Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Apr 1912, p. 1

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1 YEAR 79 -X0. 94 WHAT HAPPENED WHEN THE TITAN KINGSTON, WAS SINKING TO HER OCEAN GRAVE The Dramatic Story Told by Second Officer Charles W. Lightoller, Who Stuck to the Ship to the Last. He States That He Was the One Who Placed Major Peuchen, of Toronto in Charge of a Lifeboat---There Were No Lamentations on the Part of the Men Passengers as the Last Lifeboat Left Ship. April Charles 20. From a WW. Lightollér the Titanic, and sen of the ship, there a narrative of what pre ceded the sinking of the Titanic, what 'happened while women taken aviay in the liflebonts men stood by, and when the Titanic fook It was a story of and by a man with a nice choice of sparingly! and to the Yoik, of the water aguin, only to be sucked back by the water rushing into *the ship. this time he landed at the grating over the pipes, which furnish- ed a draught for the funnels, There was another explosion, and again he came to the surface, not many feet away from the ship, he said, and on the other side of it, the ship having turned while he was under the water Only once did Lightoller raise his voice perceptibly, and that when he denied that (here was any favorit ism for the that mitigrated wgainst (he chances of the escape the passengers. Asked if he had been Capt. Smith send the he had doné so because it rule of the he SH of human opature," man ol the sea, cond officer surviving came, to-day, ol otheer ax have what happened fast told her dive heroism faietly calm} wi words, pomt used crew So dramatic was the story which be the ot Id at the investigation of the senate on com that word spread through the Astoria, - and crowded those heard the beginning of the story had waited to hea the Lightoller Lightoter actually stack to the ship after having sent off boatloads of wo fen, until the wale up to his anklés, There had no lamenta tions and no demonstrations from th men passengers the last lifeboat leave the ship, and there was no wailing arving, no outburst from: the who liaed the ship's as she dmappeared from the nearby 'aud of Lightoller, As he expressed needed him ed, the men as they helped get women "I suid © 'Are sailor in the boats, "stood quietly as if they he replied that he was a yachisman tLe ordered bn women first was th is a rule to ol persgng or commition room while who sea, said and business elsew hero Peuchen Brave Man. April Officer who th had Maj last sentence from Called Foronto, Lightoller, lieboats, 'enchen "In the fourth lifeboat 1 ming short of put mea in, and one of them jumped out. hat was the hrst boat | had to put He was standing would go if J AM, Second had charge of came ths to of say been was run 8 hey as they aw seamen, | two sen- or mien A InAN passeager in, nides said he View Vou au ? and of his from from boat i i found told in whisper; the sink pushed women, escape the time he with the himself clad in aboard the Carpathia. sure i what boat was he sure be remained on the liner al- she struck He added, however, thal before he entered a lifeboat he had been told that there were Ho more women on the decks, He denied that there had been any censoring of messages from the Carpathia. Other witnesses, including Capt. Ros tron, bore him out in this, with the explanation that operator the rescue ship was swamped with personal messages, and wags unable to send matters for the pr her, LA in =n until he pajama He was not left the long his in just he Fitamie, nor how ter on \ Services for the Dead. New York, April 20--To-morrow. one week alter the greatest mercantile ma tine disaster in the history of the world, will be the day of universal memorial services throughout the Christian world. The great cathedrals of St. Paul's and Canterbury, in Eng lind, and the big edifices of Broudway ind Fifth avenue, in this city, will be of continuous solemn requiem dead | early morning: till night. Even the Cathedral of Dame, Paris, which is seldom for a shov will close to open them mourning worshippers to-morrow | I'he vatican fist and] ay solemn the dead. in he United Canada, me morial services also be the order of the day in churches In the meantime the investi gating commitiee is engaged in trying to get a reasonable and comprehensi le of the disaster with 5 view to fixing the responsibility It has al ready that officers and | crow passengers Loo place unquestionable, even reckless faith the fact that the Titanic was thought unsinkable. Third Officer Pitman fifteen other members of the crew be examined to-day. At later ses- sion, il