1 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 "I A (iniuiiiniiiiHiiiinm f MADISON COUNTY RXCOK.D,' fiha Medium Throagk whicK you reach th ptwple of Madison County. EtteUbhIJun28, 1901. ' FRENCH CJLOAD NEWS, EataUiahed May 16. 1937. , '. '. us V Con.olWtUd. : : Not. 2nd, 1911 I Advertising Rates on Application 4 ll'oES THE ONLY NEWSPAPER IN MADISON COUNTY. ., ' M ' ll l l- ll 'I I 'III I I I I...U. II I II I , mm II I n VOL. XIV -v MARSHALL MADISON COUNTY, N. C. 'FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1912. NO. 17. i 4$gi Ma4lM Caunty, y BetabUahed by th Leglalatur la iloi 1810-11. , Population, 10.111 " . Coaoly Scat, Marshall lMt ft bv lTaL Nw and Bodwt Court House, cost . $21,OO0lN. . . - New ad modaro jail, ooat 115.000.00. Naw and modern County Homa, coat tl0.0M.O0. . Offleara. Hon. Jaa. 1 Hyatt, Senator, S3 Olatriet, Burnavllle, N. C. Hon. J. 0. Ramsey, Representative. Marahall N. C. "... W. H. Handaraon. Clehk Superloi Court. Marshall, N. C. W. K. Bucknr Sheriff, Marshall N. 0. Jamaa Smart. Register of Deeds. . Uaranall N. C. O. r. Runnlon, Traaaurar, Marshall. N. C. R. F. D. No. 1 R. L. Tweed, Surveyor, Whlta Rock. N. C . Dr. J. H. Balrd, Coroner, Mara Hill. Mra. Ellia Handaraon, Jailor, Mar ibalt N. a John Houeycutt. Janitor, Marahall. W C ' Dr. C. N. 8prlnkl. County Physician, Marahall N. C. Jamaa Haynle. Sunt County Homa, Marahall N. C. Homa located about two mllaa south west of Marahall. " Courts. Criminal and Civil, First Monday ba fora First Monday in March. Com mencing Feb. 26th, 1912. Civil 11th. Monday after Flrat Mon day In March, commencea May 20, 1913. Criminal and Civil. Flrat Monday after Flrat Monday In Sept. Com mencea Sept. th, 1912. Civil 6th Monday after First Mon day in September. Commencea Octo bar 14. 1911 BOARDS. County Commissioner. " W. C. Sprinkle, Chairman, Marahall ft. C. C. F. Caaaada, Member, Marshall, N. C, R. F. D. No. 1. Renbln A. Tweed, Member, Big Laurel, N. C. C. a Mashburn, Atty Marahall, N. C. Board meats first Monday In every month. Road Cemmlsalonera. A. E. Bryan; Chairman, Marshall N. 1 C, H. V. 1). 2, : , .'. J. A. Ramsey. Secretary, Mara Hill, N. C. R. F. D. 2. Sam Cox, Member. Mara Hill N. C R. JT. D. No. 1 0. W. Wild, Big Pine, N. C. Dudley Chipley, Road Engineer, Marahall, N. C. -George M. Prltchard, Atty., Marahall, " N. C. Board meets first Monday In Janu ary, April, July and October each year. Board of Education. Jaaper Ebba, Chairman, Spring Creek, N. a Thoa. J. Murray, Member, Marahall, . N. C, R. F. D. No. 8. W. R. Sama, Marshall N. d, R. F. D. No. 1 Prof. M. C. Buckner. Supt of Schools. Mara Hill, N. C, R. F, D. . NO. 1 Board Meeu flrat Monday Is Janu ary. April, July and October each year. Coilagea and High Schools. Mara Hill College, Prof. R. h: Moore, Prealdent, Mara Hill. N. C. Fall Term beglna August 17. 1911. Spring Term - begins January I, 1912. Spring Creek High Sohool. Prof. O. C. Brown. Principal, Spring Creek. N. C 8 Mo. School opened Angust. : lllll'- ' Madison Seminary High School. Prof J. M. Weatkerly, Principal. War shall N, C ft. F. It. No. 1 7 Mo Sohool began October 2, 1911. Bell Institute. Miss Margaret E. Griffith, Principal Walnut, N. C, 2 Mq. Sohool began September 9. 1911. Marshall Academy. Prof, R. Q. ;. Anders, Principal, 'Mars'tial'l, N. G ( Ma School began Sept 4, 1911. ; Notary Publics. J. C. Ramsey, Marshall, N. O. Term expiree Jan. 11, 1912. A. J, Roberta, Marahall, N. C, R. F. D. No. 6,. Term expiree May 30, 1912. Jasper Ebbs. Spring Creek, N. C. Term expires August 10, 1912. . 3. C. Brown, Bluff, N. C. Term ex piree December 8, 1912. J.A. Leak, Revere. N. C. . Term ex piree January 10, 1913. W. T. Davia. Hot Springs, N. C. Term expiree January 10. 1913. J. H. Southworth, Stackhouse, N. C. ' Term expiree January 15, 1913. N. W. Anderson, Paint Fork, N. O. Term expires February 6, 1913. . J. H. Hunter, Marshall N. C. R. F. - D. No. 3. Term expires April 1, 191 J. F. Tilaon, Marshall, N. C. R. F. D. No. 1 'Term expires April 3, 1913. C J. Ebbs, Marahall, N. C. Term xptrea April 21. 1913. J. W. Nelson, Marshall N. C. Term . expiree April 25, 1913. Roy L. Gudger, Marshall '" N. C. Term expiree May 2. 1913. Geo. M. Prltchard. Marshall N. C. Term expiree May 25, 1912. . Dudley Chipley, . Marshall N. C. Term expiree July 29, 1913. J Vf. 6. Connor, Mara Hill. N. C. Term 'wxplroa November 27, 1913.. POST. ' ,v'' 'V . Oeorge W- Gahagaa Poet, Na 88 O. A. R. S. M. Da via. Commander. 