- Bellefonte, Pa., September 26, 1930. BAD HABIT LAND. The topsyest-turveyest land that I know Is the land where the careless and bad children go. boss resolves to do somethin’ nice Now take for example the dear little g5r him, when Mike comes down boys with tuberculosis. Who seldom, if ever, help pick up their So he induces a friend of his to toys. induce his friend, Bill Calkins, to I know at least two, and perhaps You Jet Mike Dolan come down to his know more, ranch in New Mexico, to remain Whose shoes lie on tables and hats on there indefinitely an’ without cost ~~ floor. : to his former employer, provided Their chiffioner drawers so untidy, and Mike don’t die in the interim. Yes, think ! sir, this horseman thinks a lot of Near suits of white duck I found bot- Mike, but not so much he's willin’ tles of ink, to pay his board an’ lodgin’ at a With roller skates, brushes, and oftena ganatorium; an’ as the doctors say shirt— Mike must seek a warm, dry, high Each one always open collecting the altitude an’ sleep out o' doors, Bill dirt. Calkins falls heir to. him. Soap floating in basins, gum stuck to Now, an extra mouth to feed an’ the glass, 'an extra bed for his Chinese house-' While gone every handle of bright polish- keeper an’ cook to make up daily ed brass don't annoy Bill Calkins none. Their mothers implore them to try and Hogpitality's a religion with him, be neat. ,an’' even if he'd been offered money They'll say, “Yes, I will” andfly into, for Mike's board an’ lodgin’ he the street. ' wouldn't have accepted it. In fact, But lo] Hopsy-turvy land sends out a he’d have resented the offer an’ 1 witch | reminded the feller he was runnin’, Whose name is ‘‘Bad Habit” and ecar- ries a switch She rides on the back of a fierce look- ing bat And whisks them away without even a hat. “Tis only the untidy boys, understand, She'll carry while sleeping to Bad Habit Land. Now as for the girls, sight, With clothes scattered ‘round where they left them last night. New bows of silk ribbon of black, brown and blue Are thrown in a corner beside a soiled shoe. In top drawers are brushes and combs filled with hair, Clean belts and kid gloves near an old Teddy bear. Their fine bureau silver is tarnished black, While pretty white shirt pinned in the back, Their tooth brush and slippers are thrown on the floor, I'm really ashamed to betray any more. Though carelsss, they sleep most- serene- ly and bland *Till, they, too, their rooms are a and waists are are taken to Bad Habit Land. And once they arrive there—now mind what I say: Forever and ever and ever they'll stay. Poor father and mother may beg on each knee, They're held by Bad Habits and cannot get free, They're prisoners for life, little girls, and what's more, They're kept in a place with a strong iron door, And there they may linger like little caged rabbits, Beware then each child, of the land of “Bad Habits.” BLOOD WILL TELL! Old Dad Tully, proprietor of the 70 Ranch, laid aside his newspaper and gazed thoughtfully and a little wistfully out across tem thousand acres of green meadow. ‘A horse! a horse!” he murmured, “my Kking- dom for a horse.” He turned to me. “Who was the cuss that got off that line?” I ventured to remind him that the Bard of Avon had placed that line in the mouth of King Richard III. “An’ that was in a day when the thoroughbred was unknown,” the old cattleman resumed. “They raised horses for utlitarian purposes then, You'd think old King Richard, well konwin’ he, like all fightin’ men might need a brisk horse in a hur- ry some day, would have set about breedin’ somethin’ faster than the big Normans an’ Percherons the knights had to ride, if they wastc carry all their armor with them. “It's a far cry, as the poet says, from King Richard's day to the present; yet it ain't more'n ten years since our cavalry people woke up to the fact that this branch o’ the military service, aimin’ to be mobile, aint’ as mobile as it ought to be. But they're rapidly gettin’ it mobiler.” “How?” I queried. “By refusing to buy scrub horses an’ breedin’ for not less than half thoroughbreds. I