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4 revisions | Whit at Apr 27, 2020 12:30 PM | |
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25that one sees the perfection of that skill in marksmanship that has become the wonder of those who are not accustomed to the daily use of weapons. Yet if it were not possessed- if there were not the quick eye, the sure aim, coolness in the moment of extreme danger, whether threatened by man or beast- life in that section would be of little value, and a man's home anything but a safe abiding place. There are exceptional cases of men like Buffalo Bill, Major North, and others, whose names are more or less familiar among the mighty hunters of the West, who excel in the use of rifle and pistol, and to which, time and time again, they and those around them have owed their lives. And they are the worthy successors of a long line of marksmen whose names are also "familiar as household words". Who does not recall David Crockett and his death-dealing rifle in the Alamo? Daniel Boone, of Kentucky, and the heroic exploits that have been written concerning them in the early pages of our country's history? It is to the end that the peole of the East, or rather those who are not acquaninted with the rough life of the border, and especially that portion of it in which the rifle plays so important a part, may personally, witness some of the feats of Western life "a series of shooting exhibitions. The manner in which buffalo are haunted, the exciting chase at a close quarters, the splendidly-trained horses who participate in the chase, the hunt for elk, the stealthy devices of Indians in capturing the fleet-footed animals-- all these will be illustrated in a manner that has never been witnessed East of the Mississippi River. (IMAGE) THE BUFFALO Cody's Famous Ride, 355 Miles in 58 Hours, through a Hostile Country. (24) | 25that one sees the perfection of that skill in marksmanship that has become the wonder of those who are not accustomed to the daily use of weapons. Yet if it were not possessed- if there were not the quick eye, the sure aim, coolness in the moment of extreme danger, whether threatened by man or beast- life in that section would be of little value, and a man's home anything but a safe abiding place. There are exceptional cases of men like Buffalo Bill, Major North, and others, whose names are more or less familiar among the mighty hunters of the West, who excel in the use of rifle and pistol, and to which, time and time again, they and those around them have owed their lives. And they are the worthy successors of a long line of marksmen whose names are also "familiar as household words". Who does not recall David Crockett and his death-dealing rifle in the Alamo? Daniel Boone, of Kentucky, and the heroic exploits that have been written concerning them in the early pages of our country's history? It is to the end that the peole of the East, or rather those who are not acquaninted with the rough life of the border, and especially that portion of it in which the rifle plays so important a part, may personally, witness some of the feats of Western life "a series of shooting exhibitions. The manner in which buffalo are haunted, the exciting chase at a close quarters, the splendidly-trained horses who participate in the chase, the hunt for elk, the stealthy devices of Indians in capturing the fleet-footed animals-- all these will be illustrated in a manner that has never been witnessed East of the Mississippi River. (IMAGE) THE BUFFALO Cody's Famous Ride, 355 Miles in 58 Hours, through a Hostile Country. (24) |
