CgMOVHrfk Www " THE FCLTON COUNTY NEWS. McCONNELLSBURG, PA. REVIEW OF PENNSYLVANIA Happenings of tha . Week in the Capitol Euilding and Th uughout the State Reported tor Our Readers In Fulton County and Elsewhere. GOV 1011 AMES GANA L COMMISSION Five to Plan for Waterway From Lake Erie to Ohio River. FAIRS TO BE HELD IN STATE "Antls" Accept Offer Of Suffragists To Debate Instruction Camp For N. Q. P. Officers Dropped. Street Car Tariff!. (Harrlsburg Correspondence.) Harrlsburg. Announcement was made hero of appointment by Governor Tener of the Lake Erie & Ohio River Canal Commission, authorized by the last Legislature. The purpose of the board Is to take up the preliminary work (or the construction, if feasible, of a ship canal from Pittsburgh to Lake Erie, through the Beaver and Mahoning Valleys. The members of the board were named as .follows: FreBldont, ex-Mayor W. A. Magee, Pittsburgh; A. 8. McSwigan, Pitts burgh; Colonel Thomas V. Symons, formerly of Pittsburgh and now at Washington; Tom P. Sloan, Lock No. Four, Washington county, and James A. Chambers, Pittsburgh. It was stated that ex-Mayor Magee was chosen a member of the board and Its president because he was one of tho originators of the project' and was In strumental in the preparation and as elated In having the bill passed by the Legislature. The first duty of the board will be to have a survey made, tinO.OOO having been appropriated by the State for this work. The board has Jurisdiction over the entire work and has authority to appoint a secre tary, a treasurer, a chief engineer and such other assistants as may be neces sary. It Is to make a report to the Governor each year of the progress made. Each member is to furnish bond In the sum of $25,000 for the faithful performance of his duty. The president will receive a salary of $5,000 a year and each member $4,000 a year. The appointments take effect at once. KEYSTONE STATE SORT ORDER Latest News HappenlngsGather ed From Here and There. TOLD IN SHORT PARAGRAPHS Frank Wisner In the Cameron Mine. Bethlehem Steel Company Rail road Conductor Terribly Burned, John Reilly, of Palo Alto, fell and Injured his knee. He may be crippled for life. MINERS OBJECT TO OPEN EXAMINATION Would Bar All Save Those Who Cut Coal From ForemanshipsJ RAILROAD Y. M. C. A. BURNED Saves Baby By 4C0-Foot Slide Down Mine Cable Robs Shrine In Read ing Church Boy Kills Farm, er Accidentally, The annual Sunday school convon Uon of Port Carbon district will bo held in the Methodist Church, June 3. Nearly fifty boys In ten townships of Chester county are now enrolled In the boys' corn clubs. Borough council, of Tanian.ua, has decided to build a $14,000 hose house for the Citizens' Fire Company. Candidates Begin Filing Expense Lists. Ten counties have filed their official returns of the primary election at the State Department and the figures are being tabulated. Of nine candidates for Slate nomi nations who have filed expense ac counts at the Capitol only one shows expenditure of over fifty dollars. This one was .Harry Watson, Greenville, candidate for Congress-at-Large on the Washington party ticket He spent $528, of which $500 went to the State Committee. Those filing affidavits of expenditure of less than fifty dollars were M. 11. Stevenson, Willurd E. Ritter and F. W. Whiteside, candidates for Guberna torial nominations; Percy F. Smith for Lieutenant-governor; Fred E. Lewis and W. N. McNalr for Secretary of In ternal Affairs; S. Harper Smith, Congress-at-Large and A. M. Fuller, Su perior Court. 71 Fair To Be Held In State. Announcement that seventy-one county fairs, horse and cattle shows o agricultural and horticultural exhibi tions would be held in fifty counties of the State was made by the Pennsyl vania Department of Agriculture. The dates run from tho Hagestown Horse and Cattle Show In Cumberland coun ty, June 17 and 18, to tho exhibition In Horticultural Hall, Philadelphia, November 3 to 6. The report shows that the attendance at the fairs last year was 1,776,600. The amount paid by the State to encourage fairs last year was $4G,S33.62, against $33,563.22 1912. Premiums paid Inst year ag gregated $157,961.77. The offerings In premiums for this year are $192,099. Discuss Street Car Tariffs. Ways and means to obtain a uniform system of making reports and tariffs were discussed with Chief ilson, of the Rureau of Tariffs of the rublic Service Commission by a committee of the Pennsylvania Street Raiway As sociation. The committee la headed by Gordon Campbell, of York, and was named at the recent meeting of the association to co-operate with the State authorities. C. L. S. Tingley, presi dent, and H. M. Stlne, secretary