The evening world. Newspaper, March 27, 1908, Page 19

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rh — or PEESSAES sengegss. SESESEEEESESESES $e. —— Tale No. The “Bad Medicine’? Machine. I TOLD you how “Red Cloud" and his Sioux warriors wiped out Col. Fevterman's command in the woods beyond Fort Kearny in| the late 6s, and | how the chipt ts} still alive to boast | for and of his victory, | But for all that} Was he was terribly MF Coby punished And here {s the story of Ivs punishmen When news of Fetterman's annihila- ton went forth among the Indian na- tions hundr of warlike ages: + flocked to Red Cloud s si Anan aervtt Paneer toro me tee Telia bod, oer an army 3,00 st hel vaweptiithe)| sue: accuse meade) 8) Reneralycharne plains, dealing death and torture in| BY D Genie QUST) CAs wholesale want! ties, But he st bered 100 to 1, were ready. ueseaetn Bs tonaeat - re The first division of Sioux, 1,000 in ail, Phil Kearny ORT ooo hncs wens | MUTed themselves at the durricade ta th & dus plans were | The galling. unerring fire of the repeat- ripe. But other plang were just as ripe ors as his. be Uncle Sam had profited by the Fet- terman lesson. ‘The old muazzle-loading ‘NB |} the barricade, Then the Sioux broke rifles of the fort were woandoned for! and ran. They circled about the was- up-to-date repeaters. New Howltzers| ong a: a gallop. looking for some weak replaced the old-fashioned cannon. The! spot, while the ring of rifle fire | Indians at the time knew no of | the central group of wagons flashed out these new tricks. Nor did they like the hub of some huge Cather the wagons of the “wood trains’ wheel | Deen metal-lined and plerced The charge was repeat Six times! loop holes so as to make splendid bar- | the New Tales ” ~” w 2 of the Plains By Buifalo Bill (Wm. F. Cody) PEST ETSISIFSSSIT FFIGITFISSTTSS GSTS SSSSIFSISSFOIIS reload, fourth volley ents, ‘The amazed Indians, range, uous deadly firing from the long range repeaters, treat, walted. let ‘through his (rain. The Sloux judged fron’ the quantity of firing that there must be many more men behind the wagons than the at first thought. vance line of archers, with poisoned ar- rows, crawling up under cover to clo! Still the most Sioux were within twenty feet of O48 a SAsanacnnagseee: Sesscsessssssesseses" | 20. — | | But no. A second, third and) crashed into the assail- who had loo! easy victory, drew back out of pursued all the way by contin and leaving heaps of dead wounded all along the line of re. ‘The defenders reloaded and Lieut. Jenness lay dead, a bul- Another soldier dead and two more were wounded had So they gent an ad- met and cut through thelr ranks ge continued till the fore- Indians almost over e rioades in case of attack barriers, But each time Tho Indians stili carried muz Yng back. Then the a| Yeading guns. Also many of them u all was heard above the trees and] Gowwinavarcowitthatates wel velhir the great missile burst in a crowd of| @oned. A good archer at close quar- | Savares. | ters was as dangerous in his way as| Major Smith and 100 troops, wits) @ revolver man. Red Cloud believed nis | ® Howitzer, attvacted by the firing, wa victories were due to the aid of the| coming out from the fort to the de- Great Spirit, or “Good Medicine.’ He, | fenders’ relief! | Uke all Indians, dreaded the Evil Spir-| The shell was another terrible puzzle | ft's “Bad Medicine.” |to the Indians. They broke and ran Capt. James Powell and Liout. | standing against the double fusillade of Jenness were sent out one day with| Howitzer and rifles only long enoug! thirty men in oharge of the wood/to remove some of their wounded. | train. There were rumors of Indian| Capt. Powell and his men bailed the attack, So, with memory of Fetter-, reinforcements wi. wild joy. For, man’s fate, they were on the watch. | her charge been made, the sav When a scout brought news of the; must @ conquered. Ammunition @dvance of a big hody of savages the | a8 almost exhausted and most of woodsmen were able to throw their| the rifles bad become so overheated wagons into @ barricade before the {rom rapid and long-continued firing Taeeceee : hey were useless, Several of t! Fush came. All were shots. All defenders were crazed by the excite- had repeating rifles. There was no|ment of battle and did cot recover Gime to escape to the fort. thelr senses for weeks. he Indians had lost 1,137 men. But The advance gnard of the Sloux | far greater was. the moral effect of changed with wild vells. At fifty yards | what they called the “Bad Medicine Gistance the defenders pened fire | Machine” that “had ‘conatiered "them pi ranea |g Thus Fetterman avenged and t meen ese the “savages | Sioux learned a wholesome respect for | ous! ‘$ must pause to Uncle Sam's “medicine.” | Too Young for Boys. Dear Betty AM sixteen. Am I too young to be taken to places of amusement by a young man? E. You are entirely too young to go to the theatre with a boy unchaperoned. It 4s perfectly proper, however, to re- ceive him at home and to be friends with him. may tu Dear Betty Vincent’s Advice on Courtship ana Marriage 09000000 leave his friends to sce you home. Would waste no more time on him, but | accept the attention of same other man. If he loves you at all and thinks he | | ] AM twenty-three, and a 1! lose you he will renew his atten- te you. | Don’t Marry in Haste. Bemy: young man| But do not regard any boy | Seriously until you are ‘much older.” | | 7 Have known only three weeks hae Give Him U; asked me to become his wife. Do ve flim Up. | you think it ts right for me to accept? Sweetheart says that when he ROR + is with his friends he cannot leave them to see me home. Late- ly his love toward me has grown cold and when I ask him what is the reason he mys nothing. M. J. He does not love you or he woult ‘Child's Night-Gown—Pattern No. 5927, How to Obtain Patterns. aCtorR®: Saye apeeity size wanted, May Manton’s Daily Fas Call or end by mail to THE TON FASHION BUREAU, No, York, Send ten cents in coin or atamps for each pattern ordered IMPORTANT—Write your name and address plainly, and al- 3 | Don't marry tn haste, for you will be sure to repent at leisure. |not love the young man seriously in 80 |ghort @ time. Tell him you must wait | for alx montha at leat until you both | become better acquainted. You could hions. | i Gig plain eacque Nightgown ts al- weye comfort. able as well as simple, end t much used for the younger ahildren, ‘This one can be made from nainsook, long- cloth, batiste end ma- terials of the sort, and @ls0 from the wash fiannels and flannel- ettes that are so satisfactory cold | weather, Jf a little daintiness for more Uked, the eellar and cuffy can be finished with dace or @ scal- doped edge or in some similar manner, is, ‘The quantity of ma- terial required tor the medium size (6 years) 1a 4 yards 27, 37-8 yards | 36 Inehes wide. Patteyn No. 5027 15! eut In simea for ohile dren of 2 4 6 and & years of age. * EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- 21 West Twenty-third street, New Can You Beat That, Sadie? « «x The Evening Worid Daily Magazine, Friday, By R. W. Taylor Vaudeville Is on Can you beat sure! Mle HELP You Out Att L CAN! the kum; Since K. & E. quit things look glum And movin’ pitcher shows have come! that, Sadie? OH! AIN'T You KIND? LIKE FATHER To me! JUST 215 1S ZE ONLY REFINED ACT ON Z— BitL! HUK! THEM Moving vi PITCHER SHOWS 1S CERTAINLY CRABBING OvR BUSINESS! FORCET IT, Bo! Nov OUGHT To BE IN THE SUPPER SHOW SSSESSSSEASSES SSS OSS (From “The Four up O Hockwall’s When young grimness on countenance. “Richard, ee you use? R coll ee | sal 1 sure made good on the Western wheel, But. gee! how cheap It makes you feel To be billed below the Whistling Seal! Can you beat that, Sadie? 