beat the United States cavalry to that idea by about a year, but I don't take no credit to myself for it. It was Mike Dolan that put that useful thought over on me—An I've just been thinkin’ of Mike—readin’ in the paper about how Gallant Fox won the Preak- ness, an’ then come back two weeks later an’ won the Derby. “Me an’ Mike used to dream ©’ breedin’ a horse that would win the Derby, but Mike Dolan’s dead an’ gone, an’ all I have left to remind me of him is a couple o’ hundred head of half an’ three-quarter thoroughbred young horses runnin’ wild on my range against the day when the officer from the Remount Service comes up to trade me out of the tops of them. There aint’ a cent of profit rasin’ horses for our government, but I suppose it’s up to some of us to help the cavalry peo- ple out, even if we only break even doin’ it. “At that, my orders to my book- keeper are not to be too dog-goned accurate; in the horse accountin’; I'm afraid I might run into alittle red ink, an’ what I don’t know will never trouble me. As the feller says. a little knowledge is a dan- gerous thing, although thoroughly realized it until I met up with Mike Dolan an’ learn about horses from him.” Along about 1915, I think it was (Dad continued) I received a letter from a fellow cattleman name ©0’ Bill Calkins. Bill an’ me used to ride the range together down in New Mexico in the days when our greatest ambition run to ownin’ a hat that cost 8 hundred an’ fifty dollars. Bill informs me he is send-, in’ to me, F. O. B. ranch, the per- son of one Mike Dolan, a friend of a friend of a friend of his an’ pres- ently, to be a friend of mine. This friend thrice removed an’ gettin’ further (accordin’ to Bill 'farm down in Kentucky an’ runs race horses. Mike Dolan is his jockey, an’ from all Bill has heen able to learn, Mike is so good his ' cattle, not a hotel. Bill informs me Mike has stuck it ‘out a month at his ranch, all the | time gettin’ weaker an’ weaker. Finally he makes an open confession 'to Bill Calkins. He tells Bill the ‘climate is just right for him but ' cow-ranch grub aint. on account of | runnin’ too high in starches an’ too low in variety. Bill never did have truck with , chickens an’ the ranch is too far | from town to admit of a constant supply of fresh eggs an’ vegetables. | Also, bein’ an old-time cow-outfit, butter, milk an’ cream ain't to be | found on it, nor is there a man on | the payroll low enough to break a | cow-brute to milk. A beef critter "is always a worry but a mlich cow {is sure depressin’, because she can't | be neglected. Night an’ mornin’ | she’s got to be milked. Lackin’ a balanced diet, there- fore, Mike Dolan is just naturally slippin’ further an’ further down the | puny list; finally he grows desperate an’ tells his host about it, at the {same time admittin’ he don’t know what he's goin’ to do about it, be- cause he can’t leave on account he's so broke he rattles when he rolls (over in bed. In his honor of calamity Bill Calk- ins remembers me. Also, havin’ visited me once, he knows my cook, | Zing, swings a mean skillet; that the said Zing further maintains a family vegetable garden; that I tolerate hens on the 70 Ranch an’ keep two fresh Guernsey cows on hand for family use; that I discov- |ered in my middle years that good "beds are obtainable if you pay the | price. an’ that the climate here is good for man or beast. | Wherefore, he’s about to buy Mike | Dolan a one-way ticket to my ship- { pin’ point an’ asks me to meet him ian’ be good to him because Mike is ! certainly one nice little feller an’ no | mistake, an’ all courtesies accorded ‘him will be the same as accorded 'to yours faithfully, Bill Calkins. | Which this low-flung Bill ain't so | much as sentme a picture post card. iin ten years! {| The day Mike is due I get into my old car an’ go down to the rail- ‘road to meet him an’ my heart sure goes out to him, a little quarter- portion of a boy about twen- ty-eight years old but lookin’ forty. He has a little round homely face like a Waterbury clock, only more intelligent, an’ just as white an’ free from guile. It's