of the association, and a number of officials from companies In Philadelphia, Pitts burgh and Scranton were with the committee. "Antlt" Accept Offer To Debate. Miss Lucy Price, Anti-Woman Suf frage Association leader In this part of the State, Invaded the headquarters of the suffragists and announced that she would accept the challenge to debate tba question of suffrage. Mrs. Frank M. Rosslng, of Pittsburgh, president of the' association, promptly accepted the challenge, and a date will be arranged later. Probably It will take place In one of the local theatres. Instruction Camp Dropped. Adjutant General Thomas J. Stewart announced that the proposed camp of Instruction at Mount Gretna for la fsntry, engineer and departmental offi. cert of the National Guard, scheduled for June 7 to 11, had been cancelled. The Adjutant General stated that the reasons werft Insufficiency of avail able funds and Inability of the War Department to detail the necessary ofll ers to act as Instructors. Edwin Montford, of York, was fined $100 by Major John R. Lafean for operating his automobile recklessly while Intoxicated. The executive committee of tho Shamukin High School Association, decided to hold the 1914 class reunion a( Kdgewoud Park, July 1. Rev. A. Memverse, rector of the Church of Our Lady, Mt. Carmel, left for Holland, to visit his Invalid sister, and to recuperate. James Thomas, twelve years old, of Port Carbon, was knocked uncon scious when struck on the head by a stone from a sling shot. His condi tion Is serious. The last concert of the sixth season of the Perklomen Symphony Orchestra was rendered Jn the Perklomen Semi nary gymnasium, under the direction of Prof. David E. Croll. John Hunslcker, a Bethlehem Steel Company railroad conductor, was ter ribly burned when' In uncoupling cars hot slag, which one of them con tained, was spilled over him. Frank Wisner, sixteen years old, while In the Cameron mine, Shamokln, thrust his head over the top of a wagon and was killed when a timber from a chute struck him. Raymond Sifagoss, fifteen years old, tried to run across the tracks of the Iehlgh Valley Railroad at Easton. He was caught between two cars and crushed to death. Blood poisoning which developed from a wound which Mrs. Samuel Parry, Mt. Carmel, received when she stepped on a garden rake, caused her death. David Weller, eleven years old, of Downlngtown, Is In the hospital at West Chester with a fractured skull. He was hit by a baseball bat while at play. A movement to consolidate Lltltz and Warwick has been started, and Elmer Eby was chosen chairman, and Frank Schner, secretary, of a commit tee to work for the proposition. Rev. Cleveland Frame, pastor of the First Tresbyterlnn Church In Malvern, preached the baccalaureate sermon to the graduating cluss of the Malvern High School, In the First Baptist Church. Mrs. Mary Linden, eighty-four years old, of Louisville, Ky., died as the re sult of a shock from a fall down a flight of stairs. Mrs. Linden was visit ing her daughter, Mrs. Joseph Helkon, at Pottsvllle. The Tarent-Teachers' Association, of Frackvlllo, elected these officers: President, J. Howard Buck; vice-presi dent, Mrs. J. K. Berk; secretary, T. M. Reed; treasurer, Mrs. J. C. McGIn-nis. Ground has been broken at the coal shipping yard of the Reading Railway Company, between Mill Creek and St. Clair, for the erection of a steel water reservoir or standplpe, to be 105 feet high. While on the way to a fire at the Penh Central gas plant, Lewistown, Jesse Estep was thrown from the Hen derson auto truck, which was wrecked In making a turn at a street corner. EBtop'i collarbone was broken. Frank O'Mleno, a contract miner, prominent In fraternal societies and an athlete, waa crushed to death by a fall of coal, and Joseph Wychan narrowly escaped a similar fate at Shenandoah City Colliery. O'Mlene leaves a bride of two months, who Is In a critical condition from the shock. Harry Hill, a conductor on the Marcus Hook division of the Southern Pennsylvania Traction Company's lines, was slashed on the face by an unidentified colored man, at Third and Market streets, Chester. Hill had asked the mnn, who escaped, for his fare. The passengers of the car were greatly excited. Saves Baby By 400-Foot Slide. Irwin. "Tim" McDonough, after sliding; down a 400-foot cable In a mine shaft In saving the life of Tony Andy, two years old, who had toddled over the brink, Is at his home here suffer ing from twelve broken ribs, a broken ankle and contusions. McDonough rescued the child and the physician attending him says he has a good chance to recover. McDonough was surrounded by about twenty children whom he