1 your cl I suppose ab a rule. A idedly. MAZIE, WHY DON'T You NIX WITH THAT) bloods spending QUIT THE SHOW BUSINESS ? Birt 1 can't Uae lnE bs clothes. ¥ LET'S GET MARRIED AN! SETTLE Down ! KEEP House! to what's di T use the old F Can you beat FIFITTITIIGF (Copyright, 1907, by Me Anthony manufacturer 4 out the brary window of h nue mansion and do you pay n've got as much m: waste as any of ‘em, and yet you stick March 27, 1908.. —_— O. Henry’s Stories of New York Life FPPGISTISTISSITTSS FIT TTISITIIIF: ———Story No. 15. Mammon and the Archer. 7 by Hent jure, Phillips & aan 0. Rockwa roti fetor Eureka rinned. Rockwall entered brary the old man laid aside his news- paper and looked at him with a kind his big, smooth, ru¢ Anthony for the soap t nt hard, only six months -home fr ge, Was startled a little. Six dollars a dozen, I think, dad." | out sixty dollars, “You're a gentleman,” said Anthony “I've heard of these young $24 a dozen for s0 ne hundred mark and moderate. N eka—not only for se looked | Fifth ave-| Rockwal ammermas aiecniicereuetecses oS” The Greatest of Short Story Writers, , keep mamma and the waiting,” said she, >» Wallack’s Taeatre as fast as you said Richard loyally. Nhirty-fourth street youug Riche juickly thrust up the trap and or- red the cabman to stop, “I've dropped a ring,” he apojogized, as le climbed out, “It was my moth- and I'd hate to loge it, I won't detain you a minute—Il saw where it “We other ry.) 0.) mustn't red of the er's, ldy s than a minute he was back in the cab with the ring. | But within that minute a crosstowa car had stopped directly in front of the cab, The cabman tried to pass to the left, but a heavy express wegon leut him off, He tried the right, and | had to back away from a furniture van that had no business to be there, He tried to back out, but dropped dts reins and swore dutifully. He was lockaded in a tangled mess of vehicles nd horses. A Blockade. One of those street blockades had oo~ curred that sometimes tie up commerce hat vaAD for | to | ow one timent, but {t's the purest soap made.) and ement quite suddenly In the Whenever you pay more than 10 cents | pig eit a cake for soap you buy bad per-| «why don't you drive on?” sald Miss fumes and bets But 60 is 05 Lantry, impatiently. “We'll be late.” ing very well for a young man in| “hiaiicg stood up in the cab and looked your generation, position aLBIOnE | a sienares gre stne wre al spite wat eel Nopanas As I said. a gentleman. Tbe | wazons, trucks, cabs, vans and street it takes three generations co inake « filling the vast space where Broad- ange RI tall Sixth avenue and ‘Phirty-fourth sick as grease, It's made You) street cross one another as a twenty- one, By hokey! its almost made one) Jy ineh maiden fills her twenty-two fo me. I'm nearly as impolite and) yi. gindie, And still from all the cross disagreeable and i} “las thee) streets they were hurrying and rattling two old Knickerbocker gents on each) toward the converging point at full aidecorMmestunteeanit 1, and hurling themselves into the pecauss I bought In betw. Struggliny mass, locking wheels and ‘ , 9 adding their drivers’ imprecations to the “[orena nowe fh “What's Her Name? mor. ‘The entire traffic of Manhattan N 4 ‘phere are some things that money | scemed to have jammed Itself around can't yny remarked young|thema ‘The oldest New Yorker among Rockwall rat |the thousands of spectators that lned Ans said Anthony, keenly; “what's| the sidewalks had not witnessed a street My manager's a poifick gent! I'm sick of wolking like an ox, har me? lockade of the proportions of this one 1 don’t know how my salary went, And I’m dead gone on Willie Knox! Richard began to walk up and down I'm very sorry,” said Richard, os ho But I touched him for my