1. H. Ballard, Adjutant . Meeta at tbe Court Hone Baturday before tbe eeoond Sunday la eaak ' month at 11 A. It ICEBERG TORE TITAK SIDE Sank as Band Played "Nearer, My God, to Thee," Carrying to the Bottom of the Atlantic 1595 Souls 745 SURVIVORS ENTER PORT - New York. After 4 days of agoni sing auspenae the Carpathla arrived at thla port bearing all that remaina mor tal of the thousands of aoula who aall ad upon the Titanic. 8tUI daaed and bait atunned from the shock of that appalling night amid all their grief the aurvivora In senten ces interrupted by sobs and ejacula- THE LOST tlona told ' of brief momenta of theii experience that had to be pieced to gether to make a coherent narrative. Titanic Was Running at Full Speed. Tbe ocean was calm aa a mill-pond when the Titanic crushed Into the Ice berg. It was a quarter of an hour be fore midnight Most of the passengers were in their cabins. Then came the ahock of collision not so violent a crash aa had been de picted, for there were many who were not even awakened by it but enough to disquiet all who felt It. There was a general and orderly exodus to the decks. . - Sailors were scurrying hither and thither crying: "NOTHING TO BE AFRAID OF! THERE'S NO DANGER!" Some of the paaaengera even return ed to their rooms and prepared to re tire. But gradually the cessation of the engines' vibration cauaed uneasi ness and the groups on tbe decks grew greater and greater. Still the sailors announced that there Was nothing to be feared. . Then, with perceptible suddenness, tho eh'p began to Hat V "All paaaengera on deck with life belts," was shouted. Than lor the first time the gravity of the situation dawn ed upon the paaaengera. ' : The sailors, working silently and without excitement, yet fast aa their hands could move, removed the tar paullna from tbe lifeboats and terse ly, without excitement came the or der, repeated upon every aide: "Women and children in tbe life boats!" .The aallora helped the nearest wo men and children Into tbe boata. . And it was the bealnnlng of excitement -K)ther aallora began , to lower the boata. ; - ' Men Laughed aa Boata Filled. Thus far the men, standing Idly by, falling entirely to graap the signifi cance of the moment, had helped the sailors. - Many of the paaaengera re port that the men were laughing. , "We'll be Bafer here on the ahtp than in that cockle-shell!" one man cried to .his wife as she was helped ever the rail.-- . --i. - . But tbe Titanic settled deeper In the ocean and it' was difficult, tor the men to remain on their feet."' Then It was that the appalling nature of It dawned nnnn those men. , And ' then, also It waa. that the officers of the ship drew their revolvers. . vi-v---; "Stand hank!" thev cried. "Only women and children go Into the boats." Some of the men leaned against the Mil and looked down over the tower ing sides of the ship. Othera slowly paced the deck aa if they were wan ing. ' ' Three 8teerage Men 8 hot . Th. shin aank lower and lower. Three revolver ahota ' were . heard. Thru nBasenaera in the steerage bad attempted to force thelikway past the aallora and had been ruthlessly snot down- ';"v's ; " By thla time the passengers on me 4.v whA remained In DOSSeSSion of their facultlea obaerved the . huge masses of Ice which the Titanic nan "DEGENERATE LUXURIES." ' Titanic'a Very Slxe Denegerate, Says ) Stanley Bowdle. foimh,ia nhlo.-MStanley Bowdle, marine engineer, member ot the Con stitutional Convention, characterises the loss of 1,500 Uvea on the steam ship Titanic aa' a aacriflce to degen erate luxury. Mr. Bowdle advocates international legislation to compel an ocean ahipa to alow down to hair speed when In the ice belt, m log, or Jj-i-wtVswT. .j t x.:wm YifU'fy' 7"'r?4 "v'Tj ;K',. . .. 1. ':.... '-.v.irrj fc. ft i i "-v'.;s.'