had promised to take into the mine. Tony Andy wriggled through the crowd to the shsft for a "look" down the hole. He lost his balance and as he fell McDonough grabbed him. As he did so he became overbalanced and plunged into the shaft, one hand clutching the child, the other grasping for the cable. Mc Donough managed to grab the cable, but the friction burned his hands so that he was forced to let go for an Instant and In his further descent he bumped a timber with his shoulder, but he held onto the baby. Finally he was able to wrap a leg about the cable and down he slid until he struck the cage at the bottom. He scrambled off the cage with his burden, who was unharmed, and then collapsed. The baby hasn't a scratch. Object To Open Examination, rottsville. Leading miners held a conference with attorneys here prep aratory to bringing Injunction proceed ings against the State Mining Depart ment for permitting any class of mine employes to take the examination for mine foreman's certificates. Miners say they believe it will Increase the danger of coal mining If carpenters, loaders, drivers and other classes of men employed about the mines are al lowed to become foremen. The law of 1901 requires that none but miners having five years' practical experience shall be permitted to take the examina tion, but the Attorney General con strues the word "miners" to mean all engnged about the mines in any re spect whatsoever. This is tho diction ary definition of the word, but in the coal region nobody considers himself a miner except the men actually cut ting coal, and this Interpretation of the law was always followed heretofore. Railroad Y. M. C. A. Burns. Altoona. The Pennsylvania Rail road Y. M. C. A. building, at Itellwood, seven miles east of here, was virtually destroyed by fire, which started from a cigarette or a spark from a passing locomotive. The building was owned by the Pennsylvania Railroad. The loss Is $5,000, partially insured. Few furnishings or books were saved. Storm Wrecks Breaker. Shamokln. Lightning wrecked the top of the Scott shaft breaker, and caused tho Richards & Hickory Ridge Collieries to suspend operations. Workmen narrowly escaped death. The plants are owned by the Susquehanna Coal Company. Thousands of dollars damages was caused by the wreck of the power plant Lone Graduate Heart Sermon. Harrlsburg. Roy Hemp, sixteen years old, comprised the graduating class of the Samp Hill School and heard a baccalaureate sermon all by himself. The sermon was preached by Rev. E. D. Weigle and was heard by a large audience, the graduate sit ting in a front pew. Boy Kill Farmer Accidentally. Heading. Frank Kramer, sixty years old, employed on the Huyett farm along the Wyomlsslng road, about a mile from Shilllngton, was ac cidentally shot and killed with a rifle by Charles Berg, Bon of the tenant of the farm. The boy had gone into the woods to shoot snakes. Pottsvllle Tax Levy Fix-d. Pottsvllle. The City Council has named as part of the budget for the new fiscal year appropriations totalling $87,000. Js'lne mills was the tax levy fixed, "divided 7V4 mills for general purposes and 1V4 mills for the sinking fund. The City Treasurer, by ordl ance, was made collector of taxes. Robs Shrine In Reading Church. Reading. Posing as a worshipper on bended knees for a while in order to avoid suspicion, a sneak thief en tered St. Paul's Roman Catholio Church, remained until he was alone, then burst open the shrine of St. Anthony and robbed it of Its contents. Ball Players Collide, One Hurt. Marietta. While playing baseball Harvey Penwell and George Eater col lided in center field, when both ran after a long "fly" In a contest with Red Lion, renwen was bo uauiy uijureu , internally that he was carried from the field unconscious. j LOST OCEAN LINER EMPRESS OF IRELAND C- a J V'- 'T ' A ? ' 7 ' "mmr, ,r Q 64 PERISH IN SEA DISAS Great Liner Goes to Bottom at Mouth of St. Law renqe River Following a Collision With a Collier. Rimoubkl, Que., May 31. Nine hun dred and sixty-four persons hist their lives Friday morning when the great Canadian Pacific twin screw liner Em press of Ireland waa rammed amid ships In a thick fog off 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 saved are women. Gathered piecemeal from survivors the horror of this wreck grows with the telling. Waters Quickly Engulf Ship. The doomed ones hud little time even to pray. They were engulfed by the onrushiug waters that swallowed the big ship inside of nineteen min utes from the time she was struck. The wireless operators on the Em press, sticking to their posts to the last, hud time only to send a few "S. O. S." calls for help when the rising waters silenced thoir Instruments. That silence told the rescuers miles away more potently than a bugle that doom had overtaken the ship. Only six hours before this fateful collision the passengers sang aB a good night hymn "God He With You Till We Meet Again," played by the Salvation Army band on board. The members of that baud 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 stele hulled, steel-bulkheaded ship of more than eight thousand tons, left Mon treal at 4:30 Thursday afternoon in command of H. G. Kendall of tho Royal Naval Reserve, one of the most skilled of trunsatlauitc navigutors. 