expected, that Major Peuchen and other passengers will bh called upon to give evidence scenes the late at Notre used i= for from but piace, doors tourists and for will of Rome masses for and States will miny sennte story been established and and will a 1% were in church." Fhen 1 told him that if he was a sailor to pet over the bulwarks to the lifebout, to head, He did and | proved himself afterwards to be a very brave man." | "Who was he: did vou know him *" Peuchen "ut in Charge. of the two to each bout, of the seven seni oh by Lightoller, &is tak | § en from the ship in the presence of f "1 didn't know him then, but after | Lightoller, That san, Major Veuchen, | wards | looked him up. He wag Ma of Foren. brave man, Lightoller | Peuchen, of Toronto." Ho said, had been put in» boat by him] "Had you ever seen him before becaise there was not a seaman TNover." handy. one man, outside "en Only mong, about tt pT . Ax the ship settled swiftly, although Speed of the Titanic. after the collision, Lightoller did not New York, April 20.--The Fitanic's | believe (here was any danger, the se | rate of speed, which wus approximates | cond officer found himsell sear the ly twenty-six and one-half miles, wad | officers' gunriers brought out, to-day, from the hips of "The ship took a dive," he said!) Brace Ismay, president of the In without emotion: "1 looked forward. | ternational Mercantile Marthe, and I took a dive. director of the White Stim tHe was sucked thi side of tho |line, a before the United ship against the grating the} States which is blower of the exhaust There was an | vestignting explosion, at least believes it was Nervous, an though he is not eer-1 Capt. tain thrown the surface' { managing to witness uyer Senate committee the disaster, hut Rostron, he not in tears, was of the Carpathia, who followed, him on the stand, Mr, Ismay WHEN DOOMED SHIP BEGAN TO LIFT ---------- i -------- alling Nature of Situation Dawned on Passengers--- : Officers Drew Their Revolvers and Shot Three. New York, April 20. When the Ti tanie began to seltle in the ocenn, it wast difienlt for the men to remain oil feet. Then it was that the appalling nature of it all dawned up au those mien. And then also it was that the officers of the ship drew their revolvers. "Stand back,' they eried, women © and children into boats.' "Some of the men leaned against the rails and looked down over the tower: lng sides of the ship. Others slowly paced the deck as il they were wait- mp. The ship sauk lower agd lower, 'Thrvo revolver shots were heard. Throe passengers in the steerage had attempted to foree their way past the sailors and had been rithlessly shot down, 2 The chip had now listed to a ter cible angle. Men in the throes: of panic attempted to reach the boasts and wore pushed back. And in that mom the hetaism ul hundreds as serted itself. It was the passengers who pushed back the panic-stricken fox and not the sailors. Of the indivi dual deeds of heroism, only a few have ss yet besa told. ji 4 4 © Finally all the boats were lowered. Then the willors, seeing women stand) ing and running abobt, cried : "Al women 10 the lower deck." They began a rash to the lower dock and it wax here that the nearest semblanes to a panic began, Some of < the women were seized by sailors and deliberately thrown over the railing to the beats. The weaker men, by seuras, began to jump overboard. tife- boats began to draw away from the ship. As they drew away those who rwere floating among the cakes of joe ng sen cried slowd, piteously for § ns explosion, He was io the lifeboats. In many cases they were pulled aboard. Iu many cases the sail ors who manned the boats deliberate ly went heodless of all supplica- tion, for thers was fall. Une boat was observed to overturn. they on What capsized her is not known; pro bably a wumber of men in the sea straggling to board her. Several more pistol shots were heard on board the ship, and suddenly above the pwurmur of the sea and the crunching of the ice floes there rose a steadily increas: ing cry irom the doomed ship, a ery in which hundreds upon hundreds of voices mingled, and the women in the lifeboats were screaming, cach to her husband or her hrother "dump, we will pick vou up." was hears on every side. The screams of men and women on the Tianie began © intrease in volume. From the life bouts the huge liner loomed a mass of blackness dotted with a few tiny lights. None of the sea illuminations were sufficient (6 reveli cither face or incident. but those lights were stead: ily sinking. In the hwrry of embarking une of Lie lifeboats had been lowered with: out a single sailor im it. Three men had been picked up by this boat, but Women were rowing, and the wo men, between the thwarts, were Suteaming to their loved ones in agony. Then suddenly abave all the wailing of that desolate scene there tose the string of the ship's band playing "Nearer, My tod, to Thee 'And for the first tine those in the hosts realized that who were leit be hind knew that they were doomed. A few voices rose 10 the melody. Tha chorus swelled louder and lowder, the lights sank lower and lower. The lifeboats were pulling from the scene as fast ws they could, but while they were still within sight of the ship the lights west out with startling swiftness. The scrsamis and shouts of "Only the gv mei Pulled Aboard Lifebeat. Those who could seized the sides of DAILY MEMORANDA. {and {i Home. Luickly Canadians Hurry New York, April 20 circumstances will permit the Cans gian survivors of the ill-fated tanic are hurrying away from all that reminds thems of what they have gone through, Those whose condillons will wot. warrant a journey at the present time are vesting qibetly in different hotels in the city, and, thev are mostly women, they are not 'anxiou to tell about their experiencee Majer Peachen, Mra. Peuchen, their two children, and Wiliam Thompson left for Toronto last night. J. Wesley Aliscn, with the infant survivor big relatives' family, has Montreal. The Havs party Iv after the ardval of the Carpathia Mrs. and Miss Fortone will like go to Winnig eg at the begumming of week, of to left short gone the Water Thick With Corpses. New York, April 20.--Simon Senecal, says: "After rescuing the boat load of women sighted a life raft on which were about twenty-four persons One-half of these were dead One of the Carpathia boats went to the raft and tovk the live men off. leaving the dead. The water was thigk with corp wie ses. Operator Waited Ten Minutes, New York, April 20.--~How the wire less operator on the Carpathia, by putting in an extra ten minutes on duty, was a means of saving 729 lives was told by Dr. J. F, Kemp, the Car pathia's physicians, to-day. "Our wireless operator," Kemp, "was about to retire Sunday night when he said jokingly '1 guess Il wait just ten minutes, then turn in." It was in the next ten minutes that the Titanic's call for help came "On Monday at 8.30 o'clock in the held a funeral service on board the Carpathia. At this service there were thirty widows, twenty of wham were under twenty-three vears of age, and most of them brides of a few weeks or months. They did not know theu that their husbands were among the dead." Women Left Destitute. New York, April 20. Charities are uaring for 204 of the Titanic's passen- gers, A sad case was that of Carla Anderson, a flaxenshaived girl of nine teen, who set out for Portland, Ore gon, with her uncle, her brother and her fiance, All three were lost, A distracted woman is Mrs, Selma Ase tond. who sailed with her husband and three small boys. The father was lost. but the mother and sons were siived' to reach America, friendless aml titute. ' : dentit word Titanic has been efiaced from that ship's thirteen lucky life boats. SOuvenir hunters robbed them of head pieces, drinking cups, water kegs® and evervthing detachable. On the water front. longshoremen secured from $5 to 325 apiece for these. Pisces of the gilded scroll taken from the fig- urehead. and bearing the mame Tita aie, brought ton prices. St. Paul's In memoriam services for those drowned in the Titanic disaster will be held morning and evening in St. Paul's to-morrow. | The Hat Question. Solve it with one of Camphell Bros." said Dy evenung we on board still © resovaded the sir. The last light went "rie New Baw, " Fag nobby $2 or $250 derbies o8 wold hats. Hs "Kodak ------------ ------------ supplies." Gabson's. 3 Aline t : \ the' lone wire less | Che Daily British Whig ONTARIO, SATURDAY, AP [scnoor wineLe RIL 20, i n2, S GOT "S05. 4 Message From Titanic Reacheil i School Before Papers. Yor, April his father a Pad tn licopton New {ten to {schoo Bray the "Our school wirdess has theked up jan 'S.O.5." message from the Titauie f which says "Hit by iceherg: sink- Cap it be true Phe whole vig- is m excitement aboit it." The sehoolboy's letter before any newspapers apnounding the disaster had reached the Little Massachusetts town, some thirty-five | miles from Boston. A lefter writ this city Mass. / by conta wm ANNOUNCED BY MR. ROWELL Bilingualism to Be Cut Out THE FIRST TO DROWN. of Schools. FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE follow uy fing. The Doors of the Steerage Depart- [5+ went Vere Shut Up. New York, April 20.