1 66 RADNOR REMINISCENCES 



"Miss Alice, that bowl of punch on the window-sill is for 

 you and your friends; it has more body to it than the bowl 

 on the table!" 



After a toast to the ladies, foxhunting, and "Oracle II," 

 and a stroll through the lovely gardens of Hampton, we 

 motored back to Baltimore and dined on the train. 



Among the cosmopolitan throng that the Maryland 

 Hunt Cup always attracts were: Mrs. Henry Bell, Miss 

 Ridgely, Mrs. Ridgely, Brose and Mrs. Clarke, "Foxy" 

 Keene, Arthur Hall, Victor and Mrs. Mather, Ben Chew, 

 Miss Welsh, W. W. Lanahan, Redmond C. Steward, T. 

 Courtney Jenkins, W. Plunket Stewart, Devy and Mrs. 

 Devereux, Govey Cadwalader, Gerry Leiper, George and 

 Mrs. Saportas, Bill and Mrs. Clothier, Mrs. Henry, Ned 

 Ilsley, Dal and Mrs. Dixon, Miss Letty McKim, Jim Mad- 

 dox, B. H. Brewster, Jr., John Bosley, Jr., Billy Wilbur, 

 Gilbert Mather, Miss Mather, Mrs. Strassburger, " Bint" 

 Toland, Mrs. Meyers Pierce, Clarence Kline, Frank Bonsai, 

 Eugene Levering, Jr., " Mack " Kennedy, Geoffery Tower, 

 Harry Renwick, Al and Mrs. Davis, and Bob Strawbridge. 



Attend, ye farmers, to this tale, 

 And when ye mend the broken rail, 

 Reflect with pleasure on a sport, 

 That lures your landlord from the court. 

 To dwell and spend his rents among 

 The country folk from whom they sprung- 

 And should his steed with trampling feet, 

 Be urged across your tender wheat, 

 That steed, perchance, by you was bred, 

 And yours the corn by which he's fed. 

 Ah! then restrain your rising ire, 

 Nor rashly curse the hunting squire. 



Warburtom 