framed burn hair, the shade that women go crazy over, an’ he has black eye- brows an’ black eyelashes an’ big prown eyes like a dyin’ deer’s. But there’s grit an’ humor in them eyes an’ a smile that never left them until the day he found himself too broke to buy oats for his horse. When he grins his shy wistful grin one sees a flash o’ fine white i teeth, an’ then, sick as he is, the little feller is almos’ beautiful to look at. Yes, sir, what Mike Dolan has— what’ radiates an’ sparkles from him—is honesty an’ personality an’ magnetism, which, added to his fragility, awakens in me a whole lot of doramnt paternalism. The colored porter carries him off the train in his arms an’ sets him down on the platform in front of me, “Hello, Mike, you young wallop- er,” says I, wishin’ to make the boy feel to home an’ welcome as an early fall rain in a dry year. “Welcome to the 70 Ranch.” “Hello, Mr. Tully,” he pipes back. “Thanks for the welcome, more particular since there ain’t no sound reason for it.” He give me a long searchin’ look an’ shook his head. “Strange as it may seem, this old boy's real” he says to himself. “I reckon there must be a God, after all.” Then he shoves his frail little paw into mine. “Mr. Tully, it’s most awful’ kind of you to take me in, an’ you not knowin’ me from a saddle. An’ I do appreciate you meetin’ me yourself. I ' figgered your time would be so valuable you'd send a hired man.” “Hell's fire, Mike,” I says, ‘you're my guest, an’ a friend of a friend of a friend o’ mine; Welcome to the 70 Ranch a second time.” “sPhanks, Mr. Tully. I'll make | myself to home, but I won't be | presumin’ long on your hospitality.” 1 never | | “Where you headed for next?” | Like a fool I dont get his meanin’. | “For the potter’s field—if you got one in these parts, Mr. Tully.” “Boy,” I says. “I wouldn’t bury you in the potter's field on a bet. I got my own private cemetery ufi- der ‘a ‘nice weepin’ willer tree out to the ranch. T got a horse buried there now—my old top cuttin’ horse, Delusion. I got a monument 'over him an’ Tl plant you alongside him. That's fair, ain’t it?" in a thick mop of au- 1 — “Was he a good horse, Mr. Tul ly?” Y ere was a thoroughbred, I had papers on him, too, Mike. He was just a niite too slow for a race horse, so a friend o' mine give him to me for a saddler.” “A feller can’t ask no better com- any than that, Mr. Tully,” sa Rik. “Me, I'm a jockey an’ born ina box stall. My teethin’ ring was the end of a bat—what you'd call a racin’ quirt.” An’ he looks up at me with that winnin’ grin o’ his. “I hate to be a nuisance, but would you mind helpin’ me over to the automobile? An’ if you don’t mind, would you put some straw in the tonneau so’s I can lie down on the way to the ranch? I'm afraid Icant set up on the seat beside you.” { I was tore between a desire to send Bill Calkins a dirty telegram or one o thanks for sendin’ this misfortunate boy to me. Not that I'm so danged long on philanthropy but because it would have hurt me to see a stray dog up against it like Mike Dolan was. i Right then an’ there I make up. my mind to take care o’ Mike an’ see him through an’ to tell the truth, I was a mite glad o' the, chance, even if it was a long one. Bettin’ on long shots was always my favorite diversion. . So I carry Mike Dolan over to the nearest saloon an’ buy him a jolt o' whisky that was so good it cost me two bits a drink. Then I lay in a case of it for medicinal purposes, together with a case of old Portugee sherry, spread a foot o’ sweet timothy hayin the tonneau an’ drive him out here all nice an’ easy. I don’t miss him up on the front seat, however, because I have a trained nurse sittin’ up there with me. Yes, ve made up my mind to get expensive. Beef was up that year an’ I'd had an eighty-five percent calf crop the two years previous. Well, sir, the trained nurse puts Mike Dolan to bed out on the screened veranda, where he can get lots o' fresh air. She feeds him eggnog an’ sherry an’ egg, an’ the best of invalid grub, in addition to givin’ him sponge baths an alcohol rubs. At the end of a month we