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SAM PARKS'S LAWYERS ASK COURT 10 SET HIM FREE Col, Robinson, in Arguing for a Certifi- cate of Reasona ble Doubt, Declares that Every Legal Right of the De- fendant Was T rampled Upon-=-No Crime Proved, Says Eustace. While Walking Detegate Bem Parke Was sorting Mhre io Bing Sing prinen t day Lawyers Businee and Roving Who defended him in hin trial for ex tortion, went before the Supreme Court fn Brooklyn and made an argument on AN application for a vertifente of ren Able doubt. This application if gran Will go a long way toward upeetting Parke’s conviction of extortion, Jus tices Bowell and Dickey sat in jude Ment on the points of jaw raised. As Gistant District-Attorneys Rand and Gray, who prosecuted Parks, apprared for the people and opposed the motion Lawyer Eustace decinred that !t was Yehe duty of the Court to grant the ap | plication because the jJulgment ia toe ease was “bad and must be reversed Reading the indictment under which Parks was convicted the lawyer laid @tress on the word “threat,” and con tended that jn dem ing $200 from Contractor Plenty Parks employed no threat. No Crime Proved. *Y challenge the Districtt-Attorney to produce anything In the record showing @ threat,” said Mr. Bustace. he e men had a right to strike and refuse to work with non-union men. Tacy had a ke Parks's simple statement that the st ‘must go on’ was not a threat w the provision of the ctatute. It was not + threat to do personal injury “Parks never saw the che Plenty offered,” continued Bus- tace, “The fact is, however, that when Parks refused a check from Plenty the fatter had the check in his possesion made out to the order of bearer. When Parks went with Farely wet the money for the check Plenty altered the sheck to read ‘Pay to the order of Sam Parka’ ‘This was done without the con- sent of Parks,” Robinson Scores Goff. Col. Robinson, following Mr. Eustace, Yeclared that the motion made was not iM appeal or a desire to offend the Sourt of General Sessions “The proceedings in the Recorder's Court were not a trial, but a travesty,” maid Col. Robinson, "There was no ‘egal right of the defendant which was aot trampled on. Those are strong words, but we will make good this cor-- soboration. It was impossible for us to yet a fair and impartial trial to be @ecently heard and decided.” "I don't say the jurors who convicted Parks committed perjury," Col, Robin- continued, “but they went inte that jury box prejudiced In mind against walking delegates, labor unions, busi- hess agents; in fuct, ngainst tbe whole fabric of labor organizston. ‘Their mental condition prevented them from endering a just verdict. Our challenges Were swept away like smoke and we Mr. right to announce !t through Sam Parks. | Mr. Hand's TT WORLD SATURDAY EVENING, ATOteT LURVMAN OF WHOSE MARRIAGR ARO HERE WERE IGNOKANT, Xie ONE KILLED, FOURTEEN HURT that the District-Attorney 5 #pecial panel from which the Jury was Aelocted to try the walking delegate. ile |denied that the defense had exhaurtet all ite challenges, He sald when tre eleventi Juror was chowen the dot had ured but one of ite challenges He denied that the Jury wax packed or pre judied and aatd the fact wan that When the prosecution had been willing to accept # union man the defense hud fused to take him Tf any error wae committed tt w the error of Latitude given defend ant by the Recor id Mr. Rand ‘and so great was this latitude that had | there been a miscartiage of Justice the | Recorder might have deen severely crit- | | icined | | "The lawyers for Parks insulted the | Recorder to his face and took exception to every qu exyanily, honiig to betray tue R or myself into | some expression of anger upon whica | they could hope to base an application has this did, you call aiouted statements of Robinson, angered by the & not in cloaked lan- Court,” retorted Mr, At the conclusion of the argument the Court reserved Its decision, eS UNION PAYS PARKS WHILE IN SING SING. During #ll the time 6am Parks ta in Sing Sing the Houvesmiths and Bridg men's Union, of which he was walking delegate when he was convicted of cx- tortion, will pay him his regular salary of $18 a week. But he will have to make # certain number of fibre brushes each day in prigon or he will be In trouble with the prison officials. Hig unlon met last. night, convict a vote of thanks, voted him his salary, condemned whole clty d- ministration and coyly invited Willian, 3. Devery to parade with the union on Labor Day, The following resolution, ad the United Hoard of Bullding 'T New York and Vicinity, was Indorsed by the Housesmiths; ‘Resolved, ‘That “Walking Samuel J. of the Labor Day parade. And int! event of It belng imposslole tor D gate Parks to be with us, that he reo. Smmend that a horse be led at the right of the line, with Delegate Parks's sas) and uniform.”