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¢ THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY. JULY 5, 190a. i PRAGERS - 1 - PRAGERS- — [ PRAGERS o PRAGERS ] PRAGERS Clearance Sale of Domestics - All clean and new goods bought this season—some INDOOR PICNIC ' APPALLING e e| D HED atr s o i ¢ A JOHN DREW MEDIUM Granite lel\ Off the Coast | hnes Only JUSt Opened : s B o 00 of Seotland, on Which Lin- | No Question About, Money-Savmg Reductions UR expansion calls for more room, and within a very short time we will commence tearing up domestics and wash goods departments to conform to plans of “Greater Prager Store.” We have anticipated every need, have arranged for extra sales people and have made shopping facilities as nearly perfect as possible. Other sections of this store will have bargains that, are certain to interest. you, and, besides, er Norge Struck, a Monu- | ment to Almost 700 Deld —— e HEAVY SEAS BREAK THE LIFEBOATS Bla che Partington Recom- mends the Vacationless to Pay Visit to Local Theater AR | go farther—where you P . i AR wnce- e there is the extra inducement. of ‘‘Something doing at. Pragers.” . Alcazar this week with : s o i ROLLER TOWELING SHEETS SILKOLINE COMFORTERS ne Day.” Plenies, cool Mad Struggle for Life, in| fl TS T s ahite ot siikors In this lot there are only 150 dozen heavy, full double bed size sheets. The size is 81xgo. No more than ten sheets sold to 35¢ i {5¢ These 1 s;:eets cannot be bought for less622C T R A, than . “ saseaas PR HEAVY BLEACHED DAMASK 25¢ Pure white filled silkoline covered comforters. Every one represents the newest designs and colors. They are extrad- ordinary values ¥ 12-4 HEAVY BI.ANKITS l A PAIR—This is a value A YARD — 21-inch roller toweling. This is a very heavy twilled toweling and unusually wide. No more than ten yards will be sold to each customer. The regular OC .A yard " HEAVY HUCK ToweLs EACH—These huck towels are hem- med and have .pretty red borders. They are the regular tamily size and rivers, hay moonlight, what more ye?—it is true the dog days. But things that “One Sum- as for ome. It is just a sunny, restful picnic. i+ by H W. Esmond, When We Were Twenty- weas ane of the John Drew Which Men, Women and! Children Take Part, Pre-| cedes Final Plunge of Ship GRIMSBY, England, July 4—A pile of granite rising clear out of the At- lantic, 290 miles from the Scottish he price is 5 we cannot emphasize too Twenty-five pieces to make your strongly. Every housekeeper selection from. This damask is Doin at Pra f the tangles and not a lit- the decks and had not recovered their | *150 pairs of real hand made Batten- A good, heavy Ori- & @ coinage of the heathen for | fee¢ when a stentorian voice gave the 1 4 burg lace curtains ental . striped éouch sort of sentiment. MajoT | ierrifying order: “All hands on deck; | . that have nice in- cover, finhbed with e h""‘!‘; m”"“f °f it | hurry or you may sink.” | * sertion and ruffle, L] pretty fringe all the 2 Vhite Whittle- | rrmediately there was a rush for the | f 2 should provide herself with s :" usual with these the hero | mainland, is now a monument to 0 will wear unusually well. 'No more ?guahquzlxty:that will stand very at least a pair of them now. self-sacrifice, though his end is | most seven hundred dead. Bodies thati ten of thicse: Yohwels 1 “8 VS=§h~ is 50 The opportunity may nnt be given again. : . that is not his fault. He wash against the rocks or lie in the will be sold to a customer. This is 2C | IR WX TP WY C | These blankets - come has even rr; re th: lhde usual dimcuh;\; ocean bed at its base. Near by, com- 2 good value at.............. The 'li.mlt'll ter;.y'a‘r.cl's to a‘él’x;tomer. :‘:['Te:eg‘?:lhallslc) f?)rr £~ Md of seeing the thing under nis nose, and | pletely hidden in the water, is the| vY WELS W, s - e s Pleacty Sughen -itn g T HEAVY BATH TOWELS DAMASK NAPKINS We also have lines from soc up. heroically refuses his ladylove's hand | Scandinavian-American liner Norge, EACH_AL thié price we are offer-,| el S Ll when she offers it—as she does every | which was carrying 800 Danes, Nor- inga g—o_(;d\aluepm a heavy double A DOZEN—Some very beautiful PILLOW CASES w and again—believing her to be in | wegians, Swedes and Finns to join rel- ‘ thread bath towel. No mare than g:;",gf’s L’ie‘:‘:h:gg“h"‘dr:"“;' ""k EACH—Heavy, shrunk 1 e with some one else. He is the | atives or friends in America. Of these ten will be sold to one napkins., - Their @8 3 = RN i e 45K, 2C ¢oting guardian and supposed father of | only about 130 were saved. | i customer. An txtl'aol’dl- OC Fequlin s | selling 1 35 ‘C“ e oWl for... 3 5 s sma nephew, wh father is No tragedy of the sea has had a U aary good value at.......... price of i R . 