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In the Hunt Country Activities Among the Horse-Lovers of BY NINA CARTER TABB. RANGE COUNTY HOUNDS‘ met at Robert Young’s place | on Saturday. They crossed | the road to draw Mrs. Geroge ‘ Garrett's woods, and in three minutes | they had started a fox that ran across the road to Bobby Young's, turned left to cross Katrina McCormick | Barnes' farm and on to the Meetz | farm. From there they ran over Horace Moffett’s place and Delancey Nichols’. On the latter farm the pack split and five hounds carried the fox on to Mrs, John Anderson’s place, the ‘Walter Woolfe farm, the Rumsey farm and on toward “The Mill,” owned by Jay Phipps. The field stopped following these hounds while the huntsmen collected hounds that had gotten off the trail. They then drew Mrs. Garrett's place again, where another fox was picked up, but they made a loss. Hounds were taken to the Young place, drew that and the Brent farm, going to- ward the Harper place, turning right toward Mrs. Johnson Redmond's and | . then to Whitewood. There they start- | ed a fox and all set sail for a good run. Fleteher Harper, master, had a fall at the first fence. As he went down and was seen to be unhurt, Harry Worcester Smith—as usual up front— took the fleld and they went at a fast elip to cross the Red Brick House farm and the Brent place to Mr. Meetz's, where they turned left by Bobby Young’s and denned on the Brent place. It was late after this run, so they called it & day and took the | hounds in. Among those out were Mr. and Mrs. Freddy Prince, Mr. and Mrs. Delancey | Nichols, Mr. and Mrs. William C. Langley, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Young, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Harrison, Mrs. Elizabeth Skinker ~Kernan, Mrs. Fletcher Harper, William Philips, | Hubert Phipps, Henry Skinker, Horace | Moffett, Roger Lambdon, Fred Carter, John Rawlings, William Eaton and “Jazz Bo” Kernan. | Horace Moffett soid his lovely 4- | year-old gray mare by Tom Tiger, to Mrs. Johnson Redmond last week. Her young son rode the mare with Orange County hounds and pro- nounced her as good & hunter as she 18 good-looking. Middleburg Hunt met at the race track on Saturday and drew back | of Mrs. Newell &ard’s house and the | Fred land. Hounds started a gray fox, | which ran around in circles for. a | little while, and they killed without | the fleld having anything of a run. | Then they drew the Whitfield place, Foxcroft, and rode over several farms in that neighborhood, but started nothing. It was practically a blank | day, as they had been out from 11 am. until after 4 pm. Suddenly, as | they were about to come in, a fox | was jumped on Foxcroft, which ran to | the Whitflelds’, came back to Fox- croft and was lost back of the stable there, giving the field half an hour’s run. The crowd was jubilant over this, as they were about to go in very sad over the day’s sport. The few who had stayed on until the finish seemed to be well repaid by this end of the day’s run. Among those hunting were Mr. and Mrs, Arthur White, Miss Charlotte Noland, | Miss Laura Sprague, Miss Thresa Bhook, Mrs. Oliver Iselin, Miss Jennie Green, Miss Julia Whiting, Mr. and Mrs. Charles §abin, Miss Bettina Bel- mont, Miss Julia Gatewood, Mrs. John Hay Whitney, Miss Nannie Fred, Barry Hall, James B. Skinner, Ridgley White, Robert Clark, Waugh Glasscock, Rogers Fred, James Pennebaker, Col. Harry Whitfield and his two daugh- | ters, Mrs. Holga Bidstrup and Mrs. | * Gaynor, Miss Connie Regan, Louie | Leith, Miss Louise Myers of Wash- | ington and Danny Shea. | Mrs. Dobson Altemus of Philadel- phia is visiting her daughter, Mrs. J. H. Whitney and was an interested spectator at the Middleburg meet on Baturday, following the road in her car to see quite a bit of the hunt. | Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Guest have returned to their Virginia home near Middleburg after having spent the | Christmas holidays with Mr. Guest's | mother in Palm Beach. Mr. and Mrs. | Danny Shea of