3-1 
THE ST RAM) MAGA'/IXE. 
BOUGH WORK FOR THE NIBLICK. 
wheat and oats were growing, had been rolled , 
so that at times we found quite good brassie 
lies even on these. One very rough arable 
field gave us much trouble, and for a time 
a heavy niblick was the favourite club. 
After crossing a road we unfortunately 
pitched into a farm-yard, but got out with 
some trouble into a pasture field, and, as it 
was nearly six o'clock, we inserted a stump 
where the ball lay and stopped for the day 
close to Crampton House Farm, between 
Biddenden and High Halden. Near here 
our carriage met us, and we drove home after 
a fair day’s work of about fourteen miles. 
On Tuesday morning we drove to Crampton 
House, where the owner of the farm greeted 
us very cordially, and our 428th shot, with a 
cleek, was a good one. Then over a hedge into 
a ditch — this kind of thing was repeated 
several times — and a pulled stroke landed us 
into a small wood, but a chopped shot with 
the niblick brought us back into a meadow. 
We drove clean through a thick hedge with a 
brassie, and then, passing over a road, we 
SOME IDEA OF Tlllt DIFFICULTIES ENCOUNTERED MAY BE GAINED FROM THE ABOVE PHOTOGRAPH. 
