The evening world. Newspaper, June 11, 1903, Page 2

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“sai ie eal oe Te RMY ENGINEERED PL Aleut: Lungievitza, brother of the Queen and a supposed candidate for the . Fhe surviving Ministers have been arrested. "The obsequies of the King and Queen will be held June 14. A festal illumination of Belgrade is projected for this evening. joy prevails. DYNASTY ENDS ON ANNIVERSARY. was murdered thirty-five years ago in the Park of Tophschider, n:ar Belgrade. To-day a requiem mass was being sung in memory of Prince Michael, and now the last of his race, together with all connected with the dynasty by his unfortunate marriage, lies on a bier in the palace at Belgrade. The people of Belgrade have been flocking the streets since 3 o'clock this morning discussing the trag- 2 edy, but without condemnation. A strong detachment of troops is encamped about the palace of the newly . proclaimed King, who was a pretender to the throne for many years. He was born in Belgrade in 1847 and was married in 1883 to Princess Zorka, daughter of Prince Nicholas of Montenegro. She died in 1890. Midnight was the hour set for the uprising. At the stroke of the hour the troops were marched from their barracks to the public square surrounding ‘he royal palace. The palace guards were overpowered and sthe soldiers rushed into the royal chamber. | “Assisted by his guards King Alexander fought off the first batch Of assassins. He was a magnificent | swordsman, and with wide slashes of his weapon he cleared the darkened chamber. Queen Draga ran _ Screaming from the room, only to be shot down on the threshold. A fusillade of bullets sent Alexander lifeless to the floor. PREMIER SHARES KING’S FATE. » »{Premier Markovitch and his wife, who were residing at the palace for motives of precaution, nished from their apartments and shared the fate of their King and Queen. a The commander of the palace guard was tie first victim of the soldiery. He fell fighting the invaders at the foot of the grand staircase leading to the King’s living chambers, The stryggle there was terrific. While the household troops held the invading soldiery at bay, several of the King’s aides-de-camp leaped from the beds and sprang to the defense of the palace. | ALL FOUGHT LIKE DEMONS. ‘They fought like demons until Lieut. Lunjevitza, brother of Queen Draga, who, she had insisted, should be agknowledged heir to the throne, was shot through the head. He had been the inspiration of the defend- ers. When he fell they fled, and were shot down while fleeing for their lives. The troops are in command of the palace, the streets and the fortifications, and the populace is cowed. Prince Karageorgevitch, the newly proclaimed King, has long been a pretender to the throne. He de- rived his claim from George Petrovitch, better known as “Black George” (in Turkish Kara”) who led the Servian uprising of 1803 and liberated the peasants. His father, Prince Alexander Karageorgevitch, was la » elected ruler of Servia in 1843 and deposed in 1857, Ten years later he was imprisoned for instigating | é the murder of Prince Michael of Servia. The Karageorgevitches have resorted to assassination whenever | fa * Mecessary to attain their ends. ° Prince Karageorgevitch has resided in Paris, where he was a well-known boulevardier. Four years ago his cousin, Prince Alexis, was reported engaged tc Miss Maybelle Swift, of Boston, whose father is allied to ‘the great Chicago packing firm. He has beea actively engineering his conspiracy for the Servian throne [qr two years. An uprising led by a relative in March of last year was abortive. Recently the dissastisfaction of the army for lack of pay, and the personal unpopularity of the King and .. Queen, gave the opening long sought. The first active step to be rid of Alexander and Draga was ro- a vealed on June 3, when the French cook attached to the palace committed suicide after revealing that he had been forced, under threats of assassination, to promise to poison