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f . be to bring the employers and their i > WLAGOR WAR, ‘onoillation Committee of Civic Federation Arranges to Bring Together Employers and Em- % Ployees to Settle Differences, 100,000 MEN IN IDLENESS. Genator Hanna In a Speech Urges ‘the Warring Interests to Come Together and Make -P. Reasonable Terms. Bfforts to end the existing contentions wetween employers and employees Which bave paralyzed the building in- @ustries in this city and rendered idle 104,000 workingmen, drawing dally wages of nearly, half a million dollars, will be MMaugurated to-day by the Conciliation Committee of the National Civtc Fed- eration. Members of this committee which will endeavor to restore harmony are: , the public—Bmerson McMillan, H. Pago, George Gunton, H. C. Por the employers—R. W. Nelson, Otto | M. Bidittz, Louis B. Schram and J. Al- ezander Hayden. Bor the, wage earners—John J. Dono- yan, K. A. Moffett, James P. Archibald, Prancla MaKay and Robert E. Neldig. The firet effort of the committee will workmen together and thereby establish understanding which will send the verge THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, MAY 14, 1903, FATHER KNICKERBOCKER, BOUND DOWN BY STRIKES AND LOCKOUTS, FINDS HIMSELF IN THE UNENVIABLE POSITION OF A MODERN GULLIVER + { | | i} | men back to work and restore the former prosperous conditions in the Dullding trades which have been inter- Pupted by existing strikes. The effort to take hold of the local situation is the outgrowth of a dinner | ¢ »Biven to members of the National Civic | t ty lon by the officers of the local at the Ashland House last a Among the speakers who discussed Woubles in this city and advocated the “application of arbitration were Arch- Bishop Ireland, Senator Hanna, John yMitohell, President F. D. Underwood, of the Erle; Spencer Trask, Otto M. Bidutz, President of the Master Masons’ Association, and Secretary W. H. Parley, of the United Board of Build- fag Trades. Senator Hanna sald in his speech: “T/" ) mot regard the situation in New|, “Work os at all hopeless. I want to make an appeal to you who have under- | taken the work in this great city to} gtand firmly on the principle of the| \ Federation. I ean recognition of the | j) fact that both siles have rights wii! must be considered. Applications for admission to the meet-| {ng called for to-morrow afternoon by Governing Board of the Building) Association have come with such rush that the mass-meeting Idoa has ‘had to be abandoned, and an executive Meeting will be held at which only one @elegate from each firm will be ad- mitted. The Building Trades Associa- tion's rooms will accommodate only 800, @nd the applications for admission ,al- | ly number close to 2,000. Let fadorsing the movement and asking for | ‘admission to the association have come | from firms all over the country. To- jorrow’s meeting will be devoted to| 4 of organization and a mass-) Meeting will be held later. Work on the schools, which has been Id up because of the differences be- eon the Amalgamated carpenters and the Brotherhood men, bids fulr to be|* started again in a few days. Poilowing | F close upon the agreement signed yestor- | ¢ between the interior decorators and net-makers to employ none bat Brotherhood carpenters, several boss garpenters have announced their will- pees, to sign the same agreement. ir eet piepoee a meeting has been galled at Virginia Hall to-diy, There individual contractors are expected to| a fign the new agreement to emp:oy none | ¢, but Brotherhood poche AS Foon as these | agreements are signed the work on the| © schools, Which has | end up t the strike, will begin. The Brotherhood m y the victory Amalgamated men Ix compe over the ‘ond shey, will be forced into the Br . ‘The Amalgamate’ men #1 matter how many 1 BE ment they have sufficient bosses pledg to them to insure them all the wor need. First avenue and listened to a speech y Giseinto Ferratl, editor of the Boclal- He urged them ‘k untH they got them they wore one of the building situatlo: ork and the bosses would ha » their terms. He urged them, wever, to keep away from the sub- vay and avoid trouble, Presidents Pacelli! and Lauadio, of the mons. also addressed the men and mounce’ that meetings would be he'd very hour, This Is a plan to keep the Over a hundred n ghowed up at the mesting placo 1) shovels, anticipating orders to go n they heard there ing they said they vould have to go to Work, as their fam- fea were starving, and they did. by w u h to t t a k | M E pumas “NON-UNION MEN BEGIN WORK ON THE SUBWAY. | ; Under a strong police guard work in | the rapid transit tunnel was resumed to. @ay. Few concessions were made from! Fanks af the striking laborers, ax the); are willl holding meeting: noing their leaders, but the i Vengeance did not de fon-union men from applying f “By noon the sub-comractors “John B, MoDonald indicated that @ li “over one-third of the regular force was Working. Indications are that the strik- Y ars’ places will be filled by the end of | | the .woek. | John Shields reported that he had who had a speedy compliance with their demand ist paper Nl Proletario. not to qo back r their men from the subway, tack to work, V wis to be a mi hotel. was, When Reed was confronted by his vi and) was al know room and and the trench wore an alr of old-time etivity. All along the suway the 200 teamsters been on strike were in evi- ence, the American flag flying from heir harness. Their decision to return 0 work pending arbitration brought a in John Mowing them $2.25 for a ten-hour day Tho striking Iitallan excavators and rookmen met this morning at No, 2229 GIRL LEAPED FAR FLING FM MAN |Miss Stickler Sprang from the Third-Story Window of a Chi- cago Hotel. CHICAGO, tiokler 14.—Misa of the May a member hrough a third-story window in the fotel Newport here to escaps from H, *, Reed, a Board of Trade operator. | The young woman was found at dawn nconscious in an alley adjoining the Sho had fallen forty feet and there three hours, Her head crushed, her spine was injured, nd the bones of her right arm were ractured. She told the men who dis- overed her that after Reed had strug- ad be wo hours he revolver and hri drew tened to kill hen she ran to thi ed out. Later at the County Hospi- a r, While Reed looked on indifferently, | Miss Stickier charged him with {cing her nto the place under the pre it was a downtown brane ung Women's Christlan Asso mn, Reed is a prisoner. she had 6 im in the County Hos consclousness, roum she arose in her cot, and, ing her finger at him, sald; here Is the man who caused all my rouble, He th ime I escaped ew my good name; ip ond te him. — | re ‘ough the ay OP e when I did not] 5 side a nu took me the! whe ou drew ou. know you did.” And cool, sald: | is out her | uu) Sunday. | met her and/ ro ined. and Women's Chris- | 8 and a friend ‘1 ‘ Young “men at work against fifty yesterday.| hes | james Pilkington rted 163 men at Bee a NR ea iskier between One Hundred and Thirty- fock last night. Thad an! : and One Hundred and Fiftieth| , At Her UL met her as) ‘Pireeta along Broadway, against s a ee CA men yesterday to the downtown dis- | 420 men to worl In the section un: dd again, About 4.30 entral Park. McMullen & Bean]? ted toward) the Ne | 1% men working In thelr section} s Stickler didn't seem i One Hundred and Th ty-fifth) any te eh mt #o Lenox avenue in the Bronx. The| 1, Sine 4 Ve | ae mith and wife, saw me Wo sections on the east side controlled hae au pp erate ata eran ant G, Rogers & Sons were idle, as they| thought Mivn Stick Pap throu Italian nelgtroorhoods. he only semblance of a disturbance so F to-day occurred at Ninoty-third where William Brady has the oD p of his men from going to work : ing, but were routed by the po- WO arresis were made. Nt polloe protection afforde mabe ey, in the Boulevara fro | street to Teassu, One Hundred an nd Contr: ca many non- ) busy with druis and tor Bradley had | whistle blew ‘ a mixt nesrirs, shove? 3 o'clock. eof Italian Awed by Police. the section a wide berth, stationed all. along pa blue- oan’ na the third floc le ‘A half-dozen Italians attempted to} £0" trom the | 18 100k woman?" dj you not body ed, use I did not want to be} imply, replied, arrested,” FRISKY TERRIER IS PUT TO DEATH, On Slight Provocation He Is Pro- nounced Mad and a Whole Street Gets a Scare, he After a delay of forty-five minutes to- day a fox terrier, suposedly suffering *| the Norge, for Christiansand and Copenhagen; the Koenig Albert, for Genoa and Naples; the Minneapolis, for London; the Pretoria, for Plymouth, \ DYNAMITER ROSSIO HAD A BAND OF PARTNERS. (Continued from First Page.) was alone, but In that room he made the infernal machine, Mrs. Harry Ehlen, who rentdh the room to him, sad it was there he constructed the box with the handles, and from the case of a clock which he left behind she belleved he had equipped the box with the clock works and the rest of the machinery which went to make up what was probably the most dangerous and efficient infernal machine ever constructed. While