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[READ] Circle-Dot: A True Story of Cowboy Life Forty Years Ago (1907) Unlimited[READ] Circle-Dot: ATrue Story of CowboyLife Forty Years Ago(1907) UnlimitedDescription"Donoho...drove the first herd of cattle from Texas to Abilene... associated with Buffalo Bill andWill Bill...in the early days of the Dodge City and Abilene border troubles." -LA Times, March 24,1921."Donoho...a pioneer cowboy of the Southwest...'Circle Dot' is considered one of the bestworks every penned by a Kansas writer." -KC Times, March 24, 1921Donoho...was himself acowboy back in the 60's and 70's...is conversant with every phase of cowboy life...the book is ofvalue historically and is intensely interesting." -Ft. Scott Republican, Feb. 4, 1908"35 years ago,March 24, 1921, Judge Milford H. Donoho, 77, Civil and Indian War veteran and former associateof Buffalo Bill, died at his Hollywood home." -LA Times, March 24, 1956Outperforming all theHollywood "Wild West" hype, Milford Hill Donoho (1844-1921) himself a cowboy (who later retiredas a judge and moved to Hollywood), writes a book in narrative form of the many dangers anddifficulties faced by real cowboys like himself in Texas, Kansas, and Indian Territory (Oklahoma)during the true Wild West days of the 1860s and 70s.Donoho's 1907 book "Circle-Dot: A TrueStory of Cowboy Life Forty Years Ago," is considered one of the best works written by an earlyKansas author. According to the KC Times, Jan. 1, 1948, Donoho's book "is largely biographicaland recount's the judge's early years as a cowboy."In introducing his book, Donoho writes: "Totravel over the ground where these cattle once grazed in countless numbers...makes the oldcowboy long to again see the prairies covered with long horned cattle, picturesque wild horses,and herds of innumerable buffaloes; to once more ride the bucking broncho in pursuit of the wildsteer and the fighting maverick; to hear the coyote's howl and the stampede's roar; to inhale thearoma of wild flowers whilst breathing the life-giving air that blows across the free anduntrammeled plains, where the sun rises and sets in a halo of glory, where you have that thrillingof the heart, that buoyancy of spirit, that drives away every care and makes you laugh atdanger."About the author: Milford Hill Donoho was born March 29, 1844, in Tennessee and diedMarch 23, 1921 in Hollywood, California. He was a Civil and Indian War veteran and a Kansaslawyer for 30 years He entered the Army at the outbreak of the Civil War and served until its end.At the close of the war he took charge of a number of cowboys and drove the first herd of cattlefrom Texas to Abilene, Texas. As a government scout he became associated with Buffalo Bill andWill Bill in the early Kansas days and was engaged in many campaigns with these men in the earlydays of the Dodge City and Abilene border troubles. Shortly before the Custer massacre, JudgeDonoho was sent by the government to Cheyenne to confer with Sitting Bull, Red Cloud and otherSioux chiefs. He then received the appointment of chief counsel for the old Fort Scott and GulfRailroad being the first man appointed to this position. As counsel for the road he became one ofthe best known lawyers in the Middle West. He was elected judge on the Kansas bench andserved for two years. He also wrote a number of books on law as well as history and fiction. He