Sawdust and Spangles
From Wikisource
| Sawdust and Spangles (1901) by |
Foreword→ |
|
CONTENTS
| ix | ||
| CHAP. | PAGE | |
| I. | 1 | |
|
My First Exciting Experience
|
4 | |
|
The Intelligence of Elephants
|
5 | |
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Fights with the Grangers
|
6 | |
|
“Doc” Baird and the Bully
|
9 | |
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Teasing Old Romeo
|
10 | |
|
The Story of a Stolen Negro
|
12 | |
|
Horse Thieves in the Circus
|
15 | |
| II. | 18 | |
|
Beasts at Wholesale
|
20 | |
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The Professional Animal Hunter
|
21 | |
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Striking into the Interior
|
22 | |
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Hunters’ Life in the Jungle
|
23 | |
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Why Baby Elephants are Hard to Capture
|
26 | |
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Across the Desert with Captive Beasts
|
29 | |
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The Adventures of Specimen Hunters
|
31 | |
| III. | 35 | |
|
The Burial and Resurrection of the “Cardiff Giant”
|
37 | |
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The Rival White Elephants
|
40 | |
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How the "Light of Asia" Embarrassed the Lecturer
|
41 | |
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The Wild Cave-Dweller of Kentucky
|
44 | |
|
The Two-Headed Girl's Three-Headed Rival
|
46 | |
|
Missing Links and Dancing Turkeys
|
49 | |
|
The Salaries Paid to Freaks
|
50 | |
|
The Love-Making and Merrymaking of the Freaks
|
51 | |
|
The Exposure of the “Aztec Children”
|
54 | |
|
An Adventure with a Circus Shark
|
56 | |
| IV. | 59 | |
|
The First Attempt to Move a Circus by Rail
|
61 | |
|
The Spartan Habits of the Old Timers
|
63 | |
|
Seven Heartbreaking Days on the Long Road
|
64 | |
|
Performing by Day and Traveling by Night
|
67 | |
|
On a Runaway Circus Train
|
69 | |
|
Panic Among the Animals
|
71 | |
|
A Single Track and a Broken Rail
|
73 | |
|
The Bronchos’ Charmed Life
|
75 | |
|
Old Romeo to the Rescue
|
77 | |
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An Unexpected Midnight Bath
|
79 | |
| V. | 86 | |
|
A Chance Meeting with a Great Man
|
96 | |
| VI. | 104 | |
|
Novel Advertising Features
|
105 | |
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The “Devil’s Whistle”
|
106 | |
|
“Spotters”
|
108 | |
|
Rivalry in Exploiting Opposition Shows
|
112 | |
|
Costly Rivalry
|
113 | |
|
Idle Bill-Posters
|
116 | |
|
The Courtesy of Editors
|
118 | |
|
Jumbo’s Free Advertising
|
120 | |
| VII. | 124 | |
|
The Fifty Cent Rivals of the Ten Thousand Dollar Hippos
|
124 | |
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A Skillful Appeal to Public Sympathy
|
126 | |
|
A Silent Parade from Albany to the State Line
|
128 | |
|
The Fluctuating Level of Circus Values
|
130 | |
|
What it Costs to Ride with the Band Wagon
|
132 | |
|
Requirements and Cost of the Circus Horse
|
134 | |
|
A Page from the Invoice Book of the Big Show
|
136 | |
| VIII. | 139 | |
|
Origin of the American Circus
|
139 | |
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The First Elephant Brought to America
|
141 | |
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The First Drove of Camels
|
144 | |
|
The Fight of the Ostriches
|
145 | |
|
The Belligerent Alligators
|
149 | |
|
Parrots and Cockatoos
|
153 | |
|
Educated Dogs
|
154 | |
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A Wounded Horse in the Grand March
|
156 | |
|
Intelligent Bronchos
|
158 | |
|
The King of the Herd
|
159 | |
|
An Elephant’s Humor
|
160 | |
|
Zulus in London
|
162 | |
| IX. | 169 | |
|
The Perils of a Trainer’s Life
|
170 | |
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Where Steady Nerves are in Demand
|
172 | |
|
Captured Animals Preferred to Cage-Born
|
173 | |
|
The Education of a Young Jaguar
|
174 | |
|
The Leopards at Kindergarten
|
177 | |
|
How they Punish Unruly Pupils
|
179 | |
|
Punishment of Treacherous Beasts
|
180 | |
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A Single-Handed Fight with Five Lions
|
182 | |
|
Teaching the Horse the Two-Step
|
186 | |
|
Ring Performers Trained with a Derrick
|
187 | |
|
Circus People a Long-Lived Class
|
189 | |
| X. | 192 | |
|
Forcible Argument with a City Marshal
|
193 | |
|
Breaking Camp under a Hot Rifle Fire
|
195 | |
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Ambushed and Shot at on the Road
|
197 | |
|
The Studies of the Apprentice to the Clown
|
201 | |
|
Devotional Services Upset by a Demon
|
204 | |
|
The Wild Beasts Loose in the Big Crowd
|
205 | |
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The Midnight Stampede of the Elephants
|
208 | |
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A Polar Bear Hunt on Fifth Avenue
|
209 | |
|
An Equine Officer of Artillery
|
211 | |
| XI. | 214 | |
|
Dan Rice’s One-Horse Show
|
215 | |
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Tan-Bark Oratory and Harlequin Pluck
|
217 | |
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An Imitation Patriot Shown Up
|
219 | |
|
In which Cupid was Master of the Ring
|
223 | |
|
Barnum’s One Unconquerable Superstition
|
227 | |
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Gullible Patrons in Early Days
|
229 | |
|
Expedients of Advance Agents
|
231 | |
|
Plantation Shows
|
234 | |
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Exhibiting “Yankees” in the South
|
235 | |
|
Sleeping in Strange Attitudes
|
236 | |
|
A Circus “Crier”
|
238 | |
|
Showmen’s Names
|
239 | |
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The Escape of a Leopard
|
241 | |
|
Hotel Keepers
|
243 | |
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Early Breakfasts
|
245 | |
| XII. | 247 | |
|
The Quest of the Tree-Tailed Kingio
|
249 | |
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Half-Hours with Bashful Whales
|
251 | |
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A Slippery Deal in Sea-Lions
|
254 | |
|
An Eventful Monday Morning at the Aquarium
|
258 | |
|
The Ultimate Fate of the Aquarium
|
260 |
| This work published before January 1, 1923 is in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago. |