so RADNOR REMINISCENCES 



to their noses again, and, on reaching a hilltop, we could 

 see our fox, barely able to crawl, being chased by a man 

 only two fields ahead of hounds. A friendly lane here gave 

 us a short cut, and, on galloping up, instead of finding 

 hounds worrying their fox, we found the aforementioned 

 man standing up in a motor in front of the Chester 

 Heights Church, holding the fox by the back of its neck, 

 with the forty-two and one half couples of hounds giving 

 him a very nervous time. Will Leverton and Sam Kirk 

 soon relieved his anxiety, and we started a long fourteen 

 miles back home via Sycamore Mills. 



We were so far out of our own country at one time that 

 not one of the field knew where we were; but on coming on 

 to a road I saw a sign-post, marking the Pennsylvania and 

 Delaware boundary. We went a couple of miles farther 

 south from this point, so were well within the Delaware 

 State Hnes. 



All that were left out of a field of over fifty, were: 

 John R. Valentine, ex-M.F.H., of Radnor; Fred Sturges 

 on "Cheavau"; Nelson Buckley on "Ruskin"; Ned 

 Dougherty; Miss Ruth Wood on the little grey Arab; 

 Grafton Pyne, of New York; Lehrman Stuart, of Balti- 

 more; Gerry Leiper; Sam Pinkerton, Rose Tree's ex-hunts- 

 man; Dr. Evans following along the roads in a motor; and 

 Dr. Edgar Powell on a <;hestnut three-year-old. 



