The evening world. Newspaper, August 27, 1912, Page 14

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m0) POOR FAMILY IN CROSS-SEA HUNT FOR LST PARENT Mother, and Three Children) Soften the Hearts of Im- migration Officials, TELL OF PRIVATIONS.| Walked Hundreds of Miles Before Reaching Steamer That Bore Them Here. The immigration oMictais see much | that i# pathetic and are supposed to be | ® pretty hardened lot, but occas) ally, as happened to-day, they show emotion. Onve in a long while Dig man in brass buttons stoops to the head of a child bearing a bundle) apd turns away with eyes that are Ming. | On the pler to-day Mra. Marte Skitvt- nek and her three children—Edna, nine; | Josef, seven, and Anne, fiv were ranged, before the officinix for en-| trance. Through an interpreter they told their story. When they had fine Aahed one man exclaimed “Gad, but they're a game bunch, some of those Hunktes!" Three years ago in the little village of Beraum, near Prague, in Bohemia, Jofet Skilvinek, farmer, determined to eek his fortune in the New World, Hig children were growing and there ‘Was scarcely enough food and no hope of better things. He tolled doubly a while and the family ate Jens until one day he sailed. Letters e to the family and a little money a Intervals from Colorado, where the father sald he had a small fruit farm. A year ago ‘the letters ceased and the mother wrote and wrote wit answer, Then she decided to come to Colorado herself, By selling everything they owned and pack- Ing al! their earthly belongings on their the family thought they might have enough for the Journey? From Reraum to Bremen is 30 miles @n@ railroad fare was more than they could afford, There was one thing to do—walk; and they waiked. For a month the mother and children trudged tong the roads carrying their bundles. It cost lems than 10 cents a day for ‘Dread and sausage, the only thing they had to eat. Little Anne (named for the good Saint Anne) found the journey the hardest, for she was scarcely five ‘years old and sleeping in flelda wan bad fer her. But she carried an her share of the burden the one precious thing which the family belleve has brought ehem hafe thus far and will bring them to their father in Colorado, Tn little Annie's arma, carried ike a doll, was @ statue of the Intant of Prague, who watches over poor tittle Mites. He himself was very poor once and walked long distances and conse- quently He must know what dangers @né sufferings lurk on the open road; and one might pray to Him knowing | he would understand much better than | the one who is found in marble churches. Bo every night before they lay down to sleep a little shrine was made for the Infant of Prague, and the three ehildren clasped their hands before | Mim, praying that they might see their papa again. | When they arrived in Bremen they engaged passage inthe steerage of the steamer Nekar and all they way over Mever failed to attend the Infant. {Mo-day they stood while the im- ration oMcials determined whether | ter mieh lund. Somehow It was de- that they were not Mkely to} eoome public chai and they were/ allowed to enter. , The mother has a few cents over the | train fare to Denver, Col, near where father was last heard from. They I trudge from Denver to that place the same as they walked from Bo- hemia to Bremen. The mother does now if the father ts alive, but @ome countryman would let them. know if anything had happened to: him. As they embarked for Colo-| mado to-day the officials at the pler| Wished them good luck. The last thing | ween of them was Anne holding the Mttle Infant of Prague and Josef pul- Ung from his all too heavy bundle two wooden horses his papa had whittled for him before he left to thake his fortune in the New World three years ago. ke i TRIED TO PEEL “PANTS” OFF MAN WHO OWED. Tailor Nearly Succeeded, When Re- volver Made Him Let Go and Run te Court. arse! Romeseee, © tailor at Mo, oea| Fulton street, Hast New