p. S. LEE AND HIS MARE "GLADYS 5 



had he possessed a long enough purse, would have made a 

 most excellent Master of Hounds, for he has the tact of an 

 M.P. Mr. Bevan never passes anyone on the way home from 

 hunting without raising his hat or saying "good night." 



Sired by "Fetherlock," Gladys was the best hunter ever 

 owned by Mr. Lee, and for three seasons 1889 to 1891, she 

 carried him most brilliantly to the front. No run was too long 

 for her, no fence too big, and when hounds ran into their fox 

 whoever else might be missing it was certainly not Mr. Lee 

 and his mare "Gladys." 



m 



Y'X 



Philip S. Lee and his mare "Gladys" 



Christmas Greetings. — We would gladly have deferred these until the 

 boys come home from school, but the frost set in heartily on Tuesday night 

 and robbed us all of a great day's sport in the environs of Down Hall. 

 The roads were like iron, the hedges frosted with silver rime, as we drove 

 meetwards, confident in the old adage that one day's frost never stopped 

 hunting. Outside the Green Man, Harlow, were grouped several frozen- 

 out fox-hunters of such lugubrious mien that we began to think that the 



