1916
HERB ROTH'S "ATTABOY" IS EASY WINNER.
Runs the Two-yard Course in Two fifths of a Second — A Classy Brute.
BOSTON, Massachusetts, (Aboard the U. S. S. Kentucky). — "Attaboy," the pride of Herb Roth's string of racing cockroaches, won the two-yard championship on a recent afternoon from a field composed of Dal Dawkins' "Hammock King," J. W. Bailey's "Ditty Box Bill," Herbert Reed's "Mess Jumper," Albert Schedy's "Scamperer" and a half dozen others. Practically all of the civilian volunteers and many of the regular crew witnessed the speed contests and the bookmakers did a thriving business.
It was thinness which finally resulted in victory for the Roth string. Hawkins had starved his roaches for two days in preparation for the big race, but some miscreant broke into the stables and fed them, so that they were a bit leggy at the start and not much interested in the mince pie which awaited them at the finish, while Roth's "Attaboy," ravenous, covered the two yards in two-fifths of a second.
The overfed condition of Hawkins' string resulted in all his entries running last, while Bailey's "Ditty Box Bill" and Reed's "Mess Jumper" were a bad second and third to the winner.
"Attaboy" is a magnificent brute, standing nearly three-quarters of an inch high at the withers and weighing not less than ten milligrams.
These cockroach races have proved so interesting a divertissement that it is proposed to arrange intership contests.
—The Saturday Blade, Chicago, Sept. 16, 1916, p. 7.
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Cockroach Derby Excites "Rookies"
Labels:
1916,
appetite,
cockroaches,
gambling,
horses,
humor,
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Massachusetts,
racing,
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World-War-I
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