. "j! : ,! ' 1 lYt-tj I hi l -. j I - I i j "n L . n - i l 1 illllllilil7n'j on dark night. , rent from the berg with which it had collided. Of the scene In tbe bow, where over hundred and fifty feet of the ablp'a length had been crushed In, there were no wltnessea until an hour afterward, when the lifeboats were all In tbe water. Herolam Asserts Itself. ' The ship bad now Hated to a terrible angle. Men, in the tbroea of panic, attempted to reach the boats and were pushed back. And In that moment tbe heroism of hundreds asserted It self. It waa the paaaengera who push ed back these panic-stricken few and not the sailors. Of the Individual deeda of heroism only few have aa yet been told. But those few are the fore-runners of thousands. Soon most of the boata bad been lowered and still a full realizing aense of the extent of the disaster had not dawned upon all that mass of men. But finally, all the boata had been lowered. Then, the sailors, seeing wo men standing and running about cried: "All women to the lower deck!" There began a rush to the lower deck, and there It waa that the nearest semblance to a panic began. Soml of TITANIC. .he women were seized by aallora and deliberately thrown over the rail Into he boata -WM The weaker men, by acores, began q Jump overboard. The llfeboata be jen to draw away from the ahip. Aa they drew away thoae who were floating among the cakes of Ice In the aea cried aloud piteoualy for help. Those who could seized the sides of the lifeboats. In ..many cases they were pulled aboard." One Lifeboat Capslxes. In many caaea the aallora who man ned the boata rowed deliberately on, heedlesa of all supplications, for their boata were full. One boat waa observ ed to overturn. What capsized It la not yet known probably a number of men In the sea struggling to board ber. Several more pistol ahota were heard on board the ship. And then, suddenly, above the murmur of tho sea and the crunching of the Ice floes there rose a steadily Increasing cry from the doomed ahip a cry in which hundreds upon hundreds of voicea mingled. ' , . Among the Innumerable deeds of heroism of that hour there waa one attested by many witnesses. The sail ors attempted to pull Mrs. Uador Straus from her husband's side, but she clung to his arm, smiling. She had decided to remain with him She Bank with him. : , Women Row Lifeboat In tha hurry of embarking, one of the llfeboata had been lowered without a single Bailor in It. Three men had been picked up by this boat, but the women were rowing. And tbe women between the thwarta were screaming to their loved ones in agony, . Then, suddenly, above all the wall ing of that desolate scene there arose the Btralns of the ship's- orchestra playing "Nearer," My God, to Thee!" And for the first time those in tbe llfeboata realized that those who were left behind knew that they were doom ed. A few voicea rose in accompani ment to the melody. The chorus swell ed louder and louder. The lights sunk lower and lower. N The lifeboats were pulling from the BCene aa fast aa they could. But while they were still within Bight of the ship the lights, began to go out with start ling awlftne8s. " ' The screams and shouts of those on board still resounded through the air. The last light went out and the music ceased. ! . The peerless Titanic had sunk be neath the waves." , HYSTERICAL SCENES WHEN FRIENDS MEET SURVIVORS , filnwlv tha . Carnathia. ambulance ship of the ocean, made her way up the bay In the gloom ot tne evening, through lanes of allent vessels, and warped Into her dock at Pier 64, North River. ' ' ' " From her descended the saved of the Titanic all that remained of 2,- V - CAPITAL IS IN GRIEF, f Loss of Titanic Cauees Postponement - of Many Function a. Washington. Because ot the Titan ic disaster social lite ia practically sus pended in Washington society, .for many leaders numbered close friends among - thoae who were drowned. The sadness at the White House baa changed what waa intended for a week ot pleaaure for young friends of Miss Taft and Robert Tatt, now there, Into one of quiet , 362 souls, a , seml-hysterlcal band numbering 745.' All the figures that bad drifted In through the air were wrong, and when the truth came it waa merely to Increaae the terrible roll to 1595. The acenea that were enacted on the Cucard Pier, and outalde aa the survivors were being hurried away to homes and hotels, will live a lifetime in the memory ot those who wit nessed them. Men in hysterics, women fainting, and children almost crushed in the arma of those welcoming them, were the rule, not the exception. Men fell down to kiss tbe knees of their re turning womenfolk. Women shriek ed, wept, dashed In madness from one