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The Evening World 50 BOOS This series gives complete infor- mation as to positions open to girls, the requirements, duties, pay, etc. Also how to get the positions. No. 12—Dressmaking. U™ U TIONABL- the best sewing trade a £ can en: is Mh-class making. trade has its dull Seasons, but a of steady most TH sons she without is, of cou One way leave school at Qs errand girl in a Ushment bright, Is 5 n and get Iressinak ng ple t ds After Pp @ome ot y rarely does sic " two tasks. id ‘ally remains among the lowest paid women in the shop. ar better ts it’for a girl to remain at least a y> n school, and with e maturer ize of know ing enter a class in dressz het are many the best Pratt In Kalb a Trade Schoo! ‘Dwenty. being VDOOOQOOGOOQOOOOOOQSHOSS) Ways for Girls to Earn a Living GOVLOGLOSGOE CORK Da —_—. You TAKE THIS) BEFORE I HAVE To smack ye! ] ANI Girls, Stuyvesant Irving for 7 Hast Fifteenth st AHEGD mber of any t mutta’ ight to fit a girl to s assistant, but tly to be pre gz. being almost e ade, req {x aby tha n different machine, who can nake buttons, trim waists kirts, and who has some idea of ign 1s much more valuable in a shop e girl w do only one ki than t 0 ¢ very large to be done or a girl J upon to do | had sulph’ aged in finishing, | finer work, the best pos- f wages to keep her in the be only one if she {9 {Il WELL FOR THE LANDS SAKE! WHAT IN THUNDER 1S THAT? ind to ad) fast as the wor each step as she at So, t work done in a shop Is pre- fogs and doing fs fitted. A eek. The girl D waist Betty: AM seventeen and am with a young man a ten months has ber {t proper for me to jan a pin for a birt lends all tell me a p: df nme. 6 My give day eaks fr J perfectly proper to give the y ana pin. It is a knife, not a ch 1s supposed to break fr Bridal Procession. ear Betty: HAT !s the customar. bridal procession? carry the wedding r! bride at es the wedd! ulred in the cere est man the groom he Wants Amusement. ear Betty: AM twenty. months young man one Iways treats me nicely. vet has never asied to laces of amus Irom one of my reciprocated. carries t and for been tn the past six have ove with year friends tha Do you think about. and do ink he cares for me? 8M. L. Perhaps the young man can not afford ways rpecity size wanted IODOOO000C0500 DOOSCOOCOO00 CON0000090000 Betty Vincent’s Advice on Courtship ana Marriage 3 (000C00000000 00000000 600060060000000000 ‘(A Birthday Present | to nas! * i the past) Girl's Apron—Pattern No. £940. Call or sond by mail to THN EV. TON FASHION BUREAU, York, Send 10 cents !n coin or stamps for each pattern IMPORTANT- Write your name and address plainly, @ | Q Gee wniz! and Ir ake you to places of him It him amusement wil Guess she’d run if a pref NO pon'T WANT SULPHUR D ‘Lasses! EMEMBER when you was a kid? R In spring what funny stunts they did! ur and molasses hid All through my system, Sadie! Bossy! ‘emember how | used to run from our old cow! she saw me now! Can you beat that, Sadie? nore Ask Him to COOCCCOOGIS00000 Cail, Story No. d5—New Series. nto :.*,, Reno’s Battle * With the Sioux alt ~<_- Grand Sport, Indeed. | By “Buffalo Biill.’’ OME years ago Jude's was a noted S concert hall in Dublin, and late | n the ev g the fun was gen Ow TI am Snglishman, bent on seein ry that I one evening, but ex sate to tell. It ts with t le of @ ter- e to a Hiternia exciting, expedition x t ended In Cu st the aid the Engltshman s last charge. a tumbler with cold wat Se it across the ts PE “Now iit the ian next 1. Tanabe have some grand sp any Healt St z c lof that charge and the slaying of Custe! e whole thing 1® really one story, but I am splitting the telling into two parts To go In the aummer of 1874 Gener Sheridan had sent UCH an apron as two expeditt into what was then S this one perfect-| known as the “Northern Country.” one eEarotent of these (the Seventh Cavalry under Wy protects