* ave the Attorneys for Parks and District-Attomeys Rand and to-day arguing before Justic \n Prooklyn, the prisoner's petition fo a certifwate of reasonable doubt 60 that he may have a new trial. DEATH SENTENCE FOR CALEB POWERS Convicted of Complicity in Goe- bel Murder After a Personal Plea to Jury Combating State- ments of Prosecution. GEORGETOWN. Ky., Aug. 29—The! Coming over from Brooklyn and notlo- third trial of ex-Se ary of State that the males of Manhattan were Powers for complicity in the murder of cleanly shaven, Louls Kirby wa Governor William Goebel in January,| for a pole of red and white, and pres-| 1900, closed shortly before noon to-day! ently found himself in the barber shop with a verdict of guilty, and sentence of one Paul Neumann, at No. 45 Cort- pf death for the prisoner. | landt street | Several hundred persons crowded the! Removing his collar and carefully fourt-room when the verdict was read! placing a mond button in his pocket $d the most Intense silence prevatied. | Mr, Kirby allowed himself to be upped Powers fat unmoved witle his attor-! pack jn a plusa | aeys asked for time te make a motion for a new trial. Arthur Goebel,brother of and # prominent merchant the at victim for over three years In the prosecution of those accused of being In a con wiracy to kill his brother, broke down trom the strain upon hearing the verdict Powers has been convicted twice bo- tore, this being the third trial in which the jury brought in a verdict of guilty against him. On his previous Is he escaped with @ sentence of Ife Imprisonment, as ti a SEN Ne : pats t you— evidence was not sufficlently strong hes rien nn ; Against him to lead the jury to inMicting! xiryy with that erases sere the extreme penalty. A}! three of the ie - Rese me uae pride nop Grials were neld at Goorgotown, and in| ja cea! ple from over the each of them he had the eof 2 x , the most able lawyers why could b | nes pitas e ligh radlaD s Eph a ured, ie softly hummed as he} eae Jast trial was distingu | Was #0 possessed with Joy pthe fac that Powers addressed t mt to talk, sping of Sin his own behalf, and in a long review fasgr over: “Isirby ‘of the himself to be « ver Ted beautifully w gompetent attorney, white his eloquence sou a agcompinying ‘4m pleading for his life astunded al) eh eae OnE ef a : He’ combatted the statements of the| Oceaelonally the man from Brooklyn] as was Would move restlessly ang a low mur- ei mur- | ™UP of pain would eecape his lips. But} |the bavber smiled and tipped the wink Ito 1 confederate who sat in a oor sned in a work entitled “How to Get Rich by Mall.’ Wiles, Ata. 29.—AN the} kirby does not remember how long he tinplate works controlled /i4y (hore under the bath bie pyers’ Asnoclation closed to- | Ae way enedon in conse. About Cincta- | nati, who has spent his time and fortune! FIFTY CENTS? YES, “THATS THE CHARGE | _ New York Is So Different and if You Come from Brooklyn and Higher. ee ved weather val for ba sat races,” deftly tucking ob- vey at wel about the neck of the customer Kirby nodded as well as a man caa with his head on a rest and his neck | is fullest ten | Vre golng, the bart poke ty h pleasantly kK j cont preliminary lather Kirby granted cing the leng the carver 4 | ‘Xk | realization of Nis y ‘old water in his f¢ the barber raised him in th he saw his face in the glass, changed man. He did not fingers had sou chalr and He was a eak until wht and found the dia- mond button and his celiulo‘d collar, and} fas ne Little bow tle with the Delegate | Parks act as grand marshal | Wear Whiskers Prices Are} his nervous IN CHAGH OF MILK TRAINS Bae Failure of an Operator to Give Warning of Danger Results in Rear-End Col- lision on the Erie Railroad, Near Newburg Junction. | There was a rear-end collision to-day on the Erie Railroad near New- | burg Junction, in which Carl Scheid, of No. 330 Cleveland avenue, Pater- | son, N. J., was killed and twelve other passengers and two company | employees injured. In the case of Passenger E. F, Halltield, of No. 783 | Ninth avenue, Manhattan, who lost au arm, the result may be fatal. Following is a list of the injured: BONNELL, H., mail ¢ k, Port Jervis, N. Y.; | COSTELLO, WILLIAM, No. 4 Brunswick street, COLL MICHAEL, Goshen, N. Y.: head, legs and arms brulsed, FR ERICKS, G. W., milk agent, Chester, N. ¥.; body brulsed. FLATH, Rev. F. 8., No. 23 Wyoming street, Brooklyn; head, right arm and | back bruised. Jersey City; lege brulsed, leg bruised. GUNTHER, RICHARD, No. 152 Broome strect, New York; scalp wound. HAEFIELD, 1 F., No, 78% Ninth avenue, N. Y.; right arm torn off; taken to hospital at Suffern. HUSTEAD, A, A,, mall clerk, No 87 East Morris street, Bath, N. Y.; slightly bruised KORDULA, E. A, No. 610 Bast Fifth stroet, New York; injuries to le and stomach. \ MUSBAUM, D. I, No, 1M Water street, N. ¥.; left leg cut and side bruised. | SAYER, W. J., Chester, N. ¥.; body bruised, BIHANNON, GEORGE, No. 9 King street, Port Jervis; both legs and a shoulder injured. | TYSON, A. R., No. 72 West One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street, N. ¥.; bad scalp wound, body bruised. VOGT, A. W., Empire Building, New York; right arm and face cut. NO WARNING OF DANGER. ‘The second section of train No, 1%, which ts a “mil accommodation,” ran into the first, which had “laid down" (come to a stop) to repair a broken eccen- trie rod. So far as Investigation has gone it would seem that the telegraph operator at the Junction must bear the responsibility. He had been siganiled that | No. 17's first section was “anchored,” and he let the second half go by unwarned of the danger ahead. What he should have done was to have held her up until he had been given a “clear track." The collision occurred a short distance north of Newburg Junction, the second section running into the one ahead full tilt and telescoping the passenger and| combination coaches, Most of the Injured were in these two cars. The weather | was thick, the rails slippery and Engineer John McNally was down on the help- Joss train Liefore he could make his reversed drivers holt, It seems miraculous that he was not killed, Immediately after the accident the offices of the company in Jersey Clty de- spatched wreckers and specials from Jersey City, Port Jervis and Greycourt to the As many doctors as could be pressed Into service on such short notice were picked up between Suffern and Mlddletown and hurried to the ald of the |injurea, They were enabled to do excellent work, a hospital ear, with every ap- pliance for. such emergenctes, having been run out from Jersey City the first | thing. } scene. ltenen were once more in place. ae reraeaeh mere Te $15,000 CHECK Hiow mue! he faltered, ) Pitty cents Marber, smiling | sionais, “ay eae tales BLEW TO ROOF. flourtsaes with the whisk broom, Priett Wisk ‘Ain't that pretty steep?” ventured | < auth AN 4 | Me nger Boy from Whom Wind 5 ts the regular New Yor I ieeitir thaiearsencelving Nimes Took It Climbed Nine Stories half ‘dol , to Regain It. J nt appears hi for some tine bad | ho looked awit they mignt stand for | Thia Ie the short, Joyous story of 9 [icant My. Kirby. suralzhtway) made | messenger boy, a $15,000 check, a gust Smplaint to the police, with the result wind and the roof of a nine-story tint Neumann was summon BUNAIE: Centre reet Court to-day. hs ¥ ag Was adjourned pr Jewett Bros., brokers, in the nine- of other witnesses against the ba story building at No. 43 Broadway, gave — @ mesenger boy a check for $15,000 to de- SHIPPING NEWS, ver to David Lapsey & Co, a few } doors up and neross the street. | MAANAC FOR TO-DAY, A few minutes later the boy returned 5 28\3un sete. 6.39/Moon rlees.. 11.00! and excitedly said that as | | he stepped | from the bullding to the street a gust of wind blew off his hat, and the check, | sun risen | THE TIDES. High Water, Lew ¥ AM. PM. A ter P.M Nook His apa Oa j/ which he had placed tn ft, disappe Fe 232 gol 820 gg, The doy was kicked out of the of PORT OF NHW Yon, | oF asked to leave—and payment on the ch was stopped, ry hai wo 8 later, the boy, all grins, sas Southampton 1 the oMce of Jewett Bros, Li erpool showed the check, He said a m Hay Dueson aie the street had seen a slip of paper as. Savanah cending In the zephyr and the boy sald Rotterdam 10 to the roof of the nine-story | INCOMING STEAMSHIPS DUE TO-DAY. building and found the check there be- hind a ventilator. Bea Hilts Es Guar a sions. St, Leonard's, Antae ” - : NCBI P Schooner Runa Ashore, OUTGOING ST eaMsHips. BALTIMORE, Aug, 29.