BLUE-GRASS
               AND

     BROADWAY


           CHAPTER I
T HE need of a large sum of money in a
    great hurry is the root of many noble
ambitions, in whose branches roost strange
companies of birds, pecking away for dollars
that grow-or do not-on bushes. And it
was in such a quest that Miss Patricia Adair
of Adairville, Kentucky, lit upon a limb of
life beside Mr. Godfrey Vandeford of
Broadway, New York. Their joint en-
deavors made a great adventure.
  "There's nothing to it, Pop; either pony
girls will have to grow four legs to cut new
capers, somebody will have to write a play
                 S