insurance_north tonawanda ny evening news 1912 jan-sep grayscale - 0613

2
^r J^WPWBP : WP*'*^ 1 B r Texiawanda—THE EVENING NEWS—Ndrth Tonawanda ?PW If, 1| "I'LL TAKE THAT OFFER" A Bell Long Distance message from Tonawanda to Jamestown, for example, costs a te>v cents. It gets you voice-to-voice with just the man you want in a few minutes. Isn't it folly to write letters; make railroad journeys; take time from other important matters, when you can close that deal so easily by Bell Telephone? It pays to spend cents to save dollars. NEW YORK TELEPHONE CO. It's Everywhere. GALIFORNIAN H A S PICKED BODIES O F TITANIC (Continued from Page One) St. John's, N. F., April 17—A report is current here, 'which is said to have emanate d from the trading vesse l Bruce, which is on the way to Sydney, C. B.. fflvin? a version of the Titanic disaster, which the trader obtained from various ships. This is to the effect that when the Titanic struck the berg she was going at the rate of IS knots an hour and the impact al most rent the big vessel asunrier. Her decks, sid^s and bulkheads were •mas hed from bow to midships. The bows and upper works were smashed to pieces. The ship struck the berg partially bow on, careening to the port side and almost turning turtle. The bottom is supposed to hav* - been torn out of the Titanic by sub merged iceberg*, over which she was passing and as every compartment from midships forward was quickly flooded and the ship rapidly settled by the head with a list to port, rolling heavily in the trough of the sea. The force of the impact was so ter rific that it practically rent the ship from stem to stern. For a short while sufficient order was maintained to al low of the launching in safety of most of the lifeboat and embark about a thousand persons Then a cry went up that the Titanic was sinking and the frenzied crowd rushed madly for the boats. As the ship settled in the sea many of the boats were smashed to pieces in the davits and some were swamped while they were being launched. The others went down with the ship. By this time the ship was seen to be Battling fast and the water had reached the engine room. The wire less tailed through the loss of the mo tor and all lights went out all over the ship. This added to the gloom and the difficulty cf handling the boats. The source of this version, which has the appearance of reliability, gives the number of passengers saved as over 1,000. It Is practically a certaintw now i that nearly a ll of the m en of the Ti tan c'a company went do wn with the ship when she plunged two miles to wards the ocean floor or that they per ished m<serably while clin ging to wreckage or life preservers in the icy i waste that betrayed them . They gave up life within sight of the little rocking boats that held their women and children, it cannot be doubted now that among those were | Colonel John Jacob Astor, Isidor Straus, Major Archibald W. Putt, aide to President Taft; George D. Widener of Philadelphia, Karl H. Behr, the tennis champion; J acques Futrelle, the writer; William T. Stead, the Lon don editor; Francis D. Millet, the I American artist, and many, many I more who are known on both sides of the Atlantic. The toll of the Titanic's dead will be felt the world over. The names of the survivors wire lessed here by the Olympic include a small number of men who were able to find a place with the women and children in the all too few boats. Such good news as 4 here is places among the living Henry Sleeper Harper of the publishing firm of Harper & Co., and Mrs. Harper; Dr. and Mrs. Henry Frauenthal and Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Frauenthal. Mrs. John Jacob Astor, with her maid, is on the Carpathia, which is borrytef the survivors to this pott and which should arrive here tomorrow night Among the others rescued are J. Bruce Ism ay. the mana ging director of the White Star line; Mrs. George D. Widener of Philadelphia; Sir Gor don and Lady Cosmo Duff; Mrs. Jacques Futrelle, Mrs. Charles M. Hays, whose husband was president of the Grand Trunk railwa y; Mrs. Henry B. Harris and Mrs. Washington Dodge of San Francisco. CAPTAIN SMITH Commander of the Titanic Went to Death In His Sinking Ship. M lock or Foresight B i t Common Sense Mor e Than A M illion Dollars lit Accident Insurance Carried by the Passengers of the TITANIC They Thought They Were Perfectly Safe BUT—1300 UNACCOUNTED FOR Are You Exempt Fro m Accident ? m o r a l— T a k e o u t a n P G G ia en t P o lic y -WITH- N o . 1 Niagara St., Tonawanda, N . Y. BOTH PHONES NO. 34. i Fran Shot for women Ladkr* Home Journal Pattern, Oliver and Schenk Sts. HEW WAISTS Economically Priced U ¥ WOMEN A ND CHILDREN FIRST WAITI NG FO R NEWS I - Nothing Has Been Received From the Sea Which Mltlsatea the Horror of the Titanic Dltatter. Now York, April 17.