York, appeared tn the barber shop of Giuseppe Tala- masiano at No, 272 Fulton street to- day and held out a demanding pa'm “Why do you point the hand at me?" asked the barber. ‘Two dollars,” #aid the tailor, “that you too long have owed me for those pants you have on.” “Get out!” sald the barber, “When I am ready I will pay you.” Rosenborn, ‘Now Either I get the $2 orl get the pants. “You wil) not get the- $2," ‘Talamusiano, y"and I have retorted on the Rosenborn dived) at the barber's waist and began disconfre t nx his suapenders ‘Talamasiano fought with one hand ali @round the room, With one hand, be- yause the other wes holding up the trousers et which Rosenbern was sug wing. In the struggle the barber managed to ppen a drawer and get out a revolver, Then the tailor let go and ran to the New Jessey Avenue Court, where Tak Masiano was summoned for having the revolver in his possession. Magistrate ~Hartis parotet bim untt! to-morrow, to sive the tailor another chance to col- the 6 4 | players take part in it than when tt ta) ata’ ae! ae | a | Search New World for Long | | ms MRS «MARIE, SKLIVENSK B3ENTRES FOR hE NATIONAL AMATEUR = GOLF TOURNAMENT 5: Wheaton, Ill., Starting Mon- day, Officially Announced. Ce Cincinnati G. © Rhett, Dyker Meadow G, Dest G, and idasis G. énal GC iis Auduton G. ©. Durwentala C'ud; City a, ©. Holden Wi Md | mn. tireenmich Country Wels) Wimingim ©. 04; i limidt, Worceater Q, ulisis GO, nel ‘Oneida Commanity thy, Metacomet G. C, Qe Miller, Detroit a, Cas eH Eitan Royal Laverpeot 0 Word, Homewood GC. a3 aya n Skokio ©, 0.; Le A ane jr., Edgewater @, C.; coker, Laie’ Gener GC. A R 4, rie ig San Antonio a D, {inie, "Skokie ©. 0; ‘The list of entries for the amateur golf championship of America, which | will be decided at Wheaton, I11., start. | ing Monday next, was officially an-|© nounced to-day c olgh= . need to-day and It conslate of elghe | X Srnigon, Dakmont ©, ©; ty-three names. Of course, owing to og & ¢. Qx4, Prioceton O. delaye in the delivery of the mail, there |e.) Wi 2. Fein eng — may be a few entered not yet an-| 1124 A.M Harvid feber, Inverness Club; tum mo, of Rdloburg! nounced, but it is safe to say that not | Quite aes ci! as i: pes § al ‘ ‘ 4. MM Phelps, Mi lub; more than one hundred players will bo (fe ey ell ie ste at eligible tart in the big championship |” iM w , Shawnee G, play next week. This # much amallor |‘ Werthrook @. C.; than the av oi es, n ib he amr Se Spiel Hicks, Namau ©, €.; ©. It is always the rule a M. Byers, Allegheny 0. €.; | 2K 40, A. M. Coes that wh evel oth is played in the W 1, SMincdonald, National held on the Atlantic coast, due to tho | nky of America; Francis Cuinet, Woodland fact that there are more ‘golf players erry Qawald Kirkby, Englewood ©, C.; in this section than in the West, and Kant Ce naturally when play is held in the wild | w x 2 B,J, Aromat ©. 6.5 ‘tion there are many who| 12.10 e the time and money that | ©: can’ the Journey West’ necessitates, The pairings for the tourney, which starts Monday, follow: 11%), flomend tr, Glen View club; — 34 ha Mite Me Wiewide a, ¢ Drowned, | .D. Foot, Apawamis Clubs BLOOM! Ind, Aug. Core a yon GC, pee Mt Gandns mituion G. Gil mires girls are dead to-day as the re- utubon G, C5 7 , of Atlantic Cty 6 ter Yidioutiian onud; att Brokaw, Garden City sult of stepping into a deep hole while wading in a creek, y were Cora McKay, sixteen; Lydia Harvey and Fay Wilkins, each seventeen years old. An- other was rescued. CASTORIA For Irfants and Children, | Ext HW 9.20 ony 4. T. ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. 