A. 4 If i V 1 il in ini ((TT)H ynpinT (TT A TUT A RESSSSR of this market. Over. 94 were sold here. X&3ESCS Omaha WOMAN A TAILOR FOR MEN Chicago Boasts One Who Has Pros pered at It. MISS HILLS A COUNTRY GIRL lluslarsa (irons I mil Now he Una m Hhop Where She Some Unit's Kmiloe mm Many na titty Women. CHICAGO. April 4. Chicago la said to lhave the only tailoring establishment for nen In the country which l owned, and I muling d by a woman. Miss Florence N. Hills la Uh- name of this woman man's tailor. She l as been In the business for the last eight years, mid dining the tuny s,asona employs (Illy workers, mostly women, with a scanty sprlukllne? of iiiym Ml km Hill, wln'ii u n rmti r saw her, wis talking, sewing, eating her luncheon unit having lirr shoes laillshtd at one and "the same tittle. "Never have time to slop, ton inueh to do; iiueh a, vhort while to live," te us ured her iUtor. "When . I die can't mine baek aaaln, j ou know. Vih I could, then I'd take lime to lent once In a while. keep my appointment. That's th reason I have suroerded and that Is the reason I don't have time to wuate. If I broke my aiipolnum nls, never had lluuga reudy when I said I would, then I might have time to kill like a lot of tailors 1 hear complaining of dull times. IVm't know what dull times are In my busineas. The only difference Is that some seasons I have t mjloy twice as many helper as others, l ikes Her Hualaeaa. ""'v k u; the busiiu J Ixi uure I liked II- iii!i!W!iMwww w.uiijip j,imn .upwpww g.nifi. ..m.i i i 111- ...mi I..- . - H H IN You You You You . u, CPIa receipts in 1907 were 1,158,716 ildiivL ancj were the h(&(frXTk suPPlies for er Buyers took fully 85 is the 2d largest sheep market in the I had always been fond of sewinc. Mv grandmother taunlit me how. tihe had come out weat when it was a new country and had been compelled to make all the clothes for her family. She said ehe always hat it to make the girl's things, but she Just felt In clover when her husband and Hons hud to ba fitted out. I Inherited It from her. for when my father died and 1 h;nl to go out to. work It came as natural to me to make men's clothes as It does for a duck to take to water. We lived in the country then and I had to go around sew ing; by the day. At the end of six years I had Worked up such a tailoring trade In that community that I hadn't any time to Klve to making women's and airla' clothes. One of my patrons moved to Chi cago and the next aprlne; wrote me to come on and do my regular two weeks' work for her husband and sons. She said she had iH-en all over the city with her boys und hadn't found a place where she could get as Rood looking suits for the same money that it coct her wh. n made them. Woy Her Pars Kalrl). , "I lu ver had been more than ten miles away from our farm In my life, so you may know what a visit to Chicago meant to me. I was all eyes dining those two weel.s. but It didn't keen me from doing g.iod work. I'd m v r made such stylish suits Ix-foro n my life. My seeing ut all rigid but it vi f the first opportunity I bad ever had for getting style. The minute I struck tlu town I knew it would never do for nie tc Mart in to make those suits until I had looked around. After I had viMled several of t lie men's furnishing shops with the woman 1 was to work for and seen the clothes on the Iniys J was to make for I decided I'd take a few lessons In pressing I went to a high class shop, and, asking for the manager, told him about my being from the country and wanting to take a few lessons In pressing so as to help my ome Market is HIPPING LIVE STOCK Save Much Shrink Save JBuild heaviest in the per cent of these reacri a total of this number. work when I got back home. Ho was very condescending, but he took me in. It was three days clear gain for him. He worked me like a hore and never even offered nie a chuir to sit on, much less a penny in waes. "When I finished the suits for the boys in that family the father liked them so much that he said I might take hint in hand. He had a couple of suits that he liked sent home for his wife to see. Of course I looked them over pretty thor oughly before they were returned. I dupli cated both suits, a,nd they didn't cost half the money the tailor charged. It seemed to me like cheating and swindling in those days to charge people so much for your Work, but since I've come to live In the city and found out about the expenses of living 1 charge along with the rest. I do the bent .work, have the best styles and charge the best prices. Hark to Chicago to Stay. 