—Nothing that came through the air from the sea mitigated in any degree the pity and the horror of the Titanic tragedy ex cept as individual distress was abated by the gradual addition of names to the lis t of the known survivors . There are no known survivors that are not on the Carpathia. The Vir ginian was too late and found none and no other skip has reported finding any. In the ley, fogamothered seas, where the Titanic sank, exposure most soon have destroyed those who wer e left to life belts or wreckage when all the boats Were gone and no help had come and the great steam ship foundered. The receding Olympic, whose pow erful wireless began on Tuesday morn ing to recite the names of the living, continued the work today of relaying the Carpathian dispatches and the suereseive bul letins posted at the WhJtt ttarofltae kept many a despair ing man or women waiting all day and •eft others awajr thanking God- No Distinction Was Made When the Boats Were Lowered. The list of survivors includes wom en and children from the Drat cabin, second cabin and steerage. No dis tinctions were made when the rule of the sea sent women and children to the boats and left the men to their fate. The first message from the Olympic that filtered through stormy airs was that there were 868 survivors on the Carpathia was modified later in the day to "about 800," but whether ono message allowed for the boat crews and the other did not was not made clear. There is no absolute certainty here as to how many souls were on the Titanic when she hurled herself against a giant berg. Her veteran captain, E. I. Smith, knew the perils that lay ahead of him, along the westerly t rack of steam ships. Other navigators had found and avoided those pallid shapes in a smother of fog that remain the un conquerable enemies of ships. Only a few hours before the Titanic shattered her tremendous bulk, the Hamburg- American liner Amerika wirelessed to the Titanic that there were two large bergs a little east and south of the place where the White Star colossus was finally.hi collision. That was on Sunday and very short ly tfttr receiving the psws tfj* Titajjtc herself relayed it to a land station, from which the hydrographic offic e heard of it. And then, there seems little reason to doubt that the Titanic plunged onward and hurled herself against these very bergs. A shadowy hint of what followed then has come from that area of wat ers that are ruled by fog and frost. The wireless, modern miracle as it is, could not achieve the impossible and snatch toward the Titanic In time to save, her people the greyhounds that were hundreds of miles away. It has not recounted clearly and faithfully the episodes of the terrible four hours while the great ship struck from happin ess and peace to horror and despair lay stricken among the groaning bergs. When the Titanic struck she struck hard. There was something more than a rending or tearing of bow plates, a flooding of a few forward compartments. As the whispering of the wireless is pieced out by the ex perience of mariners and builders, the Titanic must have recoiled from her destroyer a shattered and riven ship. ease. No tragedy of the sea has sup plied a picture more intense, more staggering to the imagination. The blasting shriek of the sirens had not alarmed the great company of the Titanic because such steam calls are an incident of travel in seas where fogs roll. While the greatest of all ships was driving steadily westward in the night towards a city that was awaiting her with all of that city's interest in a fine new thing. Captain Smith was on the lofty bridge. There can hardly be a doubt of that, for ship masters in dangerous seas— and few stretches of ocean are more trying at this season of the year to navigators than the waters that run between Cape Race and Cape Sable— remain on*watch night and day, fore going rePt for many hours on a stretch. It seems to be clear that the Titanic was running at great speed or else the shock of collision could hardly have crushed a vessel that was regarded as unsinkable by her line and by the captain himself. day night bearing those who were toru away from their loved ones, nobody may know the dreadfulne ss of the hours that followed. With no other ships for 200 miles around there war. nothing to do for the men in the com pany save to hid farewell to their wives and families and hope that help would come before the Titanic found ered. P hillips, the wirel ess operator of the ship told the world that the Titanic was sinking and that the wo men and children were in the boats. No hint of panic has come from the tragedy. There is no reason to believe other than that Captain Smith and his offi cers held control of crew and passen gers. All of the boats have been ac counted for and that indicates some thing of orderly procedure. WRECKAGE COVERED SE A FO G PLAYLED DEVILS TRICK IMPACT TREMENDOUS Must Have Shaken Engines From Foundations and Opened Up Wat er Tight Compartments. So tremendo us an im pact would have crumpled up the very bed plates, shaken the mighty engines from their foundation, opened up water-tight com partments, buckled plates from end to end and started the rivets every where. It is likely that water rushed into her hull from all tides, for her keel must have been injured by the terrific drive on a mass as hard as rock. And that jar must have quenched the ship's lights by injuring her electrical appar atus. We know that the wireless worked weakly when Phillips, the operator, set about his desperate task of reach ing out for help while the women and children in the boats rocked off some where in the dark and the men wait ed with linking hearts. A flutter or two and it was gone. The Titanic struck home with a grinding roar, which nust have been followed by a horrid chorus when the plates and planks and timbers hove under the shorfk. , She could not ha ve stopped progress all at once so she must have gone on briefly while tons of tee ci -aattad^apon her decks. And their the sad den dark falling threw *.