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SPPEASPSTOL TO BLUFF CREM ites Tells How He! Fought His Way Into a Lifeboat. Ex HANDS SCRAMBLE. = G, Fignola Says Steerage © and Cabin Passengers 5 Struggled Together. | [ledis G. Fignote, « ealoonkeoper of | whe was a passenger on the | told @ thrilling Aight between the male passengers the crow to get into the few remain. | Ufepoats of the White Star tine, | the women and children had been | “ap ever the sides, | the gate Bo attempt to help any of the men | An ere, Who fought with thelr last, wish to squeeze Into the few boate! it w: were left. Caste aid not count, | wom cabin and siccrage passengers | alike. The men, many of them, Grees suits, and they fought as des-| that as the Im:nigrants to save their 3m the boat which Fignola, after « Weta: etrugsie, managed to gain room, British Suffragettes Story to-day of than drowning. to Fignola’s atory the crew | be taken care of first. We," many disabiitties throughout our lives vantages at such a oriels.” ‘These are extracréinary views— views which, unfortunately, may 3 ‘ THE EVENING WORLD, V ambitions without the ald and encour. agent of man. i | SOMETHING BETTER THAN! | BRICKS FOR THE PURPOSE. s | Tennyson the whole thing in a Belittle the Bravery | \yisriuc'n Momus Sur 4 * man's” Not all men know ': yet. Put more | and mora men are learning {tn coble throwing termagants of huret varloty, but from gente. eMelent women who ask for their Mtleal rights with temperance and tog! and persuasion instead of bricks. Of Men of the Titanic: traordinary Views That May Do as Much Dis- credit to the Cause of Woman Suffrage in England as Window Breaking and Stone Throwing. do their worst to discredit fur cause with which they a | Mdentified they could not ha better than to make their publi pokaandntie sheen FOX HURRIES TO REN | TO GET CUSTODY OF SON.} BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. “At @ crisis such an this it must be admitted that the lives of women are more useful to the race than the lives of men,” said Miss Annie Kenney, one of the fore- Suit by the Wife Follows a Separa- | Washingion Woman in Lunacy If the Pankhurst sisterhood sought to] o' cation of the dead heroes of the Titante. | TESTIFY THAT MRS. MADE MANY TH! t Paroled in Care of’ insel, Belva Lockwood. WASHINGTON, April 19548 a com prom {ter a vigorous protest against any further continuance of the lunacy Proceedings in tho case of Mrs. Mary ur th threatening to kil o- Sharles J. Bell, @ Waahing- the Court Inte yesterday Presidential the woman eu‘trage ticket. Cage's attorneye gompinined when another postponemont was mought by attorneys for the banker and govern- | ment. | It {9 understood the continuance was most suffragettes of England, in speaking of the men passengers of the Titanic who guve their Ives that the women and children might be saved. “It ts insisted that ig m F cata | for the men to recognize and act on this WW IVs | piesa wenttny manutuctures ahd wrote | alry; {t {s also the moment to insist on the everyday'man of No. 19 West Fifty-se chivalry of women which goes on alwaya and {s usually |street, New York, 18 hastening here t not recognized, attompt to reverse the decree of divorce | “Women cheerfully starve for thelr husbands and) *r', syns. pine, cumouy of inet 4 children, and starving {8 much slower and more painful| garet Hitt Fox two weeks ago. Man fe chivalrous at moments of a crisis, but in thé aggre- | expected Saturday morning. the balance of chivalry {8 on the part of women.” cee ote geen, we ew eee Mie Sylvia Pankhurst sald she 414 not want to minimize the gallantry |CUn* or & feparation and f:.bin layed by the men on the Titanic, but {t must not be forgotten that tt 1s ; : ! universal rulo In cases of shipwreck that the women and children shall tion Decreed in the New | York Courts. continued @ year ago, after the New’ York Supreme Court haa grar temporary custody of her fou other suffragette said she aid notjtte mind's ideal over the coldiy practi- to be ungractous, but she thought /cal and serious inatinots of the body. aa the least men could do—let the) QUESTIONING WHAT 18 CALLED, EE unor tec EVERYDAY CHIVALRY. she said, “nave to suter 1 do not see that there fs very much to praise in what Miss Kinney cails the |} “everyday chivalry of women who cheerfully starve for their husbands and children Why etarve for anybody? Why not) alleged that f parents was “not a prope which to'bring him up. That Mr. Fox enjoys $ belongs to bs and keeps servants | are some of Mrs. Fox's, wo may at least expect some ad- Mr. Fox's attorneys say he has clared he would rath to Europe than leav him earries tT pas-| 40 a8 muck to discredit the cause | Work? Why not make woman's love ® mother, They announce that they wilt | yc Agrtellg newadten tee -| of woman cuffrage in Rugiaad ae | sft instead of @ receipt for board and| impeach the ‘ecres on the ground that ‘were