It easy they sent mail to the people before they invented trains.
It easy they sent mail to the people before they invented trains.
You have to do the frycook or cashier job until you earn $10
deliver mail
Go to their website, click on careers/employment, and search for a job in your area. Then apply on the job you want.
Well, no they prefer vegetation. But maybe a wack-job Caterpillar will enjoy munching on some yummy asparagus. once i saw one eat a small pony.
The American Express Corporate office is hiring at certain credit card locations. American Express provides job fairs for people who are interested in working for American Express.
pony tail, spiked, too bright a color
The image of the Pony Express is of young riders galloping across the prairie. But hundreds of years ago when John Upson made his first run, he spent a lot of the riding time walking. It was April 1860, The Pony Express had a goal: deliver mail 1,966 miles between Missouri and California in less than 10 days. Today, ten days is very slow to deliver mail, but a hundred years ago ten days was very fast. Ships usually took months to cross oceans and coaches took at least 25 days to travel 1,000 miles. So a transportation company put out the call: "Wanted-young, skinny, wiry fellows, not over 20. Must be expert riders, and are willing to risk their lives for the job. Orphans preferred. Wages twenty five dollars a week." Company employees came up with a relay system. Each rider would travel 100 miles night and day, riders would stop every ten to twenty miles to change new horses. When a rider got to their home station, a new rider would take over. In all, there would be 190 stations along the Pony Express trail. Upson's route took him east from sportsman's hall, near Sacramento, California. Across the Sierra Nevada mountain range. The night of his ride, a blizzard tested Upson's courage and strength. Some bet Upson could not make it across the mountains. But he was determined to uphold the Pony Express motto: "The mail must go through." The reputation of the new mail service depended on him. Snow covered the wagon tracks and landmarks along the way, making it difficult to find the route. At times, Upson had to walk, leading his horse. At other times, his sure-footed mustang, cut the trail. In steep canyons, a wrong step could mean death. Slowly, Upson advanced from station to station until reaching his home station. There, he passed the eastbound mail on to the next rider. A few days later, the westbound mail arrived and Upson crossed back over the snowy Sierra. Again, he was successful-and the Pony Express was off and running. Less than two years later, progress caught up with the Pony Express. The transcontinental telegraph was completed Oct. 24, 1861, and the Pony Express was no longer needed. The new "Talking wires," could carry information quickly across the country. But the Pony Express left behind a stirring legacy. In less than 19 months, riders had covered 650,000 miles and carried 34,753 pieces of mail. Only one mail sack was ever lost. Perhaps the California newspaper, the Pacific, put it best with its tribute to the Pony Express: "Goodbye Pony! You have served us well." -Kenton Curtis.
Your Character is a courier for the Mojave express
Just free to express what you feel..
Level 30 for Adventurers, Cygnus Knights and Aran. Evan has no official job advancements, but hits it's second growth at level 20 and Dual Blade performs part one of it's second job advancement at level 20 and second part at level 30