«I»JlJafl» »nd *affltn it Had Shrouded the Frozen Danger With Its Blanket of Invisible Evil. Perhaps, indeed, probably, the fos played Its greatest devil's trick, lift ing now, clearing now, always intan gible, treacherous, the blanket of in visible evil. Some such shroud must have descended with little warning upon the Titanic and blinded her to the fate Just ahead. Perhaps a whimsy of the polar currents whose pulse has never been gauged by sea farers with absolute accuracy drifted the great bergs squarely in the Titan ic's path. The wireless has told us of the bit- , ter cold in the air. the accompaniment ' lways of the ice packs that tear loose I from Arctic glaciers and sag south ward with the currents. But no warn- I ing chill served to deflect the ship J from her course. She strove ahead I as destiny pointed her and no inven I tion of man or inte rference of Provi- I dence swerved her from a fatal course. ( Her ears, the submerged telephones placed on either side of the vessel be low the water line to tattle of the 'proximity of solid objects near or dis tant, gave no warning in time, and it happened swiftly that she went head long into icy derelicts that were more substantial than the work of mens l hands; vast hulks of ice there to make * mockery of human'ingenuity, asleep or awake, were at the mercy of chance, Few among the more than 2,000 aboard could have had a thought of danger. The man who would have stood up in the smoking room to pay that the T itanic wa s\ vulnerable or that In a few minute s two thirds of her people would be face to face with death, would have been considered a fool or a lunatic. No ship ever sailed the seas that gave her passengers more confidence, more cool security. DISCIPLINE WAS PRESERVED Offiers Were Assigned the Task of Filling Boats and Getting Them Overboard. And then in the tick of a clock, all this was changed. The extent of the ca tastrophe must have been apparent to passe ngers as well as officers. Hus bands sought for wives and children, families gathered toget her. Those who were asleep hastily caught up their c!othdng and rush on deck. It is evident that discipline was preserved. The belief is that Captain Smith first of all tried the switch that closed the water tight compartments and then had the boatswain sound the call to quarters. The officers were assigned to the task of filling the boats and getting them overboard. There were boats enough only for the women and Children and a few of the men. In this respect the equipment of the Titanic was similar to that of her titte r ship, the Olympic. She carried sixteen lifeboats and four collapsible boats which were actually life rafts. Thsy were supposed to be capable of accommodating about 1.100. but many less than "that found places on them. " £ Cjiriia^hja. arrive s Tfa.nre. Carpathia Found N othing But 20 Boat - loads of Grief Stricken People. It was long after daylight when the Cunarder Carpathia, which was more than 200 mil e?, east of the "Titanic when she caught the appeal for help, got to the s cene and, found the 20 boat loads of exhausted grief-stricken pto- ple. The sea was covered with wreck age, the odds and ends wrenched Iocs when the Titanic struck and fioatc when she foundered. It is supposed that many c! pieces of debris until cold on' ness released their hold. Ap-j ! the Carpathia took aboard th? .• i\ gees without great difficulty, arirt tl:ci after communicating with the Olymi ic, since her own wireless appa.alu was not powerful enough to carry t land, started for this city. Later on the Alian liner Virginia! the first ship to pick up Phillips' crie.? for help, made her appearance. But she had lost the race again st time. What living there were had been tak en on board the Carpathia. Like the Virginian, the Parisia n searched first for the Titanic too far to the northward, acting on the loca tion given by that ship when she sent out her calls. But the Titanic had crept 30 miles to the south before she foundered and it was not until after a careful search that both ships made their way to the scene of the disaster. The Parisian sUamed through fields from the Titanic. Everywhere a green sea churned between masses from the Arctic. Progress was necessarily slow. The liner found much wreckage from the Titanic, but observed no bodies. She found no lifeboats or rafts and none of the Titanic's compa ny remained, as the Parisian's officers had hoped, afloat on wreckage. «, At 64c Fine Lawn Waists trimmed with Val. Edgings | and Insertions, high or low neck, 4 styles. At 98c Wai sts of fine Lingerie L awn elaborately tr im med with Va l. Insert ion s an d Edgings,also ine  Tailored Wai sts of tucked or hand Embroidered, dozens of styles to choose from. At $1.49 Waists of fine sheer Batiste, neatly trimmed with Laces also ine  Linen Tailored Waists, hand Embroid ered, a choice of many styles, Extra Special Ten dozen of Lingerie and Linene Waists, reg ularl y sold at 98 c up to $ 1.9 8, slightl y soi led, special . . . . . . 