-- Albert Mayor, the Titanic's steward, declares that the of the unorganized \ithough every man did his best, they were hindered in getting the best re- sults, because they could not pull to- oether There had not been a single bout drill on the Titanic, ou which all of the men, of course, were sailing for the first time : The steward nas wiltten COW vessel were TO SCHOOLS IN SPARSELY - SETTLED DISTRICTS, s------ confirms the report hat the doors were closed on the the steerage passengers after about a quarter of them had got out. ; He says that "those remaining forward in the steernze must have been the first to drow." He explains the much-comented upon fact of the ship's lights burning . so by declaring that all the engin eers stayed at their pos Liberals Aim at the Discontinnanes of All Denominational Teaching To Dismiss Inefficient Inspectors. Special to the Whig Toronto, April. 20. -Loada thas given the follow mg gramive for Ontuito : "lhe dismissal of rectly ble for jsatislactory conc French schools. "The estuclishiment of training schoois to secure Eng * shespenking teachers, jrosdding by the government antial aid to secure this result 'The carrying out or the law with rézard to the Howell liberal pro the the dion of di present un the officials long respons English ---- Fierce Attacks on Ismay. New York, April 20. The attacks of the New York press on J. Druce Ismay are Avereasing in violence. The American calls him "J. Brute lsmay" nnd suggests thus the emblem of his lire be changed from While Star to instraetion to be used schools the White Liver It publishes sar "The reslacing of inefligicnt castically a designed picture showing sympathetic inspectors by others whe, fame putting a lanrel wreath adoyit "to- his head he in a the out. 1 The additions} sap dy and of! the of fin present binpuage ol in apon sympathetic attitude as cowers life CL Attor bribing rds the teachers and pupils in | Ebglish-French "The ARENCE . SOF . 1s Lae ex ception to the story of bravery. It Savs 'We think we know the hero stuff of which this gentleman is compounded. He is not esactly an antique Roman. MI might have been of tetter for him if he had gone down." The World that given , mvst exnrect be onled is in explain how comes to 1.500 has the and thought is out of to then Lrying They hremeny school Telegraph says Ismay of super wg ln experience to laws and regulations and to to wre the sympathetic co-operation of : at L : Ang CAN A NUN BE HELD AGAINST HER WiLL 7 teachers and pupils in the policy ms {the department of education Important Case to Be Decided Be- v ihe Eoeorem te ie fore Circuit Court in | Direly stud Michigan. Jers. . "The discontinuation of ° all | Detroit. _ April 20.--The Wave jrominaticnal teaching ol the | ait court has been appealed to to de- | use of unauthorized test books in pul cide whether a nun aun be held tlie echools." convent against her will. Rev. M. Stock. a Detroit, Lutheran - man, a few days ago received a letter from Miss Martha Mueller, or, as she ® known in religion, Sister Bertha. who said she was being detained in the St. Joseph retreat as a prisones against her will. She had taken re ligious vows, but hag since changed hor mind. The minigler started habeas corpus oeeaslings. 10 compel Sister Borgia, A ther Superior, to produce the girl in court. The order is made | returnable before Judge Mandell on | April 20th. 'The issue is an import- | ant one, establishing as it will a pres dent in cases of this kind where nov tiates after having voluntarily tuken cloisterhood have later repented of their acts and desired to return to the world which they once abandoned for enforced of religi ow se 1 apoint ment spectre with hay {that the school are carried out, er ol ie help Ps } fe asserts to he others are dead" written and of Ismay upon to be alive distafcts to eviallo | * hen obtain well-qualified teach- | Much { about to been said braver navigating offi. passer but little to the engineers It idence, to-day, that brave fellows went in the engine work the dteam sent their subordifiates, and stokers, to the decks with orders to save themselves if they one ould, but the rincers stayed at ho-! their posts away below and wero the | overwhelowd by the inrushing waters son, There was absolutely no chance of {of the late John Saunders. The de | escape. They wen: to a glorious debth consed had heen ill for same imam with none of the survivors to woe was only taken to his hed last Satur I them and talk about their courag day He is survived by one brother, So far as the present needs of John, and four sisters, Mrs