Electrically speaking, this is a bad idea and risks blowing out your dad's receiver/amplifier.
In addition to the obvious risks with undersized-gauge wire, any time you have more than one wire you have capacitance between the wires. With unshielded speaker cable, you have the small capacitance between the two unshielded wires. With shielded cable, you add in the additional capacitance between each wire and the shield, leading to much greater capacitance. With a short run of 6-8 feet in a typical home stereo set-up, this may not be a big deal. But you have a 25-foot run, which increases the capacitance problem.
Capacitance on an amplifier output is a load on the signal and can cause phase shift and oscillation at high frequencies. You may not hear these high-frequency oscillations due to the limits of human hearing, but your amplifier is constantly amplifying them and overworking and overloading itself due to the oscillation. Maybe your amp burns up, maybe your speakers, maybe both.
The other problem shielded cable can cause is if you actually try to ground the shielded wire. If you have any short from the shielded wire to the speaker wires, you may blow your amp. Do a little searching on the impact of open circuits and short circuits on the outputs of solid-state and tube amplifiers if you want more specifics. A short between your shielded wire and speaker wire in this situation can happen any number of ways -- existing wear and tear on your old mic cable, plugging/unplugging the connectors, poor connector wiring, etc. If you are using a shielded speaker cable at all, the shield should be ungrounded and floating. This of course eliminates any benefit to the audio signal coming through your speakers.
Just food for thought.