59c House Dresses - - - ••• I IIIHMIII»ll: Specially priced-one or two piece House Dres se s of fine Percale in Indigos, Shepherd Cheeks, Gr eys and Black thoroughly well made and coirect siz es, values $ 1.50, special . . .9 8 c Kimono's and Dressing Sacks of Percales and figured Lawns in several styles . . 49c, 98c and $1.49. A New Line of Petticoats a li ght wei ght ma te ri al . . 9 8c , $1 .4 9 and $1 .98 . Th e N e w La France Boot in Tan , Black or Wh ite NuBuck, all si zes a nd | se veral styles, 12 or 16 b ulton $ 2 .9 8 an d $3.4 9. Going on her way after a careful search, the Parisian reported that the weather was cold and that even if there had been persons adrift they would, in all probability, have perished before they could have been picked up . The Carpathia. with about 800 of the survivors on board, has supplied no account of the wreck, nothing but the list of the survivors, which she re layed to the Olympic and which the Olympic, in turn, sent to the White Star Hnc here. It may be that the story of tho v/orld's greatest marine disaster will not be cleared up until the Carpathia reach es here tomorrow night. Under favorable conditions the Carpathia should make the voyage by tomorrow night and land the survivors on Fri day morning. According to the Cun- ard officials, she is net overcrowded. With 800 of the Titanic's people she carried a ltogeth er 1,700 passen gers and she is fitted to carry about 2.500 comfcrtab ly. There Is plenty of food on the ship as she was on her way, provisioned for a cruise in the Medi terranean. liov ed, ha s proceeded on hpr way "i Liverpool. The Carpathia h"? sot in to comm unica tion with Sable -pia i ! but no news has >et be^n r» p\. from her. The M ackey-Be nnett rablo <hip r?- gone to search the scene of the wre< There are still vagiae hopes i hat r r ~ sibly the Titanic did not. sink a? r report or her foundering has not ac > ally been confirmed. To Search Scene of Wreck. Halifax, April 17. — The steamship Parisian sent a wireless message to the effect that none of the passengers or crew of the Titanic were on board that ship. She had no news as to the passengers reported as missing. Nothing was received last night from the Virginian, which, it is be- Four Officers Saved. Cape Pace Marconic Station An r 17.—T his m essa ge com es frcm < "a tain Haddock of the Olympr, via i, Celtic: "Please allay rumor that Virginir- has any Titanic passengers; run 1 has the Tunisian. Believe onh s vivo rs on Carpathi a Secnr .rl t h r fourth and fifth officers and s< o Marconi operators only officers re;m ed saved." Mrs. Astor Lest Htr Jewels. Norfolk, Va, April 17—A wirH^ messa ge received here last nisht r ports the total survivors of the Tit a- ic as 870. Mrs. Astor reported tha i-he lost all her jewels and onb save 1 a raincoat and her night clothe" PILE8 CURED IN • TO 14 DAY" Tour druggist w ill refuno money u PAZO OINT MEN T falls to cure an? cas e of Itchi ng. Blind, Bleeding o r Prntm tflnc Pi as in « » o 1 < *•>•• i0 ' SUBSCRIBE FOR THE NEWS A FINAL WORD How often have vou beeu a nnoyed aiid vexed by just a little oversig ht? Contestants m The Eveni ng News Old Worl d Tour and Prize Contest should leave no s tone unturned i» make victory certain. You desire to win and are asking how many v otes it will take to m sure success". No person knows . Your best policy is to get every subscription powible ami then som e impo ssible ones. Grab every oue that is loose at both ends and not nailed down in the middle! Get Subscriptions This Week Do not overlook an opportunity. Do not fail to see eacli friend who has shown a wil lingness to help you. Tell your friends that a new year's subscription this week will count 3,600 votes, that a year 's old subscri ptio n will cou nt you 1*00 votes, if secured this week. and but 700 votes next week. If you can not get the long term subscriptions, take the short ones. Exert Every Influence Possible There is no need of your failing to win that trip if you will exert a little additional effort. Your personal a ppeal often has a magica l effect, your da sh of enthusiasm will * "' votes a gains t the pessimi sm of the less active. The race is so close that it can be truthfully called anybody's race. Do not lose a mom ent between now and Sa turday night. At o'clock S atu rda y nigh t, April 20th , the best oppo rtun ity for secur ing a big reserve will he •« ma tter of history . A /inal wor d, is get the vote s dur ing the remain der of this week that will make you a victor. Now Is The to Do Your Best Work The Evening News guarantees absolutely that never again during this , cont est will su b script ions count as many vote* artSfcy wHi this week. I