4 A cette ie Opium Morphine nor Mineral, j Nor Narcotic. Use For Over Thirty Years GASTORIA eriect Remedy for ine Sour Sloneek Darts Worms Convulsions feverish ness and LOSSOF SLEEP. ALG Snonthy pla 35 Dosrs ~35 Cents ee ~ PERSONS ESCAPE | exploded a jout, scorching her face and singing her retreat and drew their revolvers, think- ling they were being shot at. After the families had been resqued and the fire put out with damage amounting to only about $90, Riaze was found dead under the alli of a back | window, He had gone to the rear in- I stead of to the front where the escape TO DEATHAS SIXTY — | FROM $85,000 TO 8 CENTS. | | Flack, Cashier of Abliene | ae Taken to Kansas Handout Handcuffed between two mighty men, | Sheriff J. I, Young of Dickinson County, | Kansas, and J. 8. Searles, Chief of the | Detective Bureau of the Kansas State Banking Department, John A. Flack, undersized and thin, started for Abilence to-day to answer for the embezzlement | in the Abilene Bank, of which he was cashier, of $5,000 in 1910, Flack hid In this city after taking the money until it was all gone. The surety company agents who arrested him found but | elght cents in his possession. ih Flack was arraigned to-day by Sheriff 1 the old man wae burned) young before@lasiatrate Freach!. His to death as he struggled desperately to! wife, a frail little woman in Kk, wat ket out of bed and reach a window. In | on the frong bench of the court and the blaze that followed, ten families, | “Tied Mttery\ during the Droceedin re than #Ixty persons, some Italian! wiack said to the Magistrate. “I shall Chinese, had to descend the! plead guilty as soon as I am placed on trial. Fire Following Lamp Explo- sion Causes Panic Among Mott Street Tenants. While Vinoenzio Riaze in the room he had occupl five years on the third floor at No, 63 Mott «tr arly to-day, his oll lamp lay bedridden 1 for thirty- 1 80 ddern and had narrow escapes, | Rizze, who was overcome by the heat | last week, had found a good Samaritan | in Tessie Tale, white wife a China-! vast night Tessic begged the old bexi behalf of the man to go © a hospital and when he! mittee appointed — to refused called in @ policeman to help| Whether American interests had been suade him. “But Rizze sald: iting revolutions in Mexico or No, I'll try one more night in the iva tbl tt BEB A al got ke Od pidce, ‘Bide i ' going W die | into the Mexican revolution, The 4 x or will spend three days in El I'd rather dle here. 5 ; so and then interview Mexican refu- About two o'clock Tessie went to place in Los Angele: a siphon of seltzer in a bucket of Ice. water beside his bed. The knob of the | door handle burned her CONSTIPATION MISERY PARTOLA GIVES RELIEF HEALTH That is the new order of things, the running down of the body kraoiypeed ily built up again by Partola, the pep- permint candy laxative blood puriti that has caused over 2, people to send letters to. the Partola Co., ex- ressing gratitude for relief obtained rom the use of Partola. Over four mil- lion boxes of Partola have been sold in three years, because it is a remedy that restores health to sufferers from indigestion, constipation, rbeumat and the many other troublesome rela- tives of those unpleasant conditions of the body that result in more serious conditions when they are left neglected. Partola is the modern sure road to health. Use the gente, b coes Partola —the pleasant, certain Partole, that starts sufterers from indigestion, con- stipation and the seridus ills that come was pronounced ‘w or {from such conditions on the way to m at prose ent health | the quick relief that blab he wide, ni can obtain Eck: | weltpaved rect tl tive T have! no Your of Gon: | Rellpaved | Fost at Puocieatious, de. > Senator Fall Off for Fa: WASHINGTON, Aug Fall to-day left for man. Senate com- investigate hatr, . Her cries caused a panic among the tenants and at least fifty shots were fired from the windows as signals of | distress. When Capt. Frank Tierney of the Elizabeth street station rushed into the; house with Detective Williams and Pa- trolman Boyle, a quantity of cartridges were exploded, one after another, by the fire. The policemen beat a momentary Honest Advice to Consumptives Somehow there existe st amount of acopticiam an to th Nbility of curing ‘onsumption. We Rone but facts and are sincere in we aneert. The reason we advise all jumptives to take Eckman's Alterative promptly and fatth- fully Is because we have the reports of many recoveries, one of which follow! 