in the Chicago house Rossio bought the tin trunk whch is now being guarded by detectives in Mrs. Currie’s house in West Thirty-first street, Mrs. Eblen had orders from Russell never to enter this room without announcing herself, and then she said she would have to wait ten or fit- teen minutes while he concealed what he was working on in the trunk. He told her he was working on an invention which would make him a rich man, On Saturday, Apirl 25, Rossio gave up the room. He Instructed the Frank Parmaleo Company to remove his trunk from the Washington Boule- vard fiat to the Wabash Raflroad Depot. He presented a ticket he had pur- chased from Chicago to New York over the Wabash and West Shore Rail- roads, and on this ticket the Parmalee Company, which has a transfer agreement with the railroads, checked his trunk through to New York for him. RE COMES TO NEW YORK. He was given check No. 222,455, bearing the Webash Railroad name. His! trunk was removed from the room that afternoon to the Wabash Depot, and at 3 o'clock that afternoon he boarded the Wabash train to New York. ONAN WAS HER OWN POLINA She Arrested Another Woman, Took Her to Station-House and Had Her Locked Up as a Thief. Hattie Wilson, of No. 179 West Ninety- minth street, was arrested last night at Thirty-fourth street and Eighth avenue Mr: of No. 436 West Thirty-ninth street, the West by Edna Marsh, and Thirty-seventh street station until to-day, when she was arraigned In the West Sid> Court by Detective Frye, of that station, on a charg» of grand Tarcony. During the latter part of last October en YALE MEN TURN STRIKE BREAKERS Students in the University Vol- unteer to Fill the Places of New Haven Teamsters Who Have Knocked Off Work. TAKE HOLD WITH A WILL. The Strikers Reproach Them with Taking the Bread Out of Their| Mouths, but Say There Will Be No Violence. (@pectal to The Wrening World.) NFW HAVEN, May 14.—A crowd of Yale students merched down to the of- fices of the Peck & Bishop Company and the Smeliey Company, two of the largest trucking firms of the city, to-day and offered to act as drivers for the bie teams which have been in the barn for wevoral daya ax @ result of the team-| sters’ nbrike. Many of the Yale men are sons of wealthy parents. They refused to give thelr names, but sinted that they were willing to do the work, de- voting such time to {t as they might without interfering with their studie out of sympathy with the employers, Both firme gladly accepted the prof- fered services, and during the morning a number of youths who were quite evidently unused to the work, were scen dressed in overalls and jump- ers, gulding two and four, and in some cases six, horses through the city "| streets, Many of the students are men who own horses and experienced trouble In driving. 1 The teamsters’ strike has ben on for a week. Asa result, {nctorles are closing for want of coal and deliveries of freight and supplies. W. A. Bishop. of the firm of Peck & @, sald: "\@'re-getting more work out of the Yale men than we do out vt our regular Jiands, ‘They are hustlers. Many of them have refused to accept pay for the work, saying they are in sympatay with us and are willing to help break the strike. The men say they are not afrald, but we have asked for police protection for them in suon places as we think they would be apt to meet with troubl It Is rumored that one of the principal membors of the Crowd of Yale strike reakers {6 the son of a wealthy team owner In Chicago who was affected by the great toamster strike In that city. The story goes that during the Chicngo jetrike a brother of the young man went on one of bis father's teams and was killed In a riot with the strikers. This is sald to have spurred the Yale man on to asalst the local boss teameters and lead the movement to break the strike. A member of the Teamsters’ Union eat: ‘This 1s no more than we might expect from a crowd of sons of wealthy no ji men. They are taking bread out of the the Wilson girl, avith a young man,| mouths of poor felows who need It. Woe went to live with Mrs, Marsh, as Mr.