group of friends to another, and final ly collapsed In the arms ot those who had come to meet them. The Sctnes Repeated. ' Outalde, aa they were led or carried to . waiting automobiles, the same scenes were repeated. The sight ot a street seemed to Oil some of the re turned ones with awe, to others It wts a cause for emotional joy that could only And relief In extravagant ecataty. The precautions taken for the pro tection of tbe survivors proved en tirely adequate,' and, fortunately, all the ambulances and relief corpa that had been gathered at the pier were not necessary. The number of badly Injured on the Carpathla wis not nearly as large aa had been Imagined, and cases re quiring hospital relief were merciful ly few. i It was a joyous occasion for many a terrible day for some. To the last there had been hope In many breasts that their ' loved ones would be aboard and at the last those hopes were blasted with the icy breath of tbe news the Hvlng brought. How the Titanic sank,, what hap pened when she sank, waa told in aa many different ways as there were people to tell It. But they agreed on one thing that Capt. Smith and his officers showed the greatest bravery throughout the terrible ordeal, and that, except in Isolated cases the men aboard, from the saloon to the steer age, showed a heroism worthy of the sea. When the Ship Went Down. Men were playing cards In the smoking .room when the great ship struck the Iceberg whose propinquity waa well known to all aboard, for a bulletin ot it bad been posted In the saloon, and when the ship went down, most accounts agree, the band was playing "Nearer, My God, to Thee," while the lifeboats were pulling away. But It was difficult to get a connect ed story from anaauryjvor, Mra. John Jacob Astor, outwardly none the worse for her awful experi ence, was among the first to be whisk ed away to her home. Her atepson, Vincent Astor, and Craig Blddle had come to meet her and the greeting be tween them was affecting. She went direct to the home of her father, Wil liam H. Force, but stayed there only a few momenta ., THRILLING ACCOUNTS OF ' HEROISM AND SACRIFICE BY TITANIC 8URVIVORS. Tales of horror were told by the survivors of the Titanic wreck when they landed from the steamship Car pathla, V Men and women related in detail how the big ahip had crushed against the Iceberg, but how the jar was so alight that no one was excited until the ship's officers and crew began low ering the lifeboats and rafts and or dering passengers into them. The Titanic'a boilers exploded when water rushed In upon them, and it waa the opinion of some of the survivors Magniflcant Grand Staircase In tha that nmnv who bad been left on tbe sinking Titanic were killed by the ex- ploaions and not drowned. : Most graphic waa the atory told by Mra. Paul Schabert, of Derby, Conn. After telling of how Mr. and Mra. Isa dor Straus perished together,' because Mrs. Straus would not leave her hus band, Mra. Schabert aaid . v " "It waa terrible experience, but worth going through. I waa awaken- ISMAY'S ESCAPE A SCANDAL. Clubmen Wonder Whether He Waa Forced Into Boat by Employee. London. The only comment made by the London papers on the escape of J. Bruce Iamay, appears in the Dally Herald, tha naw labor paper. One1 ot the chief aubjecta ot discus sion in the hotel! and clubs ia Mr. Ia may' escape, thftre being much won der aa to whether he waa forced into a boat with th women and children by hia employe. ed by the ahock of the collision, and went on deck. There waa no great ex citement, and peraona were coming out of their rooma and asking what had happened. Wouldn't Leave Brother. "Suddenly from the bridge or from aome ot the officers came the cry, 'Ladlea flrat' Thla waa the flrat In ling that we had that the ahip waa In danger. We went ba:k to tho atate roonie and dressed. Then came the horrifying order that women must leave their husbands and brothera and that no man waa to go in tbe llfeboata. "I refuaed to leave my brother, and remained on deck until the next to tbe last boat was leaving. They looked around and aaw that I waa the only woman. I told them that I would not go without my brother and then they took him alao. Thua I aaved my bro ther. "We left the ahip about twenty-five minutes before it aank. She sank at about 1:50 o'clock Monday morning. At