224 GLOOSCAP AND OTHER STORIES The owner was glad to let him take care of the bull, because the other doctors had said that it could not get well. The boy with the magical belt began treat¬ ing the bull, and by the next day it was entirely well. "What shall I pay you?" asked the owner, who was glad to have his bull well again. "Oh, I will leave that to you to decide," the boy said. "Then I will give you a bull," the owner re¬ plied, "for you have done me a great service." '' I have no use for an animal,'' said the boy, "I would rather have money." "Well, as I would not have lost my bull for fifty pounds," said the man, "I will give you that amount." So he gave the boy fifty pounds. The boy carried the money home, and gave it to his father to put away for him. After that he trav¬ elled about the country, making sick cattle well, and he always cured them, since he always used the medicine the dream had told him to make. The boy always slept with his belt under his head, and one night in a dream the voice said: "Take your belt to the large pasture near the lake. Go to-morrow, but you must first eat your breakfast; and then you must eat your dinner, and then you may go. Leave the belt in the pasture; and the next day, at the very