tho! Coneral Custer) was to go from Fort frock beneath, w Lincoln to scout to he Black ® and to come back igh those hills to the post. The other consisted of Col, Anson Mills that {t serves a very|2"4 his command. They were to go Y from Rawlins, Wyoming, on @ scout practical purpose and tour of the Sweetwater coun the fs Ukely to find a Big Horn Basin and Big Worn Moun- place in every girls tain district, and to return by way of Abraha in addition ft can be Worn in place of a If need be, dress eo OOOCOOCOCO © Buffalo Bil’s New Powder River. Milis's tour, expeditions met This whole region wae then an utter | wildern practically untravelled by white men. The Indiana looked on it I was chief scout of as thelr most sacred territory. Even /truth. This seems to have brought him 0 Possible, in canyons « : more, for its hot springs, spouting| into disfavor For when he returned (rym Henly. | By dawn they had igeysers, weirdly colored canyons, |to the West he found the cominend of EE CER ON Se Le smoky, eulphurous pools of medicinal value and all the other werd phenomena that filled the country (now known as the Yellowstone National Park) made ) the savages belleve it the abode of their ) Manitou, or Great Spirit. It certainly was—and 1s—a wonderland, When the two commands met on | Powder River I had my last meeting |mtth Custer. Yet I remember him as if lit were yesterday, He had located rich Id deposits in the Black Hills and the discovery brought a rush of white fortune hunters there. This wholesale immigration made the Indians furious. In 1875 and 1878 the whole Dakota na- tion and their allies were buzzing like a nest of hornets over the coming of the white men. Sitting Bull, the greatest of Medicine Men, stirred them up till further, and they went on the war- path, ‘They picked out thetr best horses, col- lected all the long-range repeating rifles Qnd ammunition they could lay hands lon amd massed for the war. Their rifles, many of them, and of longer ramge than Uncle Bam's rmy carbines, an learned of Sitting Bull's plans and began to gather all the sol- diers he could to the posts near the likely pointe of attack. Gens, Crook, Terry, Custer andw MoGsbbon were all engaged in the work, and the North- vest became one of the busiest parts Wardrobe. As illus trated it 1s made | of om the fabrics, one print wash but ginghams are admir able for the purpose, Inen 1s always dur-| ablo as weil as hand-| ne, and If % mes) thing is Ikea, more elaborat blue or red Mnen or cham With collar and cu of Good effect. white makes a The quantity of ma- terial required for the medicrr | | is 5 yards 24, yards 8) or yea 8 1-2 31-8 yards 4 Inches | wide, | Pattern No. 5940) is cut tn sizes for | girls of eight, ten, | twelve and f en years of age, NING WORLD MAY MAN t Twenty-third atreat, N dered a al No, 182 “Ah, I love to Yes, sir, Me lt Up to get excused! le brother's got de eo @ liitie boy tn such a hurry to get to school!’ measles, an’ I'm hurrying 0000000000000000000000 At Powder River the two were far better | /Can You Beat That, Sadie? + + 4 By R.W. Taylor Now 1 RECKON You'RE READY FER sunoay scnooL! OOH! AINT THEY NICE AND BLUE AND SHINY ? AIN'T You Gon’ To SHINE MINE | was a foolish little goose— Myt | felt proud when ma woutd use Stove polish on my Sunday e@hoes! Can you beat that, Sadie? THEM WAS ‘Tne HAPPY Days, mazie! ‘YEP! DOGCONE THE OLD SHOW Business, any way | Say! my folks never thought, them days, I'd ever grow up with the craze To etar In Georgie Cohan's plays! Can you beat that, Sadie? DOSOCOOCOOOCOCOOOCOOOOOOOOCOOOODHOOGUOCOCOOOOG00000 Tales of the Flains 3! DOOOCOCOCOSOCOOOCOCOGOCCOCOCGI0B060C000060000000000 ot the continent. Terry was to send jan ‘evil omen.” Many predicted that the Department of Dakota troops under they and Custer were going int Custer to Fort Abraham Linooln. But | | Custer was called to Washington to testify concerning @ contract depart- |mene