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Page 1: Insurance_North Tonawanda NY Evening News 1912 Jan-Sep Grayscale - 0613

8/3/2019 Insurance_North Tonawanda NY Evening News 1912 Jan-Sep Grayscale - 0613

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^r J^WPWBP : W P* ' * ^1 Texiawanda—THE EVENING NEWS—Ndrth Tonawanda ?PW I f , 1 |

" I ' L L T A K E T H A T O F F E R "A Bell Long Distance message from Tonawanda

to Jamestown, for example, costs a te>v cents.

It gets you voice-to-voice with just the man youwant in a few minutes.

Isn't it folly to write letters; make railroad journeys;take time from other important matters, when you canclose that deal so easily by Bell Telephone?

It pays to spend cents to save dollars.

NEW YORKTELEPHONE CO.

It's Everywhere.

G A L I F O R N I A N H A S P I C K E D

B O D I E S O F T I T A N I C(Continued from Page One)

St. John's, N. F., April 17—A reportis current here, 'which is said to haveemanate d from the trading vesse lBruce, which is on the way to Sydney,C. B.. fflvin? a version of the Titanicdisaster, which the trader obtainedfrom various ships. This is to theeffect that when the Titanic struckthe berg she was going at the rate ofIS knots an hour and the impact almost rent the big vessel asunrier. Herdecks, sid^s and bulkheads were•mas hed from bow to midships. Thebows and upper works were smashedto pieces. The ship struck the bergpartially bow on, careening to the portside and almost turning turtle.

The bottom is supposed to hav*-been torn out of the Titanic by submerged iceberg*, over which she waspassing and as every compartmentfrom midships forward was quicklyflooded and the ship rapidly settled by

the head with a list to port, rollingheavily in the trough of the sea.The force of the impact was so ter

rific that it practically rent the shipfrom stem to stern. For a short whilesufficient order was maintained to allow of the launching in safety of mostof the lifeboat and embark about athousand persons Then a cry wentup that the Titanic was sinking andthe frenzied crowd rushed madly forthe boats. As the sh ip se t t led in thesea many of the boats were smashedto p ieces in the davit s and some wereswamped while they were be inglaunched. The others went down withthe sh ip .

By th is t ime the sh ip was seen tobe Battling fast and the water hadreached the engine room. The wireless tailed through the loss of the motor and all lights went out all over theship. This added to the gloom and thedifficulty cf handling the boats.

The source of this version, whichhas the appearance of reliability, givesthe number of passengers saved asover 1,000.

It Is practically a certaintw nowi that nearly a ll of the m en of the Ti

tan c'a company went do wn with theship when she plunged two miles towards the ocean floor or that they perished m<serably while clin ging towreckage or life preservers in the icy

i waste that betrayed them .They gave up life within sight of

the little rocking boats that held theirwomen and children, it cannot bedoubted now that among those were

| Colonel John Jacob Astor, IsidorStraus, Major Archibald W. Putt, aideto President Taft; George D. Widenerof Philadelphia, Karl H. Behr, thetennis champion; J acques Futre lle ,the writer; William T. Stead, the London editor; Francis D. Millet, the

I American artist, and many, manyI more who are known on both sides ofthe Atlantic. The toll of the Titanic'sdead will be felt the world over.

The names of the survivors wirelessed here by the Olympic include asmall number of men who were ableto find a place with the women and

children in the all too few boats. Suchgood news as 4here is places amongthe living Henry Sleeper Harper of thepublishing firm of Harper & Co., andM r s . Harper; Dr. and Mrs. HenryFrauenthal and Mr. and Mrs. T. G.

