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ee HE EVENING WORLD, smwiUAY, AF MEL 19; 191 SAYS VERY FEW REALIZED REAL DANGER 0) S37657INFUND %3% Newspaper Man’s Wife Who | WOMEN LAUGHED AS THEY /*ome=ryters st maue NOMEN RASE OVER $12 0 j, HEARDOROERTOPUTON = FUR STEERAGE SURVIVCRS| pti pestine oes st H ins UNMARRIED WOMEN |, THE LIFE-PRESERVERS ct nag of Ee aE Ph oe ? i Clothing Enough to Fill a House Has Also Been Collected by Relief Committee, Which Will ‘ GIVEN BY OFFICERS. pL Assure Future of Every Sufferer. $13,010 Received in First | sie vena isosere, a nurse trom Low | Passengers on the Titanic Thought Mail To-day. tatiana “one ‘ot the remued, 10d. 6 That the fund of the Women's Rellef ——, will take Lage Plig! bred or ged to-day of her Pei a twenty-four hours, ae co! ee e no one pasticu ommittes for the Titanic survivors has! ‘ninks the victims need that period for| Contributions amounting to $13,010 re-| Worried. ‘Then we women were told to Mounted to over $12,000 was announced| rest and quiet. Aloo Mrs. Henry 1s e%-|cciveq in this morning's mall swelled S@t Wraps and be prepared to go tmto ° The Clothing Committee, of which| $7,657.47. To-day's suvecriptions were 48 / were unmarried had better be the first of $2,000 since last night. Mra. Henry! sting C, M. Stewart is the chairman, i8/ follo to leave. It struck us ali at the time alone received more than $600 in her! jooking for rooms or even an entire previously acknowledged... 47] aa being very significant. morning’s mail. building where a clothes bureau may|wiiiam J. a . ‘I got into one of the first boats. In / It a Joke When Warned the Ship Was Sinking, and Some Had to be Kicked Into Boats. be established. Mre. Paul Dana, one of the boat with me were a number ef : BY MRS. KATHERINE C. HURD, is wee Are Sa BIOL aH the collectors of clothing. repnrte that Nomen passengers of the frat cable -. . er house ts literally Je ,000.00| They wore event wi a gull @ The World's Correspondent Who Gave the First Detalles of the paying @ round of visits to all the sur-| from basement to attic, despite the Intensely trom. the itter cold. They Disaster to The Evening World Last Night. vivore of the. wreck In the various tem-/ generous quantities given away at the| 5 1,000.00 | were all hysterical, 3 ul whart leat a! 100.00} ‘For hours we sat huddled in the tife- Monday morning, about 7 o'clock, 1 awoke suddenly to find that the ‘ , leaniey lead to which they were taken | "!tT) Henry herself te completely ex- FT be ime | boat, waking for the Cerparnia, Wo bad stopped. Suddenly my husband, who had gone on deck, came . bight, hausted a8 the result of some fifty-six | 00] could see the lights of the Titanlo ai tape the matercom door. These include the Junior League! hours of almost :ontinuous labor. the time, and could hear the cries and House, the Swiss Benevolent Home, the! and many of the other women workers, Margaret Louisa Home, the Municipal] stayed at the docks until 2 o'clock this Lodging House, the St, Vincent de Paul; morning. She told an Evening World “The Titanic has gone down and we are taking on her passengers,” he and was goue again. ery Little Bit Helps” 00] moans from the people on 0 uae “For some poor immigrant from a Sn Mephete a awe Titante —————— UL fam to my stateroom port id i id that Home, the Immigrant Girls’ Home of| reporter to-day: t slapd STRIIGN OR Wes ciscaaee,” mete Goer iaeed te AM rom Srethodiat, Episcopal Church, the! SPLENDID RESPONSE MADE BY|“Diciic” SuLtv GOLD S:-AMLESS to extend for miles in the distance. Here and there in this mam- tt t and Gare Switeer tnetit 4 7 @an-glittering field of ice huge bergs rose to enormous heights. The "Rr MRS. KATHERINE ©. HURD. Houee. the Clara de Hirech Home, the! WOMEN OF NEW YORK. ; WEDDING RINGS gare almost , ! “1 am simply overwhelmed with the ks LU la arte Welcome House, the House of the Holy; jengig response made by the womon : .e {Then I gazed down below me and saw two overturned ifeboats, TAt/ me women bore themselves bravely.