the King and Queen. It took little to turn the army against the reigning dynasty, as neither officers nor men had received any pay for a long time. The populace, too, had been made hostile, first by Alexander’s marriage to Draga, who had been a lady-in-waiting to the unfortunate Queen Natalie and was not of royal blood. Following her marriage there was a scandal over her attempt to pass off a bogus male heir on the King. This had hardly ‘ea hushed when the Queen insisted that her brother, Lieut. Lunjevitza, should be acknowledged heir to the ‘one. j oe This rekindled discontent among the army and the people a © successful coup d'etat. _ FILIPINO OUTLAW CAUGHT IN A TRAP. stino Guillerino, Charged with! Many Murders Taken as He Tried to Make Men Desert. MANILA, Jone 11.—The Constabulary ‘thas captured in Rizal Province Faustino | “@uillermo, the most famous outlaw in) the Island of Luzon. Guillevmo ap-| ‘proached a detachment of Constabulary @nd offered the men a bride to desert and join him. The Constabulary reported the matter and were ordered to continue the nege- | tations. A successful trap was planned and. Guillermo was made prisoner Guillermo was formerly one of the) Spanish guerillas. During and since the insurrection he has committed many murders and robberies, DEAD AND LIVING MIXED IN A FALL ind paved the way to Prince Karageorgevitch’s NEW KING’S ANCESTOR LIBERATED THE COUNTRY. Servia, the scene of to-day'’s political tragedy, which is almost mediae- val in its barbarie ferocity, !s one of the group of little indepen pdent princi- Palities in tho Balkan Peninsula, Lying on the outskirts of Occidental civilization, its inhabitants, Slavs, mostly peasants, are prmitive in their ey. manners and passions. Its total area is 19,050 square miles, lying between Austro-Hungary, Roumania, Bulgaria and Albania. There are 2,250,000 inhabitants, and the army, in which service {s compulsory, can muster 5,700 officers and 240,000 men, 45,000 of whom are mounted, The army boasts 450 pieces of cannon. There are only 888 miles of raflroad and 1,946-mlles of telegraph. ‘The country has immense mineral wealth, but it is not developed. Little advantage is taken of the wealth that lies in the forests of oak and black walnut which cover its territory. The principal occupation of the peasantry is the herding of swine, which constitutes the chief export. There are no manufactures except the production of plum brandy in the country along the Danube. The Orthodox Greek Church is the State religion, ‘The Servians attained Independence as early as the eleventh century, but fell under Ottoman domination in the fourteenth century, and did not shake off tbe Turkish yoke until 1803, when George Petrovich, “Black George’ (’Kara" in Turkish), liberated the peasamtrs and founde| th hose ef Kurageorgevitch. He is the great-grandfatber o: toe King wuu asccuued the throne to-day. He reigned until 1817, when Milosh Obrenovitch, a swineherd, great-grandafther of the assassinated King, murdered Kara George and sent his head to the Sultan, Milosh forced the Porte to recognize him as an independent Prince. He was succeeded by his sons Milan and Michael, both of whom abdicated, the lutter In 1842, when Prince Alexander, a son of Kara Georgo, was elected by the National Assembly, Russia opposed his election, but he reigned in spite of the Czar for sixteen years and doubled the country’s exports and [ ea Bee While Conveying Corpse of Man Killed by Fall, Wagon Up- sets in aDitch. ae a3 While conveying to the family's home e body of Peter Johnson, of No. 4 Post +. Port Richmond, 8. I, Deputy- Borsot? Thomas McGinley and Archie ton and Thomas Welsh, undertakers aasistants, drove into a ditch. Horses, wagon, the dead and living, were mixed In a heap at the bottom of an excavation. Johnson's body, which was uncoftined, was more mangled by the accident than by the fall which had caused his death, Both of Deputy-Corg aes a her MeGinley's legs. were badly | jac, Wrenched, and Fulton sustained a severe | S2PUrts @calp wound. Discovering a conspiracy among his Ministers to depose him, he con- fall while ab's new Johnson had been Killed by working on Charles M. 3c } Dulldings at Richmond Beac — __ SHIPPING NEWS. demned them to death, The National Assembly requostad his abdication and ho was forced to fly. Milan Obrenovitch was recalled, succcode him, and on his death Prince Michael, the most popular of Servian princes, again reigned until struck down by an assassin In 1868. His nephew, Milan, a lad of twelve years, was brought from Paris and declared Prince of Servia. ges ses. Labisin sts. 7 ahaten race. s35{ Fe ruled wisely for a time, but afterwards became that King Milan whose SANS THE TIDES name has been a byword for profiigacy for a quarter of a contury in the ae ie Lain capitals of Europe. Milan declared Servia a kingdom in 1882, but seven | yA ET een years later, after the scandal caused by his moral turpitude and the divorce Mail Gate Ferry. 38 10.52 secured by hls wife Natalie, he abdicated in his son Alexander's favor. Mvauwhile Prince Alexander Karageorgevitch, who had bean accused of instiguting the assassination of Prince Michael, was forbidden to set foot in Servia, the National Assembly having passed a resolution forever forbidding Benes the Karageorgevitch family from ascending the throne. s (arid Prince Alexander died in 1885, leaving two sone—Peter, the present .-Havre| King, and Prince Bodijar, who has been an active agent in restoring the popuarity of his house among the Servians. There are also two nephews of Prince Alexander Karageorgevitch living—Prince Arsene, who is married to the daughter of a wealtlhy Vienese banker, and Prince Alexis, whose yisit to this country to sue for the hand of Miss Maybelle Swift, of Chicago, ig well remembered, King Peter married Princess Sara, daughter of the reigning Prince PORT OF NEW YorK, ARRIVED, TCOMING STEAMSHIPS, DUB TO-DAY. _ Naples. Germanic, Liverpool. Albano, Hamburg. Raphael, Bordeaux. {@ STEAMSHIPS, <THE. WORLD. .- THURSDAY. Intense! The career of the Obrenovitch dynasty was closed on the same day of the year on which Prince Michael | | drift to Russian control. on correwe ener + TOMO OT TO KILL SERVIAN. KING AND QUEEN HAD LED R THE DEAD KING ALEXANDER. Born Aug. 14, 1876, Gucceeded to throne on Milan’s abdication, March 6, 1889. Imprisoned regents and proclaimed himself King April 13, 1893. Sued for hand of George M. Pullman's daughter, 1894. Met Mme. Draga Maschin while visiting his mother at Biarritz, 1895. Proclaimed his betrothal to Mme. Maschin, July 21, 1900, Accepted resignation of Servian Ministry, July 21, 1900. Married to Queen Draga (Maschin), Aus, 4, 1900. Prospective accouchement of Queen Draga denied by physicians, May 20, 1901. Intention to divorce Queen Draga and marry her, younger sister Te-) ported, July, 1901. ‘Alexander and Draga snubbed by Czar’s withdrawal of invitation to visit at Livadia. October, 1902. ‘Alexander suspends constitution and revokes objectionable laws, April 1903, Mi Fifty persons arrested for complicity in plot to assassinate Alexander April 10, 1903. Alexander's poison the food Alexander and Draga assassinated by sol 11, 1903. QUEEN D | | French chef commits sulcide after confessing plot to of King and Queen, June 3, 1903. Idiery in royal palace, June RAGA DECLARED CAUSE OF TROUBLE. leved to be an astute politician, was of idow of a Servian engineer aud was fifteen ied her. She was forty years old. years older than the King when he marr! ; Introduced at the court of the profligate King Milan, father of the as: sassinated monarch, Mme. Draga Mashin made an impression on Queen Natalie, who appointed her lady-in-walting. ‘The more she saw of her the more she liked hi y de, her son, was casting about Europe for a bride, forced to abdicate the throne in his favor, his mother selected Draga. Al- exander’s suit had been denied at every court in Europe because of his | parentage. Queen Natalle was in receipt of a subsidizing dowry from | Russia, and it was evident