C o'clock the sama morning the Carpr.lhkv put in an appearance and W3 we-e picked up. We were proba bly one mile away from the ahip when she went down, and the ateward that had given me the flrat warning that tha ship might sink went down with all the othera. Lights Burning, Band Playing. "Aa we left the ahip It waa tbe moat remarkable and brilliant sight I had ever witnessed on the water. All the lights were burning and the band waa playing aa if at a concert." Mra. Schabert waa asked in regard to a rumor that Major Butt, military aide to President Taft, bad ahot eight men to keep them from upBettlng life boats by crowding luto them. - Mrs. Schabert answered that aha was unable to either confirm or deny this. She said she had Been no auch thing, but that the confusion was such she might not have seen It, even if it had happened. Col. Aator Died a Brave Man. Dramatic stories of the death ol Colonel Astor were told on the pier by survivors. "Mrs. Astor waa sent away in the tenth boat," said John Kuhle, of Ne braska. "Just aa she waa about to bt placed within the boat. Colonel Aatoi embraced her. Helped to Force Wife Into Boat. . "Astor then freed himself from bli wife's embrace and, after helping to force ber into the boat turnea away and atood upon the deck." Colonel Archibald Grade, U. S. A., declared Colonel A tor's conduct waa deserving ot the highest praise Col onel Astor, said Grade, devoted all his energies to saving hia young bride, who was in delicate health. "Colonel Astor helped ua In our ef forta to get her In the boat" eaid Colonel Grade. "I lifted her into the boat. Colonel Astor then Inquired the number of the boat which was being lowered and turned to the work ot clearing the other boata and in reas suring the frightened and nervous women." Col. Aator Joined Mr. and Mra. Straus. ' "John Jacob Astor escorted his -wife to one ot the lifeboats, kissed her quietly and then went up to deck B and Joined Mr and Mra. Isador Straua," aaid Robert W. Daniel, of Philadelphia "I was almost alongside ot them, but not close enough to dis tinguish anything they said to each other. When the water reached deck B, I Jumped Into the sea. Neither Colonel Astor nor Mr. and Mrs. St-.-aus made any effort to save themselves. They seemed to realize that !t was hopeless. I am convinced that Col onel Astor could have saved himself had he Jumped into the water. "None of us were worried after the crash. Many of the passengers, my- Main Salon of tha lll-Fated Titanic. Belf included, went to bed. 1 did not rise from my bed until I huard the sound of pistol shots. Then I pulled on a bathrobe and went out on dck. Some of the offlccra nearest me were shooting into the air for the purpoae, I suppose, of awakening all the pas sengers who had retired. I did not onco catch eight ot the lcerer which had ripped our portside from stern to stern." BLAMES BRITISH OFFICIALS. Inadequacy of Llfeboata on Titanic ' Stupid and Criminal. Landon. Allan H. Burgoyne, M. P., editor ot the Naval Annual, ' aaya: Amid a horde of horrors, attendent on th Titanic disaster, one vital central tact emerges.- Thla fact ia nothing leaa than the woeful inadequacy ot lifeboat accommodations, due to the ridiculoualy , antiquated regulatlona laid down by th British Board of Trad. ISMAY GRILLED BY SENATORS Warned of Ice, White Star Line Head Said: "We Will Go-Faster" ARROGANTLY DEFIED DANGER Unwarranted Belief That 8hlp Waa Unainkabie, Rackleaa Navigation and Wonderful Calm After Im pact Brought Out at Hearing. New York, April 20. Without waat lng a minute the sub committee of tbe V. 8. Senate Committee on Com merce got down to business in its in vestigation Into the Titanic dlaaater. President over by Senator William Al dan Smith, a lawyer of note of Michi gan, the Inquiry began at the Waldorf Aatoria. Th remarkable and unwarranted faith ot Captain E. J. Smith and hia junior officers in tbe unsinkable char acter of the Titanic, the recklessness ot navigating the Titanic at full apeed in view of the advicee that there wer Icebergs In the vicinity and the won derful calm which prevailed among passengers and officers after the col lisionthese were the salient facta brought out J. Bruce Ismay, William Marconi and Second Officer Llghtoller of the Titanic were witnesses before the Sen ate committee Investigating the dla aater. From Ismay and Llghtoller waa drawn, reluctantly the admission that the Titanic waa going at almost her maximum apeed when she hit tbe iceberg, that Captain Smith bad been warned of th presence of bergs, but that the apeed was not slackened in the least. J. Bruce Ismay waa the first witness called, and was not fortunate In the impression he made on the committee and othera present. That Mr. Ismay had been concerned chiefly with his own safety seemed to be generally suspected. Ismay seemed to feel the antagonis tic atmosphere. He sat in the extreme corner surrounded by hia business as sociates. With him were two private detectives, who have been assigned as his bodyguard since the Carpathla got in and who are never away from bis aide. " - : Mr. Ismay 's manner on the stand waa constrained. He was plainly ill at ease. Whatever good may have been in the Impression be made seem ed to be wiped out by the damaging statement made later by Llghtoller that the first man he saw on the boat deck three minutes after the Titanic struck waa Ismay standing alone. Major A. G. Peuchen aaid that J. Bruce Iamay, managing director of the line, bad laughingly told a woman pas senger that the ice warning, so far from keeping the Titanic back, would only cajise her increase her apeed, bo aa to get more quickly out ot the ice field. . Other criticisms of Mr. Ismay by passengers on the Carpathla who ob served his conduct after he was res cued, and by landsmen, were numer ous. It waa learned that be occupied the doctor's cabin on board the Car pathla, denied himself to all Inquirers and caused the report to be spread that a sick woman was in the cabin on whose door appeared the notice: "Don't knock." Major Arthur Peuchen, of the Queen's Rifles of Toronto, Canada, made this statement at the Waldorf Astoria: - "J. Bruce'Ismay knew of the pres ence ot Icebergs, but arrogantly disre garded the danger of them. "And when the Titanic was every instant facing the possibility of run ning into an ice mountain, Mr. Ismay was dining with Captain Smith both of them in evening clothesIn a lower saloon, when the Captain, at least, should have been at his poBt of duty on the bridge." Llghtoller, second officer of Titanic, admitted that he knew ot the ship re ceiving a message on Sunday warning Captain Smith of ice. Marconi talked of the work of wire less and Intimated that only economi cal reasons prevented all passenger vessels having an operator constantly on duty. - ' -.'.'' Captain Rostram and Wireless Oper ator Cottam of the Carpathla denied receiving a message from President Taft. ' William T. Stead; the writer. Is sup posed to have perished in hia state room. President Hays was aeen on the deck just before the last boat left the doomed ship. v ' Senator Rayner of Maryland ar raigned J. Bruce Ismay and the direct ors of the White Star Line aa criminal ly responsible for the loss ot the Titanic- In vartoua hospitals and charitable Institutions are 204 aurvivora of the Titanic, aome ill, practically all desti tute. -..v;"'V ":V .V Two Of the Bailors of the Titanic confirmed the report that men who tried to rush the lifeboats were ahot Reviaed reckoning of the Titanic disaster atatlatics resulted In the offi cial announcement that 'bnly 705 per sons were rescued, and that 1,635 met death. Tbe new figures were given out by W. W. Jeffries, passenger traf fic manager ot the White Star line. The 705 aurvivora, aa announced by Jeffries, consist of 202 first cabin pas sengers, 115 second cabin, 178 steer age, 4 officers and 206 of the crew. Of thoae aaved almost a third were mem- bar ot the ahip'a company. CAPT. ROSTROU TELLSJFRESCUE Carpathian Commander Gives a Thrilling Narrative. PROUD OF CREW, HE SAYS Rostron Took Precaution In Going to Rescue of Survivor Carpathla' Capaln Talka of Work of Rcu No Meeaage from Pres. Taft w New Tork, April 20. In trlklnf ; contraat to that of J. Bruc Ismay waa the testimony of Arthur Henry Ro tron, captain of the Carpathla, who made a moat favorable Impression on hia bearera, receiving the reiterated commendation of the committee. He gave every evidence of being modest, courageous and alert, thoughtful to the last detail of the aafety and com fort of both the aurvivora ot the Ti tanic and bis own crew, no detail hav ing eacaped him In the