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Landon Braun at Jul 05, 2020 03:12 PM

110

Western British
American
Cowboys, May 20/93

WESTERN BRITI[SH]

regiments of the line, who with 100 finely
trained horses go through a series of
spirited tableaux and evolutions which
vividly portray the life and amusements
of the British soldiers in camp and on
the battle-field. Among the regiments
represented are the famous First Life
Guards, "Black Watch," Royal Irish
Lancers, Royal Artillery and a splendid
military band. Manager Leslie will also
give a series of military band concerts on
Sundays, the building possessing excellent
acoustic properties. The British
Military Band will be re-inforced by a
stringed orchestra and the arena floored
over for these concerts, which will be
given every Sunday evening. A
branch ticket office has been opened
at 315 Wabash avenue, in charge
of Thomas Morgan, who is said to be
one of the few survivors in this country
of the charge of the Light Brigade at
Balaklava.

Buffalo Bill's Wild West.- Col.
W. F. Cody or, to use the cognomen by
which he dwells in the hearts of the
American people, "Buffalo Bill," has
presented to the public in his "Wild
West and Congress of Rough Riders of
the World" one of the finest educational
exhibitions in existence. Conveniently
located as it is on 63d street, just outside
the World's Fair grounds, Buffalo Bill's
great show affords visitors of all ages an
insight into Indian and frontier life that
cannot be obtained anywhere else in the
world in such convenient and deeply interesting
form. The red man is shown
encamped in his pristine style and all the
every-day round of his wild life is reproduced
in realistic form at the great show.
Everything about Buffalo Bill's exhibition
is genuine. He is himself the grandest
of the old frontier scouts and is held
in the highest esteem by the Government
and the military authorities. Buffalo
Bill is no less the boy's hero than the
grown people's beau ideal of the dashing
frontiersman, and everything connected
with his great show teaches an
important lesson as well as affording
the choicest kind of entertainment. His
specimens of the rough riders of the
world are taken from almost every nation
and their daring evolutions on horseback
are greeted with rapturous applause.
Lovers of the dreadful will find in the
attack on the Deadwood coach and its
rescue by the scouts and plainsmen, as
well as the other vivid portrayals of wild
western life, incidents that will gratify
the most sensational appetite. In the
"Wild West" Col. W. F. Cody and his
able coadjutors, Nate Salisbury and John
M. Burke, offer the public an exhibition
that has an exhilarating and instructive
influence on old and young alike. None
of our readers should miss seeing it.

110

Western British
American
Cowboys, May 20/93

WESTERN BRITI...

regiments of the line, who with 100 finely
trained horses go through a series of
spirited tableaux and evolutions which
vividly portray the life and amusements
of the British soldiers in camp and on
the battle-field. Among the regiments
represented are the famous First Life
Guards, "Black Watch," Royal Irish
Lancers, Royal Artillery and a splendid
military band. Manager Leslie will also
give a series of military band concerts on
Sundays, the building possessing excellent
acoustic properties. The British
Military Band will be re-inforced by a
stringed orchestra and the arena floored
over for these concerts, which will be
given every Sunday evening. A
branch ticket office has been opened
at 315 Wabash avenue, in charge
of Thomas Morgan, who is said to be
one of the few survivors in this country
of the charge of the Light Brigade at
Balaklava.

Buffalo Bill's Wild West.- Col.
W. F. Cody or, to use the cognomen by
which he dwells in the hearts of the
American people, "Buffalo Bill," has
presented to the public in his "Wild
West and Congress of Rough Riders of
the World" one of the finest educational
exhibitions in existence. Conveniently
located as it is on 63d street, just outside
the World's Fair grounds, Buffalo Bill's
great show affords visitors of all ages an
insight into Indian and frontier life that
cannot be obtained anywhere else in the
world in such convenient and deeply interesting
form. The red man is shown
encamped in his pristine style and all the
every-day round of his wild life is reproduced
in realistic form at the great show.
Everything about Buffalo Bill's exhibition
is genuine. He is himself the grandest
of the old frontier scouts and is held
in the highest esteem by the Government
and the military authorities. Buffalo
Bill is no less the boy's hero than the
grown people's beau ideal of the dashing
frontiersman, and everything connected
with his great show teaches an
important lesson as well as affording
the choicest kind of entertainment. His
specimens of the rough riders of the
world are taken from almost every nation
and their daring evolutions on horseback
are greeted with rapturous applause.
Lovers of the dreadful will find in the
attack on the Deadwood coach and its
rescue by the scouts and plainsmen, as
well as the other vivid portrayals of wild
western life, incidents that will gratify
the most sensational appetite. In the
"Wild West" Col. W. F. Cody and his
able coadjutors, Nate Salisbury and John
M. Burke, offer the public an exhibition
that has an exhilarating and instructive
influence on old and young alike. None
of our readers should miss seeing it.