Frauenthal.M r s . John Jacob Astor, with her

maid, is on the Carpathia, which isborrytef the survivors to th is pot t andwhich should arrive here tomorrownight Among the others rescued areJ. Bruce Ism ay. the mana ging director

of the White Star line; Mrs. GeorgeD. Widener of Philadelphia; Sir Gordon and Lady Cosmo Duff; Mrs.Jacques Futrelle, Mrs. Charles M.H a y s , whose husband was presidentof the Grand Trunk railwa y; Mrs.Henry B. Harris and Mrs. WashingtonDodge of San Francisco.

CAPTAIN SMITH

Commander of the Titanic Went to

Death In His Sinking Ship.

M l o c k o r F o r e s i g h t B i t C o m m o n S e n s e

M o re T h a n A M il l io n D o lla r sl i t Acc ident Insura nce Ca rr ied

by the Pa sseng ers o f the

T I T A N I CThey Thought They Were Perfectly SafeBUT—1300 UNACCOUNTED FOR

Are You Exempt From Accident ?

m o r a l — T a k e o u t a n P G G i a e n t P o l i c y- W I T H -

N o . 1 Niagara St., Tonawanda, N . Y.

BOTH PHONES NO. 34.

i FranShot for women

Ladkr*Home Journal

Pattern,

Oliver and Schenk Sts.

H E W W A I S T S

E c o n o m i c a l l y P r i c e dU

¥

WOMEN A ND CHILDREN FIRST

WAITING FOR NEWS

-

Nothing Has Been Received From theSea Which Ml t l satea the H orro r

o f the T i tan ic D l tat ter .

Now York, April 17.—Nothing thatcame through the air from the seamit igated in any degree the p ity andthe horror of the Titanic tragedy except as individual d istress was abatedby the gradual addit ion of names tothe lis t of the known survivors .There are no known survivors thatare not on the Carpathia. The Virgin ian was too late and found noneand no other skip has reported findingany.

In the ley, fogamothered seas, wherethe Titanic sank, exposure most soonhave destroyed those who wer e left tol ife be lt s or wreckage when all theboats Were gone and no help had comeand the great steam ship foundered.

The receding Olympic, whose powerful wireless began on Tuesday morning to rec ite the names of the l iving,continued the work today of relayingthe Carpathian d ispatches and thesuerese ive bulle t ins posted at theWhJtt t tarof ltae kept many a despair ing man or women wait ing all day and•eft others awajr thanking God-

No Distinction Was Made When theBoats Were Lowered.

The list of survivors includes women and children from the Drat cabin,second cabin and steerage. No dist inct ions were made when the ru le ofthe sea sent women and children tothe boats and left the men to theirfate .

The first message from the Olympicthat filtered through stormy airs wasthat there were 868 survivors on theCarpathia was modified later in theday to "about 800," but whether onomessage allowed for the boat crewsand the other did not was not madec lear . There is no absolute certaintyhere as to how many souls were onthe Titanic when she hur led herse lfagainst a giant berg.

Her veteran captain, E. I. Smith,knew the perils that lay ahead of him,along the wester ly track of steamships . Other navigators had foundand avoided those pall id shapes in asmother of fog that remain the unconquerable enemies of sh ips. Only afew hours before the Titanic shatteredher tremendous bulk, the Hamburg-American l iner Amerika wire lessed tothe Titanic that there were two largebergs a l i t t le east and south of theplace where the White Star colossuswas finally.hi collision.

That was on Sunday and very shortly t f t tr rece iving the psws tfj* Titajjtc

herself relayed it to a land station,from which the hydrographic officeheard of it. And then, there seemslittle reason to doubt that the Titanicplunged onward and hurled herselfagainst these very bergs.

A shadowy hint of what followedthen has come from that area of waters that are ruled by fog and frost.The wireless, modern miracle as it is,could not achieve the impossible andsnatch toward the Titanic In time tosave, her people the greyhounds thatwere hundreds of miles away.

It has not recounted clearly andfaithfully the episodes of the terriblefour hours while the great ship struckfrom happin ess and peace to horrorand despair lay stricken among thegroaning bergs.

When the Titanic struck she struckhard. There was something morethan a rending or tearing of bowplates, a flooding of a few forwardcompartments. As the whisper ing ofthe wireless is pieced out by the experience of mariners and builders, theTitanic must have recoiled from herdestroyer a shattered and riven ship.

ease. No tragedy of the sea has supplied a picture more intense, morestagger ing to the imaginat ion .

The blasting shriek of the sirenshad not alarmed the great companyof the Titanic because such steamcalls are an incident of travel in seaswhere fogs roll.