lift him out o’ bed an’ weigh him, an’ the boy's fleshed up all o two pounds. So we keep him in bed six months altogether an’ by that time he’s quit coughin’ an’ weighs a hundred an’ two which he ‘lows is his regular ridin’ weight. So Ilet him up an’ fire the nurse an’ sub- stitute old Zing. I never begrudged the money I spent on Mike Dolan. He was the best company I've ever had at the ranch an’ that’s takin’ in a lot © territory. He never would run out o’ stories, none of 'em snappy Or vulgar an’ all of em sad or funny. He'd been born an' brought upin a world I mever knew nothin’ about; he talked a language I had to learn before I could understand what he ment; an’ I learned about horses from him, Me, I thought I knew somethin’ about horses thirty years before Mike Dolan was born. But I didn’t. Mike judged every cayuse on the ranch an’ faulted ’em all I never knew I had such a collection 0’ nags with spavins, ringbone, splints curbs an’ bad tendons until Mike found ‘em an’ showed ’em to me. I had two cow ponies I wouldn't have sold for a thousand dollars each, until Mike Dolan showed me where they were no goood. A good hoise to me is a horse that can do his work cleverly an’ willin'lypstand abuse an’ never pitch with me ex. ceptin’ on frosty mornin's. To Mike Dolan a good horse was a horse that was bred in the purple an’, as a two-year-old, could work an eighth in eleven, a quarter in twenty-two an’ three-eighths in thirty-four an two- fifths—or thereabuots. Well, sir, as I say, Mike Dolan without ever meanin’ to. made me ashamed of every horse in my cab- allada. I had a dozen chunky little ropin’ horses that had hairy fetlocks, showin’ a faint strain o' shire in ’'em, but Lordy, how they could bust a steer an’ hold him. But Mike Dolan couldn’t even bear to look at ’em. “Rubbish, Dad,” says he; “all plain rubbish. Id iather look at a donkey, because a donkey's all of what he is, an’ you know exactly what he’s goin te give you.” I apologize an’ explain patiently that usually a thoroughbreds blood is too hot for cow work, to which he ieplies that half a loaf is bet- ter'n none an’ that if I have half- thoroughberd cow horses each one’ll do the work © two cold-blooded horses an’ I won't have so many mouths to feed. What I can’t use myself, he allows I can sell to the government for cavalry remounts. He tells me how the Australian cavalry horses in the Egyptian cam- paign; bein’ walers, or half thor- oughbreds, outfoot, outmarch, out. thirst an’ underfeed the cold-blood- ed mounts. They wasted slower in campaign, lastin’ at least six weeks longer, an’ they come back a month sooner. An they had more intel- ligence. ! The result of all this missionary work is that presently I give Mike a letter o’ credit an’ send him East to pick me up a good thoroughbred stallion that's been broke down racin’, ‘but that don't affect him none for breedin’ purposes. For a thous- and for the right horse, but Mike ain’t. Still, he spends all the let- ter o credit an’ brings me back three three-year-old mares that ain't showed much on the race track. But that don’t trouble Mike Dolan none, although my foreman almost dies when he learns o' my sinful ex- travagance. “Which all these here animals is a gift,” says Mike. “Many a mare that couldn't do a quarter faster'n twenty-five has dropped colts that broke world records when bred to the right stallion. It's their breedin’ an’ conformation that I go on’ an’ these mares will drop big foals. An’ “They're big: mares, too, an’ aswe expect the dam to give the offspring fully sixty an’ maybe seventy per- cent o’ the class they're born with, you can just bet your ranch, Dad. these mares will drop big foals. An’ no good little horse ever beat a good big horse, at any distance over six furlongs. You got to have a big powerful horse to go a mile an’ a quarter.” “But I ain't wishful for runnin’ horses, Mike,” I explain. “The big idea was to improve the quality of our cow horses.” “Which we'll do the same,” says Mike. “You'll sure get some grand stock horses. But we”ll raise some thoroughbreds, too, an’ if we only get one