2 14 Horse and Hound. 



Farm, White Marsh Valley, Montgomery 

 County, above Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia. Tele- 

 graph office and railroad station, Philadelphia 

 and Reading Railroad Terminals, Chestnut tlill, 

 Philadelphia. Post-office, Chestnut Hill, Phila- 

 delphia. Days of meeting, Saturdays and legal 

 holidays, with a bye day, mostly Wednesday, in 

 the middle of the week. Season, from October 

 1st to March ist, or as much longer as the 

 going pennits. Country, White Marsh Valley, 

 mostly meadow land, post and rail fences. Out- 

 side of the valley the country is rolling, fences 

 generally well kept up, and farms prosperous. A 

 good open country, very little rough going. Club 

 organized in the fall of 1903; has a full member- 

 ship list of one hundred riding members, also a 

 list of about thirty-five subscribing members. 

 The hounds for the last two seasons have been 

 run as a drag pack. 



The Patapsco Hunt. — Master, Dorsey M. 

 Williams (P. O. address, Ellicott City, Md.). 

 Officers: President, Grosvenor Hanson; Vice- 

 President, Colonel Chas. F. Macklin; Secretary, 

 Rowland C. West ( Catonsville, Md.) ; Hunts- 

 man, the Master hunts the hounds (the Master 

 maintains a stable of about fifteen schooled hunt- 

 ers, and always mounts guests of the hunt) ; 

 Whippers-in, first, N. Roger Williams ; second, A. 

 R. H. Ranson, Jr. ; Kennelman, Joseph Harman. 

 Hounds, about twenty couples of American 