| down with the Titanic. Here were two | oeary and several Balvation Army of New York in this emergency. Every ‘award Lazansky.. wee my frst realization of the great tragedy. even though realising that their loved] tittle French boys who had suddeniy | !0uses. member of the Women's Rellef Com-| Rennie J. Kiywers JF, § dressed hurriedly and rushed out of my stateroom to go on deck. As ones had gone to their death. But still] oeen made orphans. Here wasa bride of |AIM TO CARRY OUT PERSONAL mittee 1s deserving of the highest!yonq Clinton Grai there was always a hope, and many] two montha who had been forced fro: p ey could not do more than 5, o, 1 gam slong one of the gangways @ passenger came out of his stateroom |janded in New York still hoping that] her husband’ side to tne ifeboate, and PLANS AND WISHES. done, and they could not do \Bucranai Davis . ané asked: “What's happened?” Other ships would rescue those from] there was an aved woman who had been | The Housing Committee made at the There has been no hang'ng|ienk B. Cahn & Co.. “ whom they parted aboard the Titanic, | torn from the side of her companion of | ‘er last night an exact list of the num- no confiict, no confusion. All| Geo, F, Barnhardt ‘They say the Titanic has gone éown,” I answered. Tt was a ship of trazedy that put back] years. Words can't express the horror, | ber and the names of the refugees taken man—or, | Hudson Rubber Company. x a ee | r 4 Sst then a man ina blue uniform with a white star on his cap, WhO) to New York and those of the Carpathial the tragedy of it all, I want to forget It:] cacn asylum, To-day the members |Father, one woman. And there will be! Abraham I. Kantrowlt .00 | FROM TNE TUAY PRiche N\ ‘Standing at my elbow, stepped fcrward and sald: “It's true, Madame, who had witnesed It al) will never forget] I wish that the last week could be| | it through interpreters. no let-up until the future of the lastitra |, P : SOLID 14-hT..ULD. SOLID 18 KT.GOLD, y 0 to their dying day the scenes of grief blotted trom my memory. but it haunts cee eee eed eat the pareonal |" rene Coane oser wutterere ts aegured, |ficraos Waite : A- 87.75 A~ 810.98 of the Titante. Here was a babe that had been roscued| me sleeping or waking lke @ terrible |*"¢ endeavoring to And o personal |°""We are going to make our work al B Bamberg & Rissor .. ; bas . Kingsbury Brill ard catalogue ta being made, contain: !eMiclent American philanthropy. And |Ghasios Strauss ig full statements of each individual |we are going to show ihe whole world |yq xf, Beach ce awe, and so far as is possible the com-|how the modern woman can meet and! aired H. Kornfeld « o will help the sufferers in the |S" eye success‘ntly with the most serl-|Cash .. fay the latter wish to be helped. Lemire eee 3, auton Thompson ot . He . . Those who are without any notion of | Reilet Committee will be held to-morrow | witiam Colgate .- . No Charge 10. Engrav ng Fi Years [1 etood etill and gazed at him for several moments, hardly comprehend-|and whose father and mother had gone’ nightmare, es or yians of each immigrant. A!monument of intelligent, sympathetic, | len a the wails of the survivors who were being taken aboard our ship Ss Sites cox ccteverd sopped me mys. ™ "| Other Men Stood Aside to Let Brother Go With His Sister 1.78 4 6.75 E— &. _ “Don't go in there, Madame, please. I fumt leet ber baby.” @ poor Italian woman who has \ vhat they want to do will be assisted | mornin; t 11 o'clock in t! hom: e . _;, , Trea trom the door of the dining room came the distracted mother,| Philip Mock of Derby, Conn., owes his women only partially dressed an: | accor@ing to the discretion of the wom-/|sirs. Abram 8. Hewitt, No. 9 Tantapeoa Seer ok se onapter, DAR neds ou @pthed and with her baiz hanging about her face, shrieking bLyster!