tne ———— Terrific Explosions as the New York-—-With list of the Titanic roster of her officers and crew bottom of the sea, the ose saved Is ¢ ly placed at 706 by W W. Jeffries, ral passenger agent of the White Star Line, although latest revised list of susvivor the official pas senger and the at the total of th ficial ger counts for 7456 persons “There are undoubtedly cated the account names i: sSurviy struck was laid ard and a he forecastle he sank gs! ine.room ally stant ere taken i no seri shed “to ard the i » unsinkable distressing t the in their gtorioa are | f experiences of the lifeboats. These 31 suffering, ve the harrowing details of how t great hulk Titanic two, the after part sinking a series of explosions, fol d by the the forward hig awful spec the groups of they plainly they had from the own but hey aw of the break first lowe part tacle sinking of ghip. As t witnessed by in of behind decks the J. Bruce lsmay, ternational of the was Bury tl boats fawn tint 1 IVOrs 16 those whom leaping water many left into president of the In Mercantile Marine, own among the seventy-odd men saved, P A. 8B. Franklin, vice-president of the White Star Line, and BLOW WAS EQUAL TO 30 GUNS, Revenue Cutter Chief Compares Force Of Contact. Washington.—A graphic comparison of the probable impact of the Titanle against the iceberg that destroyed her with the projectile force of the guns on a modern battleship, was made by Captain Charles A. McAllister, engl neer-in-chief of the Revenue Cutter Service. Captain McAllister sald: “The Impact of the Titanic against Big Liner Seitled Down. Senator Willlam Alden Smith, chalr- man of the Senate Investigating Com mitt held a aboard the Carpathia soon passengers 8g, conference after the + ashore rival mile mul had ia brought the vast blocks f the Carpath {tude of They ¥ overtfiowing for people 1 filled Q docks the and tho pier sheds crowded nearby streets ™h 10} ’ all } ral 11 Through it all the rain fell adding al aspect to Say 2,340 Persons Were Aboard and 745 Saved. Approx ertificate for ourteen + lifeboats, two small four pregervers or boats ana boat Life apparently board “The approxi sengers carried collaps ible were accessible n sufficient nu on mate number of pas at the time of collision First-class, 330; second-class, 320: 1,400, Officers 2.340 the third.-claas and “Of the ing Carpathia “First 210: third-class, 200: 750: total, Total, foregoing about by the crew, 540 follow steamship were rescued naa, secondclasa, officers, 4; firemen, crew. The was about 80 per cent seamen, v1; total, total—778 of the 19 sites rda, 96: the “We feel It our duty to call the at- the lecberg was probably equivalent to the simultaneous fire of thirty twelveinch projectiles, or the concen trated fire of three such dreadnoughts as the Florida. “The fire of ten twelvedinch guns posed to be sufficient to put any bat tieship afloat out of business, if the projectiles should strike simultaneous ly. The force of the Titanle striking the jceberg must have been approxi mately 1,000,000 foottons, equivalent | | | | | i | COLLISION “COLLISION: 2 BULK 4 HBAD ACCORDING TAINED HERE TO ¥ it we con : Be ¥ J iiie far re y CRAZED BY TITANIC STORIES, THE OF THE DAMAGE END SUS. [HE GARPATHIA'S His Eager Race on His Errand of Mercy. GOT NO MESSAGE FROM TAFT ceived, All He Says Have Been Goes Violently Insane arrestee He nsane CAPT. SMITH'S WIDOW. | Her Pathetic Message To Mer Fellow Sufferers. London the writter pe it he widow of Capt of Smith, the Titanie, commander ide the wmied ou White Star offices reads as follows To my poor fellowsufferera: My heart overflows with grief for you all | and laden gorrow that are weighed with this terrible | burden that has been thrust upon us { May God be with us and comfort us | all fa with down "Yours in deep sympathy, "ELEANOR SMITH.” | thirty such projectiles, It is a won. { der, in the light of such a comparison, {that she floated so long. It is incon ‘celvable that the ingenuity of man can ever devise a floating structure to | withstand such a terrible collision.” PUT WIFE IN BOAT. { Then Mr, Astor Gave Military Salute and Turned Back To Death. New York.—Passing his wife to hearted real men ized that human next what a few the all now oe mind was wholly set upon of the just {saving the live who the be gen & people crowded ata “The | scarcely ice floes were the North. In # shimmercd life! was calm. There a ripple upon its face down distance was Great from several like mirrors. Why oats were not crushed by the floes 1 call luck The sixteen boats seemed at first near i 1y all women “I remember that it occurred to me {that the good God had stretched out ! His mighty hand and had checked fur ther murder by his elements, “We got aboard the Carpathia every human being in the sixteen lifeboats ot the Titanle. Every officer and crunching the ice member of our crew stood by Like the brave and loyal lads they are and did is full duty “We tock aboard 7085 children who were alive, them unconscious {to the { members | had boats and women but some We also decks of the of the been tolled off 0 fou Carpathia Titanic's were stark ! heen fr rozen t + A itched horny fingers still cl that ing bi graves from the deck of the Carpathia “1 am d | President they been Aesperately 1 We i iried these men In sallor tol that it Taft { of the scout Vednesda f the Jacob Lv xi President Frank { and Is name John Astor ence Wore dore aboard his vessel “1 1 less is possible the Carpa § operator acknowledges fused to answer mes the President of the ter midnight, as his post more 14 } ut 16 Grapt ry ineane, Men and women fought, bit and scratched to be in line for Iteboats, 1 got a black eye snd a cut chin in the fight Then Cap ith some order passengers were sent to fore ind aft on the big There the tain Bm seemed to get ina boat frightfu hiro gt 1 nen t thro nou men J pounding raying, the rail wae a Women room, rORTeRE, apparel women were in one Captala trying tin iil Was 8 None Dreamed Of Danger t Henry W. Fraud Jacob Astor held his wife for a moment in his arms, kissed her ten. derly, passed her into a lifeboat, stood erect and, with a military salute, turn: ed back to take his place on the sink ing Titanic. This was the story told by a sur vivor. “1 did not see it myself, but they told me about it. It was fine,” sald Charles William Daniel, formerly of Richmond, Va, as he came ashore “They said that Astor stood up as the boats went away with a military ! salute as he returned to die. He had { kissed his wife as she entered the life. boat. Howard Case a Mero, “The men behaved bravely. Major Butt took charge of one section of the ship In placing the women in the life boats. Howard B. Case, of London, and whose wife was a resident of Lu thervilie, Md., was another hero. He installed a system to get the women off, and he saw that the system was followed. I think he was the big hero of the disakter.” Valuable Mail Lost. New York—Of the 3.423 bags of mail In the hold of the Titanic, about 200 bags contained registered matter. Postmaster Morgan sald that those sacks contained; on an average, about 8,000 letters each. He estimated that approximately 1,600,000 registered let ters and packages had gone to the bottom. Three of the five postal clerks aboard the Titanic, Postmaster Morgan sald, were in the employ of the United States Postal service.