good horse out o' the lot, this thoroughbred stock won't cost on, I'm a fool.” : Well, I couldn't get rid o' Mike, because I liked him. Of course I'd figgered that, now he was well again, he’d go back to ridin’ runnin’ horses, but I see now this ain’t his idea o’ the full life. “I'm a good jockey,” says Mike, “put I ain't so good owners are fightin’ to buy my contract. The money’s in breedin’ an'trainin’ horses I can win with, an’ if this ain't a grand ranch to breed blooded stock I'm a fool.” So I seen there was nothin’ else to do but put Mike Dolan on the pay roll at the wages of a top cow hand. I might as well confess. too, I'm curious as a pet coon to see what comes of his experiment, par- informs me he’s’ ticularly as he picked the three mares to make a perfect “nick” when bred to this here stallion Moppe:up. Mike don’t give me no rest. Ap- parently he ain't a drivin’ me. No sir, he just keeps on suggestin’ things, so it ain’t no time until I'm suggested into settin’ aside a quar- ter-section o' finest subirrigated meadow on the 70 Ranch as a stud farm. An’ a barbed-wire fence won't do. No, sir; I got to put in sixteen foot redwood posts with fine heavy wire mesh the foals can’t get their feet into or jump or get hurt none if they run in to it. The next thing I know I'm build- in’ a barn with a dozen boxes an’ space upstairs for hay, besides a separate stallion barn, an’ I'm in twenty thousand dollars on the whole shebang. Yes, sir, twenty thousand dollars in assets I don’t need an’ don’t want, includin’ a room for Mike, who won't sleep up to the house no more. Along in February an’ March of the followin’ year I have eighteen half thoroughbred foals an’ ‘three that’s all thoroughbred. Mike don’t even bother to look my foals over a tall, although to my mind they're the likeliest-lookin' to feel grateful to Mike for suggestin’ them. That stallion begets about seven- ty percent liver-colored chestnuts, which is a color I've always admir- ed in a horse. Mike's youngsters are all colts an’ big, but he loses one of the . mares in colt birth, so promptly, an’ without consultin’ me, he knocks one o’' my half-bred fillies on the head an’ steals the mare for a foster mother, an’ Mike's happy notwithstandin’ I've just lost a thousand dollar mare. “Dont’ worry, Dad,” says Mike. “If this colt amounts to anythin’ he'll be worth ten of his mother. It’s just a question o’ time.” Well, them three colts prosper like the green bay tree. Meanwhile the two remainin’ mares are rebred to Mopperup. From the day they're dropped Mike is out in the field monkeyin' an’ foolin’ around with his three colts. They're a nibbin him an’ rearin’ up an’ placin’ their little legs on his shoulders an a-wallopin’ him from time to time with playful kicks which he don’t mind. He halter-breaks 'em when they're three months old; he watches ’em an’ guards ‘em like a mother, an’ when theyre eight months old he weans ‘em. But does that mean they stop drinkin’ milk? It does not. Before I know it, Mike has got me to order the foreman to break three big, heavy milkin’ Hereford cows to stand quiet while Zing milks ‘em, which Zing says milkin’ two cows for them dog-goned colts ain't accordin’ to Hoyle. So I have to raise the heathen’s wages to quiet him. Mike, he cooks up every night a hot mess for his coits—crushed oats, a little wheat, handful o' coin an’ bran—an’ the warm milk in it, with a few carrots, which we wouldn't never have had no carrots if Zing didn't plant ’em in my private yege- table garden, whereat the heathen kicks some more. Yes, sir, all the peace an ’'quiet o’ my life is disturb- ed by this demon, Mike Dolan—an’ I ain’t got the heart to hurt him. Life ain’t been very kind to Mike from birth, I gather, an’ he plumb is happy now for the first time. It's a terrible thing to destroy a feller human’s happiness, but I come mighty close to itwhen Mike starts honeyin’ me out o' gradin’ him a little three- quater-mile private race track to train his colts on. I got to put a wood fence around that track, too, an’ eighth poles an’ quarter poles an’ a timin’ stand, An’ I got to build chuts to break ’em out of an’ import a fancy startin’ gate an’ act as starter. When his colts are about sixteen months old Mike starts breakin’ 'em. It ain't scarcely no job atall. They never buck once, which is an eye opener to me, but this is on account they've been handled since birth an’ know Mike Dolan for their friend. First he gives 'em walkin’ exercise; then he trots a little; finally he walks, trots an’ canters. Meanwhile, I been stuck for about eight hundred dollars’ worth o' what Mike calls tack, which is an exer- cise saddle weighin’ seven pounds, bandages, bits, headstalls, rollers, blinders, standard martingales; night cloths, coolin’ sheets an’ all the med- icines in the world, in case his colts get sick. After bringin’ 'em in from the track he washes ’'em off with warm water an’ a sponge, then he scrapes the wet off'n 'em an’ rubs ‘em with somthin’ that smells like bay rum. Havin’ rubbed '’em he puts a blank- et on ’em an’ walks ‘em fifty or six- ty minutes around the * barn, which , to jedge the colt. horses that won't give you a good has a porch built all around it so he can walk ’em in wet weather. Havin’ cooled ’em out he grooms ‘em ’an blankets ‘em an’ so on, ad libitum, until the day's work is over, which Mike stands .leanin’ in over the half doors o’ the boxes admirin’ an’ dreamin’. One day he tells me he's got te have a stop watch, so I'm set back fifty dollars more. Bein’ taught how to clock a horse, I become of. ficial timer, whilst breezin’ the colts, an’ one mornin’ Mike says: “Dad, we're goin’ to find out what we got this morin’. I'm going to breeze “Dad's Dandy’—he honored me by namin one 0’ the colts that—“an eighth.” So he breezes Dad's Dandy an eighth never lettin’ the colt all out, an’ my stop watch says eleven an’ two-fifths, The next mornin’ we breeze Old Folks, the half orphan, an’ my watch says thirteen seconds. The followin’ mornin’ we breeze McGonningle, which he’s named for my foreman, this bein’ Mike's final— an’ successful—effort to win the fore: man's approval. McGonnigle steps the eighth in twelve, an’ Mike says he’s satisfied, but has his doubts if Old Folks will ever be more than a sellin’ plater, although it's too soon He says some workout will catch pigeons, once they're in competition. Son, I smelt it comin’! In about a week Mike says he'd ought to have a good exercise boy so he can ride McGonnigle in competition. I almost have a fit when I discover that exercise boy has to have a hun- dred an’ twenty-five a month an’ board himself, or forty less than that an’ eat ranch grub. I got to house him free gratis, too, an’ I'm like to have a strike on my hands, be- cause I'm payin’ my foreman a hun- dred an’ seventy-five a month, an’ he rides all day, wearin’ out four horses per diem. However, Mike tells me the boy's good an’ worth a hundred an’ fifty— an’ then I know how-come racin’ stables isa luxury that only the rich can afford. An’ by this time Mc- Gonnigle has a little sister an’ Dad's Dandy an’ Old Folks have each a little brother, an’ come March I'll own three more thoroughbred foals. Time is flyin’ on winged hoofs, as the fellers says, an’ I'm up to my ears in the runnin’ horse business— an’ beginnin’ to like it. Every time I look at them beautiful colts an’ compare ‘em with my pot bellied, knot-headed an’ misformed cold- blooded cow ponies Iget a vision o what Mike’s all het up about. We're schoolin’ the colts at the barrier now, an’ I'm enjoyin’ my job of starter, whilst the foreman is now timekeeper. We're workin’ 'em 8a quarter now an’ McGonnigle does it in twenty-two flat, which is a race horse, believe you me. Old Folks set down for a real race for a quarter with Dad’s Dandy, can’t doitin bet- ter'n twenty-three an’ a fifth to save his life, while Dad's Dandy is step- pin’ along in twenty-two an ’three- fifths, which is another race horse. Strange to say, Mike likes Dad's Dandy best. so one day we have a five-furlong match race, an’ ‘Dad's Dandy noses McGonnigle out by a whisker. And the exercise boy is up on him! About this time Mike Dolan gives our blood