. The driving clubs of greater Boston . LEWIS WHITAKER Patron and Comrade of "Uncle Jock" Bowen. Owner of Refina, 2:08 1-2; Jesse Hanson, 2:13 3-4, etc. together both were sure to get to quarreling like a couple of school boys. One evening in the dining room of one of the Dover, N. H., hotels, the discussion between the two was whether a pint of beans would swell to fill a two-quart bean pot. "Old Whit" de- clared that they would, while "Uncle Jock" was as firm in telling the former he had grown so old that he had become foolish to talk such rubbish. The argument


. The driving clubs of greater Boston . LEWIS WHITAKER Patron and Comrade of "Uncle Jock" Bowen. Owner of Refina, 2:08 1-2; Jesse Hanson, 2:13 3-4, etc. together both were sure to get to quarreling like a couple of school boys. One evening in the dining room of one of the Dover, N. H., hotels, the discussion between the two was whether a pint of beans would swell to fill a two-quart bean pot. "Old Whit" de- clared that they would, while "Uncle Jock" was as firm in telling the former he had grown so old that he had become foolish to talk such rubbish. The argument kept the entire room in a howl of laughter. But when "Uncle Jock" had his pocket nicked at the Lexington meeting, "Old Whit" had his turn. He had remained to see the two weeks' meeting at Dover, and when the news came he said that "Uncle Jock" was not a safe person to carry money around. He was too old for one thing, and another was that he would insist in putting his money in his vest pocket, just because Sam Lang- maid always did when he was with him. The consequence was, "Whit" said, that he was


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjecthorses, bookyear1914