Ahern, surviving PIS Mrs. Froderick Joyner and Miss | crew have been Saunders, all of Troy, N.Y., and Mrs | pretty by the locul | Alfred Ockley, of this city. Deceased and various {was a the Catholic Order | funds. cun describe the of Foresters, of the Y.1( terrible grief suffered by the women B.A. vith families of children being drop d alone in a country where they are theolute straggers. . Fhe | vers m given in the these se rs, Cid and came ina weniy Adam clergy doom to down The William Saunders. fhe death occurred at his i Friday evening, at eight William Saunders, for of the proprietors of the Queen's tel. Brock street. He had lived in city all his life, being the eldest | 1 | | rooms, Late | pumps home, the o'clock Some on of Vears en the steerage and are concerned the y well looked after women's committees ut nothing passen memthor of and also Choral Concert. the seclusion "i wurviving members of the crew THE LIBERAL PROGRAMME ~~ | LAST EDITION ---- Toronto, April 20th, 10 am Mrawa Valley and Upper St Lawrence Fine and a little warmer to-day and or Sunday: showers Sunday sight T nt ----------e A -- ITEMS OF | {INTEREST for the wonien of an econo cal turn of mind. Dress Goods - «nn Black and Colors. Excep tional values All the newer weaves, including Boucles, Serges. Whipcords, Armures, Diagonald, Finish, Tri- | others. Pirle cotine and many § { #| See our special 36 inch bess: | quality French $1.50 quality Messalineg, for $1.04. All wanted shades. Satin Skinner's Satin, guaranteed 27 laches All for {wo Seasons, $1:25 colorings. wide, yard sult Hosiery That are fast in color, 2b¢ up STEACY'S| The Store of Satisfaction. ent to music lovers Tuesday even An ev of interest has been announced for institutions. ve been paid off for the Jreient and on free passage to Eng most of where steamer commitiee later may 1 RANGE I and A STRANGE BEQUEST. jing, April J0th, when Francis Fischer Powers and fifty of his pupils will give a choral concert the eity hall. Ea La > Due, tenor, Miawa, will Lanuidy. | them belong, the Lapland An investigiting will their evidence General Manager ls v bitte od thing on Heirs Forfeit Legacy if They Preach Gospel. Boulder, Col., Aphil nephews of John | imal share them in take gen of extreme it the eriticism being pour He suid had merited censure 2.--The grand Church, a maning who died here recently, will estate of $10,000 if become ministers of the him that on he done dens no The Whig's Second Part. Interesting articles regarding the | Titanic disaster, along with local re not m ius any | Scott's, Christy's and Buckley's Celeirated hata, at Campbell Bros' of pel This was potis and general news will be found on pages 9 to 14 these pa the unusual stipulation in the will, which has. been filed for pro- The testator made a bequest to | wile, but his are out off | favor of Is grand-nephews and! grand-nieces. | The aim is to mak: ble gos read very The renter has an up-hill pull. | i vou have tired of it; consult McCann's that home : Music Ask Princess hate hi m The Buckley Hat And the Puckloy thad in Kingston jPros., the style thats. own sons agency about Students 1 yw here 200 flower be Campbell men' guarantee, two at fox sent free | © Dut- | 4 post catalogue slreet, scecds."" Gibson's NEW HERO OF THE WIRELESS IS MAIME, OF THE CARPATHIA only centry for EDS MONEY. ton's, "Ruy Raise, Mimster Consistent. ] Pittsfield. Mass., April 20 - { first time in the 'history of the | England Baptist churches a preache i has declined an increase in salary | i | | is} Declining Salary For the Now Rev. Henry CU. Leach, pastor of the Morningside church, here, was voted an increase by the congregaeion In a statement declining to accept the money, Mr, Leach says that he is JACKSON At 'ERRY SAUNDERS. BORN. 101 April Jame Bagot Street, 10th, 191% to Mr 8, Jackson, au Kingston and Mrs daughter In Kingston, 19th, 1812 Mr P'errq + daughter DIED, Kingston John Saunders Ont and on April Mrs H 1, to In 1912, rif 63 late residence, 320 Monday, at 2 pm acquaintances are re. invited to attend in Kingston on Willtam Saunders place from hs late uren's Hotel, Hrook 3 norning nine and scqualntances a" 3 itty invitee attend WLIVAN--AL Hotel Dieu Hospital, Kingston, Ont, wn April 15.4, 191%, M Sullivan, beloved wife of ullivan, aged 69 years take place from the roe fosaph MeGrath, Mount Monday morning, at 9 the Church of the Holy ishendall, where a solemn 1 be sung for tho her soul Friends and ances Are respectfully Ins attend on 19th ag ears "uneral from 'rincess his Street Friends and spectfully AUND ERS 19th, 1m2 ineral wil Aprid at wk. Friend not a man of means, but the church negds the money more than he does, Operator Who Detected Cal From the Titanic Works Dweiting Ttiske. | Steadily for Sixty Hours, Flashing Marconi | "Phone 577. i RORERT J. REID, The Leading Undertaker, 280 Princess Stregt, The Continental Fire Insurances com. | . | pany, Eas assets pf over $24,000,000, Names of Survivors. | alt Is over sixty Years ol age, Ln ~ of the cldest and largest companies ini » the world. This company makes specinlty of insuring first-class dwel linge at a reduced rate. Call on W, J. :Fair, agent, and save money b patronizing this estimable company. ew York, Ap 20.