The Cowboy His Characteristics His Equipment And His Part in the Development

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Whoever had a cat for sale never named a higher value. Of course, the vagaries of birth easily might overstock a ranch, and one large litter could glut the market of an entire Range. Nevertheless, no threatened shortage of supply, no undue excess in reserves made any difference. The catless man had to pay ten dol- lars in order to change his state.
As for the other pets, ranchmen, from their virile life, liked virile playthings. This quality, as exhibited in an- other phase, particularly among
...the cowboys, found vent in the playtime harnessing together of two entirely unbroken animals, either two broncos, or two renegade steers, or a bronco and a maddened cow, fastening the insane team to a wagon and climbing aboard it.
John H. Dewing, now of Livingston, Montana, and a nephew of the James Dewing already mentioned, may still remember the fifty-five-mile drive that, some thirty years ago, he and another man took from Gardiner into Living- EQUIPMENT AND FURNISHINGS 169 stem. Of their two horses, neither had ever before been in harness; and one of them, Slim Jim, had "two notches in his tail, " having on two occasions when under saddle killed his rider.


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