-|!ife to his sister, Mrs Paul Schavert, |they suffered Ybly from the cold.’ |on workers, But no removes or ad- avenue Mrs, Max Dansiger . who refused to leave the sinking ship bear BO: @AW A DEAD MAN IN Al sorvers and come on deck: hie was) “upnt, hin. Y OF FOURTEEN Bemeon M. Topic eon. SEAT IM MtateeaaREe| toet anneal; tte) HOPES HE DIDN'T Kes? | Steward Tells How Liner Beye fee Informant had of the danger. shock and 1 coudn't make out for the WOMAN OUT OF BOAT. Greenbaum Bros., Inc. Survivers by the dozen told me of the | 1ir9 of me what it was. I wasn't fright eee ONE NA Ce ETN cea] eae me what It wan T WAM TERY] Ae tne steerage” pussensore whe Made the Final Plunge |: 5: sisi life preservers and come on deck. Many | jocar that the Titanic had struck | UFVived was Cervine Swensen, a brigh One of the most graphic, thorough and authoritative accounts of the|!ames Byrne women ing dreas Aaek Veer sr lad of fourt re ie Yharles A, Robinson ¥ ; meh i preskrdart? | Rx Jan loeberg. Tt was only a few minutes, | 100 of fourteen Hatin bees hard disaster was given by Albert Smithson, a first cabin steward of the Titanic, |Charles H. Hayden . 1 yA we thinking the warnt however, before some one knocked on . with) much tefused to leave my cabin door and warned me that I bil ft ne in South Dakota. This little |and corrobo. ated im detail by two of bis shipmates among the survivors Meera iaay cturcnnh Meliaue, ge! “ _ 5 Among those who refused to leave their | Nad bee hve a ponte hier gd Racal ansaes iba crash came and chines |Smitheon eacaped the vigilance of the White Star officlals and alippes| opne 4.00. x co ‘ond Wala Tamiaral free ecemeentos {oe laidn't know why we were being ordered | Into one of the Iifeboa ashore from the Carpathia to send a cablegram to his mother in South-|virs. Charles Blum . 50,00 Ruree, The nurse obeyed the warning | '° fo coged aa into the cold at that ¢ ips a con Legrccebial aoe about It." he/ampton. The White Star line ordered all the Titanic men aboard a smal. Pe ee eruaNutine BS 3 of the nig! y¥, “except that there was a 7 9 eedived wt ete eee? baby to the deck and /%.7"\ 2." soon joined by my brother, | great deal of confuston ‘among the stevr. | 008e when the Carpathia docked and carried them around to the Red |iopert T* 250.00 S 3 Laughing groupe stood about the decks | V2 like myself, was fully dressed, for, age passengers. I had no one to look out | Star Line docks where they were immediately shipped on the steamer Lap [Tullius Ewoldt x eon and Irving Bamberger. ‘land in the ealoons, | neither of us had appreciated that we/| for me, eo 1 thought I'd better look out | land. Joseph Southeim.. the saloona, in evening clothes. | vere in any danger. Hy that time near-| for myself. My mother told me when 1| ‘The atory told by Smithson and his shipmates establishes beyond doudi |" S Suntiard & Co ly all the lifeboats had been filled with | kissed her goodby in Sweden that if any- . Murdook, first officer of the Titanic, was in charge of the ship anu ton: en erew. Gomme of then, [women and children.and we could 4ee| thing happened to run to the iifeboat terse orlses fat the time of the collision, and tha: he committed suicide by BEcMan rope taddere and ewings, just !"e| thinking they would be back in their | {nat they Iready were fs the Vale and that's what I did." shooing himself in the head after it became apparent that the great vesse ‘children delight in, were| staterooms in half an hour. did not try Gritting away trom the Titanic. | The little fellow paused a moment and was doomed and the passengers had been ordered to the lifebogts, it also oor and the people in the two/to take any of thelr valuables with ly brother pushed me across the) added tearfully: roborates beyond question that the Tiianlc was hurling its huge bulk throug. wn up