While the greatest of all ships was

driving steadily westward in the nighttowards a c ity that was await ing herwith all of that city's interest in afine new thing. Captain Smith was onthe lofty bridge.

There can hardly be a doubt of that,for ship masters in dangerous seas—

and few stretches of ocean are moretrying at this season of the year tonavigators than the waters that runbetween Cape Race and Cape Sable—remain on*watch night and day, foregoing rePt for many hours on astretch. It seems to be clear that theTitanic was running at great speedor else the shock of collision couldhardly have crushed a vessel that wasregarded as unsinkable by her lineand by the captain himself.

day night bearing those who were toruaway from their loved ones, nobodymay know the dreadfulne ss of thehours that followed. With no otherships for 200 miles around there war.nothing to do for the men in the company save to hid farewell to theirwives and families and hope that he lpwould come before the Titanic foundered. P hillips, the wirel ess operatorof the ship told the world that theTitanic was sinking and that the women and children were in the boats.No hint of panic has come from thetragedy.

There is no reason to believe otherthan that Captain Smith and his offi

cers held control of crew and passenge r s . All of the boats have been accounted for and that indicates something of orderly procedure.

WRECKAGE COVERED SE A

FO G PLAYLED DEVIL S TRICK

IMPACT TREMENDOUS

Must H ave Shaken Eng ines From

Foundations and Opened Up Wat

er T igh t C ompartments.

So tremendo us an im pact wouldhave crumpled up the very bed plates,shaken the mighty engines from the irfoundation, opened up water-tight compartments, buckled plates from end

to end and started the rivets everywhere .It is likely that water rushed into

her hull from all tides, for her keelmust have been injured by the terrificdrive on a mass as hard as rock. Andthat jar must have quenched the ship'slights by injuring her electrical apparat us .

We know that the wire less workedweakly when Phil l ips, the operator,set about his desperate task of reaching out for he lp while the women andchildren in the boats rocked off somewhere in the dark and the men waited with linking hearts. A flutter ortwo and it was gone .

The Titanic struck home with agrinding roar, which nust have beenfollowed by a horrid chorus when theplates and p lanks and t imbers hoveunder the shorfk. , She could not ha vestopped progress al l at once so shemust have gone on br ie f ly while tonsof tee ci-aattad apon her decks. Andtheir the sad den dark falling threw

*.«I»JlJafl» »nd *affltn it

Had Shrouded the Frozen DangerWith Its Blanket of Invisible Evil.Perhaps, indeed, probably, the fos

played Its greatest devil's trick, lifting now, clearing now, always intangible, treacherous, the blanket of invisible evil. Some such shroud musthave descended with little warningupon the Titanic and blinded her tothe fate Just ahead. Perhaps awhimsy of the polar currents whosepulse has never been gauged by seafarers with absolute accuracy driftedthe great bergs squarely in the Titanic's path.

The wireless has told us of the bit-, ter cold in the air. the accompaniment' always of the ice packs that tear loose

I from Arctic glaciers and sag southward with the currents. But no warn-

I ing chill served to deflect the shipJ from her course. She strove aheadI as destiny pointed her and no invenI tion of man or inte rference of Provi-I dence swerved her from a fatal course.

( Her ears, the submerged te lephonesplaced on either side of the vessel below the water line to tattle of the

'proximity of solid objects near or distant , gave no warning in t ime, and it

happened swiftly that she went headlong into icy derelicts that were moresubstantial than the work of mens

l hands; vast hulks of ice there to make* mockery of human'ingenuity, asleepor awake, were at the mercy of chance,

Few among the more than 2,000aboard could have had a thought ofdanger. The man who would havestood up in the smoking room to paythat the T itanic wa s\ vu lnerable orthat In a few minute s two thirds ofher people would be face to face withdeath, would have been considered afool or a lunatic. No ship ever sailedthe seas that gave her passengersmore confidence, more cool security.

DISCIPLINE WAS PRESERVED

Offiers Were Assigned the Task ofFilling Boats and Getting Them

Overboard .

And then in the tick of a clock, allth is was changed. The extent of the catastrophe must have been apparent topasse ngers as well as officers. Husbands sought for wives and children ,families gathered together . Those whowere asleep hast i ly caught up the irc!othdng and rush on deck.

