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4 revisions | Landon Braun at Jun 29, 2020 12:14 PM | |
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6On an early train yesterday morning and "Buffalo Bill" in personal appearance, Places of Comfort. Two restaurants are now open, under the | 6On an early train yesterday morning and in the same coach were a merchant from Bagdad accompanied by two "Frenchified" attendants. A Parisian dealer in curios, Commissioner Moore of Minnesota; Judge Henry P. Ware, of Salem Oregon, three animal trainers attached to the German circus, a group of Prussian metal workers, an Armenian "tumbler" or athlete, a detail of English soldiers, colonial cavalrymen who will participate in the big British military tournament several malodorous and Chattering Javanese and the "Honorable" Buffalo Bill. "Buffalo Bill" in personal appearance, despite his prolonged stay abroad, remains the same striking type of that class of heroes which popularized the editions of Beadle's dime novels and the American penny-dreadfuls. He still wears his white sombrero, his mustachios and imperial and his long hair, all of which is now tinged with gray. The association of princes, dukes and the swells of Belgravia has apparently not dulled the democratic instincts of the Nebraska ranch owner, although it may have swelled his girth a bit. Cody is probably one of the most generally known men alive. There was probably not a man in the town yesterday morning who saw him who did not recognize the man. Places of Comfort. Two restaurants are now open, under the management of the Wellington Catering company, on the grounds, and are being liberally patronized. One of them is in the administration building and the other in the south wing of the horticultural building. The service is at present indifferent, but doubtless will be improved in the near future. Prices charged for food are no higher than those asked in clean and respectable cafes uptown, and the quality of the food is fairly good. The steady patronage of the employes on the grounds is divided between the restaurants and those hotels and eating-houses in the vicinity of the grounds that fortunately for their proprietors are prepared to entertain guests. Only a small number of hotels especially designed for the care of exposition visitors will be ready to receive them by May 1. Work is being pushed with vigor by the projectors of thousand or more mercantile enterprises in the neighborhood of the park, and the streets leading to the gates will before the summer is over form avenues of wonders and interest leading up to the grand and colossal "show in the big tent." Henry Murray, the distinguished English statistician, in writing of expositions of the past devotes a large amount of space and time to the consideration of what he calls "the fringe" of the national exhibitions, and regards them as the sources of valuable information and entertainment. The bazars, shops, cafes, street stands, and the wares of the street peddlers, all of which for obvious reasons are and will be excluded from the park grounds, will constitute a great exhibition in themselves. |