to the deck. The ‘One or two who took the warning |10k to one of the lifeboats. I was be-) “1 hope I didn't prevent some nice lady! those ice-endangered waters at @ speed of about twenty-three knots an hou to lose abeolute contro! sed thelr valuables |!"nIng to grow deathly afraid, for the| from being saved. I didn’t mean to 40| wren she ran into the fog surrounding the huge bers. Her speed was oni t th | as they left to answer the warning, Nc |@!t of tenseness showed me that there) that. I would rather have died than to] gigntly diminished when she struck the ice a minute later, one thought for @ minute that the boat {4s real danger at hand. I clung tight-| have been in the way.” It was about 11.45,’ sa.d Smithson, we had turned in for the night would sink, From what I could learn, |4¥ to my brother's arm, and when the| The Rev. Axel B. Lilja, of the Swed-|1 wag out of my clothes and just climbing into my bunk when the jar came Conta ination the steerage passenrera were more keen |*NeN who crowded the boat deck saw! ish Lutheran Emigrant Home, who took| 1; wasn't a scvere jar, but we knew she had hit something. 1 pulled on m, of foods absc to realize the real danger than those in |! was a woman they stepped aside with | young Swensen in charge, put his arms) irougers and rushed to my station on the boat deck. 1 was listed as a mem lutely impos the first and second cabins, Some of the |'"reat deference and permitted us to/about the bo: oulaers and led him| oor the crew of boat No. Ii, and that's where I went. The discipline an (ile das 6 ah 'p. pase through to the side of the boat. jaway. Mr. Lilja sald he would see that) \.Ger were perfect. Every man Was at his post. the was the last of the rescued. Bix . WOULDN'T GO AND LEAVE the little fellow is sent to his father, ‘phen the officers came and ordered us back to our bunks, They sald the lation of Cold Mfeboats and two collapsible boats BROTHER BEHIND. ‘Timothy Kennedy, anocher of the| way no danger, We went below, and as f passed ihe passenger deck—the on. eclect Circulation of the colta: Riese being tadsred seriously by an} “A ship's oMcer seized me by the) ricerage, hensengets, tola of. peloe in| “Now the boat deck—1 saw the officers rad other stewards and saliors chee: ry have— exclusively —the from the eurvivore the majcrity ié ne: {27m and Dus | e‘tay! Water for mare dhsa' two Hours} cg: up the, paseanetem (and aesuring (hem Shas the ship wae Ia ne: danse y means of syphone, No, offen LINOCORD BUTTONHOLES —they're easier—to-button= they don’t tear out, Geo. P Ide & Co., Makers, Troy, N.Wo Brought to safey. eee the icebers. twhich a few ®.!lo sonttered al! over the Carpathia. | ONE WOMAN KICKED IN paring to lower. ‘Hurry up and get! q¢ seemed as if eve: “1 mingled with the other stewards to help cheer the passengers, Sudden OF SURVIVORS TE TO Alinto it,’ the officer cried into my ear. I! the ship jumped when their came @ muffied sound far below and a slight Jar all over the ship, Ther yee LIFEBOAT. had never released my brother's arm.|Kennedy. ‘The ocean was very caim,| was a moment of confusion, and then the order waa quickly given: ‘Kveryooa THEIR EXPERIENCES. Then the crew of the Titanlc began when 1 realized that I would be sep- land as long as T could sce the big ship) nto thelr life belts and to the boats ; and there little groupr gat! ol yl Mae and to order the larated from him on the boat, I refused |1 didn't feel spectally alarmed. But “We fellows of the boat crews went bad Ld oer sat ions ‘4 lowered th telling of thelr experiences, “I{women and children aboard. Ul there Jig go, 1 was going ay with him,{WHen the Titanic sink my heart sank.