all members of the orev, in| he witless breaking of windows jlodging? No eMclent human being Eee Ee eee bUtLinweay ward H Boat, sald Mignola, there were! and stoning ef pablie starve. If the every-day chivairy of| Hint 0 Dersone, and they were all part of crew. It was one of the first boats ‘be lowered, and was taken by the r The Mmsicet bluff wae the means Fignola's salvation. He had made two to crawl into lifeboats that) being lowered by the davits from | Worward part of the ship. but each be was beaten off. As a@ tast re- he took a stmight-atemmed pipe his pocket and pointing !t like « Peveiver, and yelling he would shoot, the others, who allowed him to ROWN FROM CHAIR BY) jA\ ehrill reflec tages Wh ertoon of the “said Fignola to- iy, “when the cram came. It throw T ruched out on had run into berg. It wi perfectly clear ‘The stare shining, and 1 there wes a moon, It was about Woked around and saw that the 7, Of the Titanic was buried fast into Seeberg, watch loomed up white and ly before us. truth rying out én foar, and hyst Ing each other what was » dame piling up on deck. 7 a tried to calm every one down, averybody that vhere was no Ato is going down! women In terror. * shouted the officers; ‘this fe, to be: dren, fora with which the Paathurst ¢le- Ment has identified iteelf. At a Yune when the whole world ts the men who died on the Titanic, de- prectation of thetr splendid sacrifice can inatinets/of humantty could look upon the saving of her own life. the ex- penso‘of another's “advantage?” ‘What woman with.the first ele. ments of womaulines® would not shrink in horror from the supreme trivute of chivalry what these extraordinary bratal and callous Bngiish women claim Nothing could be further from the ‘the ancrifice of a “Immediately after the crash the pas- In the acheme of préaitive nature|- “|woman ts the giver, man the taker of jahildren that there may be more men jwwomen prompts them to starve cheer | fully for their husbands and children, It \is Ume euch chivairy were obliterated | | trom women ed by the magnificent heroism of | RING FIRST. e, Ind., April 1 rrived here rec from Newenatle, 4, was marr this week to Mart Hutchinson, wh came from the same place six months ago. MAKES HIM BUY TERRE HAU @aret Yarr (iat almost any woman t only dishonor upon those Who! Vo1s tay down her life for the man she Mt, Loe d loves? But what ancrifice would she! At the courthouse Hutchinson recalled WHAT KIND OF WOMEN WOULD | make for any other man? Why, none at Uae He ad ee Re vee hee q ey rl, with English teas, insis WANT THE ADVANTAGE. jal Women, except In rare 1: poet fe pel Reto sual} are not yet humanitarian, as m PROOF OF THE SUPREME SACRI- FICE THAT WAS MADE. It would have been uatural fo; man on board the Titanic to let hi or child take the fret chanco of safe! But why should he have given his | ‘omen are entitled to some advan- | In such a crisis!" at woman with the most primitive store possessor. Over half a century THY, ji rs oO “With the toneyoucan't forget” has given pleasure to thousands. You will find to-day, Behnings | chased 50 years ago still gra ihe homes—they are pricel couldn't be had at any fig: or Kasy Payments, Send for Catalos| 425 FIFTH AVENUE | Entrance 28th St. NoY.Citz._! Wy whom he did not know—for whom he cared nothing at all? Only because be was willing to make @ oupreme sacrifice to carry on the highest ideal of the race— the ideal that men owe protection, even to their lives, to woman the torchbearer of the Infinite, the watcher by th ecradie of Inimor- tall ‘The mistake that so many women re- formers make {9 in thinking thac men and women ever accomplish any- ‘thing without the co-operation of each ether, Men could not have accomplished woman 1s & reversal of the natu- thelr wonderful achfevements without he docs Give his life the sympathy and assistance of wofen. he supreme triumph of Wonfen will at y a “right?” than that a woman n's Mfo as “a right.” Men bear arma and women bear ar arms, more women to bear ohil- That a man ahould give his life sought to permit the prosecutors to ob- tain Mrs. Archtbald Graole as a witness. | It developed from the testimony to-day that Mrs. Gage had threatened to horre. Granville Hunt, superintendent of i post who was arrested March 1, , jonable churches, | \ CHESTER Notch COLLAR. |Meets close in front and |stays so 15¢ 2 for 25¢ Cluctt, Peabody & Co., Troy, N.Y, Premiums “al Stamps | Popular than Paccneaoet Reenrrecesnad ta 1-ib. Best Coffee... 