—The schooner Umbels. Liverpsol, Sarge, Henmark Ralph M. Hayward, Capt. Trimm, bound roouiend, Antwerp, ' ‘ a Hihandoliera, Napiea — Uritish Prinewnn Ths for Buitimore, loaded ashore off ‘Chri ‘4 the Chesapeake Bay. Sisters in Dati! IND ONL , 1) FRIENDS OF Hilt MISTER® TO CATCH THEVE David Michel, a Harlem Butcher, Robbed by Highwaymen Near New York Central Tracks, Followed Them Many Blocks. David Michel. of No. 1988 Second ave- nue, wao dleappeared from his home, has returned and tells a pecullar story of his; xperie| Michel ts @ well-to-do butcher in Har- lem. He left his home at 4 o'clock Fri- day morning to go to the Harlem mar- ket to purchase a supply of meats. He appeared to be absent-minded when he lefi home, first forgetting to wear a collar, and, after getting that, fonget- tung to wear a hat, which he also se- tured. m He boarded an Amsterdam avenue car at Hundred and Third street and Third avenue and intended transferring to the crosstown One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street line, to go to tne Hudson River, where the Harlem Mar- ket Is located. But he fell asleep and went on up Amsterdam avenue, He was awakened north of One Hundred and Thirty-elghth street and left the car at One Hundred and Forty-second street and started to walk back to the market, He walked to the rallroad “e men set upon him, hel had over $100 in which the bold high- attempted to scream but was unable as one of the men caught his throat with strong and mus- cular tigers. Tae men then lett him, Michel sald he then assumed the part of a sleuth and followed the men. Thev walked to the river, then turned ; and, after walking about half mile, agaln turned from tne tracks bac’ a) Ams enue, um i Then they started to walle nosthward During this time not a patrolinan was seen, At One Hundred and Elghty-Atth street Miciel lont sight of the men. Michael then started to walk home, as he track, where thre At the time M) n In his pocket, ymen took. f did not have any money left. “He reached home about 7 0 .P. MM. ‘The robbery, Michel believe: < place about 6 o'clock dn the morning. ; that sometimes fall apart when they are tind, od OUR FLEET BEGINS THE MOVE ON SYRIAN COAST oer WIFE ABUSERS SET TO BURYING DEAD Gruesome Work in Pottar’s Field or on tha Dumpe the Portion of Worst Offenders Sent to Workhouse | Machias Left Genoa To-Day and Brocklyn and San Francisco Arrive — 6 ree ‘ fadtarodtn: aa tiem pe! 60 Coal Before Sailing tor Beirut—- “ ‘ ‘ wot Although ViceeConsul Magelssen if wr + tw ° yy i 4 j ‘ r eet with natlentin | Escaped Assassin's Bullet, Situation hie mind by Monday to dv differently | Pp Is G Would Aen Hin up fhe Fiver to jnere 1S Wrave. An adled t t wil " anaes aa the work of @ dead bolle@, GENOA, frat Ave ®—The Molter - Ture yatoes tn aacnrt toyou ww © THAC#) ataton munteont Machtas left hare today, ioe With hie ore orders 1 of k they for Port Bald, whence she will eod | ft tine } witaed denmey, : . ° their join the Cruleera Brookiyn and San | ron will pondoavous at Heirat rea he tite M eon at Retrut ally ordered teatination ER Wi acletcle ais was saluted by the Italian war.| Yerela will be dejermined le at work in t wiome crews wished her good State T tment hai! RX isi iy legram from Mink: eM that's only another one of Zel-) tne trooklyn and Ban Francisco ar- at tat advices from Put tt | rived here from Villetranche shortly af-| to the effect that white the PAL itis tor the departure of the Machias, ‘They|Americnns in thowe pinces are in dang (anil A eet kaa roiugs will com! and procead at once to Reurut.