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Related article: Henry Bentinck are taking a house near Langham, not far from historic Ranksborough Gorse. Thus, with few exceptions, after the return of the Household Cavalry, Melton will be itself, save and except for the Nateglinide 120 Mg irreparable blanks left by the War. The Quorn.— Kirby Gate, in- deed, showed no falling off. There were even more brakes and carts oo.] **OUR VAN. (I 447 lan ever. Nor was the ridge ver Gartree Hill thorn coverts 2SS crowded than of old. Shrill bouts of ecstacy greeted the leparture of the fox for Burton Lats, and there was a mighty barge of horsemen and horse- vomen as the pack were let go. t all came to very little, for there VRS no scent. The BelYoir. — The principal jvent of moment in this country las been the marriage of the naster, Sir Gilbert Greenall, to N^iss Griffith. The new Lady Cjreenall is not a stranger to her liusband's hunt. In Cheshire she is well known as an enthusiast for hunting, and as a fine horse- woman. The changeable weather of the cubbing season, in which every variety of climate was felt, except that there was not rain enough, made the early history of the season somewhat unsatis- factory. There are no great runs so far to record. Yet every one notes how well the famous pack is working, and I think it would have been impossible for a hunt- ing man to have a more enjoyable sight than the way hounds worked out a difficult line, on November loth, from Sherbrooke's covert. Scent was at all times catchy. There were many foot people about. The line was often foiled. Yet Capell and his hounds made a run of it. But for the way the horses were galloping it was difficult to realise how fast the hounds were going. The fox was headed several times, and there were some long checks. Thus he was able at last to run them out of scent near Hose village. Mr. George Parker, of Wicklow Lodge, had Buy Nateglinide a very nasty fall. His horse put his foot in a hole when trotting towards Sherbrooke's covert. This kind of fall is always the worst. The Percy Hounds. — The pre- sent master of these hounds, Mr. A. F. Cress well, has tried many kinds of sport, polo at Ranelagh — he was in the Coldstreams then — racing, in which fortune did Nateglinide 60 Mg not greatly smile on him, and now he is master of the Percy Hounds. This pack, which were founded by the present Duke of Northum- berland when he was Lord Percy, hunt a very excellent country round Alnwick. To the Castle Mr. Cresswell brought his hounds for their opening meet. The pack is rather a notable one, and has been formed with great care, and will no doubt with time build up into a first-rate kennel. Mr. Cresswell mounts his men well (he used to ride some good horses in his Melton days), and the whole turn-out is smart. Besides the Duke, Lord Grey is a sup- porter of the pack, so that the master finds his lines cast in pleasant places. Needless to say, the meet at Alnwick Castle was a very picturesque scene. The run that followed was over a good country, but was marred by want of scent. The Percy have justly the reputation of being one of the best mounted fields out of Leices- tershire. The Y. W. H.— Both these hunts are doing well. The Cirences- ter division has had the advantage of Lord Bathurst as master from the beginning, and now has a new huntsman in James Cooper, who is a son of the Bel voir huntsman of that name. Cooper was for a short time with tlie Warwick- shire, but had scarcely begun to make a name when he had a terri- ble fall, which laid him up for a time. The Cricklade Division has Mr. Butt Miller as master and hunts- man. He started with some dis- advantages, as foxes were not too plentiful, and not everybody was pleased to see the master hunting his own hounds. There was, too, a good deal of wire. But keen- 448 BAILY S MAGAZINE. ness and patience will do much. No one will deny that with a vastly improved pack of hounds Mr. Butt Miller is a good hunts- man and shows sport of the best. Mr. Hooper Deacon has also been so long a consistent supporter of hunting, and has given the help of a great local popularity, with the effect that there is much less wire and many more foxes than there were a few years ago. Al- together this delightful country Nateglinide Starlix promises to be as attractive to sportsmen as ever. The Warwiokshire.— Plenty of foxes in Shuckbrough is always good for future prospects, and on Thursday, November ist, the sound of the horse and the hounds sent them scattering in all direc- tions. A leash were soon ac- counted for. Hounds were taken to a holloa and ran brilliantly to Helidon. These seventeen minutes were very sharp, and Mr. Freake had the best of it all the way, and was the first, though not the last, to tackle a very nasty fence, a combination of wire netting and timber, with a brook on the far side that might well daunt even a good man on a bold horse. This was one of those bright little bursts which marked the close of cub- hunting almost everywhere. Those packs which began the regular season Starlix Nateglinide in the first week in Novem- ber had for the most part better opening days than those that waited for a week later. The Pytohley had their first full dress Wednesday on Novem- ber 7th at North Kilworth. The sticks had plenty of foxes, but whatever direction they tried there was always a man with or without a dog, and hope was turned into disappointment. So the day wore on till nearly every- body had gone home, and then there was a gallop of about twenty minutes from Misterton Reeds to the other side of Gii- morton. Let me gi ve their nanaes: Mr. C. Mills, Mr. Broughtoe Leigh, Captain Renton, Mr. Pow- lett, and the master. These had the experience of a run over a beautiful line, the Pytchl^ hounds running in front, and no