ecandal, He told Congress the true. At 2 A. M. the maroh began again the man empedition nad been taken | ewe that the: from him and that he was to be In| gages ‘The change of only his own regiment, Terry lodges proved aftorward judgment later at a time when wisdom wes most needed. Terry did all he could to soften the ing him to march straight to the Little Bix Horn, Cujt. Bentley, with two companies was to bring up the rear blow and to show his trust in the i1-| With the pack train. Custer himeelf, treated general, When the Indian trai! with five cor mes, was to make a < caren gevon-mile detour and to strike the Lite waa | disoovereds curing Bie Zenon! (tie Big Horn at what he mupposed would Retails m |be the lower end of the Indian village, the savages, he ordered Custer to tak his regiment with ten days’ rations, jeinmunition, ete., hie private scouts (Charlie Reynolds, Bloody Knife and land Reno to continue down stream wun- others) and follow the trail [tl a and Custer should meet. Custer did so. On July 23 and %, 1876,| But here are some faows Custer did jhe and his regiment pressed hard after | not kr Tho Indians he had been fol- the Indians. Then the trail left the!lowing wers only a comparutively small | Ren) would strike i from the upper end and they would crush it between n. Custer waa to ork” up stream Rosebud River, where !t hid previous party, velling to join other 4 | Tun, and struck off toward the Little|ten times ay numerous as thempaivew, Big Horn Miver, At this twist In the! who were encamped at the Little Ils ‘track Custer halted for rest, planning !to march at 7 A. M, over the "divide" that separated the two streams. He | thought they must surely come up with Ena thy a |the Savages by the next day. | prine lial war chiefs were ¢ One queer thing ‘nappenod that night. | Horse, Grass, Raln-!n-the Horn, There was a huge army of how- savages tn tha was thotr Bull ains” me man, the t. Thelr Cre und Pace A strong wind blew down the regimens | jrtjy-iig-Man. ‘hanks er ‘tal flag that stood before Custer's tent. | Bull's counsela, they were re ¢ Instead of falling toward the enemy /#bie to cope with a far larger [than the single | regiment n tho flagstaff tumbled toward the tent. Boldiers, like sallora, are superstitious, | |The men looked on this flag affair as| Cu with shut eyes, gallant stumbled, i Happy Childhood .# # ww By J.K. Bryans. “What makes your friend 60 popular?’ “Aw, he's Capt. llanks, of de bail team, an’ dose foul women ts ttle worshippers!” their st fight. For once an “omen” came |The rogin ent kept out of eight as much as possible, in canyons and ravines, and | vance scouts came back to Custer with had seen several Indian to belong to a MHttle smellpox camp. taking chief commend. This was @ | Custer did not know this. he ar (THY had towed me to the middle humiliation to a man of his eonalttvo| ranged for a general edvunce, He of the grand stand, when I saw srérit. Perhaps it helped to werp his | gave Major Reno five companies, omer- Sheila Cameron and Cecilia Mur ily Magazine, Friday, April 10, 1908. | 008 An A uto Story with Speed to It; CORO | Champion By John Colin Dane. g | eossoess (Copyright 190T vy . pany WW. Dillingham Com SYNOPSIS OF PRWCHDING CHAPTERS. Hugh Cameron, disinherite’ son of a Sootoh nobl Invents and bullds a new sort of | motor car to oom) in the great Vander. | Noorat itp “ftaee fn lrance the | far hanpion cthe cag is, #ub te Ita owaatory), and makes {tin wecret., al only by Jean aud, me: prevent Hus! On landing in’ France an attempt | to wreck Champion. ‘This is fru ted by the prescnce of Ceallia Murray. Deautitul Amer with whom haa unconsc fallen In ‘love, Bia! (whe, aiou ts ‘dan- courre the cars in cade the finet two times wroun}, showing speed that amazes all, A man in a brown auto watches the Face from an obscure spot. On the third trip, aw th amplon reaches Chat Arnaud knocks “Hugh tuto a tree, ‘The