--A hero of palling wreck had by this time reach the high seas, no less deserving of tiie 1 to the ends of the carth This task ! va owas ench . of humanity than "Jack" | ¥28 encless He sould not hope . answer all messages repubhe fame, or Operator i After flashing assurances that Phillips, of the Titanic, who forced Jacob Astor, lsidor Straus, - - - jis assistant to man owe of the life Butt and others of equal pre Queen's Examination Results. iboats and make his escape, arrived [were not aboard, he began the work Complete results of the examinations (here on the Carpatbia., iof transmitting all the names of sus #ill be published in the Whig as soon He is L. Naim, the Marconi {vivors abosrd the CarpatiXan, The a8 they are posted. Students who wircless man, who detected the Tits {names were brought to him Irom be leave name and address at this office lnic's 8.0.8. dgnal, plied the air with low as fast as the survivors eould can have the paper mailed them with- blue blame uniil he found the sink- [be tdentified. They totalled 491. out delay. Price, including postage, tng vessel's tocatfon and then flashed | When they bad reached the names of three cents -a copy. ito the world the news of the terrible ithe sieerage passengers there cama A Farm Sold. 'tor family, the Force family, 'disaster, 2 i Wikle the Carpathia was speeding to T. J. Lockhart sold, this week, the | the rescve, Maim sat at Hs nstra- newspapers, the commanders of farm owned by John Blackiock, on ment erscking out the plight amd po the York Road, to John Black, of sition of the. Titanic to be recorded Glenbdinie. on the detect 'of the Virgickan, from Norfolk, from the Hrooklyn Navy | ---- -- {of the Baltic, the Olympic, the Pans | Yard, from Newport, from Halax, $2 and s2 50 Derbies 'ian and a deren other veswels within Hivom yk Race, from Cape Sable. x reatest - assorbment, Weel wireless racfes of his Instrument. rom London, from Seuthdmpton-- on oi best values as Unmiphbell | When Mi pe Kieboees had bee, | from every wireless post acoessible 10! Brow', the larpest imporiere of men's Picked up a their octupants splely {the waiting would, and ali hopelensly | hath In Ahi pars: of DRaric. iput sboard Was ship, ¢ taking 'entangled wm 8 maze of difficals re -- {any rest, Main: again bridlied the ser lays and of different codes. Though n | Baudits to | i | Binns, of fobu Majn 8 {t c } i i i : further urgent - messages from the As. | the . crus ers Salem and Chester, the Marcos | wirdiess statlons, from Highland Vaghy | at PICKLES JAMES REID Py AT "Phone 147 for Ambulance, | etter ------ GO-CARTS. A couple dozen of them. Wii hem at & reasonable price ash. Turks, 'Phone 708, Must" be CROSSE & BLACKWELL'S Mised, Chow Chow, Walnuts, White Onions, Gherkins, In Octagon Bottles, 30¢, Jas. Redden & Co. Let ws electrily yur home while/1al waves with messages to the on he had not slept for sisty carpets are up. Gur stall ie expert in. * Stamens tefling (Nem that afl Maim was able by almost superhumen this work. Beautiful array of fixtures. | had been done and they opuld [powers of We rent vacuum . HW. New. pot Teach the scene in lime to be man Electric C'o., 79 Princess street. [any assistance. Oilskin pats, for men and boys st! The CUarpathia, headed about Roney & Uo's. > under steam toward New York, May badies' Home Jowrual. College lfound himseli Sooded with : Book Store, y { =. ws, tor the news of the ap ih more urgent calls of fanblies and friends, and $n the meanwhile 10 keep Maia | the world in of hie ship' exact location and her [ogress to! ward New York. : } ' endurapee to (rassmit' the merri,"' A names of the surivors, reply 10 the | tore," aad | tons. Music, 10c. copy, "Schubert's Sere ade Vales Lente, by Mefitier "Tran "Humoresque," "II Trava- and ten thousand others. seeds." Gibson's. & Co's for the latest | "Tar paper in sheste." "Buy Go to ENT Say garden Roney in sill hats, Bl A ps a Ve a a RE a 3 WER 23 WR Pow

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