newspaper oswego palladium april-june 1912 - 0216

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  • 8/3/2019 Newspaper Oswego Palladium April-June 1912 - 0216

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    THif O8WKGO DAILT FAUUABIUA1, WKDNESDAT, APBIlS U 4 - F A & J 2.

    N O M A H I N E C L A S S E S '\' - ll-.LU... D__D i s a s t e r M i g h t H a v e B e e n

    A v o i d ed , S a y s S a i l o r .A ND F R A N K I N D O D .

    Senate Committee Investigating TitanicWreck Refuse* Their tru es t toReturn to New York For a-F f w DayeIsmay May. B e Called Today.Washingron, April 24.Frederick K.Fleet, seaman nud lookout onthe til-fated Titanic, testified before, the sen-ate lnveetlpNting committee that thecollision with the iceberg might havebeen avoided If the men in the Titanic'*crow's nest hoid been supplied with mn-

    * - ' Fleet Is the lookoutTvho first sighted"the iceberg that nent the giant White' Star liner to the bottom' lie declaredthat he ami other gat ivould bo overturned ifwould mean the needless sacrificing ofmore Hres. Pittmai* acknowledged be

    - was insole command of this lifeboatnd that he finally yielded to> of his p a s s en g ers and theaway out ofthe sound ofthe terriblecries. Pittman showed preat emotionxvhile inthe witness chair and repeat-~e31y~~nrceii bodiescapable ofld.-mlii catkm have been recov-ered. ^ l """i

    M O R E B O D I E S I D E N T IF I E D .Sevtniy-seven Titanic "Victim* H ave

    York,* April 24. Fifteen morebodies of theTitanic survivors werereported by wireless to the White Star\s_Jiayiflg btvn i'leutlfledaboard the cable steamship 'Maekfcy-|----CaptainBennett . Thl brought the total ofIdentifications up toforty-two out ofv> ho sfttempted to turn alwnrJTne seveuTyTevc'ii CodtwrTreported tohave been recovered. Of these nf-

    i-othetthree membern ofthe crew.Tho wirele.sii mess age was" noten-tirely decipherable, and not all thenames sent agree with those on thepassenger list. However, by compar-ing the list sent by wireless with theX>as8enger _Ust_pf_the_ Titan ic, the jof{ticials of the company have becy ableto malt* tipidentified:e company nave oecn able j of the leadethe following list ofbottles | railroads w

    S T R I K E I S A V E R T E DR a i l r o a d s a n d E n g i n e e r s A c -

    c e p t M e d ia t io n O f f e r .A N A G R E E M E N T I S E X P E C T E D .Federal Arbitration Off icers Will MeetToday Separately With Railroad .Conference Committee and WithRepresentatives ofEngineersto Opon-Megotiations.

    tUituUnei*strike of the locomotive engineers ofthe fifty railroa ds east" of Chicago ananorth of the Ohio river lias been avert-ed, certainly for the present. ;The offer of mediation made by Mac-tin A. Knapp, presiding Judge of tbeUnited States commerce court,, andCharles P.NeiU, United States com-missioner of labor, was accepted by therailroad managers, thepresidents ofthe roads having approved this action.As tbe-eogineers, after Having voted tostrike, agreed to the mediation proposi-tion on Monday night, this means thatthe amicable adjustment ofthe dlffer-ences between the engineers and~theroads rests_with tjie federal representa-,ii*#*wfce-effered ttretr^servlceSrShouiamediation tail, there still is a chance forarbitration, making the possibilities ofa strike evaji more remote. An agree-ment is expected.the Erie railroad and chairman oftheconference committee of the railroadwhich Has-been-negotia ting witb ^be

    since Jauuary, accepted thetpp and

    GOVERNOB SOBEET B A S S .-Real Ltd** of the Roosevolt J-Force* In NwHampshire.

    *m pWI*

    - G E I T I M A N S W E R S R E A D Y .*O. chusett* Real Fight-Coming.Oyster Jiay. April ^M.There is areal fight eouiiug off in staid Massa-nt fh" *" o f t h l s week if

    er NeiU ina.-short^note toCommis-sioner

    First c a b i n - W . D.Artagaveytia. Fred Satton. A. M. Ha!-verson, George D. Widener.Second' CabinLouis M Hoffman.John H. Chapman, W. Corbines, W. H.Harbect . J ohn Ofli. Nicholas Nasser,. M a rj Mack. Reginald Hale.Steera1?eMary Manigan, J a mes Far -rell, J a mes Kelry. Henry D.Hansen.Manritt Dahl, Leslie GIHnskl. ErnestP. Tomlin. Josef Draznovic, MalkalmJohnson, Neslie Williams. -. Because ofprotests received by tn*njVhlte Sta r tfae1 TrtBctataratrtoial from -tee- Maekay Bennett beforethey had been identified and also be-cause ot communications indicatingbe en av e dw abnit a l and had r e f used, t h a f c nM intend to go to- t a r n _ b a c k when heheard cries ofj the Mackay Bennettdtrtroo* and-^a-signal calling "ft*-1This is the-first evidence that has been presented" -Ionday.2remaining flooaevElt trip! iiUC 1UMaryland before the open primary onyitxy 0. In New Jersey before th^e opeuprimary ;i May 2S, and In Ohio beforethe primaries early in June.Nationalists Approve Home Rule BillDublin. April 24.Thc convention oftbe Irish Nationalist party here votedunanimously toaccept and indorse th-

