loo RADNOR REMINISCENCES 



Mrs. Benjamin Chew; Mr. and Mrs. Samuel D. Riddle; 

 Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Strawbridge; Mr. and Mrs. W. 

 Frazier Harrison; Mrs. J. Stanley Reeve; Miss Ellen Mary 

 Cassatt; Miss Gertrude Henry; Miss Eugenia Cassatt; 

 Miss Savage; Miss Margot Scull; Miss Kitty Smith; 

 Messrs. Henry C. Barclay, C. M. Kline, and Russell H. 

 Johnson; Mr. and Mrs. A. Barker Mellor; and Mr. and 

 Mrs. W. H. Mulford. 



Saturday, I2th May, 1917 

 The Master of the Cheshire hounds was host to all the 

 racing and foxhunting fraternity at Chesterland to-day, 

 and, barring one dark cloud that dropped a bit of rain on 

 the spotless linen spread on the lawn, the hills of Chester 

 County never looked more beautiful. The Sporting World 

 and his wife were there. They came to luncheon and they 

 stayed for tea, and some of the more favored stayed to din- 

 ner and passed the night. 



After luncheon under the lovely pines, Charles E. Ma- 

 ther, Esq., M.F.H. Brandywine, assisted by his huntsman, 

 Thompson, judged the Cheshire young entry, consisting 

 of three couples of dog puppies and six couples of bitches. 

 "Commodore," an exceptionally nice Belvoir tan dog by 

 "Pytchley Driver," out of "Burton Comfort," won his 

 class for the best dog hound, while "Tissue," a bitch of 

 great quality with especially good bone and feet, by the 

 "Cottsmore Fisherman," out of "Heythrop Tipsy," was 

 awarded the blue among the bitches. 



After the Puppy Show came the steeplechase for the 

 Cheshire Cup, of three miles over a hunting country for 

 any horse, the bona-fide property of, and ridden by, a mem- 

 ber of a recognized hunt or a farmer of Chester, Delaware, 

 or Lancaster Counties; the winner's name to be inscribed 