|havo worked for years for wages which and Mra. William Keeley, at No, 9| Were not fair compensation for, the 7 oo et | work performed, and now that we have West Thirty-sixth street. They paid| 2 “vnance to make a decent living it is He arrived in New York at 9 P. M., Sunday, April 26, and he was then either accompanied by the principal accomplice or was met by him. Ten| | minutes after the ferry-boat meeting the train arrived at the ferry landing | at West Forty-second street Rossio regstered at the West Shore Hotel, | Forty-second street and Eleventh avenue, Laura but from descriptons and actions and by tracing the trunk, which now | door. Young contained all of the infernal machine except the dynamite, t has been! Women's Christian Wssociation, leaped jonrned that one of the men at the hotel was Rossio. | | that all her furniture and personal be- Here another namo was given, | Rossio registered as “John A. Reily, Nagara," and his companion registered himself as “Edward Andrea, Holden, Mo.” The names wero | bracketed and they were assigned to the same room. | ‘Those names are known to be assumed, as there is no such elty or town as Niagara. the nearest being Niagara Falls.and Niagara-on-the-Lake, and | in the small town of Holden, Mo., Bdward Andrea is not known, DIDN'T BRING TRUNK. ‘These two men remained at this hotel until Tuesday, sleeping there only, youwn /gled with her in the room for more than Phey left the trunk In the West Shore Depot on this side of the river. | time,” | Once “Retly” was going to have the trunk removed to the hotel and ex- | avenue open window and | hibited the check to the clerk and then changed his mind, withdrawing the |Thirty-seventh street check. On Tuesday, after Rossio had engaged the room from Mrs, Currie, he “employed John Dillon, an expressman on Ninth avenue, between ‘Thirty- her innocence. first and Thirty-second streets, to remove the trunk from the West Shore Depot to Mrs. Currie’s house. As there was some trouble about paying the storage charges on the trunk, which had boen in the depot more than twenty-four hours, Rossio rode with the driver of the wagon, Frank Butts, As he entered to the depot, paid the storage of 45 cents and tnen rode back with the! tr trunk to Mrs. Currie’s house. The history of the trunk after reaching Mrs. Currie’s house Is already known, The handwriting on the register at the West Shore Hotel has been compared with that in the note which Rossio sent to the police. It is believed that the hand which wrote the note was the same which wrote the name “John A, Reily.” At the same time that “Reily” left the West Shore Hotel the man who registered with him as Edward Andrea disappeared. The police are now tryingto find hm as earnestly as they seek Rossio. There are numerous theories as to what has become of Rosseau and as to what his motive was in desiring to “drive British shipping from this! port,” as written in the note warning the police of the presence of the infernal machine on the Cunard Ine pier. MAY HAVE SAILED SATURDAY. Many of the detectives working on the case profess to believe that Rossio has sailed for a foreign port, and some of them belleve that he sailed on the Umbria itself, Because he disappeared from his boarding- house after mailng the letter to the police last Satvrday some believe that he may have safled on one of the steamers leaving New York that day. Besides the Umbria, the other steamers sailing eastward from this port on Saturday were the Kroonland, for Antwerp; the Aquitaine, for Havre; Cherbourg and Hamburg, and the Ethiopia, for Glasgow. On cabled instructions from the police here each of these vessela will be searched on arrival for the dynamiter. serman, who keeps a dyeing and clean-| the Union Market Station and notiited ing establishment at that address. The] the sergeant, The sergeant refused to dog commenced to froth at the mouth.| take any action In the case, as it was oH ran to the street and tnto the men’s! out of that precinct, A few minutes furniehing store of Jacob Geller, next ter @ patrolman passed un the east- door, Geller lives in the rear of his| erly side of the street, He rofused to store. He had a few customers at the} do anything, ag it was not in bis pre- time, and when they saw the dog they| cinet. Hea atond across the street, now- made a dash for the rear door leading| ever, and tried to keep the crowd, whicn to the back hall. The dog followed pow numbered hundreds, away from the them and ran Into eGller's living apart-| house. S f ments and into the roam waeré Sro,| pAvout © Balthour later | Patrotman Geller was working. She sed trom thy| Eldridge street. 