that If she had her way Servia would eventually Draga was made iady-in-waiting to Natalle because the Queen saw in 4 tal! e Q y: da su her what she believed to be a loyal friend to Russia an herself, At the same time her attractions made her chief of the house- | hold of women who had succumbed to the wicked attentions of peal who had sworn Servia’s allegiance to Austria. As a consort to Milan she caused much worry to Natalie. was at Biarritz with Queen RRitaeiine That was ten years ago; he was seventeen and she was) a widow, of whom the gossips had much to say. When he entered the room to greet his mother, he encountered the flashing dark eyes of the fascinating lady-in-waiting staring boldly and steadily at him. UMA nothing in the room but those eyes, paid attention to no one but Draga, and upon that day he became her willing slave forever after. STRANGE POWER OVER BOY KING. : When she returned to Belgrade from Biarritz a few months later, her g was already recognized. Queen Natalie allowed fostered it, delighted at the prospect of know ing his son's movements through such a trusty source and influencing his mind for Austria. And Mme. Mashin quietly and skilfully manoeuvred, not for Natalie or Milan, neither for Russia nor Servia, but. always for. herself. In less than a year her hand was shown in Alexander's first coup d'etat. He had not yet attained his majority, and his kingdom was gov- erned by three regents. These dignitaries were feasting one night with him when the room was suddenly barricaded, the King announced that the authority of the regents was ended, and they were kept prisoners until he had been formally proclaimed before the army. After that no one dared ignore the existence of Draga Mashin in political affairs. - Her palace near the royal Konak was as splendid as any in Belgrade. There the court flocked for gayety; there the Russian and Austrian diplo- mats held secret conferences in turn, each trying to pay more than the other. There the King often mingled with the guests, speaking to no one but Draga, daueing all the evening with no one but Draga, throwing confett! to Be one else, and frowning darkly upon any one who attempted a word with her. ‘The court did not wonder at her sway over the king, who had inherited the viccs of his father’and the weaknesses of his mother without the ee tary bravery of the former or the personal goodness of the latter. 4% me Mashin was never counted a beauty; she was dark enough to eee swarthy, and in repose her face was cunning and treacherous. A ut ae fascination had seldom been doubted; she was a bewitching i aie while talking became a veauty. She was tall and slender and ri ‘i aH formed, of the Oriental type, with masses of soft black hair an ig! the role of queen she was ft subtle flattery. Before she essayed ee ince in the Paris salons, where she was known for her perfect taste in toilets as well as for her wit and social diplomacy. REGAL TASTE FOR GEMS. Renate She had a regal taste for gems, and even in those days carrie vines ransom in the jewels upon her Hendy Well a ismeran peor net jan, German an 5 Ungulst, speaking Frenchy Russcorvia and usefttl to the throne. Her intel- always been a social leader In Servia an ‘ e nea ecathow i i been recognized; but how s) ligence and shrewdness had long a Be Ot nana 1600. Then 1 he really was was not known unti dae aiesineed her hand and showed tip she carrie a king’s ransom in the i eyes—a power which cou! e bought. Boye er aeevind reoplevend court wanted See iis wy Soe eee) an mother and father had unsuccessfully begge e Tea y him to marry a commoner. exal princess, they were willing for feomimoner, | Alexander di them, nor even his own ministers no: fine ening in July, 1900, tn people CU ita Ae er bet the King’s second coup d'etat had taken oe eee enallia walls of the city was a long proclamation, signe’ jee) Draga Mashin, a daughter which he made known his betrothal to Asean le, whose home would be a pattern to + a sere would Bring happiness to the country, as