an agent of Barr Arnaud 5 haa been bribed ‘to rab of ve, ‘he two fall to pring, Cameron to his senses They ve, Champion towed back to the gran and, CHAPTER IX. (Continwed.) | I Suffer All Things. | Slowly, by cross-roads, they towed me back to the starting point of the face, which by rights I should have won; and as by this time all the cars had come home, been timed and noted, the wretches did not spare me the humiliation of being dragged past the ‘grand stand, showing my battered body | to the world which had cheered me with delirium when last I passed that way. I tried to comfort myweif by saying: “At least thtp is better than being hur- tied off to some dark hole by Barr Simone’s emissaries and immured for- |ever. Now, Shella and Lia Murray will eee me after all. I may be rescued yet.” “| May Be Rescued Yet!" But I could not delude myself into being cheered by such sophistry, It was clear that Barr-Simons’s game was deeper than I had gnessed, and that he was comfortably certain it was all in his own hands, otherwise he would not have run the risk. Or, if I were wrong [1m this surmise, it was because I had eo battered myself that he dismissed me ] trom his mind as worthless, and would simply shame me for the pleasure of humiliating hie rival, my maker. Every one stared at me. as I trailed auiserably by behind the cart-horse, all with curiosity, some with pity in their glances, but more, I thought, with that kind of morbid satisfaction in the fatl- ure of others, which I have learned since then 1s too often characteristic of human nature. Hud I triumphed to the end my victory would hardly have been 8 pomilar one, seeing that I was a rank outsider, and a foreign outakler, too; whorena Barr-Simons, though calling himself an Bnglishman, bad e large | factory In France, where be employed | Prench workmen. I had borne ali of ignominy I could bear, ft @eomed, without dropping to pieces in my mortifoation, whem a thing happened that changed the color of the sky for me | | | | | CHAPTER X. | The Enemy. |ray. They were not together, of course, | but they were standing up, In the midst |of other women who were seated; and the eame expression was on both faces —an expression of horror and distresa, | ‘The news had come by telephone be- | tore I was dragged upon the scene and | they had heard !t, Then, suddenty, they oavght sight of me and I heard— fancied that I heard—a low, pitiful | from each, Without any thought J except for my master and his car, the | two girls left thelr places and ran down the steps between the boxes and rows Jot seats, impulsively bent on making | thelr way to me, At first Mr, Murray tried to restrain [nt daughter, but sesing that this was useles# he followed to keep her tn countenance, Shella's companion, too— the handsome, tlred-looking woman IT had noticed before—would have kept her back {f she could. but Shella did not weem to feel the hand on arm, and her friend, after an instant's hesitation, adopted the same course which Mr, Murray had taken, The Great Barr-Simons. the great Barr- Just at this moment, Simons—the man who for novelty of Invention aud speed cambined had won Hugh | pened waa his fault. | Cameron he was a traitor, that het ‘mpion | fenselees, | father and I: would be:wo gind of news of him.” “If I only knew!" exolatmed Shella, no longer atde to keep back the tears, “We've only just heard of the accident, and nobody seems to know what has happened to him. ‘Where's his chauffeur? Why Isn't he e with the car?” orted Lia, @ bright color atreaming over her face ang her eyes flashing. “I know whatever hap- { I warned Mx, | Meant to ruin him if he could. I"— But BarrSimons stepped forward, { | very polite and very srave, hia;motoring | |cap in his ‘hand. His black hair wae | Whitened with dust, and it mede him |Sppear older and less harsh than ne| | Would ‘have looked without the powe | dering. “T beg your panton,” he said, | but