A FOXHUNTING JOURNAL 137 



Our second draw was Calvert's Swamp, where another 

 fox was viewed away down-country, with quite a holding 

 scent, hounds carrying him on into Mr. C. C. Harrison's 

 meadows, down the creek to the wood on top of the hill, 

 then right-handed and back to where we found. Here he 

 was viewed again by Higgins, and, circling, took the same 

 line as before; crossing the Newtown Road and, pointing 

 down-country, took us to Yarnall's Hollow, where another 

 fox broke ahead of hounds, the pack splitting and four and 

 one-half couples going on the line of the fresh fox. The 

 hunted fox then turned up the Hollow, circling back, and 

 was finally marked to ground in the hillside by Mrs. Mc- 

 Govern's little house, near where we first found him. 



A field of sixty-three out; quite the record for a cubbmg 

 morning, among them being: Mr. Bodine; John and Mrs. 

 Converse; Miss Emily Welsh; Miss Betty Trotter, of 

 White Marsh; Misses Ellen Mary and Eugenia Cassatt; 

 Ben Chew; Bob and Mrs. Strawbridge; R. Nelson Buckley; 

 Roddy and Tommy Wanamaker; Mr. Beale; Gurney 

 Munn; Mrs. Howard Henry; A. J. A. Devereux; F. Am- 

 brose Clarke; Thornton Baker; Dick McMeely; Bob Mont- 

 gomery; Isaac Clothier, and his little daughter on a pony 

 that ran away; Miss Gertrude Heckscher; William and 

 Mrs. du Pont; and Lowber and Walter Stokes. 



Saturday, 2^th October, 19 19 



The Race Committee at Rose Tree, composed of Charles 

 A. Dohan, Emanuel Hey, M. Roy Jackson, Walter M. 

 Jeffords, M.F.H., and George W. Orton, are very much to 

 be congratulated on their meeting of Saturday, which 

 every one agreed was quite the best ever given in this sec- 

 tion of the country; not only from an artistic standpoint, 

 but from a racing one as well. Everything was beautifully 



