coursing here. They picked the scent up again, and on 

 to Great Stainton with a rattle, turned towards Stelling- 

 ton, then to the left to Elstob Hall, and crossed the 

 Hartlepool railway to Bog Hall ; he then took a road 

 for about a mile to Morden Moor, crossed in front of 

 Sands Hall, and on to Sedgefield station, where he 

 crossed the railway, ran for two or three fields and re- 

 crossed the railway back to Morden, and then to Bog 

 Hall covert ; never went in, but turned again to the 

 north, and after viewing him for a few minutes the 

 hounds ran into him at Brechon Hill farm. Time, 

 3 hours and 5 minutes. From point to point, 12 miles ; 

 as the fox ran, about 22. There were five checks, the 

 longest near Newton Ketton, and another when he 

 turned from Stellington towards Elstob, where there is 

 a fox earth, but he never went near it. In at the finish 

 were a friend of Lord Castlereagh's on a chesnut horse, 

 W. O. Elliot, M.P., T. Wilkinson, E. L. Ward, C. 

 Backhouse, A. Park, J. W. Smith, J. Brown, George 

 Dodds the huntsman, a whip, and a servant. 



Written by Eev. J. "W. Smith, 



Rector of Dinsdale. 



"SENDE HYM ALONG; 



OR, 



Ye counsatle of olde Eobert to Matstee Henrie, 



TE SONNE TO SqUYER NyMEOOD." 



" Come, tell me, old Eobert — you can if you will — 

 How to go to the fore with the best of the throng ; 



I can sit on Bay Jerry, don't care for a spill. 



And I just want to know how to send him along. 