It is evident that d isc ip line waspreserved. The belief is that CaptainSmith first of all tried the switch thatc losed the water t ight compartmentsand then had the boatswain soundthe call to quarters. The officers wereassigned to the task of filling the boatsand get t ing them overboard. Therewere boats enough only for the womenand Children and a few of the men. Inthis respect the equipment of theTitanic was similar to that of hertitte r ship, the Olympic. She carriedsixteen lifeboats and four collapsibleboats which were actually l i f e raf t s .Thsy were supposed to be capable ofaccommodating about 1.100. but manyless than "that found places o n them.

" £ Cjiriia^hja. arrive s Tfa.nre.

C arpat h ia F ound N ot h ing But 20 Boat-

loads of Gr ie f S t r icken People.

It was long after daylight when theCunarder Carpathia, which was morethan 200 mile?, east of the "Titanicwhen she caught the appeal for help,got to the s cene and, found the 20 boatloads of exhausted grief-stricken pto-p l e . The sea was covered with wreckage, the odds and ends wrenched Iocswhen the Titanic struck and fioatcwhen she foundered.

It is supposed that many c!pieces of debris until cold on'ness re leased the ir hold . Ap-j !the Carpathia took aboard th? .• i\

gees without great difficulty, arirt tl:ciafter communicating with the Olymiic, since her own wire less appa.aluwas not powerful enough to carry tland, started for this city.

Later on the Alian liner Virginia!the first ship to pick up Phillips' crie.?for help, made her appearance. Butshe had lost the race again st time.What living there were had been taken on board the Carpathia.

Like the Virginian, the Parisia nsearched first for the Titanic too farto the northward, acting on the locat ion given by that sh ip when she sentout her calls. But the Titanic hadcrept 30 miles to the south before shefoundered and it was not until after acareful search that both ships madetheir way to the scene of the disaster.

The Par isian sUamed through f ie ldsof heavy ice looking for passengersfrom the Titanic . Everywhere a greensea churned between masses from theArct ic . Progress was necessar ilyslow. The liner found much wreckagefrom the Titanic, but observed nobodies. She found no lifeboats orrafts and none of the Titanic's company remained, as the Parisian's officershad hoped, afloat on wreckage.

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Going on her way after a carefulsearch, the Parisian reported that theweather was cold and that even ifthere had been persons adrift theywould, in all probability, have perishedbefore they could have been pickedup .

The Carpathia. with about 800 ofthe survivors on board, has suppliedno account of the wreck, nothing butthe list of the survivors, which she relayed to the Olympic and which theOlympic, in turn, sent to the WhiteStar Hnc here.

It may be that the story of thov/or ld 's greatest marine d isaster wil lnot be cleared up until the Carpathiareach es here tomorrow night. Underfavorable condit ions the Carpathiashould make the voyage by tomorrownight and land the survivors on Friday morning. According to the Cun-ard officials, she is net overcrowded.

With 800 of the Titanic's people shecarried a ltogeth er 1,700 passen gersand she is fitted to carry about 2.500comfcrtab ly. There Is plenty of foodon the ship as she was on her way,provisioned for a cruise in the Mediterranean.

liov ed, ha s proceeded on hpr way "iLiverpool. The Carpathia h"? sot into comm unica tion with Sable -piai !but no news has >et be n r» p\. !from her.

The M ackey-Be nnett rablo <hip r?-gone to search the scene of the wre<There are still vagiae hopes i hat r

r~

sibly the Titanic did not. sink a? r •

report or her foundering has not ac >

ally been confirmed.

To Search Scene o f Wreck.

Halifax, April 17. — The steamshipParisian sent a wire less message tothe effect that none of the passengersor crew of the Titanic were on boardthat ship. She had no news as to thepassengers reported as missing.

Nothing was rece ived last n ightfrom the Virginian, which, it is be-

Four Off icers Saved.

Cape Pace Marconic Station Anr

17.—T his m essa ge com es frcm <"atain Haddock of the Olympr, via i,Ce lt ic :

"Please allay rumor that Virginir-has any Titanic passengers; run

1

has the Tunisian. Believe onh s

vivo rs on Carpathi a Secnr.rl th

rfourth and fifth officers and s< oMarconi operators only officers re;med saved."

M r s . Astor Lest Htr Jewels.Norfolk, Va, April 17—A wirH^

messa ge received here last nisht rports the total survivors of the Tit a-ic as 870. Mrs. Astor reported thai-he lost all her jewels and onb save

1

a raincoat and her night clothe"

PILE 8 CURED IN • TO 14 DAY"Tour druggist w ill refuno money uPAZO OINT MEN T falls to cure an?cas e of Itchi ng. Blind, Bleeding orPrntm tflnc Pi as in « »o 1 < *•>•• i0 '

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