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Munafa ebook

Munafa ebook

Read Ebook: Lions 'n' tigers 'n' everything by Cooper Courtney Ryley

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Ebook has 775 lines and 67153 words, and 16 pages

PAGE

INTRODUCTION xi

CHAPTER

I INSIDE THE TRAINING DEN 1

II TRAMPING IT TO CAGEDOM 40

V THE DOG WAGON 109

VI MENAGERIE "PSYCH-STUFF" 145

PAGE

In the steel arena 6

A tiger being trained to ride horseback 6

Feed a hippopotamus and he'll do the rest 38

Bon, the baby hippo, for whom a man gave his life 38

Indigestion makes a lion vicious in the arena 58

Never try to do this if the lion has a headache 58

Baby wild cats, and they look their part 64

Representative circus dogs 72

Baby lions are always sought after as pets 82

A pair of real "teddy bears" 82

A sick baby orang-outang 98

A baby camel with its mother, the "dumbbell baby" of the menagerie 98

Baby Miracle, a few weeks before she decided to leave this tempestuous world 102

Lion triplets 102

Collies make excellent circus dogs 114

Waiting to enter the big show 114

Young lions in the training den 154

Waiting for mealtime 154

An inbred lion, hence not a good worker 160

Circus men can't beat these things, so they "jine 'em" 160

An elephant is the easiest to train and the hardest to handle of any menagerie beast 178

A work elephant waiting for the crowds to leave the circus grounds, when his labors will begin 178

Spring practice in the yard of winter quarters 192

The elephant turns naturally to clowning 192

In winter quarters 216

In the act of a breakaway 216

Old Mom and her girl friend Freida 222

Kas and Mo when they arrived in America 222

INTRODUCTION

"HURRY! HURRY! TH' BEEG SHOW IS STARTING-G-G-G-G!"

Of course, you've been to the circus. You got there just in time to hear the sideshow spieler tell you that there was fortay-y-y-y-y-five minutes for fun an' amusement beforah th' beeg show, th' beeg show, would begin! Fortay-y-y-y-five minutes in which to view those stra-a-a-nge people, to see The Cannibal Twins, the Skeleton Dude, the Fat Lady who has taken everay-y-y-y known method of reducing in an attempt to rid herself of her half a ton of flesh, but who gets biggah, biggah and fattah, Ladies-s-s an' Gents, everay living-g-g breathing-g-g moment of her life!

You've given yourself plenty of time, so you think. You want to see the menagerie and the lions and tigers and elephants, but the first thing you know, that sideshow spieler has inveigled you inside the tent and the next thing you know, somebody with a fog-horn voice is yelling in your ear:

"Hurry! Hurry Everaybodi-e-e-e-e-e-e! Th' Beeg Show is Starting-g-g-g-g!"

Then you have to rush through the menagerie and get into your seat before you exactly know what's happened.

Well, it's about the same way with the beginning of a book. You set yourself to have a lot of fun seeing the main show, and then somebody drags you off to a side performance and before you realize it, your time for reading's up and all you've gotten is a lot of advance information as to what you're going to find out if you finish the book.

I suppose I've a lot of the boy in me. I hate introductions. Despise 'em. Yet, in a way, they're necessary. I've always wanted to write a book where I could put the introduction at the end, or something like that. Because, really, an introduction seems terribly necessary.

But since I couldn't do that, I waited until I had finished writing the rest of the book, and then I wrote this, which I am busily trying to keep from being an introduction. But it seems that there's no way out. I might as well break down and confess--that's what it is. Th' sideshow, th' side-show-w-w-w-w, Ladies-s-s-s an' Gents, th' sideshow, while farther on, the main performance band is tuning up for the grand-d-d entr?e!

So, if you're like me, and detest introductions, just let this part of the book slide on by and wait until you've finished the rest. Then maybe, some day when you haven't anything to do, you can come back and see what I've been doing all this talking about. It's simply this:

I've often been asked why a circus carries so many animals around with it; whether it is merely because it wants to "fill up space" or because they are cheap or to take up time before the rest of the performance. It really is none of these. Questions like that hurt a circus man's pride. He really thinks a lot of his animals, and he's terribly proud of the fact that he carries them around the country, because he knows that from the fact that he does like animals a great portion of America gains its knowledge of natural history.

There are comparatively few big zo?logical collections in America and all these are in the big cities; especially is this true where jungle animals are exhibited. The rest of the country must depend on the circus to make possible a close knowledge of the various beasts of faraway lands--and there is hardly a man or woman in America who was reared in a rural community who did not gain his or her early studies in this manner. And that pleases the circus man, because he always wants to feel that he is something else than merely a purveyor of amusement. Nor does he do it cheaply!

For instance, the next time the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus comes to town, you'll find in its menagerie a total of forty-four elephants. A number of them are babies, purchased at an average price of about 00 apiece, when all costs are considered. Half of them are full grown, worth from 00 to ,000 each, according to their performing ability. Lump them all at an average of 00 apiece, and you have an investment of 6,000 in elephants, to say nothing of the food they eat, and of all animals, elephants are the champion hay eaters.

That's one item. The four giraffes are another, and in case you should desire to purchase a first-class giraffe some day, just write out a check for ,000 and then trust to good fortune to get you the animal. Giraffes are scarce. So are hippopotami and rhinoceri and great apes, to say nothing of pythons, and jungle-bred tigers and lions and leopards and other animals of their kind. Figuring the interest on the investment alone, for the number of performance days which are granted to the circus, it costs nearly 00 a week to carry that menagerie around the country. That is the amount the original outlay would earn if it were invested in the ordinary channels of business. Nor does that include the items of trainers, of food, of assistants, cage men, dens, horses for transportation, railroad equipment and repairs, and steam haulage. So a menagerie really isn't such a cheap adjunct, is it? Nor is that all.

A few years ago, John Ringling learned that there was a wonderful ape in England. He had heard that it was a real gorilla--but didn't believe it. He went to England and to the home of the man and woman who had reared the beast to health from a disease-ridden little thing which had been landed in London from a tramp steamer. It was a real gorilla, the first one that ever had thrived in captivity. John Ringling wanted that animal for his circus. It meant that the people of the United States would be given an opportunity to study something which neither the combined efforts of scientists nor the hunting parties of the animal companies of all the world had been able to give. He didn't need the gorilla. The menagerie was full as it was. But there was the urge of the true circus man--to bring forth the thing which had not been seen before, to present something new. It meant a gamble of thousands of dollars. He took the chance. The check read for ,000. John Daniel, the gorilla, was brought to the United States--and lived less than a month! Such are the risks taken by the circus man to keep his menagerie up to the plane which he desires. This is not the only instance.

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