wummmmnmmitmmm0iimtiamiiBa nmmriHtH m If RED OLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF & ill t r 4 l ' I r 1 i y r r r 964. PERISH IN vr 1 X. slllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllVv vt VbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbLJ V'Nhii'ni48lK JK sbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbblbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbLH. '.IfwS i1t2a. 1 A r y BUBBIBP '?'Wi vIto'-'v'Msjj()P' ,s4'QBE2?BBKBBBBBBBBBBBBBBflSSP u'.BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBKSviCa BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBl , " ,V.BJBBJWBJBJP TV, juiimW.aH1 ' ;!-?. Xt viXf ;i'f -i)MHBBBBBBBBBl WWW IgyE- SSBSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBSBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBI i Great Liner Goes to Bottom at Mouth of St. Law rence River Following a Collision With a Collier. RimouBkl, Que., May SI. Nine hun dred and sixty-four persons lost their Uvea Friday morning when the great Canadian Pacific twin screw liner Em press of Ireland was rammed amid ships In a thick fog oft Father Point In the St Lawrence and sunk by the Norwegian' collier Storstad. Four hundred and three survivors were picked up from floating wreck age and two lifeboats. And only 12 of the eaved are women. Gathered piecemeal from survivors the horror of this wreck grows with the telling. ' Waters Quickly Engulf Ship. Tho doomed ones had llttlo ttmo even to pray. They woro engulfel by the onniBhlng waters that swullowod the big ship lnsldo of nineteen' min utes from the time sho was struck. The wireless operators on the Em press, sticking to their posts to tho last, had time only to Bend a few "S. O. EL" calls for help when tho rising waters silenced their Instruments. That silence told tho rescuers miles away more potontly than a buglo tha't doom had overtakon tho ship. Only six hours before this fateful collision the passengers sang as a good-night hymn "God Be With You Till Mo Meet Again," played by the Salvation Army band on board. The members of that band and most of the 165 Salvationists were among the lost Survivors Tell of Fog. It was foggy, according to survivors, when the Empress of Ireland, a steel hulled, stoel-bulkheaded ship of more than eight thousand tons, left Mon treal at 4:30 Thursday afternoon in command of H. G. Kendall of the Royal Naval Reserve, one of the most skilled of transatlantic navigators. Forest fires also obscured the at mosphere and the big ship, In charge of a pilot, proceeded slowly on her way to sea. At midnight tho pilot aide left near Fathor Point, shouting a merry "Bon Voyage" as he went down their ladder to his waiting boat The darkness at thU tlmo was in tenso and the ship under the eloweat speed posslblo with steerageway hold her course. Her decks wero deserted. Tho passengra had all sought their berths with no thought of Impending death. Out of tho darkness, on tho port sldoBoon after 2:30 In tho morning thero loomed tho llttlo Norwegian col lier, not half the slzo of tho Empress, but fated to be her destroyer. Not until tho collier was almost ubeam of tho big liner was the dangor known on either ship. Tho fog had blotted out tho lights as well as tho port and starboard lights of both ships. Quick ordors trumpeted on both ves sels wero heard. Hut they cnina ull too late. Strikes hip Amidshijj. Tho steel-polntcft- prow of tho Stor stad etruck tho liner amidships and then forged utt, ripping nnd tearing Its way through tho Empress of Ireland. Clear to tho stern of the Empress of Ireland was this great steel shaving cut from her side, from tho top of the LOST OCEAN LINER EMPRESS OF SEA DISASTER hull far below the water line. Into that rent tho water poured with the forco of a Niagara. - The bow of the Storstad smashed Us way through berths on that side of the ship, killing passengers sleeping in their berths and grinding bodies to pieces. Reaching the stern of the big liner, the Storstad staggered off In the dark ness, her bow crumpled by the impact. Her commander was ready a few min utes later, when he found his ship would float, to aid tho crippled and Blnklng Empress, but he was too late to save the majority of those on board. Carried to Bottom. Tho EmprosB of Ireland recoiled al most on her starboard beam ends from the blow of tho collier and passengers woro flung from their berths against tho