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 the pilot aide left near Father Point, shouting a merry "Hon Voyage" us he went down their ladder to his waiting bout. Tho darkness tit this time was in tense "and the ship under the slowest speed possible with steerageway held her course. Her decks we re deserted. The passengers had all sought their berths with no thought of impending death. Out of the darkness, on die port Bide, soon after 2:30 in the morning there loomed the little Norwegian col lier, not half tho Bize of the Empress, but fated to be her destroyer. Not until the collier was almost abeam of the big liner was the danger known on either ship. The fog hud blotted out the lights as well us the port and starboard lights of both ships. Quick orders trumpted on both ves sels wero heard. But they came all too late. Strikes Ship Amidchip. The Bteel-pointed prow of the Stor stad struck the liner amidships and then forged aft. ripping and tearing Its way through the Empress of Ireland. Clear to the stern of the Empress of Ireland was this great steel shaving cut from her side, from the top of the hull far below the water line. Into that rent the water poured with the force of a Niagara. The bow of the Storstad smashed its way through berths on thut side of the ship, killing pasKeiigem sleeping in their berths and grinding bodies to pieces. Reaching- the Btern of the big liner, tho Storstad staggered off In the durk ness, her. bow crumpled by the Impact. Her commander was ready a few mln uteB later, when he found his ship would float, to aid the crippled and sinking Empress, but he was too late to suve the majority of those on board. Carried to Bottom. The Empress of Ireland recoiled al most on her starboard beam ends from the blow of the collier and passengers were flung from their berths against the walls of their Btuteroonis. Many wero stunned and before they had time to recover wero carried to the bottmn with the ship. The vast torrents pouring into the great gash on the port side, aft, filled the corridors and flooded every Btate room abaft tho midship section In side of four minutes. There was never a chance for the helpless ones In the lifter cabins and staterooms of the liner. With her port side laid open for half Its length from the midship section to the stern, a seive 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 the blow the ship be gan to settle almost immediately as the water rushed Into the big rent. From the forward cabins, however, men and women In night attire, stum bled along tho corridors mid up tho companion way to the promenade deck the deck below, the one on which the boats rested. Swarra to Deck. Vp they swarmed on deck In their night clothing to find the ship heeling away to port and the deck Blunting at a degree thut made it almost impos sible to stand even clinging to railings. Men and women, shrieking, praying, crying for aid thut was fated to arrive too lute, fell over one another In that last struggle for life on board tho doomed Empress of Ireland. Frenzied mothers leaped overboard with their hubieB In their arms. Others knelt on deck and tried to pruy in the few moment left to them. Some were flung overboard by the heeling of the sinking ship and some broke their legs or arms In trying to reach the life boats. Above the din of the struggle on the great promenade deck could be heard Captain Kendall shouting commands for the launching of the HfoboatB. Sev eral were launched In the 19 minutes that the ship floated. There was no time to observe the rule "Women first" in this disaster, for those nearest the boats scrambled to pluces In them. Hut even as they were being launched, while tho wireless still was calling "S. O. S." there came a terrific WIRELESS AGAIN PROVES DEATH NEMESIS ON SEA. Wireless telegraphy, which has been tba savior in the hour of gravest (lun ger to thousands of helpless victims In disasters at sea, and which flick ered out the Bturdy "S. O. S." that brought succor to the Empress of Ire land early today, has again proved