[?]
troduction of a grandiose band of Indian
chiefs, from the Pawnee and Ponca tribes,
direct from the reservation in the Indian
Territory, under the immediate charge of
Mr. W. F. Cody, [?] Master Eddie Dar
gren, [?], the Boy Chief of
[?] Pawnee, the youngest chief of which
any record is given among the [?]
[?]. His rendering of the "Wolf
Dance" and the "Home Dance" are truly
realistic.
Buffalo Bill's Shooting
The fancy rifle shooting of Buffalo Bill
is not effective to ladies or [?] peo
ple as might be expected. The rifle he
uses for [?] He
shoots with marvelous accuracy, standing
sitting, lying and stooping, backward and
forward, taking aim backward into a
looking glass, etc.
Look out for the novel street parade,
Saturday afternoon, [?] after the arrival
of the company. Buffalo Bill and his
Indian Chiefs, mounted on horseback, will
be led by Mr. Cody's own Military Band.
The "blood and thunder element" of bor-
der play is not so prominent in Col. In-
graham's drama, "Knight of the Plains,"
and consequently the elite of the country
go to witness Buffalo Bill in his new play.
Read the synopsis, in another column
of the "Knight of the Plains." It shows
it to be a thrilling story of adventures.
And then it is a sketch from real life.