stock ranch a new name. First off, he calls it a farm. Then he calls it Valle Verde Stock Farm, because it’s in a green valley, an’ from that to Valle Verde Stable is only a verbal jump. Somehow, it all sounded rich an’ aristocratic to me. “Well, Dad,” says Mike Dolan one mornin’ in early Feburary, “there ain’t no sense in havin’ a racin’ stable unless a feller races ‘em for profit. How about shippin’ me down to Tia Juana race track so we can see these colts run in real company?” There ain’t nothin’ to it. I'm sold by now. . I got to see them colts complete if it’s the last act o' my life, so I have the railroad company spot in a horse express car an’ we load ’em in. I'm tellin’ you, son, if you ever want to get a real pain in the pocketbook, try shippin’ race horses by express. At Tia Juana Mire gets his li- cense as trainer, Also, he renews his license as jockey, an’ as I'm afraid it'll hurt my credit with the bank if it’s known I'm operatin’ a racin’ stable an’ see a good chance to get shut o’ the whole business, I sell Mike the whole stable, mares, stallion, foals an’ tack, for what I've got in the game to date, which is thirty-three thousand an’ forty-one dollars and ninteen cents. Inasmuch as Mike has no money I take his note, secured by the horses, so he's now owner, trainer an’ jockey. Not bein’ altogether mean, I loan him a thousand dollars to carry on with until he can win some operatin’ cap- ital on the track. When, he’s there about two weeks he wires me that he has McGonnigle entered in a race for two-year-olds that have never raced before on a regular track. I wire him back toen- | ter Dad's Dandy too, out 0’ compli-* ment to me, because I got a notion that colt is goin’ to be in the money. So Mike does that an’ by the time the race is to be run both horses are in an’ the public has a chance to bet the Valle Verde entry. But the heaviest blow is still to fall on me, son. The mornin’ be- fore the race Mike Dolan begs me to bet a thousand aorars for him on the stable entry. I have visions o | havin’ to go to my bank for a loan, so bein’ weak, but not weak enough to see a horse named for me runan’ me not have a bet down on him, I fall for Mike's wiles. Then heen- treats me with tears in his eyes to spread five thousand more in the books, if I can get three to one, an’ just before the race to lay another thousand in the Pari-Mutuel ma- chines. I kick an’ buck an’ squeal all over the tack room, but Mike talks an’ explains ap’ tells me what a cinch it is—an’ in the end Iwire my bank to wire me ten thousand dollars, an’ after the money's been bet I set up in the grand stand an’shiver mil ——— after ' an’ cuss an’ tell this is ab- solutely the last time an’ if that Mike Dolan ever asks me for another dollar I'll hire him killed. Mike, who is up on McGonnigle, waves to me as he's paradin’ past the grand stand, an’ his cheerfulness gives me courage. Then the race is run, It's all a smear to me. I get heart failure. There's three horses bunched in front an’ it's any. . body's race—so I close my eyes an’ groan. When Iopen them again the num- bers are up, an’ out or fifteen horses in the field McGonnigle is first, Dad's Dandy is second by half a nose an’ I never was sufficiently in- tersted to find out the name 0’ the critter that came third. I'm still settin' there tryin’ to figger out how much I've won’ when Mike Dolan comes up on the clushouse Veranda an’ hugs me. Then he figgers out my winin’s. T've made twenty-two thousand dollars an still have my ten thousand. The follerin' day Mike Dolan comes to me an’ hands me a check for what he owes me. He'd won eighteen thousand dollars in prize money. I'd won him two to one in the ma- chines, so that made twenty thous- and, an’ he'd sold McGonnigle for fifty thousand. “Which his cannon bone is too long,” Mike explains to me. “He'll break down as a three-year-old if they run him on a hard track—an’ yesterday, after the race, while he wasn’t lame, he had a slight tem- perature in his off leg an’ just the tiniest little swellin’ It went down again, but I thought best to sell him. We got a