|of suffering from an uprising at any ire at Inwe or one whose me the aituation was tot nt the thme aang Mont. bee| it In expected that Brooklyn and Son | if vending Roabae Ae ateveTae yond that provided le a nate Efancisco will be ready to leave here/ earlier reports would indicat nd tha provided eA mote sunday morning | aE. Taimhiman” han eon Insiructed 1 his case from the commtt magin- ine re - ot {notify the Turkish Government that trate or a word from the probat si ASHINGTON. Aum. 9 Secretary Of] mumt kecp the peae nnd that it will Be officer to the Commisaloner of Charitles | Sta partment to-day, It wan said |feld te a strict accountabtiity for ang and Corrections will put him either in| that hs arsival in Washington at, thts | aoe ; , ie war not due to th rences the gang that works the dumps on Rl- iin Turkey, but in accordance with ar- ker's Island or the one that deives in|rangements made at the time of dis trenehes in Hart's city of the name-|departure for Oyater Bay, lees dead. Hay Talks of Uprising. They Prefer the Dum “The old timers—the ‘repeaters one of the keepers on the island this afternoon to an Evening World re- porter, “prefer the dumps on Riker's to the handling of corpses. Sometimes we Mr. Hay sald that while uprisings in the Turkish dominion were more or less chronic, the present ingureotion ap- poars to be of’ considerable magnitude. He would not disclose the text of the cablegram febeived last. might from Minister Leishman, but sald that the Minister's advices ‘were that the erro- *eald ASHORE IN SOUNG give ‘em a chance to choose, but they | neous report of the assassination of Mr. are both awful. It's mot a0 bad when! Magelascn was due to the use_ot the| hanes §, Whitney, Bound from the cold spell comes on and freezes| Wrong code number and not to any things up. It isn't so hard to breathe, |frsor in translation. Wile it is not! Rouen for New York, Grounds then. Consul Magelesen’ was killed, it Is a What work {t Ist On the dumps they| fact that he was shot at-by some un-| Near Execution Rock, Oppo Known person waile driving. Alarm Felt at Reirut. The ‘nformation given in the cable- gram was that the Governor called the Consulate and offered prompt ‘ton, peeling, o make every effort to find out and punish the would-be assassin. Mr, Leishman further “l the Secretary that several of the Consulates reported to their goy- ernments that the condition of the tity of Beirut at the present moment ts un- safe. To Receive Misstonartes, With the view of furnishing Secretary Hay with the fullest facts concerning the reports which have come from thi missionaries in Turkey, a committee rep. resenting the Boanl of American Mis. sions will call upon him’ to-morrow or Monday, he having Indicated a desire to meet such a committee and obtain from them all information in their pos- session. The full text of Minister Leishman's despatch announcing his action in the Magelssen case {8 ax follows: “THERAPIA, Aug 2%, 1 “Secretary of State, Washington: “I have made proper representations to the Sublime Ports with reference to the assassination of Vice-Consul, but pending reception of fuller details and also your Instructions I have made no {demands other than asking for Investi- gation and explanations, which the Minister of Foreign Affairs assured me handle the garbage ana the refuse and the excrescences of life that was, with picks and rakes and shovels. Down on Hart's, where the human dumps are, they pack things in filmsy pine boxes site New Rochelle, " ‘The British ship Charles S. Whitney, from Rouen for New York, went ashore to-day near Execution Rocks, in Long Island Sound, opposite New Rochelle. The heavy rain and dense fog ob- scured the signals, and the vessel wad aground before the Captain realized she was even In danger, Bhe Is reported to be leaking. oarries a cargo of chalk. The Whitney {s a full-rigged ship of 1,600 tons burden. ‘The wrecking steam- er W. EB. Chapman has gone to he: assistance. The Whitney ies abcut four hundred feet north-northeast of Execution light: house. She is listed over to starboard and put up several small sails in an effort to work herself off the rocks. The vessel carries a cargo of chalk Bhe !s consigned to J. F. Whitney & Co., the New York agents of the ————— Cured of Asthma After Vears of Terrible Suffering, Mary Josephino Bezy, Floyd Knoby Ind., writes: “After suffering untold agenica for 82 years from Asthma, I was curcd by Schiffmann's Asthma Cure. used to besa bad that I could not move without he!p,but Tcan now do all my own work.” Another writes: “My little boy? years old bas bocna sufferer for soveral ycarg, some timos so bad off that wo could not hold him in bed, expecting any moment for him to breatho hislast, Doctors did him no good act heaved Into the shallow trenches. When they don’t fit in their tlers evenly—often the gang |s too lazy to dig a hole large encugh—two or three wijl jump on them and pound them Into place with their heavy prigon brogans, “It's all the same,” said the keeper; “It's all garbage." Twice a week the steamer Fidelity carries away from the foot of East Twenty-sixth street the city’s unclaimed dead--the sot who was found in the gutter with his skull cracked, the un- known who came In with the tide; the “rag and the bone and the hank of hair’ whose beauty once was market- able; the poor devil with the faint heart who couldn't stand the fight and quit by stealing enough gas in a cheap lodg- Ing-house to end his lIfe; the panhandler who hung you up the other night as you came from the theatre, for the price of a drink or a bed; the girl mother and ner babe who had no name, They all go by this ferry, do the flot-| Will be given immediate attention, sam and jetsam of this great city, ex-| Warships Needed for Protection. cept those whom the medica! colleges| “The troubles in Mecedonia became claim for the benefit of science. The} Worse and more extended each day, students are adepts in selecting the best; | 2N4, outside of the necessity which may present itself of sending a_ shi} they know what thelr knives will cut| {to Belrut to force a proper course, 1t easiest. seems to me advisable to. keep a ship within easy range of Turkish waters, In VESSEL A TOTAL WRECK; FATE OF CREW NOT KNOWN. She order to be in a position to more fully protect American citizens, should the revolution assume more alarming pro- portions. “The insurgents have become more aggressive in Eastern Roumania since the visit of Russian war vessels, and the (Special to the Evening World.) passenger train from Hurope was blown NORFOLK, Va., Aug. 29.—The dig]/UD With dynamite this morning about and we had almost given up Jn despair, a 1 Van, it Naty: fifty miles from Constantinople. killing | when through accident we hoard of Schiff parkentine James H. Hanlen, Capt. Ro- dick, lumber laden from Jacksonville, Fla., to New York, which stranded on Cape Lookout Shoals, North Carolina or wounding most of the passenger: “LEISHMAN." No Change in Original Orde OYSTER BAY, N. Y., Aug. 29.—In monn’s Asthma Cure, tried It and ft almost dnsrenile, rolieved him.” Mra. D.G Barris, Elbow P. O., Va. Sold by all druggists at 50c and 81.00 The police sald that Michael could give {pet ul and they are 13 \ In the In-er-seal Package view of the serious aspect of affairs !n Turkey President Roo»velt hns decided that Admiral Cotton's squadron shall coast, late last night, {sa total wreck, The fate of the crew is not known. Dac-T-Ra Eyeglass Clip, 50c pinch ‘or leave mari Doves not 60 West 1: Alat & 424 ote, ats, DACHTERA BROS., opticians, Sold oni 312 Madiaot 150th & 151ee ole patentess, Laundry Wants—Female. FOLDERS—Experienced; also girl to tle op Mutual Steam Laundry, 525 W. 2tth at. neckband Spencer ‘experienced on dorom and also girl to mark and sort. 550 Gates ave., Brooklyn tor and ironing aad as help. holpers must have certificates if under 16. are a Steam Laundry Co., 86-92 84 at. rookly a. | IRONERS—Experienced girls band troner: also GIRLS troner, Laundry All on Account i ( ave., Brooklyn, od Iaundry woman who under ts rinsing and bluing. Apply 152 Colum 0. DRESS on coate, aprons, by the week, Bex fors 9, bE. 1 STARCHERS, | oxperien cuffs and shirta: good pay. City Laundry, ai to 135 12th ot, Brooklyn, i WASHING—Wi to do plain ironing in famtly hotel: wages $18 (month, ‘room, and board; steady position; some ready to work, The Cornell, Central Park Weat, | comer 7th” nt { WANTED—Expe the bakers are working Bf crete gee aPe . : MANGLE GIRL8 WANTED, Ami night and day—the gro- 1884 st, and Lincoin « cery stores are crowded —nickels are getting on body ironing short hore. Brooklyn. ‘Scoam 38d ave, WANTED—Young lady for office work; must be ‘a good, rapid penman. City Laundry, 131 to. 185 12th ‘st, Brooklyn. WANTPD—Woman for cleaning, Laundry, 88-02 24 st., Brooklyn, GIRTS, experienced. in laundry, to mark, sor, Pligtim Steam fc, Laundry, 865 10th ave, scarce—the children are Laundry Wants—Male, IRONERS, for stock work only; white and cel. all happy and everybody wonders what is coming next—all on account of # Zu Zu The Great Ginger Snap. cored bosom Laundry Co. shirts, Manuf Rosebank, Staten THE WORLD'S VACATION BUREAUS. {f you want a Summer Hotel or Boarding - House consult the Summer Resort columns of The World or the Vacation Bureaus, . 1381 Broadway, New , (NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY York, and 292 Wash- ea street, Brooke. Ly — |