6 their room rent regularly up to the end of November. On Nov. 9 Mrs. Marsh was taken {Il and had toe removed to the Roosevelt Hospital, She left the ‘hospital on Dec. 10, and when she went 0 her home she found it vacant and a 0 Let’ sign hanging on the front With a key ehe had In her possession she entered the house and discovered longings ‘were gone. Mrs. Marsh went to Hve with friends until she was strong enough to fix up another home. Last night, while on her way home, she met the Wilson woman. The latter tried to get away, but Mrs. Marsh grabbed her by the collar and told her sho Was under arrest. “I've been looking for you @ long, long she sali, walking her up Eighth | nd then over to the West police station. | me, now,"" and when ar- the sergeant protested The policeman looked at Mrs. Me in amazement and for a moment was at loss to know what to| do. Mrs. Marsh was just half the sie of her prisoner. In the West Side Court to-day Magis- te Hogan held the Wilson girl in 0 bail for examination on Saturday. “You can't get, away fro: The girl burst into tea: raigned before | in unfair for a lot of Yale men to step in and try to destroy our chances. They will soon tire of thelr Ifttle diversion, however. and we will suceed in getting our demands, We do not intend to in- terfere with the Yale men, for tpat is against our pollc: — SHAMROCKS DIDN’T SAIL. Weather Keeps Old and New Chal- leugers at Thelr Moorings. GOUROCK, Scotland, May 4.—Owing to unfavorable weather the Shamrocks did not leave their moorings this morn- ing. ‘The cup challenger's new canvas sets so woll that her managers are anx- jJous to avoid having her salls soaked) with rain. rr iM’GRAW WILL PLA REGULAR TEAM ON SUNDAY. Giants’ Manager Doesn't Want to Love Game to Hobokens, Lindeman, the pitcher of the Hoboken team whom \Ned Hanlon and other man- agers of League teams are trying to ign, will pitch for the Jerseymen in r game against Johnny McGraw's nts ut the St, Ge ricket Grounds Hoboken on” Sunday. | McGraw says he will play his regular team, as he does not intend to take any chances of being defeated by the Jerseymen, Miller will probably pitch for the Glants. WOMAN SLEUT FOUCHT THE Eva Piser, Detective In Twenty-| | third Street Department! Store, Grabbed Man She Saw Stealing Diamond Pin. DRAGGED HER MANY FEET. He Finally Broke Away and Dashed! Up the Street, but Came In Colll- sion with Another and Was Finak! ly Captured, Eva Piser, detective in a Twenty- third street department store, saw a |young man slip a diamond pin into his |Pocket and start for the door this after- jnoon. She knew that the young man had not pald for the pin and grabbed dm. Miss Piser is small in stature, but her nerve is colossal, as the pickpocket discovered . He tried to shake her off, but she hung on; he tried to beat her off, but she hung on. Then he dragged | feet to the door of the store, where he | Succeeded finally in releasing the grip of her hands , Dashing through the door, the man ran through Twenty-thim street in the direction of Sixth avenue, with Miss Pieer after him. He bowled over many women and ohildren and at ‘the avenue corner collided with a switchman of ‘the Metropolitan Street Railway sta- tloned at that point. Both men rolled over and over ‘the street. Detective Sergeants Be>k- er and Rein, who were standing on the corner, thought there was a fight and arrested both men, When Miss explained the switchman was released with apologies, ‘The pickpocket gave the name of Thomas Stanton. He refused this ad- dress. The pin was found In his pocket. Mlvs Pier appeared against him in Jefterwon Market Court. He was re- leased from prison in Boston after sery- ing @ term for shoplifting. PIENING PUNISHED FAUST SEVERELY, | But Champion Wrestler Failed in His Effort to Throw German in Fifteen Minutes. The spectators at Minera Bowery The- atre last night saw the real thing in wrestling between John Piening, the Graeco-Roman champion, and August Faust. All holds were allowed; also falls on and off the mat. As Johnny Dunn felt confident that the “Butcher Boy” could defeat his tg opponent in less than fifteen minutes, he offered to bet $100 that his prediction would be verl- | fled, but found no takers, Before the men shook hands, Tom |Shartey, the fistic gladiator, who Is to wrestle Piening on Friday night, was introduced, and hr recetved an ovation, but refused to respond with @ speech. When hostilities began Plening quickly put Faust on the defensive, after a des- |peraite struggle for the upper hand, and proceeded to grind his face into the bare floor, Piening tried to force his shoul- jders to the mat after rolling him over, By a dexterous move Faust came within an ace of securing a hammer-lock. Pien- and he again assumed the defensive, Al- though Faust received a great deal of punishment until time was called, he | managed to stay the limit, | This afternoon Piening will meet