THE UNPOPULAR HUNT.
It is, T think, beyond question that hunting— of stag, of fox and of hare, and even of otter— is a sport approaching a social crisis (writes Sir William Beach Thomas in the "Spectator"). Three notable examples of local and very practical opposition to the hunt have occurred within the last few weeks. The staghounds have been clean forbidden some farm lands in the SoutliWest. Foxes have been shot down to the vanishing point in one district of the Eastern Counties; in other places packs of beagles and harriers liave got into trouble by hunting over land where they were not expected or wanted. In a good many places barbed wire is put up intentionally, and without red notice boards of warning. The opposition is not chieily humanitarian, though it is supported by humanitarians. It comes from farmers and landowners who do not care for the expense of repairing fences. It conies al?o from men who prefer shooting to hunting, and it conies from poultrykeepers. Certainly a total disappearance of the sacrosanctity of the fox has to be recorded from most shires, except perhaps Leicestershire and Rutland.
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Auckland Star, Volume LX, Issue 45, 22 February 1929, Page 6
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190THE UNPOPULAR HUNT. Auckland Star, Volume LX, Issue 45, 22 February 1929, Page 6
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