did the wife of his grand. r eople. ee Ee beanie official poems to bere: Latah ane he tion beforehand, The capital was in a turmo’ sas pe {tated meeting, the Council of State assembled to wae Haein a teeereh marriage; the president of the Skupshtina ne the Metropolitan, the head of the Servian Church, went sown upon their knees before the King and begged ‘him to be wise. There were threats among the people, and Mme. Draga’s house had to be carefully guarded, The King ignored all entreaties, and drove boldly through the streets every day in an open carriage with his future Queen by his side. WERE CONGRATULATED BY CZAR. ! It was significant, and not unexpected, that the Czar of Russia was the first and only sovereign who congratulated Alexander and Draga upon their marriage. When an heir to the throne was expected it was the Czar who was to be the godfather. When the sixteen cradles were taken away from the royal palace at Belgrade the largest and finest among them had been sent by the Czar. When Queen Draga was declared innocent of attempting to deceive her husband by substituting the child of her sister, Mme, Petro- vics, it was said: “The Russian Ambassador and the Czar have been very friendly and sympathetic in the matter.” STORMY CAREER OF KING ALEXANDER, DEAD MONARCH King Alexander was in his twenty-fourth year and had held the throne since 1889, when his father abdicated and proclaimed his son his successor, under a regency of three ministers. On his seventeenth birthday Alexander Queen Draga, once bell lowly birth. She was the w er, and while Alexander, ‘his father having been | Natalie when King Alexander 4 power over the buy kin, it, mindful of Russia. Milan emmy Nicholas,.of Montenegro, She’ died within the past year, leaving him two Rusela, King Peter is a brother-in-law to the future Czar, took the reins of government into his own hands, ang ever since had fol- sons, Mhrough the marriage of her sister to the Grand Duke Michael of lowed a most independent course, publicly and in his private affairs, © Many marriage projects had been formed in bis behalf. His mother, er, - THE MURDERED KING AND QUEEN OF SERVIA iM | lution, EMARKABLY STORMY CAREERS. THE DEAD QUEEN DRAGA. Born, Belgrade, September, 1867. Married to M. Magchin, ‘an engineer, 1885. Husband committed guicide, 1888. Attached to Quen Natalle’s entourage as lady-in-waiting, 1893. Met King Alexander while with his mother at Biarritz, 1895. Returns to Belgrade and becomes court favorite, 1896. Marrieé to King Alexander, Aug, 5, 1900. Prospective accouchement confirmed by Czar’s physician, April 26, 1901. Denial of prospective heir and exposure of attempt to foist off her sister's baby as heir apparent, May 20, 1901. King threatens to divorce Queen and marry her sister Helena, July,19U1- Drinks poison because of King’s brutality, Nov. 21, 1901. Four shots fired at Queen in streets of Belgrade, Nov. 21, 1901. King asks Greek Metropolitan to arrange for divorce from Queen, naming two co-respondents, Jan. 18, 1902, Boxes King’s ears because he cut off her allowance, Oct. 8, 1902. Czarina refuses to meet Queen Draga and Czar withdraws invitation to visit him at Livadia, Oct. 10, 1902. Queen tries to force acknowledgment of her brother, Lieut. Nickodem Lunjevitza, as heir apparent to the Servian throne, April, 1903. French chet at royal palace admits plot to poison Queen, June 3, 1903. | | _ Queen Nathalie, exerted herself to secure for him a marriage alliance with a daughter of the Prince of Montenegro, through the influence of the Rus- sian court, but Prince Nicholas had married off four of his six daughters ie vet to think of a match with the holder of the unstable throne of ervia, There was an announcement, at the beginning of this year, that King Alexander was engaged to the Archduchesg Marie Christine, daughter of the Archduke Frederick of Austria. Alexander was spend- ing a few days in Vienna and was much gratified by the reception given him by the Emperor Francis Joseph, but the matrimonial