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5 revisions | Landon Braun at Jul 05, 2020 10:00 PM | |
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246Inter Ocean June 30 Lessons from the Cowboy Race. The first and the most unpleasant Another lesson is in cruelty to animals. We do not know that there is any The race was projected by Colonel | 246Lessons from the Cowboy Race. The first and the most unpleasant lesson learned is that "cowboy racing" is just as dishonest as Washington park or Garfield park racing. This lesson would have been omitted but for the praiseworthy zeal of THE INTER OCEAN cycling commissioner, who followed and watched the horsemen, and who detected some of them in the fraudulent act of riding on cars and in buggies when they were supposed to be pattering along the roads on horseback. One of them gave his horses a ride and a rest on the cars from Dixon to DeKalb. There was little or no betting on the outcome, and therefore it was supposed that the race would be an honest trial of the endurance of men and horses. It proves to have been a tricky scramble for lucre. Another lesson is in cruelty to animals. For though the condition of the horses while in the State of Illinois and outside of it-they do not seem to have been closely inspected-was not wretched enough to warrant the interference of the officers of the Humane society, yet it is certain that several of them were ruined for life; indeed, they 'were so reduced in strength as to compel their abandonment on the way by their riders. The horse brought in by Rattlesnake Pete would have fared better had its rider refrained from the cup that cheers and inebriates, but as to how it fared under the actualities of the race may be learned when the proceedings of the suit of the Humane society against that rider are made public. We do not know that there is any other lesson. We have learned, it is true, that bronchos and cowboys can endure great hardships. But we did not need to learn it again. The narratives of a hundred forced marches with Crook, a thousand journeys across the plains, myriads of 'perilous adventures on the frontiers had taught us this long ago. The race was projected by Colonel Cody, of Wild West fame. He is an enthusiast as to horses and horsemen, and doubtless meant that there should be an honest and humane test of the powers of bronchos and cowboys. He was not able to control the conduct of the riders, and the result is that the race has been neither honest humane. We assume that by this time he is convinced that his judgment was at fault. As proprietor of what without any exaggeration may be called "the greatest show on earth," he has nothing to lose by confession of his error. His exhibition is marvelous enough without the addition of one or two broken down bronchos and a few Ricky riders. |