1619 Susquehanna Ave, Phila.. Pi “Gentlemen: For two yeare I wae af- feted with he of the lungs and our family physician advised another cll- mal 8 to remain fatal; howevek, I remained, and when I recovered sufficiently to walk about the house I was left with a frightful hackini cough, no medicine I had taki could’ alleviate. It was at HOWARD L, sire to serve their patrons sell Par- Fakmas hina tay Pe Hs in Bron: |tola. It comes in 25c., Ca, Oy i 4 box keeps a lam: By fiecaract ssciehs unter tataave: [beste A Tate et ee taret, moathe Fi samples and 100-page book sent Free on fads by Partola Co. 160 toa ing kman Laboratory, | Q New York. ‘Additional evidence, | @nd a Aching Corns Here’s a plaster that costs you nothing if it fails to remove your corn quickly, completely and without pain. If it doesn't “do the work” to your “Ne mere corns, Ne cntire satisfaction, tell the druggist and more suffering fort." he will give you back your money. Pierce’s ‘Corn Plasters Are as easy to apply as a piece of court plaster. They are s0 thin that they do not take up any room in the shoe. During the past 11 years they have cured thousands of corns where thick felt plasters had failed. ~~ The pain ceases on the first application. The Plaster temoves the most obstinate corn, root and all, in five days. In most cases only 48 hours are required. Our money-back guarantee goes box bearing the name Pierce and our trade mark. 10c and 25¢ a box ‘ At all Druggists (or by mail) THE A. F.PIFFCFCO., Sprinptield, M EXTRA! Special Light Page Fall Fashion Supplement EDITED BY MAY MANTON Illustrated in Colors. Free With SUNDAY WORLD Septeniber Ist. THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, 1912. ! Missing Husband and Father AGED MAN BURNED BURDEN DENIES TALK; STANDS BY NEWPORT. DENVER, Colo,, Aug. 27.—Returning from a month's tour of California, I. Townsend Burden of New York and Newport, was greeted at the office of his father-in-law, Dennis Sheedy, a banker, by a heap of assorted mail mi postmarked Newport, New York and elsewhere, They revealed upon examinatiom-newspaper clippings and scribbled rtproaches. In them he was quoted as predicting the downfall of Newyort and lauding Los Angeles fas a social hub, and the correspondents expressed themselves freely as to this repudiation of the New York summer pital. Most ail of New York club- dom, and the social colony at Nar- ragansett Pier was represented. “Never saw a reporter while f was in California,” he commented. “I never made any such statements, Nothing can alter my opinion that Newport has no superior as a summer resort.” et Franco-Prans n War Veteran Ends fe. John Strickwurth, elghty-two years old, a veteran of the Franco-Prussian war, hanged himaclf to-ds of his bed in his home at Ne. 2899 Ware Wick street, East New York. He was an undertaker, Only two weeks ag) he managed the funeral of the dart of the comrades with whom he had cor.e y to the post! en to this was over. his loneliness. country soon after the war He took to brooding over To-day when bis daugh- his room to wake 2m she o U. S. TRANSPORT SINKS. Dock Repaired. incum Goes Down at | Shanghai While Bei SHANGHAT, China, Aus. %%—The United States transport Liscum sank in forty feet of water here to-day along: side the wharf where she was lyin ‘The cause of the aécident has not yet | been ascertained. She was undergoing repairs, and che captain and the ship- builders are of opinion that #he can be raised with ease. It a feliow at the dub doesn’t like you. - Don’t hate him. Offer him a Nebo. The gloriously good Cigarette Watch the grin. Hear him say: “Old chap where do you get them?” Mr, Retailer:—Please cut me out and “stick” me on’ your window. I will do you good.—NEBO, |

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