Itself the Nemesis of death on the ocean. Statisticians who became busy chalking up and adding the human credit marks that wireless has earned. declared that probably 6,000 persons owe their lives to the fact thut a wire less station was near them In some disaster. They declared It hus re duced the terrors of oceun travel as nothing else under Providence has. It cume Into practical use in 1909. Tho steamship Republic, threatening 1,500 lives in a head-on collision with the Florida, that year, guvo it its first real sea try-out. The Alaska was the next. In mid- 1 explosion Hint almost rent the ship In twain. It was the explosion of the boilers struck by thn cold water. A geyser of water shot upward from the midship section, mingled with fragments of wreckage, that showered down upon the passengers still clinging to the rails forward and upon those strug gling In the water. Tho explosion destroyed the lust hope of the ship's floating until succor could arrive, for the shock had smashed the forward steel bulkhead walls that had up to then shut out the torrents Invading tho after part. The water rushed forward and the Empress of Ireland went swiftly to her doom, carrying down with her hundreds 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, relnting that last tragic scene on the decks of the liner, said: "I was asleep like most of the pas sengers when tho collision came. There was a sickening crunching of wood and steel and then 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 friends and shouted to thorn to get up, as the ship was sinking. Stateroom doors flew open all along the corridor and men and women begun to rush for the grand companion forward. Those aft must have been drowned in their berths. Darkness Is Intense. "On deck officers of the Bhlp, par tially dressed, wero rushing ubout urging passengers to be calm. Sailors under orders were trying to launch the lifeboats. "The darkness was Intense and a few minutes after 1 reached the deck the electric lights went out. At thnt time there were still hundreds of pas sengers below trying to grope their way through the darkened corridors to the compunlonway and reach the deck. .Most of them went down with the Bhlp, for the corridors below filled right after the explosion of the boilers. "I leaped overboard in despair Just before the Bhlp went down and '.man aged to find a bit of wreckage to which I clung." Intenso darkness covered the waters when tho Empress of Ireland made that final plunge, but the fog lifted a few minutes later and then came the first faint streaks of dawn. It lighted waters strewed with wreckage and struggling pussengers, who Btrove to keep afloat. The crippled Storstad, which had wrought this tragedy of the waters, hud lifeboats out picking up as many survivors as possible. The gray dawn revealed the govern ment Btenmer8 Lady Evelyn and Eu reka near tho scene of the disaster and hastening to aid. Somo of those In the water tried to swim to the Eureka as she neared the point where tho Empress had gone down. One woman, wearing only an undervest, swam to the Lady Evelyn, and was helped on board, but died of exhaustion Boon afterwards. The work of rescue still was going on when the sun arose In a cloudless sky. Men and women were clinging to 8 purs and bits of broken plunks. Many of the survivors were Injured. Some had broken legs, others fractured arms and still others had been Injured Inter nally In thut last mad rush to get away from the sinking liner. Women clinging with one hand to little ones, while with the other they tried to keep clutch on pieces of wreck ocean with not another smokestack In sight, flames burst out. The wireless operator, unmindful of his danger, kept clicking and clicking, and just as the boat was going down, help arrived and the 128 passengers aboard wore saved. Then came the Kentucky In 1910. In the same year 10 were saved In the Koenlgen Lulse. Heath was cheated In tho Instunce of the burnlug freight er, Temploniore, when all on board, 544, were saved. Vfllnwlne ioKfl on this record, the age, were picked up by the and carried on board the rescuing V(. sels. Captain Kendall, dazed and untkv to give any coherent account 0 u, loss of his ship, was found clinging a broken spar. J. W. Langley, rancher, of Canto B. C, went down with the ship, j, held his breath, and, coming to u, surface, found a piece of wreckages clung to it until picked up. One of the survivors, In explain, the quickness with which the Kmpr( of Ireland went down, said: "The collier, being only sommiu over 3,000 tons, did not reach up M to the upper or topmost deck of 03 hull. Her bow cut under the uW deck and took a peeling