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3 revisions | AnnaH at May 19, 2020 01:16 PM | |
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6955 After a successful summer season at Erastina, S.I., and New York (originating there, at Madison Square Garden, a now much-copied style of Leviathan spectacle) twice crossing the Atlantic, visiting respectively Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington-an uninterrupted season of 2 years and 7 months, starting at St. Louis, Mo., on the Mississippi River, was finished in conjunction with the successful Richmond Exposition on the James River (Virginia). The members of the organization returned over the vast continent to their respective localities (ranging from Texas Cow-boy and Vaguero and his southern valley of the Rio Grande, to the Sioux warrior and his weather-beaten foothills of Dakota), to be reunited in the following spring on board S. S. Persian Monarch, bound once more across the Atlantic to Harve, and consigned to the Great Universal Exhibition at Paris. Sufficiently large grounds were secured from thirty-two small different tenants, at a JUBILEE YEAR, 1857, EARL'S COURT, LONDON, -FAREWELL, 1892 great expense-two streets being officially authorized to be closed by the municipality so as to condense the whole-in Neuilly (close by the Porte de Ternes, the Bois de Boulogne, and within sight of the Exposition). Expensive improvements were made, grand stand, scenery, a $25,000 electric plant erected, and a beautiful camping ground built. The opening occurred before an audience said to have equaled any known in the record of Permières of that brilliant Capitale des Deux Mondes. President Carnot and his wife, the Members of his Cabinet and families, two American Ministers, Hon. Whitelaw Reid, Hon. Louis MacLean, the Diplomatic Corps, Officers of United States Marines, etc.. etc.-a representative audience, in fact, of ladies and gentlemen of distinction, known the world over, in society, literature, art, professions and commerce-honored the Inauguration by their presence, and launched, amidst great enthusiasm, a seven months' engagement of such pronounced success as to place the Wild West second only in public interest apparently to the great Exposition itself. | 69 |