5:1:menc:rlyaotn(;uhralsft;‘:c:( u;‘l?)gn;or‘: 2d and whose mother was a gypsy. n’"t‘: r:g";‘rl“:g Y;"r"‘?f“:fn’i;e ’fr"hdt ’;;’:’: o WASH _G____OODS a dozen is a very low figure for the value they | than ten sold to one customer. e a R “ C r sho T i e 8- | P e e mother is still alive—disreputably Sencs - e s alioily akonid ions A YARD bo]:n 200 vpa;lterns do( represent. i e WASH LAWNS so—married aga and at the opening | their sleep, terrified by the contact of = this season’s choicest \&as thgonh\ ___—OCIIAD A YARD—Pretty and unusually ei- f the play planning to blackmail the | the bows of the ship®, with the solid 3 | They have hkeen néu?orfs b:cln ‘:llx!nc For this sale w: fective designs in the newest wash uncle by pretending to want the child. | granite, followed by a grinding, rasp- | i last few weeks and hav g8 g have cut all iy o on our bargain tables for awn About 78 pieces of our best £ BW t overhears the bargain- | IDg sound as if the hull was being | d 20 d our .. lines have been selected for this sale ing magines the worst” The |SEOved over large rocks. Then silence Sc an C a yar Crocheted "bed spreads within a and their _worth insures = s ates things by |2° the clanging bells brought the en- | For this sale, however, an extremely low . few cents of half price. It is a | every satisfaction. These lawns sold lOC g 2 ~ {gines to a stop. Those of the pas-| price has been made. rare bargain. for 2. casensesesesedneoves i yurd s ¥ and an amorous | sengers who were standing at the time | C —— — I B the steamer struck the rock were| [ | BuS® | Hand-Madc Battcnberg Curlains Couch Covers sy ¥ of fun in the straight- | 1y roun against the bulkheads or on | w ] L] . - g v!‘ ],‘_'5: - fa_;‘ it narrow companiohways and men, wo- | regular price of ular_ value is.. 50 l & | the Jast act, Where | men and children pushec and struggled these curtains is late Svening Aress jand made every effort to reach the | s : S en oo e Lt 0 RO SEERE T e EXTRA HELP WANTED ALWAYS RELIABLE avits. Many persons who retained . i i} s t- = i z maj : '1. an at- thejr presence of mind seized life pre- Tep domestic salesmen. Four 1238 12501\’[ARKET ST I Three silk salesmen. Fifteen = \hudafl'erlzm servers, only to find in some instances | fl dress ndn lesmen. -JONI:S | w 7“‘\"‘@““(1 s goodnature is S 7 Whittle- is agreeab! y in that the strings were rotten and they | directly against the rocks. It remained ! could not be quickly placed around s r bodies. Those whno reached the ere l with the ' geck saw the nose of the Norge pinned sJa8edq je Suloq Suryauiog A [IAA 244 L finished with prctl\ lace edge. The Be Sotng Domg at way round. The reg- B SPEDEL . there only a few minutes, for Captain | . Gundell, commanding, who had im- | , > DPEa order to the engineer to reverse the : x Miss Rawson | cpgines. Some men of the engineer nd a charming fcrce had relatives among the passen- There Will Be Somethin' k. It has, 100, | gerg and after seeing them safely to t very desirable .y, poats they heroically returned to| ™ —— & Y o = e Bt _\1|>=~ I.a.'\. N their station below. As the ship backed | plunged forward, her stern shot up in | occupants into the water. A heavy |breeze from the southwest. I stood on Sl'l'lATlO\' IN TANGIER I Member of Parliament Killed. - ¥ - '";r»‘_vlr":- off and as she gained headway it was | the air and she disappeared. The swim- { sea was pounding the boats against {the bridge with Chief Officer Carpen- NEVER MORE CRITICAL | LONDON, July 4—Sir Henry Wil preternaturally s Marie Howe >und that water was pouring into her hold This fact, announced in Scan- dinavian, added to the supreme fright and agony. SEE DEATH COMING. The passengers who were piled in the mers in the vicinity of the ship were drawn into the