walls of their staterooms. Many wero stunned and before they had tlmo to recover wero carried to the bottom with tho ship. Tho vast torrents pouring into the great gosh on tho port side, aft, filled the corridors and flooded every state room abaft tho midship section ln sldo of four minutes. Thore was never a chance for the helpless ones in the after cabins and staterooms of the liner. With her port side laid open for half its length from the midship section to the stern, a solve had more chance to float than the Empress of Ireland, and the trapped passengers In that after sec tion were doomed from the moment the Storstad struck. Reeling from tho blow the ship be gan to settle almost Immediately as tho water rushed into the big rent From the forward cabins, however, men and women in night attire stum bled along tho corridors and up tho companion way to the promenade deck the deck below, the one on which tho boats rested. Swarm to Deck. Up they swarmed on deck in their night clothing to find the ship heeling away to port and the deck slanting at a dogreo that made it almost Impos sible to stand evon clinging to railings. Men and women, shrieking, praying, crying for aid that was fated to arrive too late, fell over one another in that last Btrut,gle for life on board tho doomod Empress of Ireland. Fronzled mothers leaped overboard with their babies in their arms. Others knolt on deck and tried to pray in tho few moments left to them. Somo wero flung overboard by the heeling of tho Blnklng ship aud some broko their logs or arms In trying to reach tho llfo boats. Above tho din of tho strugglo on tho great promenndo deck could bo heard Captain Kendall shouting commando for tho launching of tho lifeboats. Sev eral wero launched in tho 19 minutes that the ship floated. There was no tlmo to observo tho rule "Women first" in this disaster, for thoso nearest tho boats scrambled to places In thjim. But even m they woro being launched, whllo the wireless ntlll was calling "S. O. 8." there came a terrific IRELAND explosion that almost rent the ship in twain. It was the explosion of the boilers struck by tho cold water. A geyser of water shot upward from tho midship section, mingled with fragments of wreckage, that showered down upon tho passengers etlll clinging to the rails forward and upon those strug gling In tho water. The explosion destroyed the last hope of tho ship's floating until succor could arrive, for the shock had smashed tho forward steel bulkhead walls that bad up to then shut out the torrents Invading tho after part The water ruehed forward and the Empress of Ireland went swiftly to her doom, carrying down with her huudreds of passengers who stood on her slanting deck, their arms stretched upward and their last cries choked in the engulfing waters. One of the survivors, relating that last tragic scene on the decks of the liner, said: "I was asleep like most of the pas sengers when the collision came. Thero was a sickening crunching of wood and steel and tbon a grinding, ripping sound as the Storstad smashed her way along the port side of our ship. , "I knew that we had been struck and I rushed to the staterooms of some frlende and shouted to them to get up, ns tho ship was sinking. Stateroom doors flew open all along the corridor and men and women began to rush for tho grand companion forward. Thoso aft must havo been drbwned in their berths. Darkness Is Intense "On deck officers of tho ship, par tially dressed, wero rushing about urging passengers to be calm. Sailors undor orders were trying to launch the lifeboats. "The darkness was intense and a few minutes after I reached the deck the electric lights went out. At that time there wero still hundreds of pas sengers below trying to grope their way through the darkened corridors to the companion way and reach the deck. Most of them went down with the ship, for the corridors below filled right after the explosion of the boilers. "I leaped overboard in despair just before the eblp went down and man aged to And a bit of wreckage to which I clung." Intense darkneBB covered the waters when the Empron of Ireland mado that final plunge, tut the fog lifted a few mlnutCB ,lnter and then came the first faint streaks of dawn. It lighted waters strewed with wreckage and struggling passengers, who strove to keep afloat. The crippled Storstad, which had wrought this tragedy of the waters, had