preparation h made tor the rescue, and bis thought. ( fulness culminating in the religioua aervice of thanksgiving which he ask ed an Eplacopal clergyman to conduct Immediately after the rescue, obvW ously aa much because ot a realiza tion of the sedative and comforting effect it would have on the nerve of the suffers aa because of bis religious convictions. Narrative of Capt Roatron. Capt. Roatron gave hia residence a Woodville, Victoria road, Croaby, Llv erpool. He baa been following th sea for twenty-aeven years, filling all posta from cadet on the tainlng ahip Conway, in the Mersey, to command er. He has been with tha Cunard Line alnce 1895 and was commander of the Pannonla before he took charg , of the Carpathla in January. "We let New York April 11," said Capt Roatron, "and up to Sunday midnight had fine, clear weather. At 1.35 o'clock a. m. Monday I waa in formed by our wlreleas operator of ur gent distress signals from the Titanic. The operator told the first junior offi cer and be and the operator put their head in my doorway and told me. I had' just turned In. The massage that had come from the Titanic gave her position aa latitude 41 degreea 46 minutes north, longitude 50 degreea 14 mlnutea west I cannot give at th moment our exact location. "The New York time of the receipt of the distress signal waa exactly -10.45 p. m. Sunday. Thla acccount for the apparent discrepancy between : the times reported by wireless for th sinking of the Titanic and that report ed by the passengers. "I immediately gave orders to turn the ship," resumed Capt Roatron. "I asked our operator twice it he waa absolutely certain aa to the origin of the distress message, and upon receiv ing assurances picked up a point on our course and set a course to nortb 52 degree west, true fifty-eight miles from my position. "Then I sent for the chief engineer and ordered him to call another watch of stokers and make all speed possible to reach the Titanic. "We made the fifty-eight miles In three and a half hours.. It was at 2:40 that we made out a flare about 'halt a point on the port baw, which wa took to be the Titanic itself. The light seemed so high I was almost B'ire tha Titanic must still be afloat. It waa a little after that we made out an Ice- -berg on our port bow. Between 2:45 and 4 we were passing bergs on either side of us. At 4:10 the first boat from the Titanic was alongaide, but just be fore getting to it I eaw an Iceberg ahead and had to starboard my helm. Twenty Bergs Around Titanic'a Grave. "The first boat which I picked up .'. waa in charge ot an officer. I aaw bo , waa not in control of her. He sang '; out that he had only one seaman, so - I had to manoeuvre a little to get him : alpngslde. By the time we had got the lot on board It waa making day, and then I aaw about me the rest of . the boata. In the neighborhood alao ' were about twenty Icebergs, ranging from 150 to 200 feet high with numer ous smaller ones, of the kind we call 'growlers,' running up to ten or twelve feet in height. We had all the people from the boats on board by 8:30. Wa were then very close to where the TI- . tanlc had gone down, where a lot of wreckage, broken up stuff, but nothing . large, was floating about." , "How many llfeboata were there?" he waa asked. "We had fifteen boata alongside of ub with paaaengera in them. I aaw one lifeboat close to the ship which had been abandoned because it waa In a sinking condition. The occupants had been taken out by another boat. Two of the fifteen boata were of the collap sible canvas sides. Each would hold from alxty to seventy-live comfortably. Wo found one collapsible boat capsla- , ed among th wreckage. We took th boata on board, leaving some of them on our davit.".; ' Captain Rostron aaid that all the boata were marked "Titanic" and that they conformed to the regulatlona of the British Board of Trade. , Pressed for an answer to a question about tbe number of lifeboats required on a modern liner, he aaid that a ship nowadaya waa built to be practically unsinkable and waa supposed to be a lifeboat In itself. He told la anrser to a question that he had aeen womn pulling In the boata and in one certain ly two or three. "The flrat I knew of Mr. I v s presence on the Carpathla" be '. "waa when the last boat was s' and the passengers were ; c J