vortex and were whirled around like chips in the maelstrom. But twelve minutes elapsed from the time the ship struck until she sank. A fine Scotch mist which was falling at the ship's sides. We went to another, a crowd of shrieking women and chil- dren following. “The launching operations were not conducted simultaneously, the officers and crew going from one to another. ter. Soundings were taken and it was reported there was five feet of water in the forward hold. Orders were given to commence pumping and also to the passengers to put on life belts and be ready to get to the boats, which were Outbreak Expected Which Means Ap- palling Sacrifice of the Lives LONDON, July 5.—The Tangier cor- respondent of the Daily of Europeans. wade. Mail, under | overturned. liam Rattigan, member of Parliament for Northeast Lanarkshire, | the time shut out the other survivors! Had men been set at work at each |ordered to be put out. Hrss UL ST £ akys: el rous bit as | boats were the fortunate ones togseape. | from the view of those Who: were] boat more would. have been paved.| ‘The crew werkhd nobly under the French officials here admit that the | Remains of De Lome Buried. 1l f the painter. The unfortuntes, who saw death near, | brought to Grimsby. These latter, as| Some of the crew were worse than the | leadership of the chiet officer. Seven |Situation was never more critical. PARIS, July 4.—The funeral cludes Rich- ' clustered in the vicinity, a seething, |soon as their boat was clear of the passengers and but few of the officers | boats got safely away, the life savers Fighting occurs daily in this vicinit | Senor Dupuy Lome, the Spanish s it with a ' struggling ma Some were on their calf-lover, knees praying, surrounded by children scene of the wreck, devoted themselves to thoughts of their own safety. A would have put off in the boats them- were driven back and were cut adrift and the steamer went |down by the bow. The chief officer Raissouli is only two hours from Tan- gier and iIs collecting men. Yesterday | Embassador to Italy formerly 3 . selves. They | ister of Spain at Washington, who died Maher and | others were supplicating aid from any | jacket was tied to an oar, which Was! {hreatened with death unless they |told'me she was sinking and I told him | he attacked three villages and looted | F”da\,m"sm s i pla.,f;[ e Gl MiMin, Agnes one and shricking for permission 1o in turn fastened to the bow of the boat, | obeyed orders. The captain never left | to jump overboard, which he did. I|their cattle. The town guards are | o the Shilehas e dan a The piece enter the boats, elbowing and fighting | anq a sailor, a Dane, took charge of the bridge, but he shouted so many | did not see him again. I went down | helpless. When the outbreak comes | g staged packed houses at both Kremer's work, is as ns as an egg is of meat. their way to the places from which the te deep water. The sea hungrily rushed | waiting for orders and without paying attention to their proper manaing the! lowered from the ship. An examination of the water cask showed that it did There were some biscuits, and these were eaten by the shipwrecked people a small boat just before the vessel | but we did not think so remaining on board were chiefly women and children. I saw only two other boats afloat, one a big lifeboat, boats got away, reached the surface I noticed a num- | ber of bodies floating. The Norge was “I swam for about twenty minutes and came across Second Engineer Brown, who is a good swimmer, We urtain calls after every occupants began to lower the boats. | during the ten hours between the time kept company for about an hour and a that the Central has| The starboard lifeboat began slowly | the ship struck, at 7 o'clock a. m. June | easily carrying :":"y e a;’il;‘:; half, when we noticed a boat some dis- ! thing in the bill now | lowering, when to the horror of those |28, until they were picked up by the | Other a smaller boat, carrying p: tance off and we both made for it. I The play tells the story | on board the stern tackle failed while | Grimsby trawler Silvia. forty. No ne A ‘ was hindered by my sore leg and the fa v's cruel wrongs, but the |the bow tackle ran free. [ “And we who sat horror-stricken in | though there were elght on board.