'Three cars after that first trip to Chi cago mother and I came on to stay. Opened a little shop on a back street with the proiiiine of five regular customers. I sewed while mother did the housework and acted us delivery girl. We were on the lookout for slack seasons, but none came. As soon ss one stilt was off my hands there was another to take up. Hefore the end of the first six mouths I wrote for the woman who had helped pie In the country to Join me here, tine la the forewoman In my work rooms now, and three of her nieces uie regularly employed in the business. Those four were my first assistants, and if they've ever bad a discontented day since they came I've never known It. When business men complain of not being able to keep their help I point at those four and ask the reason. "The reason is plain enough. It rests all on lbs shoulders of the employer. If Save ! ' " " I - I. i . i l ' Tig,iVTraiBKKtil,,,r--',,' " r, ... rr T r miliar .n.-...- i - i , .-Tnm f j -J- "gJM .',, . J IJ ,ggf H TITfc . oKrAHA1 SUNIUy BllE: AVRIL TO Much Time Muc Up Home head TT history cattle issnssss of 2,- South world. I worked my women and men us some of the tailors 1 know they would be going off and leaving me In "the lurch at the busy season. Just as they do In other shops, and I for one wouldn't blame 'cm. 1 never have, to 'consider the, law In the management of my shop becattae I know a woman's strength and have always taken that as my guide. No woman has ' ever been employed In my shops for lunger than eight huurf a day. Out of that time there is always taken an hour for lunch and recreation periods of twenty minutes each, morning and afternoon. Heat Hoar at the Khun. ' 1 don't tell them they can nave an hour for lunch and then encourage them to stay in and take a few stitches. They know that in good weather they ate ex pected not only to g-t out of the room and Into the streets for fresh air, but they are expected to stay out until the end of the time. The twenty minutes given morn ings Is only for stirring around the i ji nu and giving their backs and finicr tim to rest, but in the atlcrnoon lecreatim they take turns making and serving tea and biscuits. Oil, it is my treat, hut 1 find that It pays. Wording hu i an b.vngs are Just the name as work animals. Hive them good care and they give you good sci vice. i "Another point wherein I dlffir from other tailors In Chicago. If not all over the country. "I have no tardy fines. You put a woman on her honor and ninety-nine cases out of lot) she will come up to the mark. When my workers ate a little late in getting in, knowing the opening hour, they feel In honor bound to explain to the forewoman of their room. If the excuse la a gcod one and the woman is an hon est, good worker, nothing is said to her beyond an expression of sympathy. If she should he a liar nearly all laiy women are Hare she la soon dropped, or l( she drops out herself she finds bar place filled 5. 1908. Money Indu f i.1 " Thrrfcs year iooi up z,zoj,odz neaci. Local packers bought fully 97 per ct. of this big supply and would have used more if they could have gotten them. Horses sold here and from this point were reshipped to al most every state and territory in the nation. HS3 on her return. I never have to advertise for help. 1 let It be known In my work room that such a numhtr of women will be needed at a certain time and there are always more applicants than 1 have room for. Woiuru Have Advantages. "Do I think women make Inner tailors than men?" Well, I know they do Just as satisfactory work. There wus a time when I preferred men fur the machine work, but that was on account of their strength, not their skill. The machines were heavy, and for thai reason It was hard to get a woman with sufficient strength to run them for any length of time without breaking down. Now thai machines are no longer beyond tue strength of the average woman I never think of hiring a man for the work. My reason for employing women rather than men ins almost entirely within my own personal peculiarities. I detest the odor of both whisky and tobacco. I con sider