A Good Thixg 



6<; 



half-cro^Yns and shillings. Two races have been run, 

 the course is being cleared for a selling hurdle handicap, 

 and the ring is offering to take three to one ; for Hawke, 

 the well-known cross-country rider, is on the back of 



On the look-out foe Rustic Half- 



something in his uncle's stable, and this is put down as 

 good business— there is, perhaps, no better jockey over 

 jumps in England, and very few of the leading flat-race 

 riders have much the best of him; though it is just as 