™ | o\ 0 reached the boat first. Both the art triumphs at last, of| Soon the boat was almost perpen- | that small boat, avoiding as much as ENGINEER A HERO. of us were taken on board exhausted. the day of happiness | dicular. Those who were in it clung | possible the heavy seas because we| Many deeds of, heroism shine bright- [ We found that it was lifeboat No. 1. after the night of woe actual facts, re- police records of New ver that may be, the for The plot is said to have | unced success at the | a prosperous | | no time to spare to as: desperately to the sides and seats until a great wave came towering along and | struck the boat, smashing it against | the side of the ship. The occupants of the boat who were not killed by the| impact were thrown into the water. The crew and passengers on deck had were afraid we would sink,” said Larra Christina Pederson of Copenhagen, who is on her way to join her cousin, John Schroeder, at Chicago, “we were danc- ing and singing to the music of guitars and violins the night before on the promenade deck of the Norge. We 1y through the pall of the catastrophe. That of Jans Peters Jansen, who*has relatives in Brooklyn, N. Y., is told with admiration by the survivors. He was one of the engineers on the Norge. ‘When the ship struck he learned the extent of the disaster and went below It was crowded and under the charge of Seaman Peter Olsen. After talking a little, I took charge of the boat and provisions, which consisted only of a box with bread and two flasks of water. The boat wgs steered for St. Kilda, 150 miles distant. | st the few who | Were so happy then in that small boat, | to where his relatives were and told “On Saturday morning we saw a o e bin had a chance to escape but lost it. | not knowing what would be our fate.|them and those near by to go at once |large schooner-rigged steamer about Y- in, who Trflsenl Undeterred by the experience of the | With the memory of horrible scenes on | to the upper deck. He accompanied {four miles distant. We put up a ‘ e ty musical act, were | both perform- vesterday. Carl held his audi- 1 fifteen minutes, first boat, a second, loaded principally with women and children, was lowered. This time the tackle ran smoothly, but | the hopes of escape of the passengers the steamer, we could do nothing more than pray miserably for the succor and help that came.” “I was on the bridge looking at the them to the boats-and saw them safely on board. He was urged to join them, but said he must return to the engine- room, and, shouting farewell, ran to blanket on an oar, but the steamer passed on without taking any notice of us. On Sunday morning a boat passed some distance off. At about 12 affected soldiers are deserting and £ : - i o 0 b ing performances of | into the huge rents made by the rocks | not contain & drop of water. :‘n';"";‘l:’;‘r:‘le" behind as appeared on | afloat only about twenty minutes after | Joining the freebooting bands. P e s e TIY. WRRSRIN the ook (BNt B MY B Reppel BUT LITTLE TO EAT. the water when the Norge sank. Those | Striking. s a comedy drama |began to sink by the bow. Without | E 5 swaid N ? ; ; g o there will be an appalling sacrifice of G e e . S A the boat. Men and women were put t0| grders that the crew did not know | With the steamer. My right leg got 3 BLIND MAN KILLED. —OAKLAND, July 4 CHE PARTINGTON. |beats were being lowered. The.sound | york keeping the boat afloat, as a hole | what to do. Therefore, I stuck to the | Jammed between two stanchions and | European life to the fanaticism of the | BLIND MAN KYLLED —OAKLAND, fuly & _— of grinding ceased and the bow of the | hag heen stove in her bow when It Was | thirq mate. Together we jumped into | WAS Very much injured. When I The Sultan has cut down the |, san Pablo-avenue car last night proved to- Theater began the week ' Norge gnawed as the steamer returned 5 soldiers’ pay by cne-half and the dis- | day to be John Cralg, In inmate of the Home for the Adult Blind Caused us to +.. JNCREASE OF BUSINESS.... look for a larger store—found it next door (CURTIN'S = on board were blasted. The moment | men gathering in the seine,” said Hen- | his post of duty, where he died. Some |o'clock Sunday land was sighted and 2{0‘2’- i .