full brother to him at home,” “So you're comin’ back to the farm, Mike?” I says. “Sure,” says Mike. “I'll send a good man up to look after the year- lin’s an’ I'll race until late in Sep- tember, here there an’ yon. Then I'll come back to train the young- sters.” “Well, Mike,” I says, “I'm out of the runnin’ horse business an' I'm out with a big interest yield on the in- vestemnt. T'll forget the wear an’ tear on my conscience, but no mat- ter how much money you make racin’ horses I'll never sell you a quarter-section out o’ my ranch. I'll just let you use it free gratis until you retire, with the provision that when you got a horse that can win you let me know. Me, I'm goin’ back to cows an’ experimentin’ with them half-thoroughbred cow ponies.” When Mike come back in the fall he brought Dad's Dandy with him. He'd won five races with Old Folks an’ then sold him for twenty-five hundred. The follerin’. February he departs for the races again, his hopes ain't so high this time, He's still got Dad’s Dandy an’ the horse is fit, but he’s got one fllly an’ they're always uncertain, whilst the two colts, while good, ain't nothin’ to mortgage the ranch to bet on. In order to help out on expenses he ships three ton o’ goot oats hay from the ranch inthe car with his four horses, hay bein’ dear in Baja, California. » All durin’ the meetin’ at Tia Juana I get letters from Mike, but no good news. Finally I wire him as follows: How come you can’t make a prof- it. this year. You got exactly the same blood you had last year. Please explain in the interest of science. Back came Mike's answer. was just like Mike. Dear Dad, I should have shipped more hay and less horses, Later I learned that Dad’s Dandy had ben sick with one thing an’ another, an’ couldn’t be got fit in time for racin’ at Tia Juana. An’ before he left the track Mike has sold his other horses for whatever he could get for ‘em; then he ships back to Aurora, where he gets a lot o' kiddin' on account he’s owner, trainer an’ jockey of one horse, which a single-horse stable rs known as a badge horse, on account his owner can always get an owner's badge admittin’ him free to the track even if his horse can’t win a race. At Aurora he fits Dad's Dandy again an’ as a thrue-year-old the horse shows a big improvement. Mike wins lots o 'races with him an’ it’s only due to bad racin’ luck when Dad’s Dandy isn’t in the money. He's a horse with shore stout can- non bone an’ good knees; he has a grand constitution an’ can stand up under a lot o’ hard racin’, He has a sweet disposition an’ the work don’t sour him or set. him back. He's the sort of horse that can supporta It ‘stableful o’ sp:inters an’ sellin’platers because he hes far better than aver- age speed an’ runs consistently. That year, while Mike was in Chicago with Dad’s Dandy, his stal- lion, Mopperup, got pneumonia an’ died. Then one of Mike's two re- mainin’ mares aborted her foal an’ when the other mare foaled the lit- tle one had one misshapen hoof. However, there was another colt, a full brother to McGonnigle, an’ two fillies ready to put into trainin’ in the fall, so Mike was hopeful. However, bad luck always comes in bunches. The colt ran into a fence an ‘broke his neck an’ the fillies got distemper. It hung on three months an’ stunted 'em considerably; they couldn't be got ready to race until the followin’ March, an’ then they weren't worth tryin’ with. The two remainin’ brood mares did not breed that year an’ Mike was discouraged. So he sold off his mares an’ young stuff an' bade me good-by. “If I can make a killin’ with Dad’s Dandy an’ get a hundred thousand dollars together T'll restock the farm,” he said at partin’. Tll race Dad’s Dandy until he breaks down; then I'll retire him to the stud an’ try to pick up a few good mares for him.’ He didn't come back that fall, after the last meetin’ in Chicago, Him an’ Dad's Dandy shipped to Miami an’ over to Cuba, but they come back to Tia Juana in the spring so Dad's Dandy could run in the Coffroth Handicap, which was worth about seventy-five thousand dollars (Continued on page 38, Col.3.)