Ernest Roever's pupil, William O'Day. z pistols Manbattans Play Hobart To-Day, | At Jasper Oval to-day Manhattan will cross bats with the strong Hobart Col- liege team. Judging by the excellent ball |each team has been playing a fast and | interesting game is expecteu. With Mc- | Philips and Duff in the points for the! |home team, another victory will no ‘doubt be added. The game will take | piace promptly at 4.80 o'clock. Sweet, crisp fakes of whens ana malt. from rabies, was shot ‘and killed in the \a it pours, Jnsscons the $i and tothe whe to t roar yard. le missed Geller then shut the doors to keep the five tlnes. bul killed him with the Jaz io the room, Wassermann ran to shot room and the dog ran ws lar Live bed. ‘The Ready-to-Serve Cereal permits indulgence without penalty. So his good wi please, Tried mixing “F cheese. Jim Dumps, although It made him itl, Would of Welsh Rabbit eat his fill. “Force” Rabbit now agrees with him “It’s simply great!” says “Sunny Jim. fe, his taste to ‘orce” with melted lier through the crowd of shoppers thirty | in| Piser came up, and the situation was| ing's skill proved too much for Faust|F! ) CLEVELAND IS SAID TO BE FOR HARMON, Rumored that He WIIl Announce Himeelf for Hie Former Aide for Prealdent. PUT-IN-BAY, O., May 14.~Thia te the mory ta.d bere by the Aghermen, on seemingly good authority, of Grover Cleveland's attitude on the Presidential noménation; Mr. Cleveland will make no statement regarding hia position until ehortly be- fore the convention, Meanwhile, in ai- tlolpation of his oy ue the pom: fuation, @ sentitnent for him pureed by the Us, 29 posed to, ‘an. then declare poalt! co and will indorse f Cincinnati. ¢ormer Attorney: ‘or he homilies Hoe Mr. armon said last night; “I cannot aay anything about Before a President! of every promt man trot him out. Mr. Harmon is Mr. Cleveland's chum at the island. They occupy the same boat while fishing every day. ‘Silks and Dress Goods. We will put on sale to- morrow 10 different kinds of silks such as White Taffeta, Imported and Domestic Black Taffetas, Colored Fancies, Black Brocade, Printed Foulards, |Black Liberty Satin, i Black Fancy Moire, Imported Black Louisine, and Jasper Striped Taffetas, all to be sold at 58c. a yd, special value, Sold at special silk counter, 32 Pieces of Imported Vetling, in cream and two shades of \mavy blue, to be closed out at 68c. a yd., regular $1 quality, Also a lot of 38-inch |\Light Weight Plaid Dress Goods for children’s wear, closing price : 35c. a yd., unusual value. Lord & Taylor Lost, Found and Rewards, LOST—May 12, brown whippet with broke 1 nd broken tall, Reward, Woodcock, 210 Brook|yn. Laundry Wants—Feinal iron pi adios’ clothes, 119 Wr OHAN 13 plain ladles’ clothes, *AMILY IRONDR who can body ahirte per day. Mohawk Laundry, 202 Prince at Toner, and alto scrub ‘Wot 14th at. ASS family oman. Royal Laundry, 38) GIRL on neck family troner, marker and 8 sary" Ct RB, rienced on shirts, ool! siiover Laundry, 76 Wallabout. ate wanted; W. 10th. erly plage, ironers_ on at, Nrioklyg, t expe Brooklyn. LW in mL llipe’ Steam Laundry, $87 itutecs a or. with oF Steam Laundry, 86-92 84 GIRL for marking and assortiog 1 y; ox anced. proterred, 2289 Brosdway. et UNGRS—Warlly loner, veat Iroaers and wal jenera: atoady "work, good pay. Heats Bands ard Laund O41 Sth vad BRR ited, plain family and ndty. StS Lexington ate one CAUNDBESSES—Pir twsnliy Uronare 108 7th ave, near LAUNDRESS WANTHD—Young woman as family Inundrees: reference required: $20 per month, Summit Hotel, 141-148 Canal at. LAUNDRESS, first clans; come ready to work. 144 Madfeon nv. ¥ i "AROHER. Columbia Laundry, Y—Body ironera_ wanted. Crowm, DAUNDR’ Laundry, 119 W. 224 at. GIRL WANTED to serch ‘The German-Amerioan ft thirta by machine, teem Laundry, 66 weok {iogS for smell restaurant; 21_B. Both at. LAUNORY—Wanted, marker and asaorter; also firat-clas famjly _ ironer American Steam fauedrr On, 96 Ldnooln ave MARKER AND SORTER alah, Oy, Hoel, launder bar 70) 138i Hiroe dwa MARKER and asorter wance re Lawn dry, 116 W. 28th wt. waedinacaaned: food wantier, Iron only Bho pleces. 238 W. 1itet at, undry Wants—Male, dora {bring relerence, Launtiy, 15 . ene bey ing telerencs, Laundry, jones at, loor, ‘Detween West 4th ‘and BOY WANTSD, about 14. Benner” Laundry, 080_W. 140th at, BOY—Bright, honest boy can obtain stead, Je 1328 6th Taundey. flv) near 34 ave, wanted, experienced, ite wiohr Cenollaatee’ Lavadey, i x Brooklyn. ¥ LAI at 10 M4 "Hoe "Putten “e., ig retovence- BTid' Broudwest lyn. DR} start, ad | 1 »