UfeboatB out picking up as niai.y survivors as posslblo. Tho gray dawn revealed 'the govern ment steamers Lady Evelyn and Eu reka near tho scene of tho disaster and hastening to aid. Somo of thoso In the wator tried to Bwlm to tho Eureka as she nenred tho point wnoro mo umpross nati gono down. Ono woman, wearing only an undervest, swam to the Lady Evelyn, and was helped on boar, but died of exhaustion soon afterwards. Tho work of rescue still was going on when tho sun nroso In a cloudless sky. ' Men and women wero clinging to spars and bits of broken plaukn. Many of tho eurvtvors woro Injured. Homo had broken logs, others fractured anna and still others had boon Injured inter nally In that lust inad rush to got away from the sinking liner. Women clinging with ono hand to llttlo ones, while with tho other thoy tried to keep clutch on pieces of wreck age, were picked up by the lifeboats and carried on board tho rescuing ves sols. Captain Kendall, dazed and unable to glvo any coherent account of the loss of his ship, woe found clinging to a broken spar. ' J. W. Longloy, rancher, of Cnnford, B. C, went down with tho ship, but held his breath, and, coming to tho surface, found a plecfl of wreckage and clung to it until picked up. Ono of tho survivors, In explaining the quickness with which the Empress of Ireland went down, said: "Tho collier, being only something ovor 3,000 tons, did not reach up oven to tho upper or topmost deck of our hull. Her bow cut under tho upper deck and took a peeling off the sido of our ehlp that allowed tho water to rush into tho lower decks. Then tho liner heeled over, and even those 4n tho superstructure deck rooms had no chance to snve thcinscdves. Hundreds of them must have been dumped out of their berths and slammed against tho walls with stunning force." Scenes on Shore. Father Point, Quo., May 29. "The Empress of Ireland passed and landed her pilot here nt 1:30 this morning," said an ofllclnl of tho Canadian Pa cific. "There was a haze at the time At 1:C0 a. m., I was awakened by at "S. O. S." ring on my door bell and rushing down, was Informed by a Mar conl operator that tho Empress of Ire land was sinking, having been struck by some vcbhcI. In undress I started to help. No other signal could be got from tho doomed vessel. Sho had no tlmo to glvo another, ns she sank ten minutes after being struck. "Mr. Whiteside, manager of tho Mar conl station, rendered offectlvo serv Ico by notifying the government steamer Eureka, at Father Point whnrf, and the Lady Evelyn at Ra mounkl wharf. Help Rushed to the Scene. "Capt. J. B. Belanger of the Eureka immediately rushed to tho scene and Captain Poullot, vlth tho Lady Eve lyn, followed later, his ship being three miles farther away. "Meanwhile daylight broko and scanning the horizon with a telescope I saw the two government steamers, nine lifeboats and a collier In the vi cinity, going hero nnd there.. Later the Eureka arrived at Father Point wharf with 32 survivors and faeveral poor drowned bodies, also several of tho survivors who had been wounded. Agent in Narrow Escape. "The scene on tho Eureka was most distressing, the survivors walking around their dear shipmates, stretched out In their last sleep. The Eureka was sent to Remouski whnrf with all on board, and the Canadian Pacific agent, Mr. Webber, who was here, hav ing Just got off the ill-fated vessel with the pilot, engaged all the cabs he could find and telephoned for all pos sible medical assistance. As the com pany's agent here, I ndvlsed all the survivors that their cables and tele grams to their families would be paid by the Canadian Pacific railroad. "The Lady Evelyn passed Into Re mouskl wharf about 4 a. m. with some more Burvlvors and bodies. Among the Burvlvors was Captain Kendall, commander of the Ill-fated ship, who was picked up by n lifeboat from tho wreckage after tho ship had gon down. Survivors Almost Naked. "Most of the survivors were almost naked In tho cold morning, with the temperature at 35 degrees and white frost on tho ground. "At 6:10 the Norwegian collier Storstad. coal ladon, from Sydney, N. S., for Montreal, came nlong slowly. When her bow hnd been smashed in it became known that sho was the vessel thnt had struck the Empress of Ireland the fatal blow. The Stors tad was too much damaged to allow her to proceed to Quobec under her own steam, but before proceeding Bhe landed a few survivors