| yogis to the deck below, the passenger deck. I could see the Grat officer on out over the ice Meld, thinking 6] Were many who doubted the sincerity of I realized for the first time that I was My boat was filing with women, when glancing up I saw the ‘Land laughed at the idea of reriou- ("9 matter what happened. The officers] peip), t am hundreds of othi = cepa * Beitcsog at Many worsen held beck coun [and men urged me to hurry, for the] Delbleae, just. os bhiahs shoot himself in the heed and fall wou H when ordered to et the boats, One |\ifeboat was going to be dropped into] “We were ail swimming; yes, swim- the water, but ai! that I saw was) woman with whom I talked sald that |xne water in a moment. But I couldn't|ming against hope—and It seemed so GIRL WAS FORCED two overturne’ lifeboats and some|she was actually Kicked into a boat by |cnitk of leaving my brother, I guens| terrible to think that we could not kecp j 4 ot breton wood foating about, [an oMcer of the ship, who had repeat- la just chrow my arma around hia neck | UP much longer, Beveral times T was al TO LEAVE FATHER. women’ + most persuaded to give up, but the aay tm @ couch wrapped in e blanket. | Then the boats were lowered and [84 told them all I was golng to stay | sire to live, if only a few minutes more, the floor nearby was a pile of wet| fied with passengers and pulled away | with him. was foremost in my mind, erhaps ive odors, Its in pessble io cisture to acumulate on th: Ils of the provis on chan bers. All styles. sizes and prices. Booklet upon request, WHITE ENAMEL REF. COor NY. the lifeboats. of sinking. \ World Wants Work Wonders. Lora Cribb, a pretty seventeen-year- Jothing wa heen cut (MO the darkness the first real! “‘Are there any more women to go|@omething would happen, although 1|°'4 English girl, who was a steerage trem ber by tee pr ae ae told pr nee, tant Oe ship Waa in peril began to|in this boat?’ T heard an officer cry out, | Must couions Lie enance seinen to be] passenger on the Titanic, was orphaned ordeal aboard !p. She from mouth to. on the word Waal | Not another woman was in sight, There | Sbout one in ten million. But I kept on} by the drowning of her father, J, Hat- e est 1 in danger of nt the ahlp Waal vere two eeate left in :he boat. One) Just the same. With each stroke of my teld Cribb, who was bringing her to g ‘ove boas. MOM | wa Cor me. The other seat belonged to| Cenc teas trash thay revia bone | Nawere: N. J» te make Rer home with y ; 0 seemed as tho e (i AS the lifeboat was being lowered the) _T' rae Bie ty of Dane aboard the [he first man who could get into tt,| “pinally I felt something tugging ac aleiive i) ia eeeaa eee cate ta to bu jo suddenly went down, The rusu| | 1 electric bulbs threw their |uhey aay, because no more women ap-| my head, and turning I saw one of the flooded the decks and washed ey over the crowds on the decks. (peared, But thowe men made no rush| lifeboats There were women in the boat }OOat by sailors her father cated t 5 Ag feet. As she was flounder. |, {! ltor It, Instead, they pushed Phillp and | all crying. I was so exhausted I coulg| \¢F tnat he would try to save himself j@Pout in the icy water she saw a rT myself forward. 1 heard one of hem | NOt speak, but with one desperate efio: | \f he could find a lfe-preserver, but sn at had overturned ‘out to Philip: ‘You go om old mam? |! Bushed forward and with the aid o | did not see or hear of him axain, “Kayser’—the kind that “don’t wear out” at the finger ends—and sold to you with— sa raft, Several (te . one of the men who manned an oar 1!,everal hours she searched the Car- Together we entered the Mfeboat and | managed to cilm> aboard. How 1 wae| nia, and. would not be comforted A Guarantee that Guarantecs much disorder a in an instant were Homing away from|abie to do thie much J cannot tell yu) © on told ber father had aot been bs P the aide of the liner, It was the next| now, for no sooner gotten into] ong the rescued. She was sent to ‘a new pai aa ping”? : Sq AT petit eee pene: ears teneres REOr: roe fs to the last boat to leave the ‘Mtanic;| the