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Hallie at Jun 08, 2020 10:57 PM

33

Hundreds of Protests Against the Race.

President Shortall consented last night
to add other information to the remarks
contained in his letter.

"The letter which I sent to Nebraska last
week," he said, "was the outcome of hundreds
of communications which I
have received since the race was
first announced from every part of the
union. Everybody interested in preventing
this unjust contest from being run
has written to the Illinois Humane society
to stop it. Chadron is a small frontier town
on the very border of Nebraska. Its position
on the river bank, right opposite Iowa, has
practically removed the race from the
jurisdiction of the Nebraska Humane society.
The only ones that are left to cope with
the proposed contest are the Iowa societies
and our own. One of my first steps
was to place myself in communication
with the humane society of Des Moines. I
have written several times to President
Thomas F. Gatchell of that organization,
and am assured of its hearty co-operation
in case the race is started. The other humane
societies of Iowa are also actively engaged
in preparing for the race. The Illinois
society will have agents stationed all across
the states of Iowa and Illinois, from
Chadron to Chicago. If the warning which
I tried to couch in mild terms in my letter
to Secretary Weir is not obeyed, then we
shall assuredly make good the alternative
offered, and call in the strong arm of the
law to see that the statutes are not ruthlessly
violated. We can and shall have the
riders arrested every hour or oftener. As
often as bailed they will be rearrested.

Thinks the Race Will Not Be Started.

"But all these measures are not simply
precautionary. I really have no expectation that
the race will be started. Besides showing
the intended riders that they won't be allowed
to finish the racd, even if they have
the hardihood to start upon such an infamous
course, our society has been hard at work
upon the organizers and all connected with
the scheme. We have shown them that
such a race would redound a thousand times
more to their harm than to their credit. And
they well know that everyone of them who
is in even the slightest way responsible for
that cruel race of 700 miles will be followed
and prosecuted by our society unremittingly
and unsparingly to the furthermost limits of
the law.

"The cowboys, we firmly believe, will also
be willing to resign from the race. The
date of the race has been postponed three
times. It was originally set for June 13,
then for June 18 and the present date is
June 23. We expect the ignominious contest
will be declared off. The cowboys are
fast being made to realize that the winner
will gain no glory, while his $1,500 would be
eaten up ten times over in court fines.
Why, in the Berlin-Vienna race residents
along the route closed their doors and pulled
down the shades as the shameful spectacle
dragged past. Cowboys want applause, not
hisses. No, the race will never be run. If
the cowboys will run from Chastron to Chicago
on their own legs, instead of the poor
horses, I should be much better pleased."

33

Hundreds of Protests Against the Race.

President Shortall consented last night
to add other information to the remarks
contained in his letter.

"The letter which I sent to Nebraska last
week," he said, "was the outcome of hundreds
of communications which I
have received since the race was
first announced from every part of the
union. Everybody interested in preventing
this unjust contest from being run
has written to the Illinois Humane society
to stop it. Chadron is a small frontier town
on the very border of Nebraska. Its position
on the river bank, right opposite Iowa, has
practically removed the race from the
jurisdiction of the Nebraska Humane society.
The only ones that are left to cope with
the proposed contest are the Iowa societies
and our own. One of my first steps
was to place myself in communication
with the humane society of Des Moines. I
have written several times to President
Thomas F. Gatchell of that organization,
and am assured of its hearty co-operation
in case the race is started. The other humane
societies of Iowa are also actively engaged
in preparing for the race. The Illinois
society will have agents stationed all across
the states of Iowa and Illinois, from
Chadron to Chicago. If the warning which
I tried to couch in mild terms in my letter
to Secretary Weir is not obeyed, then we
shall assuredly make good the alternative
offered, and call in the strong arm of the
law to see that the statutes are not ruthlessly
violated. We can and shall have the
riders arrested every hour or oftener. As
often as bailed they will be rearrested.

Thinks the Race Will Not Be Started.

"But all these measures are not simply
precautionary. I really have no expectation that
the race will be started. Besides showing
the intended riders that they won't be allowed
to finish the racd, even if they have
the hardihood to start upon such an infamous
course, our society has been hard at work
upon the organizers and all connected with
the scheme. We have shown them that
such a race would redound a thousand times
more to their harm than to their credit. And
they well know that everyone of them who
is in even the slightest way responsible for
that cruel race of 700 miles will be followed
and prosecuted by our society unremittingly
and unsparingly to the furthermost limits of
the law.

"The cowboys, we firmly believe, will also
be willing to resign from the race. The
date of the race has been postponed three
times. It was originally set for June 13,
then for June 18 and the present date is
June 23. We expect the ignominious contest
will be declared off. The cowboys are
fast being made to realize that the winner
will gain no glory, while his $1,500 would be
eaten up ten times over in court fines.
Why, in the Berlin-Vienna race residents
along the route closed their doors and pulled
down the shades as the shameful spectacle
dragged past. Cowboys want applause, not
hisses. No, the race will never be run. If
the cowboys will run from Chastron to Chicago
on their own legs, instead of the poor
horses, I should be much better pleased."