““,_'m:‘::v': : 2’3?’:3':3.':.,::‘7..‘3 . 'S Kelcey gave a4 touched the water the waves picked | Ty Glover, second engineer of the Silvia. |of the male passengers, without a |the spirits of @il were revived. It cuts in the prices to help move the R00dS. - X 'd"‘f"'“s act. | up the small craft as if it had been that a buoy out of place?' 1 asked | thought of self, placed women and |proved to be St. Kilda. Some time aft- GROCERIES. LIQUORS. “ng barytone, made | ;" feather and dashed it against the | the cook; who was with me on deck. children in the boats, preferring to re- |erward a steamer was ndticed coming PENWICK RYE 2% & singer of | 30 of the ship in spite of the frantic| * ‘You don’t see any buoy,’ he an-|main behind rather than take advan- |from the west bearing down on our B 7 I?f @ WHISKEY — and Dandy, | .yorts of the passengers to fend it off. | swered. tage of thelr strength. The mate of the [ boat. She proved to be the Energle, Coa 16 5 £°9, Distillery bot- N The crash was heard on deck; then| ‘I went below and got the glasses. Norge, who left the ship in the boat |and at 6 o'clock we were safe on ?l’-g by o : ORI CacTiat the sea swallowed more victims, and | *‘It's a small boat,’ I sald, ‘and they | which arrived here, leaped into the |board.” cts 0 T on e s e ovr capital pro-| pieces of wreckage slowly drifted to- | have got a jacket flying at the bow.’ | water for the purpose of swimming to| ———see— g i P ward the rock. Chey have been shipwrecked.’ a second boat. He had only gone a | YOUNG AM}'ERICA FAILS TO in it "?:fu:“lm “The N b D MEN BLASPHEME. “\\’e l?lul the captain and he im- |short distance when, we,lgh(ed by his BURN UP MUCH PROPERTY WINCHESTER BACON. E"p ‘;‘:.i“ S3e el mediately told us to go ahead and we | clothes, his strength gave out and he ey S sugar cured, for two days only... tt g Theater. “A Lucky| The upper deck of the Norge at the | picked them up. They were in a ter. | sank. MARIALINS. Sre. Sterted by -Dunileg SRR b 12e BT ANy Etone Dorothy Morton in the | time of the disaster to the second boat rible plight. Men andeomen were in- The crew of the Norge appear to Powder, but Are Quickly Extin- PURE "m CREAM—Largest WHISEEY ; — atnetey: was only a few feet from the Water, | sufficiently clothed and so cramped |have behaved well after the first panic, SO Wi S sime -3 cans 25¢ e pena N and it was apparent to every one that that they could hardly come on board. The city firemen celebrated the rated. Purest > i when it ig said the officers were com- h, of i fa t food. limit. ) y E ” ourth in their usual b £) 5 - DR PERSONALS. only & few minutes more and she would | we coulq not start immediately, for |pelled to drive them back from the e an it Ho ;:ym::‘ PIONIC HAMS—Fresh smoked. ... |TABLE CLAR iR X g plunge beneath the waves. In the final| we had our nets out, but as soon as|boats, But there apparently was no|av & € “hiine hotses ‘e acivity Suar suved. o 100 B%€| We have. the best. We also Have F the Mayor of Los An- Crisis those who were able to remem- | 1poy were stowed in we went di-|discipline, the orders which the captain Al o ok ¥ Sugar cured. Reg. 10c. P the cheapest. Any store will geles, is 2 Iace Per clearly What mappencd say thal|recty to where the Norge went down. | shouted from the bridge being misin- |t mione 1n all perte of the ore Log EELEG JAPAN TRA—Uncom-| <harse 40c to soc for this same r R. ¥ nson of Monterey is | (D¢ shrieks and sobs died away and | mpere was no trace of the ship, but | terpreted or unheard. So far as the | 0 P8 P of the city, and TNONTY CREAD. -« »« v« v or e r * T Sibipies Tois. the § that the quiet was only broken by the back of the rocks were the bodies of survivors here remember there was no engines, horses and men had few rests, Good as any 40c or 50c Tea other stores. OLD PRIVATE STOCK WINE the work of Y B Al B N o nds 1 3. Craig, “tor of Highland | Sre% of some men whose fear £ound | more than 100 men, women and little | systematic distribution of the people | Sy gy e "Work Of Young America DOMIND SUGAR....5-1b. box 40¢| Wimond fruit w.,f,’.’,u,'e‘,,?,'? Springs, is at the Gramg ""“‘d‘" blasphemy. i SR children.” to the boats, which were not adequate- | (1% T e g:;e SMS“S“ Crystals, Cubes. 