off tin. fi'ieij our ship that allowed the uuti.rtl rush into tho lower decks. Then n, liner heeled over, and even thovc the superstructure deck room hadu chance to save themselves, limning of them must have been dumped of their berths and slammed nijalr.i the walls with stunning fnren." Scenes on Shore. Father Point, Que., May 1!S. "Tin Empress of Ireland passed and lar;iH her pilot here at 1:30 this murnlni' said an official of the Canadian h cine. "There was a haze at tlm tin At 1:50 a. m. I was awakened hj u "S. O. R." ring on my door h. li U( rushing down, w as Informed by a conl operator that the KiiiprcHHoflrt land was sinking, having been struct by some vessel. In undress I starts to help. No other signal could i, got from the doomed vessel, she hit no time to give another, as Mie m ten minutes after being stnuk. "Mr. Whiteside, manager of the Mu conl station, rendered effective im Ice by notifying the gnvernmni steamer Eureka, at Father Polo: wharf, and the Ijjdy Evelyn Rt Rj mouskl wharf. Help Rushed to Scene. "Capt. .1. II. Ilelanger of the Kuwki Immediately rushed to the scene t,l Captain Poullot, wllh the Lady Etf lyn, followed Inter, his ship Mt three miles farther away. "Meanwhile daylight hrok ml scanning the horizon with n t-l-sccp I saw the two government steamen nlnn lifeboats and a collier In the rt clnlty, going here and then- Later the Eureka arrived at Father I'o: wharf with 32 survivors and e:vn' poor drowned bodies, also nev, rd d the survivors who had ber-i n-ir.M Agent in Narrow Escape. "The scene on the Eun k.i was moil distressing, the survivors ualklci uroiind their dead shipmates. MretrM out in their last sleep. Tie Kurfti was sent to Remouskl wharf with 1! on hoard, and the Canadian I'acltt agent, Mr. Webber, who was here, hat Ingjust got off the Ill-fated vessel witl tho pilot, engnged all tho tabs hi could find and telephoned for all pot slblo medical assistance. As the d pany's agent here, I advise,! all th survivors that their cables a ad tele grams to their families would he pall by the Canadian Pacific railroad. ."The Lady Evelyn pasneil into Rt mouskl wharf about 4 a. m. with k more survivors and bodies. Amort the survivors was Captain KeiiM commander of tho Ill-fated f lilp. tn was picked up by a lifeboat fmm th wreckage after the ship had pi down. Survivors Almost Naked. "Most of the survivors were alir.ml .naked In the cold morning, withtl temperature at 35 degrees and biW frost on the ground. "At f:10 tho NorwCKlai. rnlW Storstad, coal laden, from Sidney, X S for Montreal, came along slnlj When her bow had been smashed It became known thnt she was tt vessel that had struck the Kmpre of Ireland the fatal blow. The Str tad was too much damaged to alio her to proceed to Quebec under h own steam, but before proceeding il landed a few survivors and some dn bodies, which were taken off by ,!" steamer Eureka and Lady Kvelvn w' landed on the Remouskl wharf." Sing "God Be With You." on Ship Montreal, Quo.. May 30.-W hen tb liner Empress of Irelnnd steamed aF from here Thursday, Bhe carried l members of the Salvation Army f" the United States and Canada. bnM for the world convention In l"11 To the accompaniment of the n"' band, thoy were singing. "("'I " With You Till We Meet Again" This prelude to the accident In t Rt. Lawrence made the disaster n n' parallel to the sinking of the Titanle. whose passengers sang. "Nearer. nod, to Thee." as the White Star Im" went down. Irving. Actor and Author. New York, May 31. Laurence 9 Irving, drowned on Bteumshlp press of Ireland, Is an nctor. nuthw and ninnnger. Ho rocelved his cation at Marlborough colleee. (wP Rollln, Tarls, and spent three !' In Russia studying for foreign eWJ His plays are widely known, hi ' and 100! he presented sketches of own authorship In Englnnd and A"" lea. On May 3. 1910. Mr. Irving' dressed the Equal Suffrage leaf"" New York. Scenes at Liverpool. Liverpool. May 30. Pathetic 8cec were enacted at the office of the J adlan Pacific railway In this city day. Crowds of weeping ,npn women begged for news of tho ow Bnd crew of the Empress of Ire" the majority of whom wero pat"' here. When confirmation of he aBter was received several of the en fainted. Friday's scenes duplicate of those witnessed ' time the Titanic went to tho bo" Lexington was caught in a nurrC!! unprepared. AH were saved w help the "S. O. 8." summoned- . Nlobe, wrecked off Cape Sable. In the Intermission until the I . Bea disaster of the Titanic cla . world attention by the ""P",,) summoning of assistance from different Bources. Some people bear throe trouble all they ever hud, a' have now and all they expect W Edward Everett Hale.