    rule bUTpropcinn? 1 r> fh T 1hr 1 gpy

    OLD TKINITY HONOK S DEAD.Annual Dinner Held For 126 Years Replaced by TiLanie Me/norial. ..t New York, April 24.ForVbe S C O B pluce there was amemoriaL-w rvi, e fur the dead of ih eTit anic luT r iui t y .It was A congregation ofmen. Wo-mea were presout, but the attehdanceof men, from Wall street bankere andland to rha loiterer on Broadway, wasexceptional, paying a tribute toman

    The cuestfl Included" Lord-Percy,thp HriHaii embusay, tvhocame over -from Washington for theservice; W Courtney Bennett, - theBritish consul general, and other members oftbe consulate, with representatives from St Andrew's nnd St. Davids societies, the Society ofthe Co

    Inninl XVHTH, SODS of theHuguenot Soclety^Pilgrims, Canadianand Southern socienes.The only hjnon .^vWc4 was sungcame at the end, '!Nearer..My-c;od. to'ihee,'* which twas played as .lie Titupic.san*fe.*'* ~ " * *CETJSH A T S TR A n FMeeting Abandoned when cro w d To o

    . Great For Hallrvew rorK.-frostrilliiu-c. wTtrin^ for th4loors t> O IM I >r tin- noer'tln^ in momnrr of lHllleuty of am-munition- They put Hup abrilliantflght and hadklHed fifteen of tbeAloors, when tue Uitler' climbed on t IK*roof ofthe. wireless building. Theybored nhole'tlirouKb. the ro^f and'lie-gan j^ouring biasing -all ou the floorbelow. Seeing that their capture w:isinevitable and knowing the horriblefate in store for them, the wirelessmen resolved to die_*_drew lots to see which ont*should use tbe revolver Qn bis com-rades. The lot fell to one of themnamed Rebout. He immediately shothis three comrades and then turnedtbe revolver on himself . Tbe wounddid not j)rove fatal immediately, andafteT the mutiny, had been put downRebout WBB found bytbe troops ,andtaken totbe -hospital. He was just'able to finish his story at tbehos-pital before be died. _ __ sC A I I F O B N I A H WRECK.

    SaiTor Says SheWas Twenty MilesFrom Titanic a) Time ofDisaster.Boston. ADrtl 24.^T he .Leyland line3f^ Q rtrvt* P o l l Tr r*T1* r\ ^ r g W Jt l l l l l t^V^DrTTmiles of the Titanic when the latterstruck the iceberg. Captain Lord ofthe Californian said that his engineswere shut downall tnut night on ac-

    A member ofthe crew sai iaT theTTCalifbrnian was lying within less thantwenty miles ofthe Titanic tht nightand that the wireless operator wasasleep? csuaoetcd from seventeen hours

    Come Over This H A T are you doing toSi3~M ii7Brown ca g a m e r . ~-*Nothing quite equals a Befor getting people togedier. Mevenings are passed by a telefriends. ' * " . -Bell Telephone service hfriends, both nearby andfercloser touch with one ah.the J^nds_p sociability.

    Every Bell Teleph41 Long Distance S-NEW YO RK ^TELEPHON

    of continuous work-Captain Xord was asked: "Captain,it has been said that tbe Californianpassed within five miles of tne sinkingTitanic and disregarded her signals?1Captain Lorfl reptted: **I will onlysay one thing, and you may draw yourown-conclusions. 1 attained into animmense ice field at10:30 o'clock thatSunday iQgbt. The engines were shut^Jown and^ffemained shut down until.V* g* the-Virginian's messa ge thenefct morning. Then I started with allh8,ste for the scene of the disaster/'

    -H O MOVTEg OFSenator Become* indignantProposition ofPicture'Men,Washing ton, April 2-1-"Ettorta wtJ emade^v_jcoovlcg picture-people to ob-tain theconsent of the senate com-mittee investigating theTitanic dis-aster to make a set ofpictures of theInquiry. .Senator Smith, who' is chairman o/tbe coinmltfeeT became very indignantwhen the proposition was made tohim. 'Thio inquiry," alri ha, "! of.

    I A I A I rt>/l mithippodroming nor commerciallxlng' It.I will not permit it^in fact, ^forbid it**Confederate Officer Dead.-, Baltimore. April 24.Major Claudiusi Godwiu. a member ofthe staff of

    ifu of- the Cou-erate anuy, ladead, agedice. Who Hold Steamship Stock*

    to locate andascertain inor name* titles to propertyin W\\A. country of fort'igu steamshipcompanies against which damage suitsor other litigation might lie inadmir-jTky courts was Introduced intin.bouse by Representative Moore of

    Daughter of^Tom Brown's" Author.4t

    was lost on (heTHanH. WH aigbt e r .o f T bo a a a Htwlwa. 4bm aa -thor of 'Tom Brown's Schooldays."

    portion: warmer today; tomorrow Hair;westerly winds. * _

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