intentions with which he was credited in this case did not develop. In choosing for himself a lady in waiting King Alexander only followed a royal fashion of the times. The heir to the Austrian throne married, mor- ganatically, the Countess Sophie Chotek, who had been one of the ladies of the court of the Empress of Austria. A similar course was adopted by Prince Oscar, the secand son of the King of Sweden, who renounced his succession whom he had fallen 1: royal mother. f ‘ The romance of the favorite companion of the Queen of Roumania (“Carmen Sylva") for whom the Crown Prince had shown a ‘‘tendresse,” did not have a similar ending, political reasons being brought into play to overrule the promptings of Cupid. A dark tragedy again closed the hap- less love story of the Crown Prince Rudolph of Austria, and the beautiful Counrees or the Imperial Court of whom he was enamored. ng Alexander, it must be acknowledged, had shown some ab take an independent course. The announcement of his intended aaetes marriage was as great a surprise as was that of his assumption of full soy (ter oe pil 13, 1893, a year before he attained his legal rity, that he dumfounded the Regents and Mini " His pibns were ad with the utmost pee Bee Tinga cou dea. n idea of the character’ of Alexander is gained from the man. which he snatched the Government away from the Ministers. He arate @ banquet and bade all those of high office attend. While they were at board soldiers and police took possession of their houses ard the Gov- ernment buildings, and the King laughed at the Regency, which pre- pened ore the aye shock was over to znjoy the coup d'etat, ey t with poor grace, however, while the peop! order of things with acclamations of joy. pee idivenca ANCESTOR OF THE NEW KIN WAS A RICH SWINE OWNER. to the throne in order to marry the Countess Bbba Munck of Fulkila, with | 2.2% in love when she was a lady in attendance upon his i LONDON, June 11,—Despatches received here confirming the assassina- tion of King Alexander and Queen Draga of Servia add that three ministers of the King, together with several aide-de-camps and Queen Draga’s brother, also were murdered. The Servian Minister said there were many causes leading to the revo- A large section of the people were greatly dissatisfied with the tendency of King Alexander to eliminate the radical element from the Government and by the constant rumors of his intention to appoint Queen Draga’s brother heir apparent. In addition to this the Queen was disliked by the people, who were also intensely outraged at the recent suspension of tue constitution. The Minister did not anticipate that the changes would result in internecine strife or in any real dangers to the country. He pointed out that the original Kara George was not a prince. He was a rich swine owner, The father of the new King was made a Prince in 1842. The Minister also related a curious incident. He said that a month ago he was present at a clairvoyant’s seance at which a letter written by the murdered King was handed to the clairvoyant, who immediately be- came intensely agitated, predicted that King Alexander would be assassin- ated very saortly, and even depicted the scene, which appears to have been enacted at the palace at Belgrade during the night. The tragedy of the palace at Belgrade, marking the latest of revolutions which have conyulsed Servia from time to time during the last century is not regarded in diplomatic circles in London as likely to lead to civil war. Stress is laid on the unpopularity of King Alexander since his marriage to Queen Dragan King Alexander's successor, Peter Karageorgevitch, is a son- in-law of the Prince of Montenegro, and is regarded as acceptable to the people. The universal anxiety of the Governments of Hurope for peace is ad- vanced as a reason why the Servian situation js not likely to lead to compli- cations, Should, however, these unexpectedly ‘arise official circles think an Austrian-Hungarian army will immediately march into Servia and restore order. This, however, is considered improbable. Jim Dump: Which makes all thi The strictest tests Crisp flak All filled with force from, 8 pure,” cries brim courts investigation. Finds “Foroe” Absolutely Pure, “Atyour request I have purchased in the stores of ql have sub- Boston the ceres: known aa ‘ Force, en pay A jected the food to careful analysis. absolutely pure. Wrave L, heehee : Prot. of Theory and harmacy Mass, College of Ad s haa analyzed that food ngs in life seem good. found naught but malt— es of wheat without a fault— “Sunny Jim.” 