7\lvobe sweletnes.H 1895 vintage. Suddenly one man threw mse| s . 3 - mber color. [as the flavor of L. R. Poundstone ell KROWH S5 | verbonrd sudl'misther folomsd His ox- HEAVY SEA RUNNING. 4 mflnne:. No .lt::::ptmwu made bY | “ou¢ of it all the San Francisco Fire TABLE EELISEES........hot Se| Spanish Port Price good all ing man of Gaston, is registered at the | ample. Still another jumped into the| - Karl Mathieson, the Danish sailor | *"Y e e v time vo tave ProD- | Department added to its reputation for Many, kirds. Reg. 10c and 15¢ bot. | week. Reg. $1.5 Grand > | water and soon around the ship hun- | Who assumed command of the boat :;:’;'“m‘_e" ake Prep- | efficiency. The noisy boys of all ages . °m m cnnsllfllS m n"‘lg‘“ m Hobert W. Shingle of Honolulu ar- | dreds of persons were struggling in the | brought to Grimsby, only joined the Blogn did their best to start a conflagration. Pure California. “Res 32000 " Distiliery bottiing. High proof. rived to-day from Washington on his |sea. Others determined to stand- by | Norge at Copenhagen just before she Powder was burned by the ton all over IMPORTED SWISS m Reg. 75¢. »ay home. He Is staying at the St.|the ship, hoping against hope that she | sailed for New York. He said he CAPTAIN GUNDEL SAVED. the city. Fires by the score were aice” P s b 25¢ | PURE GINGER BRANDY b S0c ancis H i 7 . B g uiey. ine flavor. uble £ led. nest thing on ; would remain afloat. Three boats, it | knew nothing about the ship’s ar- started. But the city's amazing luck Y. e is known, successfully reached the sea. : rangements in case of collision or fire. | Commander of the Norge Goes Down | stood by it. OLD GOVERNMENT JAVA COP- ?.r;:lml:;l; ':;x“;:mg;r; . troublee. Mother Finds Her Boy. | The passengers frantically pulled away | He had never been instructed in the With Ship, but Escapes. Mre Whelan has applied to Judge sky for the custody of her 12- the boy was placed in St. Vin- ,from the doomed ship, passing by poor '\ret.chs who were still afloat and who spairing cries. The women in the boat fire drill and did not understand what it meant. He was on deck when the the order to man the boats that the LONDON, July 5, 5:35 a. m.—Captain Gundel, of the wrecked steamship was Prompt work by the firemen checked every incipient blaze and the total damage reported from all the ‘While credit is being given, per- bs. 55 Fresh roasted. Most delicious Cof- fee in the world. Reg. 37%ec. satisfaction. To-day with orders. Reg. car-old l'm; Fddie Whelan. Under | vainly begged to be taken aboard, | vessel struck, but he did not know |among the survivors that arrived on |fires Wwill probably total only a few rlch‘\}iéf(d"fiidé&ilehnlgf e o AN 4 sentenc rom the juvenile depart- | while from the ship came lofig, de- | until he heard the captain shouting the steamship Energie. In an_ inter- | thousand doilars. Reg. 25¢. I de Turk's \lneward Perfect $1.50 s COLOMBO CEYLON TEA..Ib. 50¢ ‘s Orphanage. His parents sepa- | which reached Grimsby hid their eyes, | damage was great. Mathieson said: "’:" he sald: 1 l. - haps the weather man should line up In original package. ' Fresh and |OLD C BRANDY . .bot. TSe 4 avhen he was a year old and the | but the men who were sitting facing | “I worked with the third mate and| ~All went well until about 7:45|. i} the Fire Department and get his fragrant est Pen grown ang[ Wurest ‘dtiistion fiom grape «hild was placed in the care of his!the Norge say they saw the captain | followed him to the different boats, |0'clock last Tuesday. When about|gue. The slight rain, or heavy drizzle, S b o ATy grandmother by his mother, lease. Recently he was found who asks for his re- | gion. While they looked the Norge! ,still on the bridge and the passen-.| gers on deck in attitudes of resigna- The first we attempted to lower fouled her tackle, keeping her stern fixed, while her bows fell and shot the a s eighteen miles south of Rockall I felt the steamer strike heavily forward on unken rock. There, ‘was & . gentle of Sunday night probably contributed in no small degree to the city’s escape 1en.n|umm serious fires. - . '] TELEPEONE SOUTH 1082. was killed | to-day in a motor accident near Glass- A tire burst and the car was Min-