smoking and chewing a criminal waste ! of money and I have absolutely no patience I with a man who drinks. It would be diffl- cull for me lo gel fifty first-class tailors tin Chkago !io neither used tobacco nor whleky. For that reason if for no other I . would alaays pruier women. There are. however, suvrrul other reasons. One of them is that the hard-working woman Is better undei stood and for that reason more easily managed by another hard-working woman than by the average man. "There is no reason so far as I can see why a woman shouldn't tailor for men. I begnn with boy's clothes, and as the boys grew up I grew up with them. They be came accustomed to me and I to them. At first my boys would all go off for few seasons and then come slipping in for an alteration on a garment that had cost them several times over what 1 would have charged. From that beginning they would gradually put themselves bsck on my books. the -Be stries f i a r i 3BB received during the year, 44,020. head. These were practically all to remain as long a they were In reach of me. Now that my reputation as a men's tailor has become as well established as my making of boy's clothes t'.ioy appear to have lost all desire to change. Outside of my workrooms there are only two points In which I claim to differ from other tailors, I keep my engagements to the minute and a customer can, If he prefers, furnish his own goods. I import goodj. gs to London twice a year, but If a customer wains a suits made from his own material all right and good. That !s a part of my business and I guarantee to salivfy him. "When I tame to Chicago eight years ngo I owned one sewing machine, the fuinlturu for two rooms and three hundred odd dol lars in bank. Today 1 own my shop and workrooms In the heart of the city, a good working capital in bank, besides having enough invested to keep me In comfort the balance of my day if I should dei.de to I step down and out. 1 began by wjiklng hard and now my business keeps me up to the notch. It Is reliability and hard work tiiat lias given me success, and from what 1 know of the world, I'd have gotten II in almost any other field by paying the samu prite." REVERED 'ON A BATTLESHIP ".tar-fpaaglrd Rassrr" aad Quarter Deck Bfrereseee Above All Else. The longer you remain on a warship, either as a member of the crew or as a guest, two things become more and more impressive. One Is the reverence for the quarterdeck and the other Is the patriotic regard for the national hymn, "The Btar Gpengled Banner." The quarterdeck seems te be almost a holy place. The officer Jute it taey step upon It, No stain y r v i thousands S535&5939 Im KlInaH , , " " """! upon it. If a man, for Instance, were found spitting upon it well, hamstringing would be the fitting Penalty ,f , f(,,ing9 f )o8e " the performance were consulted Ixt 0e inollrnt n,veul t(B rfg&rd lie hymn on H.ipboard. We were ateam lug Ju;t below the eouator on the way to nio Janeiro one evening when showere made It impossible for the band to play on deck. The concert was held In a rase mate and the humidity added grPat dla comfort to the heat. Members of the crew off duty had at.lnued to their under Mrts and tro.isor. The musician had thrown off thcii coals. Their face, ran with sweat us thiy played. Kvery concert cutis with "Tfce Star Pparpled Manner." U was tl,a to pUy It. All the musicians stood up and the men wlm had crowded In to hear Iho music came to attention, but not one move loward llftlntf hi baton would the band master make until every ono of hi men had put on his coat and hut. They might play Strauss waltse and even Wagnerian selections in their unuVrtMi t, but no notu of the national hymn could lm played until every mat- was In Urcs b filling tho oc casion. All this Is nothing unusual, but It Is impressive to the man who sec It for the fttM time. So, although t,i-r la no place for com fortable loafing Hj sometimes It is lonely, a civilian paero;cr on one of these ships after all can f rid entertainment and other :l Irgn t i 'n' evert him. Day hy day ho feels his patriotic linpuhn iiuickened. Day by day he is more and more glad that he Is an American citlxen. Franklin Mat thew (fleet correspondent) In New York Bun. By using the varlou department of Ths Bee Want Ad Pages you get quids JXunM t uvaU eiec , ' 1 TtaL'wwwi r- i , m