next month’s rent! Vd marry—but | can't darn socks! the brary floor, There was enough] resui bless Sh sibut ie opie ee ere that, Sadie? Say! Can you beat that, Sadie? comradeship and sympathy tn this cr are stuc heyawOnleige : Fie s old father of his to draw his loosened up in an hour, It was my dence. fa If 1 hadnt dropped the ring y: on't you ask her?" demanded eas A tno iaad Kare ; me see the ring,” said Mise 50 Ways for Girls to Farn a Living. old Anthony. “I've put it off too late She's going Lantry ‘ow that it can't be helped, 3 to sail for Europe at noon day after to-]| I domt care. I think theatres are stu- norrow for wo yea ay. Im to] pid, anywa Oxxxxxrzxx 00 0-0-0-2+4 0-0 xx Hs ee aia me a sate evening for a} At 1 o'clock that night somebody Reg ears SSO | oh inutes, Sho'x at Larchmont now | {pred lightly on Anthony Rockwall's This series gives complete infor- ‘s by no means closed to women. er of a local to recommend spectal jthe pace is slower, and the surround- | iy jer aunt's, 1 can't go there, Butj (veh os SK CHD mation as to positions open to girls,| The International Typographiea! | men to employers, they often break |ings more congenial every way Ti NallGwedaT Olea tihenivitivekcabha’ ‘Come in shouted Anthe UF § 3 ihe requirements, duties, pay, etc,| Union. which, to a great extent, con-| the rule where a woman Is concerned, | easiest ¥ f ting into the trade]. Grand Central Station to-morrow |’ a red ans ae reading Lia koa Hs a , trols the trade, admits women to mem-| Hence we find women employed on/is to secure the friendly assistance Of| a oiing at the 89 train. We drive book or miratical seven ures fatale 2 9 ¢ positions. bership on equal terms, and imposes | equal terms with men, even in morning| #ome ore who 1s” alrec If Ree nee ea pimvc ineiaes CEav waist ee sa unt) Hien) leoking heavy penalties on ofMfces that em- | newspaper offices. thas a relative who {s @ print AS FASS at ETL ES OMS Las TE Tbs — Printing Trades. ploy women at wages lower than those| It is in book and job work, however, | shuld begin early to convince” nT mailnetfornia inttiaiicnl Do left aot ear oy ian lat eat Paid men. Although it is against tae | that women have their Sest chances ag|thit she has the material in her for} oo a uid aisten to a decla- They're or S the old days|Tule of the organtzation tor any off- printers, ‘The work is more artis an accomplished craftswoman, aoe en Noe ae OAC ea a ently ay ; ryote I of hand type- Apprentices are admitted between the |) 10 rie ae ene a gtancea? No shard. On to the eats) setting printing . A ages of fourteen and twenty. A com- |" atone . , "7 ; a i ; a ons eae BER 0 7 f atecnance we) wre thelr cab could was one of the R fl t f B h | mon school education is deemed suiti- | \"0 What cervoue \ i man could ac- fnielligent mind and a gor 4 memory Reel Ke Accident or Monzy 2 quire. She did Bpsremisesweriral Anes camaoNtol inter aan pene aera uaere Tal : : good work and % learned in the printing office, words and avai ree All “And, oh, Brot Anthony, don’t was always sure of By Helen Rowland, phruses never heard outside would live longer. ‘There's no hope ot ever joast of the power of money againt a job, The intro The apprenticeship term 1s five years, | S¢tting @ talk with Miss Lantry by A little emblem cf true love—a little duction of typeset- ATRIMONY fs the slip that usually shatters the cup of love. ut during that time the girl draws| She sail Mng that symbolized unending and uns ois Asking a girl {f you may kiss her before doing it 1s an insulting |a fair w CEN) (hari aneeihy “Macic’? Ri mercenary jaffection—was| the cause of. THe ce N [ revantsa 7.08 ell tbelpesronalbidtyeonsher, unt!l in the last she reecives not less The *‘Magic’’ Ring, four Richard finding his happiness. He type and others— | Blue Beard undoubtedly fancted ‘he would have been an idea! husbant than two-t! 2 sla fe, in| That night came Aunt Vdropp in the str and got out Faedaltedeakenae if Fatima's curjosity had not driven him to the verge of murder. N. B.