'WOMAN WITH BIG DIAMOND IS LOST, Mrs, Alice A. Maher, Sixty Years Old, Found Wandering Alm. lessly In the Streets, “I'm all alone; I'm lost,” wafled an old woman who was etanding in front of No, 329 West Forty-fourth street, to- day. Her clothes were faded, but she wore a gorgovus light hat with ostrich plumes in It, On her Nght hand ‘she had a huge diamond ring. Policeman Reilly took her to the West Forty-seventh street station, where she sald her name was Alice A, The police remembered having arrested her on April 18, when she was com- mitted to Bellevue Hospital as an in- vane patient, and she will probably be fent to the institution again. hen Mrs. Maher was last taken into custody she had in her possession Ciamonds Valued at $2,000. Two young women, who said they were her Gaugh ters, procured her release from Bell: vue, and stated ‘that they would ha her committed to a sanitarium. It thought that she escaped from Place and again found her way to York, The woman js about sixty yea! eld. ‘She is unable to tel! anything co! btu Sal sTronks,SuitCases, Bags, Rtc., At the Three Big Stores of (chs. W.Wol, Manufacturer, 28, 58 and 72 Cortlandt Street, the .00 Ladies’ Dre. Trunks for ..6.9% SOLE LEATHER SUIT CASES. $5.00 values, speoial for this mal $9.50 value, special for this sa $8.50 values, special for this sal Laundry Wants—Female GIRL to feed on No. 6 collar machine & tur qatar by hand. Sterling Laundry, 185 W. f i MARKER & SORTDR, fend hand Jaundry; $12 World. WAIST TRONER, 100. per piece; also Tama | ily troner. Metropolis Laundry, $41 6th ave. |) MARKER, “first class; must be good In offices bring reference. Laundry, 1296 Amsterdam ave. EXPERIENCED marker and sorter; must be first. class. Call after 6 P. M. Commonwealth Laune dry, 784 Manhattan ave.. Brooklyn WANTED—Collar and cuff ironers_on machiog, Model Laundry, 27 Fleet street, Brookiya. IRONER—Firet-clasa shirt, ‘The Royalton, 44 W. 44th GIRL WANTED as catcher on collar machina, Pearl Hand Laundry, 65 Myrtle ave, B'klya. collar and cuff troner, ith nt. collar & cuff trener, ; at. IRONER—Firat-clans spist, The Royalton, 44 W. 44 LRONER—Firet-class family ironer; oome readyd for work, Lau , 101 W. 106th ot. IRONBR—A family ironer wanted. Empire. Hand Laundry, ave., near 119%th_ st. ONER—Firet-class family iyoner, Monare® Laundry, 901 W. 112th ot. UNER on flannels; young women only. Laundry, 232 W. ‘1éch at. Libor LACNDRESS — Middle-aged, capable _ woman, Cy hl; if rk Geena Re por week. Apply 435. Browe w ‘buredi i. Laundry Wants—Male. BOY about 14 with reference wanted. Laundry, ry 1125 Park ave., 90th st. BOY to run around in laundry business; good! st, basement. wages. 160 W. BOY WANTED, Harrison's Laundry, 49 lantic_ave., Brooklyn. DRIVER, Tau joni Fete a Rend, "Sat “etter 6, €8 Clariant ence an Call_atter 9, boys, 16, to work in laundry. Ap rents, 606 Columbus ave. ( | JANTED—3 Diy with pa Help Wanted—Male. ASSISTANT SHIPPING OLPRIC wemeli cone experienoe neceemry; emall salary * Apply by. letter only, with references, . Bruae ‘Type_Foundr; reat. n. DRIVER—Wanted. 35 truck drivers; wages @@) A. Pucal, 340 Bast 100th_st, Hole Wanted—Female. YOUNG NURSD GIRL, with good references, to attend to a boy 4 years old; must de willl to go to the mountains. Inquire after ira, Hartman, 134 E, 95th st. j | x 5 g' 5 3 x FE. LostFound and Rewards. | pieces of allver abe | ra. Phillipa, Ne. 7, two Mi isi to brim.

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