Washington spent the | week end in Middleburg as the guests | of Miss Connie Regan in her hunt- | ing box on the Charles Sabin place. | Mr. Shea, who has long been famous | as a rider of high jumpers in all of | the largest show rings, has been | training a string of race horses most | successfuily for the past year for sev- | eral prominent horsemen. He has his | horses out at Benning this winter. | Eight of them belong to Mr. Sumner Pingree of Boston. Mr. Shea went well in the hunting field on Saturday. Hunting Log—Tomorrow’s Meets. Virginia. Piedmont Fox Hounds—Dr. A. C. Randolph, M. F. H.; Philmont, 1 pm. DON'T NEGLECT UB soothing, warming M &\ well into your chest and throat. usteroleis NOT just a salve, It’s' & “countsr-irritant” containing good old-fashioned cold remedies~ menthol, camphor le ingredients. ‘That's why it gets such fine results e=better than the old-fashioned mus- tard plaster. It penetrates, stimu- lates, warms and soothes, dra; out Tocal eon{gsfion and pain. 535 by millions for 25 years. mmended B s Al gth, Childten’s (mild), an S 3 ootHoiekeepineBurens No.sde7, The Fairfax Hunt—William Me- | Clellan, M. F. H.; Seneca road and Leesburg pike, 10 am. Orange * County Hunt—Fletcher Harper, M. F. H. For time and place call The Plains telephone central. Loudoun Hunt Club—J. R. H. Alex- ander, M. F. H.; Dry Mill Bridge, 1 pm, Maryland. Elkridge-Harford Hunt—H. 8. Lae dew, M. F. H.; Greens Bridge, 11 am. Riding and Hunt Club Hounds—Dr. Fred R. Sanderson, M. F. H.; Scot~ land, 1:45 pm. Henry Timmons of. Tulsa is the only one of Oklahoma’s 44 Senators who wears a mustache. THE EVENING FOUR FACE DEAT IN ELEGTRIC CHAIR Group Is Second on'Sing Sing Mass-Execution Schedule. By the Associated Press. OSSINING, N. Y, January 11.— ‘Three colored youths in their teens and a white man have four more days to live unless Gov. Lehman saves them from execution. They are the second of three groups | in Sing Sing Prison’s death house who were to die in mass executions on successive Thursday nights, be- ginning last week. But four of six young hold-up killers were saved from the electric chair last Thursday, giv- ing renewed hope to those scheduled to die this week. ‘The four now facing the chair are Wentworth Springer, 17; Lawrence Jackson, 18, and Robert Taliaferro, 19, colored, convicted of killing Mor- ris Ernest for $3.50 in a Manhattan hold-up, and Louis Lazar, 29, convict- ed of slaying Morris Saskowitz in Brooklyn in a fued over money. Five other prisoners, two of them minors, are under sentence to be exe- cuted a week from Thursday night. Humanitarian groups besieged Gov. STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MONDAY, JANUARY 11, 1937. Lehman with appeals for clemency last week, and two nights before the scheduled execution 200 Italian fathers and mothers from the Italian se¢- tion knelt in prayer in the street be- fore the Governor’s home in New York City. “I'm younger than Scata, but no- body cares about me,” Jackson, one of the colored youths, said today. He referred to 19-year-old Salvatore Scata of Hartford, Conn., saved only & few hours before last Thursday's executions of Theodore Didonne, 31, and Joseph Bolognia, 24. The three other participants in the Brooklyn hold-up slaying of a subway collector, saved by the Governor the previous night, were Dominick Zizzo, 27; Sam- uel Kimmel, 22, and Eugene Bruno, 23. All face life imprisonment. Lazar’s chances for clemency rest chiefly on the fact that it required two convictions to keep him in the death house. His first conviction was set aside by the Court of Appeals. About 2,000 applications to see an execution are on file at Warden Lewis E. Lawes’ office. From this list he will select a dozen citizens to be legal witnesses Thursday night. THE HAY-ADAMS HOUSE Sixteenth Street at Lafayette Park One of the Nation’s Finer Hotels Homelike Atmosphere Large, spacious, magnificently furnished rooms and suites. Only a few hundred feet across Lafayette Park to the White House. 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