I think you are doing the poop chauffeur an injustice, for so far from having brought about the accident hed 414 his very best to prevent it, and nasi! been badly hurt. You are no, doubt friend of Mr, Cameron's, Well, 1 ami his friend, too, I hope, and Miss eron fe here with my wife end myself 1am sorry that his sister orang friend who care for him should have he: the news of the acoldent tn/euch a sud- den way. I hoped it might have beem Kept from Mies Cameron till I ave broken it ayself, and told het that there are the best hopes for hep’ brother's recovery.” } implored Shefia, j 1 “You are sure? Awaited the answer 1@” while Lie allence, “He Was Lying!” “Sure. { couldn't get to you till:now, | you know, or you should have neard } my version of the unlucky acz:dent | before any rumor of something dread- { ful and mysterious began going around, — end It always does on occasions like * this, I passed the car my: on the { course, Jus: after ‘the steering-gear had + Gone wrorg—must have been a little weakness, everybody thinks and ft» had smarhed into a tree. But Hugh | Was sitting up, drinking out of a five ome ono had offered him, and the poor ebsutecr Reemed. the worse off of tho wo. “Now, I knew he was lying, and my hopes, which haa revived, 4! down “gain. The scoundrel was merety try- ing to mike his impression on the two credulour girls, and the worst was that he was Iike'y to succeed. Shell's eos brightened, und the cloud of suspicion Degen to char away from Lia's charm- ing face. I was sure ehe did not under- stand that this man was bart Smiuns, Hugo's cnemy, and, seeing him with Shetla, hearing that Hugh's siste- was staying with his wife, must have con- vinoed her of the man's aincurt:y, “Burely you Gidn't pass without do- ing anything for Hugh?’ exclaimed Shella, knowing nothing of the cold eclfehness which racing men must cultivate if they would be successful. ‘be was to be taken to a hospital, which ig Wokfty, rather near. A friend of mine was close by—had been wetching he race in bis eutomobile from a cross-reac; he promised te take charge | of everything, and let me beve news‘ ¢or you, Mins Cameron, as even .es be. could. Sheila's Distress. @o to block the cours; though, as far as I was I have taaroet ty own” ehancae of winning to do anything for balosgrdaves ( ought by rights, I ¢eel, to have me. He made a splendid Cameron, ané you may of bien, though by bad If you agree, I'M give orders that car shall be taken to my garage, kept there until he's well enough 9. claim It Shella seemed Aistressed i contused. “II wish I knew what ma 4 brother would wish,” ehe murmured, | remembering, no doubt, dis hina, 7 which had aknost exacamtea tel acoaacty tions, of Gilbert Barndtmens as bie oe i But who, seeing and listening to bandit 5 man now, would not have trusted believing that he had been miajudged? | —.who, net knowing the black truth him, a I knew it? He appeared pathetic, considerate, and even and, though he may have guessed cause of Sheila's hesitation, he sho no sign of offense, thes your brother } ; is ‘T think," he aid, would wish me to look after the welfare because, no doubt, he values ot his can irprise Cup—was being congratu by the Freno! President, the King, and rst, the ot He glanced companion Be er nd excu ready =| nd and had been Master old | 1 » bad dragged me to omy wonder Ila No s Hugh's F of his “Httle sts at happy day of ‘SEL Only Knew!"' things; and if T don't taie z i, what ts to become of tt? He nas no intimate friends here, I be tt or all of eve; at least''—-and he glanced at Mr. Murray and L. “in the automobile world. Edith, tr won side Mise Cameron that Tam right.’ The Other Gir.. 1 sure hi urged hie Kiaily; and Shella could jon. wite out Murrays, dy of to the » 1 1 that coarg Weta very e said, “but short time, i, “If youre sure you won't come with us?" ls quite right,’ Mx tne gin lt’ would fo and seo Mz, 1 Gatinnese ow