and some dead bodies, which were taken off by the steamer Eureka and Lady Evelyn and landed on the RemouBkl wharf." Sing "God Be With You," On Ship. Montreal, Que., May 30. When the liner Empress of Ireland steamed away from hero Thursday she carried 165 members of tho Salvation army from tho United States and Canada, bound for the world convention in London. To the accompaniment of tho army band, they were singing, "God Be With You 'Till We Meet Again." This prelude to tho accident in the St. Lawrenco mado tho disaster a near parallel lo the sinking of the Titanic, whose passengers sang, "Nearer, My God, to Thee." as tho Whito Star liner wont down. Irving, Actor and Author. New York, May 31. Laurence S. B. Irvine, drownod on steamship Em press of Ireland, Is an actor, author and manager. He received his edu cation at Marlborough college, College Rollln, Paris, and spent three years In Russia studying for foreign office. His plays are widely known. In 1908 nnd 1909 he presented sketches of his own authorship In England and Amer ica. On Mny 3, 1910, Mr. Irving ad dressed the Equal Suffrage league at New York, Scenes at Liverpool. Liverpool, May 30, Pathetic scenes woro enacted at tho office of tho Cana dlnn Pacific railway In this city Fri day. CrowdB of keeping men nnd women begged for news of the officers and crow of tho Empress of Ireland, tho majority of whom wero gathered hero. When confirmation, of tho dis aster was rccolved Hcvural of the wom en fainted. Friday's scenes wero a duplicate of thoo wltnesBed nt the time the Tltunlj went to tho bottom. LIST OF RESCUED Names of Those Reported Saved When Empress of Ireland Sank. The following Is a list of the passen gers and crew on tho Ill-fated steam ship Empress of Ireland that havo boon reported as among those saved: BACKFORD, Joseph. BAKER, Starr. BANDY, J. P. BANTALA, T. BAWDEN, Florence, Hlllsboro, 111. BAWDEN, Bessie. BLYTH, Miss. BOCH, Miss Edith, Rochester, Minn. BOCH, Rheinhardt, Rochester, Minn. BOYLB, Robert BRENNAN, R. BROWN, William. BYRNE, John. , BURT, C. R. BURROWS, W. T. CANEPA, W. CAPPL1N, George. CLARKSON, H. CONE, J. M. COURT, Miss E., Liverpool, Eng. DARC!f, P. DAV1ES, John. DAVIES, Peter. DONAVAN, G. DORTS, John. . ' ELGEVJSH, A. ERZINGER, Walter. , BVANSON, Arthur. FAVEUSTEND, Mrs. FERGUSON, A. C. FENEDAY, Arthur. FlINTON, Walter. FISHER, Mrs. John, Chicago. FITZPARICK, John, FLOIR, Roy. rUGENT, William. OARD, John, Chicago. (MADE. A. W., chief engineer, GIBSON, John. GRAY, Arthur. GRIVERI, Alex. HACKNEY, Mlaa MabeL wife of Lawrence Irving. HABS, assistant purser. HAMPTER, W. HARBANN, Renne. HEATH, H. Ls Chicago. HEATH, "Jack," four-year-old son above. HELLER, W. HENDHRSON. G. W. B. HOHN, 8. F. HOLT. P. R. HONRALAIN, WilUara. HUGHES, Hugh. HUGHES. W. H. JOHNSTONE, George, Santa Bar kara, Cal. JTJBAINBR, Sims. KAVALSKB, Evan. Dulath., KOHL. Miss Grace. KORONIC, MlchaeL LAWLER, Herbert UBDDELL, R. LEB, Mlsa Alice, Naasan, Bahamas. LOMMI, Malta. M'CREADY, Thomaa. M'DONALD, C. P. M'DOUOAL. D. M'WILLIAMS. R. METCALFE, G. J. .MOUNSEY, Mrs. William. Chicago. MISITO, F. OWEN. w. a PROBSI, P. QUINN. William. RICATBTBNTO, Fedor. REGINALD, A Moreland. ' ROBERTS, W. ROMANUS, John. f ROWER, William. I ROWAN, W., atcwarf. RYAN, Phona. RYAN, John. ' , 8ALIN8KI. W. SAMUBL80N, C. BCOTT. SHANNON, BdwanL SIMS. John. MITH, O. H. 8MITH, H. H. SMITH. J. SPENCER, C, bellboy. SUZZBRA, Adaa. TALBACHA, Alex. WALINSKI, Thome. WEINRUCH, B., Montreal WEISS, Alex.' WHITE, J. B. WILLIAMS. O. EUH. H. COMBES, a pantryman. BAMFORD, B., Marconi operator. BUNTHROME, Alex., Santa Bar bara, Cal. BYRNE, Mr. and Mra, Brisbane. Australia, BYRNE, Mrs. G. ELLIOTT, A., baker. FINLAY, J. M Liverpool. FOSTER, B. Baker. GREY, seaman. HOLT, Ferklneoa tL, bedroom toward. DOBLIK, MoscaL GRATWIOK, T. HADLBY, Alex., boatswain's mate. MURPHY, O. S. REGINALD, A. SAMSON, C. S., chief stoward. SIMONS, Mrs. R. SORAHUB, T. SWAN, J. K., tenth engineer. WHITE, Morland. WILLIAMS, Joseph, assistant stew ard. DUCKWORTH, O. H., electrician. NOVEK, Pedodon. DONOVAN. OLANDON. CLARK, Charles. BAPOKE. 