobbie began to show aptitudes which
were to stand him in good stead later. He was a natural "heeler." When
only two months old he would heel cats, horses and people, driving them
ahead of him wherever he wanted them to go. At one place he was bringing
in a horse who was lively with his hoofs, and before Bobbie knew it, he
was sailing through the air with a well-placed kick. He blinked and caught
his breath and the next second was up and after the rebellious equine,
keeping at a safe distance, but worrying him until he was safe in the
corral. This left a mark over the dog's eye, which helped to identify him
at a future day. Our next stop was a fruit farm, where they used a
tractor. Bob was asleep, quite unconscious of danger, when the machine
caught him. His leg was crushed into the ground, which, fortunately, being
deeply cultivated, was very soft and kept him from serious injury, but the
mishap left another scar. His third accident came from an encounter with
an old gopher. While digging furiously to get at the "varmint," he broke
off parts of two teeth.
When Bobbie was about a year old our dear little Toodles had a
paralytic stroke and passed away. We buried him back of the barn. Soon
after we bought the Reo Cafe in Silverton, and realizing that it was no
fit place to keep a dog used to running at large in the country, we sold
him to a friend who was to live on the farm we were leaving. But Bob soon
located us and came into town every week-end, going back to the farm
Monday morning.
Then my wife and I decided we would go back East on a visit and take
Bob with us. So we repurchased him at three times the amount we had sold
him for, and one fine morning left Silverton in our touring car, the dog
riding on the running board or on top of the luggage. How that dog enjoyed
the trip! When we were going slow enough or stopped for a bite to eat, he
would dash off after a rabbit or on an exploring expedition over the
hills, coming back after an hour or so, panting and grinning to tell us
all about it. We reached Wolcott, Indiana, and stopped for our first
visit. Leaving Mrs. Brazier at the house Bob and I went to the filling
station to get the car "tanked up." I was inside when I heard the dog give
a yelp, and rushing out, saw him rounding a corner with three or four
snarling curs at his heels.
Thinking he would take care of himself as usual, I went back to the
car, expecting to find him at the house when I returned. When after an
hour or so he had not appeared, we began to get anxious, and as Bob knew
the sound of the horn and would come running whenever I sounded it I drove
slowly all around town, honking at frequent intervals, never doubting but
that presently I would see him bounding toward me. It was midnight before
I gave up, very much depressed, as you may Imagine. The next morning still
saw no Bob, so I got busy on the phone, calling up everyone in and around
Wolcott, but no one had seen our pet. The weekly paper went to Press that
day, but I got in touch with the editor--a mighty fine fellow and a great
lover of dogs- and he made room for an advertisement which was to run as
long as we were in that part of the country, though with out result. We
visited around Indiana for three weeks, motored into Ohio, then back to
Wolcott and resumed our search, but at last turned our faces toward home,
sick at heart over our loss, leaving word that if the dog turned up he was
to be secured and shipped back to us.
Exactly six months later, my youngest girl, Nova, and her chum
were walking down a street in Silverton when suddenly my daughter gasped
and seized her friend by the arm, exclaiming, "Oh! look! Isn't that
Bobbie?" At the words a shaggy, bedraggled, lean dog just beyond them
turned his head and the next moment fairly flew at Nova, leaping up again
and again to cover her face with kisses and making half-strangled, sobbing
sounds of relief and delight as if he could hardly voice his wordless joy.
It was Bobbie, sure enough, and it was a glad and triumphant procession
which hurried on to the restaurant, where the dog hunted out my wife and
Leona, and told them how happy he was to be home again.
But there was someone else he wanted to see. Paying no attention to the
crowd of curious and sympathetic bystanders, he rushed through the rooms
in search of me. As I take charge of things at night, I was sleeping
upstairs, and was awakened by a whirlwind which burst in at my door, con!
posed of my excited wife and dog. "Look who's here," she cried. I could
not believe my eyes. But it was no dream, for a wet tongue lapping
feverishly at my face and two dirty paws resting on my shoulders, told me
it was not a ghost, but Bobbie sure enough, who had miraculously re
turned. When the welcome was over, he dropped on the rug at my side, tired
and worn, and had a bit of sleep, in which I joined, to be awakened
presently by my faithful friend licking my hand. Then I jumped up and we
went downstairs, where he had the choicest meal the place afforded, a
thick, tender, sirloin steak and a pint of cream.
Poor Bob was almost "all in." For three days he did little but eat and
sleep and would look at us so pitifully as if to say, "My, but I am just
worn out. Can't you help me?" He would roll over on his back and hold up
his pads, fixing us with his eyes to tell us how sore his feet were. His
toe-nails were down to the quick, his eyes inflamed, his coat uneven and
matted, and his whole bearing that of an animal which has been through a
grilling experience. When he first came back he would eat little hut raw
meat, showing that he had depended for sustenance chiefly on his own
catches of rabbits or prairie fowl.
One day we took him out to the farm where we formerly lived. Bob
inspected his old bed on the porch and ran all around sniffing at familiar
spots. Suddenly he seemed to recall something and darted out to the barn,
we following to note what he would do. He went straight to the spot where
Toodles was buried, and I must say the tears stood in our eyes to see him,
digging as hard as he could, trying to get down to his old friend. If
anyone had doubted that it was the same dog, that little scene would have
convinced them.
Bobbie was three years old when just six months to the day on which he
disappeared in Indiana, he turned up in Silverton, 2551 miles by
speedometer. This does not include detours which we know he made, because
we have received letters from people who housed and fed him on his
homeward way. His "dog sense" and his love for us led him over three
thousand miles, across river and prairie, through towns and wilderness,
straight to his own folks. There was no doubt as to its being Bobbie, for
he was fully identified not only by his behavior, but by his three scars.
In addition, since his return, we have had many letters from persons who
saw him at different stages of his journey. He would turn up at some house
where we had stopped or some town we had passed through, his eyes half
closed and red with strain, his feet bleeding, ravenously hungry, so tired
he was ready to drop. Some friend of dogs would feed and doctor him and he
would rest for a while, but just as soon as he could, he would be up and
away again. Or perhaps he would jump in a car where there were children
and go home with them. He would run all over the house, searching upstairs
and down, before he would eat, then he would accept a lodging for the
night and be off in the morning before breakfast. We are told he was
always looking for someone and always in a hurry.
Bobbie has had many honors, as he fitly deserves. The Oregon
Humane Society gave him a silver medal, engraved with the record of his
long-distance journey. The presentation was made at Eugene Field School, (left) by Mr. Robert Goetz, superintendent of schools, and a large
crowd witnessed the ceremony.
A month later the Portland Realty Board held a home beautifying
exposition in that city, and a local contractor built Bob a miniature
bungalow, which weighed about nine hundred pounds, with eight windows
curtained with silk and every convenience which even a traveled dog could
wish. Bobbie and his new house were on exhibition all that week, and one
evening he was formally presented with a deed to his domicile. He was also
given a silver-plated collar, suitably inscribed. Over a hundred thousand
persons petted Bob during that week. He was the honored guest of the show,
but I must add his head was not at all turned by the reception. Nor is
this all. He received presents almost daily, with requests for his
picture; has had columns and columns of newspaper stories printed about
him, and his photograph has appeared so many times that we have had to get
a special scrapbook for all the articles and pictures.
Bob, we hope and believe, will never leave us again. He is dearer to us
than ever, and as for his proud "folks," you could not match us in any
State of the Union. Do you not agree with us that he fully deserves his
title of "the wonder dog of Oregon"?
From "Animal Pals" Edited By Curtis Wager-Smith - 1924
Macrae
Smith Company, Philadelphia
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