4} Y-lbeBest Tea..... iH Farina, Blue Ribbon, ; A Rice, clean and good, 3 Stor zi kable ship.” range of Capt, Smith on @ilpw seconds later reassured tho Ethere was any danger. Capt, Smith, wr, ordered all the women passen- to go below and get thelr wraps. explained that he was going to place im the boats #0 that they would safer, and at the same time told that other boats had received our is menage, and that they were thelr way to help us. nov. ‘It was 12.18 before the first a, It was filled with women and few of the crew, who By the time tho first ater the tow of the to settle, It was t hint of the Impending . The officers began nd children first!' ERAGE PEOPLE ALLOWED ON DECK, no dlatine made anywhere, All men were |. Terrible scenes were witnoased the launching of the lifeboats. enough to have broken any Oar feet. unching of continued the Titanic settled dily but evénly, She did not Ist oF aide. were only sixteen boate h I counted them. Some said) ° Wore eighteen, but that ie not grief of the men and women were pariet at the sides of the aa he officers thrust their wives ighters into the lifeboats was vin many cases It was necessary eMficera to force them apart. A. M., after the women and the officers push th uting: “Every- ve himself! Inatant!y hundreds made being to ifeboata that red from the bow. Men ing Gress fought with the steer Passenzers. It hor. Using my pipe as a pistol I My way into the last boat. UST the sort of unordinary things here that make the most delightful wedding gifts. And such selections to choose from— Just think this over. We have eleven factories making Sil- ver articles for us. '" And each factory has its own ideas, its own designs: So here you can peek around until you find just what you want. Sterling Silver is Sterling Silver the world over, It is the design and the workmanship that counts, We do not charge for the Meriden mark, just for the silver and the splendid workmanship. The MERIDEN (INTERNATIONAL SILVER COMPANY, SUC Silversmiths 49-51 W. 34th St., Through to 68-70 W. 35th St., New York A Sterling Silver Bread Tray, 11/4 inches long. An exclusive Meriden piece, Price $13.50, Co. CESSOR) | The High Value and gee Great Variety of gat FRM) account for ae With this Special Combination Offer: | } Corn Stareh, large p'ckse 10e At All (he 200 ee | Cael) oS being more} ever before. | .. 88¢) ie age ANS for a" akg. 10¢| { Ibs. S7e} > CHOICE! J GROCERIES Dg sen 119" AVE 20" fy The Sunday World’s| | 1 6-pag : Joke Book, is' a hummer, Gagé had'told him she Intended to horse- whip Mr, Beil publicly for barring her daughter from soctety and keeping her Stern Brothers will place on sale To-morrow, many new and desirable models not shown heretofore in Misses’ and Giris’ Apparel Also the following Exceptional Values: Misses’ Tailored Suits, Three New Styies, of Mannish Worsteds, Imported Serges and Whipcords, severely tailored and trimmed, also hand embroidered, in sizes 14, 16 and 18 years, at $49.78, 27.50, 37.50 Misses’ Dresses, of Foreign and Domestic Cotton Voiles, showing the peplum and 7 silk coat efiects, trimmed with shadow laces, sizes 14, 16 and 18 years, at $13.75, 16.50. 19.75 to 35.00 Junior Suits, of Serges and Mixtures, demi-tailored, trimmed with striped silk and deep revers, also strictly tailored, sizes 13, 15 and 17 years, Girls’ Coats, of Serges, Stripes, Checks an d Mixtures, plain or with collars of cou- trasting silk and cloths, fuil, half and unlined, sizes 6 to 14 years, at $4.75, 6.95, 8.50 Girls’ Dresses, of Galateas, Chambrays, Tissues, Ginghams and Lawns, sizes 6 to 14 years, from of Linen and Ratine, many embroidered and tae sizes 6 to 14 yis., at $17.50 . \ $1.65 to 4.50 ¢ trimmed, POMBE at $3.50, 7.50, 9.75 | Also a large collection of Misses’ and Girls’ Raincoats, of single and double texture rubberized materials, | in sizes from 8 to 16 years, from $5.00 to 19.78 Children’s Rain Capes, of Sateen and Corded Materials, in all desirable colors, with plaid lined hood, sizes 6 to 16 years, at $2.98, 3.98 Misses’ and Children’s Hats Unusual Ofierings jor Saturday | Lingerie Hats, Value $7.50 at $4.75 | White Mi'an Hats, trimmed with i velvet, silk ribson and small flowers, Value $10.50, at 6.50 | Engtish Tailored Hats; Velue $16.50, at 812.50 "School Hats in a wide range of styles and prices. THIRD FLOOR MAIN BUILDING —— _ ‘ F Youngs Men's and Boys’ Clothing’ made of the highest class materials and supertor workmanship, including Norfolk, Double-breasted, Russian and Overcoats, Reefers, Men's and Boys’ Rubbe Ra Coats, Young Men's Suits; also extensive assort- ments of Washable S its, For To-morrow, at Special Prices Boys’ Norfolk and Doub’e-brea-ted Suits, $4 as of fine fancy cheviots, sizes 8 to 17 years, Boys’ Suits with Exta Trousers, .of effective mixtures, in Norfolk and Double-breasted styles, sizes 8 to 17 years, Young Men's Suits, of fine blue serge, fancy gray and tan mixtures, latest models, sizes 34 to 39 chest measure, at 6.50: a 14.00 West 23d and 22d Streets at Lord & T. aylor Found:d 1826 ——| Vlen’s Shoes Oxfords That Fit because they ure made on. lasts specially constructed for this kind of a shoe, The most economical shoe you can -buy—it embodies all the good points of $6.00 and $7.00 Footwear All Leathers and Shapes $3.95 & $4.85 Boys’ Oxfords $2.95 & $3.95 SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS,