Show WENT DOWNWrrHI sniP po f Big Transport Ingalls While in Dry Dock t at Brooklyn Slips Froth Blocks i and Capsizes I I There Were Two Hundred and Forty hn on Vessel and Dock at J Time Thirty Others Were in Ships Hold ultls Feared Latter I Were i Lost Large < Number of t the Others Were Injured No I Estimate of Financial 1 Loss f I > New York June 11 While the United State3 transport Ingalls t t was In the balance dry dock at tho Eric basin South Brooklyn this t f afternoon where she wns about to undergo extensive repairs she tIP t-IP suddenly slipped from the blocks and capsized One man Is known to IP have been killed and many injurnd l I There were about 210 carpenters machinists and other laborers tat t t-at work on the vessel and dock at the time Besides the mechanics and other workmen who crowded the vessel and dock preparing her t for a voyage to Manila about thirty Italian laborers arc supposed to frt fr-t have been In the bold of the ship employed In Shifting pigiron ballast t t While the workmen were trying to escape the dock Itself overbalanced over-balanced by the weight of1 the ship turned on its side and sank in t tp fifty feet of water A number of the men were borne down Into D the water and jammed under andbenCath the wreckage and arose tot to-t the surface Ilow many were caughtcould notbe learned tonight t t t Martin Anderson a painter was caught under the descending side t t of the ship and killed outright Others were dragged out of the water I badly Injured or half drowned and hurried to the hospitals Added to the horrori of tonight was the uncertainty ot the fate t of tho men In the vessels hold Some managed to get to the dock land l-and leaped Into the water aa the vessel was sinking but It Is feared p that the majority were less fortunate IP I t1 The Ingalls went Into the dry dock at 1130 oclock thlsvmornlng t and about 80000 was to hare be en expended on her repairs The b t dock in which she was placed was avery old one having been constructed tP t con-structed over fifty years ago No one could be found tonight who could t t give an estimate of the damage caused by the disaster t tP a t t A vivid description of the accident was given by Second Officer Grady of the Quebec line steamer Media lying In the next dry dock t t > ito i-to the west of the Ingalls lie saw the collapse from the deck of his gwn vessel t fj tP I was at the starboard side of our ship he said when I heard tP L a chorus of shouts fromjlic dry JockIn which the Ingalls was lying 1 i t and I ran across The transport had a henYj list Starboard and t t was rapidly increasing Itt I t it-t Men were clambering all over the ship and the air vns full of t i groans cries and screams si thiShip turned the gates of the dry dock P j f flew open and the water came in wlllr arush I could see the n men climbing up the sloping deck of the transport ami trying to make the V port rails Many of them Jumped from thc decI and into the water SJ The men who were working on j1 1e staging on the port side were V ti t raised upby tho vessel as shevjKpnUover t before the end I saw B > i u some menrush up the companion way to tlYfe deck i 1 t The water rushed into the dock seemed to rjght the ship for a > tj tisecond and then the dock went over this and sank with a roar of t L water As Il went down with the vessel inside many men Jumped Into b I i the water The slip was Boon full of them The blocks and beams rose F t to the surface and many of the men were wounded by being jammed b i between floating timbers I i P t tP fP IP |