Little Warhorse 
comes near enough to be dangerous, the Hare 
balks him by dodging. Each time the Hare 
is turned, scores for the Dog that did it, and a 
final point is made by the kill. 
Sometimes the kill takes place within one 
hundred yards of the start—that means a poor 
Jack; mostly it happens in front of the 
Grand Stand; but on rare occasions it chances 
that the Jack goes sailing across the open Park 
a good half-mile and, by dodging for time, runs 
to safety inthe Haven. Four finishes are pos- 
sible: a speedy kill; a speedy winning of the 
Haven; new Dogs to relieve the first runners, 
who would suffer heart-collapse in the terrific 
strain of their pace, if kept up many minutes in 
hot weather; and finally, for Rabbits that by 
continued dodging defy and jeopardize the 
Dogs, and yet do not win the Haven, there is 
kept a loaded shotgun. 
There is just as much jockeying at a Kas- 
kado coursing as at a Kaskado_horse-race, 
just as many attempts at fraud, and it is just as 
necessary to have the judge and slipper beyond 
suspicion. 
The day before the next meet a man of dia- 
ae el 
ele Ree ee ge ge be ye ae 