1 BAVBIN. BBBALAK, Joseph. Ordburg. SBARLB, Mlsa Eva., Seattle. ' VINCENT, Mrs. A, Falrcroas, Eng land, I t 8ALVATION ARMY. ATWELL, Maj. and Mrs., Toronto. BALES, Ml&e Alice, address un known. BROOK8, Thomas, Toronto. DELAMONT, (two brothers) Moos Jaw. FOORD, Ernst, Toronto. GREEN, Ernest, Toronto. GREENAWAY, Herbert, Toronto. GREENAWAY, Mr. and Mrs., To ronto. daughter of Bandmaster llnnnagan,) daughter of Bandmoaster Hanuogan,) Toronto. JOHNSTON, James, Toronto. KEITH, Alfred, lieutenant, Toronto. M'AMMON, D., Btuff captain, To ronto. MORRIS, Maj. Frank, Lindsay, Ont. M'INTYRE, Kenneth, Toronto. SPOONER, R., captnln, Toronto. TURTIN, Richard, major, Toronto. WILSON, George, captain, Toronto. BIG SEA DISASTERS 1850 March 30. Steamer Royal Adelaide wrecked off Margate; over 400 lives loBt. 1852 February 26. Troopship Bir kenhead, QueeiiBtown to Cape of Good Hone wrecked; 645 lives loot. 1854 March. Steamer City of Glas gow, Liverpool to Philadelphia, with 450 passengers; never heard from. 1854 Eleven transports with sup plies for the army In the Crimea, wrecked In storm on Black sea; near ly 500 lives lost. 1859 October 24. Steamer Royal Charter, wrecked on tho Angelsea coast; 446 lives lo3t. 1867 October 29. Royal, mall steam ers Rhone and Wye and about fifty other vessels driven ashore and wrecked at St Thomas, West Indies, by a hurricane; about 1,000 lives lost 1870 September 7. British warship Captain foundered off Flnlsterro; 473 lives lost. 1873 April 1. White Star steamer Atlantic wrecked off Nova Scotia; 647 lives lost. 1874 December 6. Emigrant ehlp Cospatrlck burned at sea; 470 Uvea lost. 1878 September 3. British steamer Princess Alice sunk in collision in the Thames river; 700 lives lost 1887 November 15. British steam er Wah Young burned; 400 lives loet 1890 February 17. British steamer Duburg wrecked in China sea; 400 lives lost 1890 September 19. Turkish frigate Ertogrul foundored off coast of Japan; 540 lives lost 1891 March 17. Steamer Utopia, Anchor line, sunk by collision oft Gibraltar; 674 lives loBt 1892 January 13. Steamer Nam chow wrecked In China sea; 414 lives lost. 1896 March 11. Spanish cruiser Relna Regenta foundered In the Atlan tic at entrance to the Mediterranean: 100 lives lost" 1898 July 4. French line steamer La Bourgogne in collision with British sailing ship Cromartyshire; about 660 lives lost. 1904 June 16. Steamboat General' Slocum, took fire going through Hell Gate, East river; over 1,000 lives lost. 1904 June 28. Steamer Norge wrecked off Scottish coast; 46 Uvea lost. 1905 September 18. Japanese war ship Mlkasa sunk by explosion; 599 lives lost. 1908 March 23. Japanase steamer Mutsu Maru sunk in collision near Hakodate; 300 lives lost. 1908 April 30. Japanese training cruiser Matsu Shlma sunk by ex plosion off the Pescadores; 200 lives lost. 1908 July 28. Steamer Ying King foundered off Hongkong; 300 lives lost 1909 August 1. British steamer Waratah, from Sydney via Port Natal for London, left Port Natal July 26; never heard from; 300 lives lost 1909 November 14. Steamer Seyne sunk In collision with steamer Onda off Singapore; 100 lives lost. 1910 February 9. French line steamer General Chancy wrecked ofB ' Minorca; 200 lives lost 1911 April 2. Steamer Koombuna. wrecked; 160 lives lost 1911 September 25. French battle ship Liberie sunk by explosion in Toe Ion harbor; 286 lives lost 1912 April 14. Steamer Titanic,' White Star line, wrecked by collision, with Iceberg; about 1,603 Uvea lost 1914 May 29. Steamer Empress oti Ireland and collier Storstad collide la ' Gulf of St. Lawrenco; more than 80O lives lost. Calls for Inquiry. London, May 30. The London morn ing papers in commenting editorially on the disaster call for a thorough in-4 vestigatlon as to whether the bulk-, heads wero closed, and, If so, how was! It that the most modern system of) watertight compartments failed to keep the ship from sinking? The claim for the Empress of Ire- land will be tho heaviest suffered by tho Lloyds underwriters since the sinking of the Titanic. It ls expected that the disaster will give a serious check to the schemo for establishing a Canadian Lloyds, with a. view of re-" duclng tho rates charged In London for lnnurlng vessels navigating the St. Lawrence. Statistics show that the underwrit ers have consistently lost money on such voyages, owing to the dangers oC tho river and the prevalence of foga and Ice. Tho Times, in an editorial, con siders thnt nothing could have saved the Empress of Ireland, considering the naturo of tho collision, but asks: "What was tho Storstad doing to ru Intn thn TCmnraRH nt Trailing with ,u.w suddenness and violence?" ' u 4 ' V l.v naWTpW iiM.iiie.awtaHYj wWfc.!ftAi . rJlmi . iT. i4.'fcfcwiiK'e'rtiyiwy