lifeboat than I felt a cold chill oom. |ine Elizabeth Home, No. 907 East pair free” if the “tips Peres a8 ae ahaa Ge a Mt | al ar aaein th tanilan the , he other followed it into the water In over me and sank back in a daze, 1] Twelfth street, to await the arrival of ~ wear out before the gloves. Per citron Nay anistence, (the situation, ‘The majority of the men |fem# than a minute, My brother and 1 knew nothing more until they brought] ‘elatives. Her mother died two years c ves * » .) me to board the Carpathia.' Kae ere Mithout any assistance; gallantly observed the rule of “women {had not been separated, Those other and children first.’ The boats were| men just stood avide and let Phil! frail oratt by moving from side to! rapidly filled and lowered away Man: fo and Wt Philp They drifted about in this way for| women refused. to leave their hus- | 0° Sved: @r three hours before they wer MUSIC DIDN'T STOP TILL LINER up by one of tie Titanic's boat WENT UNDER, amcorones with survivors The! to get ; | “Aa we floated away from the side of 0 me this story was) the ship, We could see all her lights Abrott of Providence, R. 1. ener ad be the vide of | burning brightly, and. could see the UGAME RESUMED AFTER) men on her decks, From the dining he number | Saloon we could hear the strains of THE CRASH. of lowered away with | Music, The ship's orchestra was play- her survivor, a man, told me of | their passengers. Suddeniv there was|!ng. It seemed to me they never spddunness of the Titante’s sinking. |a rush of water, then darkness, The | stopped playing until the vessel actu- maid they had been aitting in lonce diamond |'ke ship had become a |ally sank under the waves, But I can- 9 SHOKINg room playing cards, The cinder, Thore were loud shouted or-|not remember what they played. The . = = ApH " iders, hoarse cries from the throats of | music rings in my eare—I probabdy fe rAneraa Nee eee the men, shri’ s from women, and then |never wit be able to forget It, but I ae eh oune of ihe players after ‘came ‘ve, explosion. The water that |know I raver will be wble to tai with The pathway of wisdom—fianked by room and |certainty what the tune was, Some of Ahelr feet went on deck to see gtonped the dynamos, throwing the ship |the other passengers say the band was 4} was the matter, The iceverg was into darkness, had reached the botlers, |playing ‘Nearer My Ged, to Thee” quality and style and paved with economy. ‘the opposite side of the ship from! too, and the explosion followed. Then |do not know, though I heard every arya, hy "afte ton| oe At, ay toad he Carus" Goring Desblon & Soft Hain, 63 & 54 ito Rie my watch it was exactly 1.50 Lateroom, thinking nothing | When all was excitement because of the|A, M, Monday morning when the lights 4 began to undress, ‘com. | rescue, the rea} awfulness of the tragedy |on the Titanic went out and in a very 8 ured: te’ thar Mag game not realized. Bivery one who had|tew minutes she went down, In the| 290 Broadway. we Risedeae | the messengers came to each of separated from a relative or a/boat in which we were saved all the| $4) Broadway, a y fee u “Kayser” Gloves cost no more than the “ordinary kind’—and are worth double. Don’t accept the ‘§ust.as good” kind, . There's a way to tell (he genuine “lock in the hem” for the name “Kayser” —it is there for your protection. You take no risk. “Kayser,” the safest glove to buy. Short Silk Gloves 60e., 760., $1.00, $1.25, $1.60 Long Silk Cloves 160.,$1.00,$1.26,$1. bear I ‘Jallas Kayser &3 Co. Makers riend believed that other boats had|/ women were fully dressed, for wer sere to rl smoking rooms | come to the rescue, the last to leave the stip, so we suffer- F places and quietly ordere@| The second day, ” esday, the realled little or no inconvenience. But in to put om thelr Ute gre- ' truth began to dawn upon the survivors. |the first boate thet were lowered, the