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THE MYSTERIOUS “PRINCESS.”

“Her Royal Highness Princess Henrietta Ivanovitcli” passed through Palmerston yesterday on route to the Waitomo eaves. A Wellington exchange says: She has extensively travelled, and she slates that she has visited almost every country contained in a school atlas. She was “in the Agentine last year;” then she was in an address at Hie West End of London. Monte Carlo and Paris were both “honoured with her company.” She had visited China and Japan. To travel these days costs money. The finances of the ‘-Princess” llm-tuate. Recently it is said, she was “temporarily short.” The next day she swept into the hotel lounge casting ten-pound notes like’autumn leaves. She dropped two, which were retrieved and handed hack to her. ITer wardrobe is old and much-trav-elled. She smokes the cheapest cigarettes (“gaspers”). This remarkable woman received a large mail the other day. Much of it was crested and all addressed to “Her Royal Highness.” One was re-directed from a West End (London) address, while yet another was embossed with “Yacht Henrietta.” There is no such boat existing in Lloyd's Register, but an old issue of Lloyd’s shows that J. I. Ivanovitcli, of Archangel, Russia, did own a twin crew steamer of 400 tons.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19230327.2.25

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Manawatu Herald, Volume XLV, Issue 2560, 27 March 1923, Page 3

Word count
Tapeke kupu
205

THE MYSTERIOUS “PRINCESS.” Manawatu Herald, Volume XLV, Issue 2560, 27 March 1923, Page 3

THE MYSTERIOUS “PRINCESS.” Manawatu Herald, Volume XLV, Issue 2560, 27 March 1923, Page 3

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