—|New York City from $l to &7 a weck | Sentimental, wrinkled s, op-|to recover it. And before they could and printing has become almost en-|A!ways lay {t on your wife. in union offices. Althou the work is | pressed by w 1 to 4 i Eerrraat} Ho ti a man’s trade, especially in| A man may send you a gold-handled umbrella with your monogram on ft tn skilled and demands the best effort | t his e biti san! aj won ther there ites. This, however, 1s probably only] diamonds and mean nothing but good-fellowship, but if he offers to put It up poss!li it is not over-diMcult and is | « nurse on t bject c , ‘ i in ney, temporary. The introduction of ma-| and carry it over you for fear the mist will spot] your feathers you may be sure engrossingly interesting. ‘The tneotype | 8 O28 the next even ed true love, chinery usually drives women out of a|he's in love. {machine 1s no harder to cperate then | 2 aie a tas : a gold rh a Be eee atte trade at first, but It almost Invariably| ‘There ts nothing half #0 helpless and pathetic looking as the father of ehe| Ne typewriter, and hand typosetiing ine) Molleaks save it to Riche | is) olay Anbar Aten forces them back into the trade later. |new baby who. fs occupying all the family attention. volves no unusual effort beyond cone | ard. ei s] s en att ern The census of 1900 reported no less * stant mental conc on, Wear’ tt to-night, nephew," sheyI wid n't spare any exp i eee ee A man eeldom discovers that he hasn't married his affinity until his wife be- |" The woma at the end Recwad our inothersmavalitatolme:|ineth than 15,353 sromen engaged) En DUE gins to get crow’s-feet around the eyes. {her five yea eahily Ands her | Good luck in love she suid it brougitt Rare corer ess rk in the State: self in 0 lanalae 8 an p Temade no report of the number en-| A Married man thinks that if he concedes to amooth his top hatr and carry @ ves het” cot iilon Ibe eval aavenlimenteretvelivitoivoul wien ney have done Ai mire ty, except in the cane he is suffictently dressy to go out anywhere with his wife, Mg, after marriuge, mistortue you had found the one you toved FAM NAS Rockwall, a 2 ah i r, or ne fs le: a widow, = flex Borough of oklyn, where 158 were| Love 1s just the shine on the jewel of matrimony; but, after all, the shine on WUE EE ORURGKALON ERICK » station tbe ce Cs found, It will be seen that the trade jewel {s the whole thing. Wed craft Is nover forgott: € the gadd sa iia ns ju Rereits i m tid let me go on with this Clarence the Co vw ut By C. W. Kahles y story should end here. L wish it iid as heartily as you who read tt $ to the YER PROMOTED W THE MOTOR CYCLE x SLOW UP YOURSELF! SLOW UP, LOOK OUT! i t Bo SQUAD, CLARENCE. HERE'S YER NEW | FOR6OT HOW TO YOURE GOING A MILE, if “ tom th. NOTOR CYCLE, THANKS,CAP! YE Do ME GREAT, 1's CLARENCE! STOP IT! AMINUTE sae a Sy GOIN YO MiLES v AN HOUR! with red hands a necktie, who 1 himsel 2 at Anthony house and was at once re= kwall's j ceived In the } “Well,” sald nony, reaching for | his check book, was a good bdilin’ t Let's see—you had 35,000 in own," above my “I paid 20, Th ) T paid two, a n't it work 18 t 1 I'm glad : at Ite hs ne. c k his a a ree : 2 time 1, It was two could get below Phirtee 1 you are, sald ring off a ' and the $300 se money, « al] Kelly can Nek the |man that invented poverty.’ Anth y illed Kelly when he was at : idn’t sald h where on tle a kind without any clothes on ab rows around with a bow, did you? { Kelly, mystified, “ dn’t If was like you say, maybe ps pinched him before [I got loaner ught the little rascal wouldn't chuckled Anthony, "Goode

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