TORONTO, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1932 FOUR FEARED LOST, 17 SAVED, AS FREIGHTER SINKS IN LAKE ERIE Lashed i nte-caps of Lake Erie for five hours, yesterday, 15 of the 17 men and two women who made up the crew of the freighter J. J. Boland Jr. slept in comfortable beds at Welland last night and attempted to forget their nerve-wracking conflict with wind and wave. Loss of the ship owned by the Sarnia Steamship Company still remains a mystery. The only explanation advanced by.«the crew for its sinking is that a jammed rudder had left it at the mercy of the gales, which survivors fear claimed the lives of four of the crew. The lake eany to-day yielded up the body of the assistant stewardess, Miss Jean Mclntyre, 25-year-old Welland girl. Photograph (1) shows the freighter's life-boat beached on the rocky coast at Stiff Neck. Survivors had to clamber up the cliff by a rough rope ladder. Captain E. C. Hawman, of Sarnia, skipper of the J. J. Boland, Jr., is standing at the controls of his bridge in (2). Picture (3) shows eight of the survivors, smiling with relief as they entered a motoi bus at Buffalo. The J. J. Boland, Jr., is shown in (4), and (5) is a mat of Lake Erie, showing the position of the wrecked boat. Mrs. Elsie Smith cook on board of the ill-fated vessel, is shown in (6). First Mate M. Smitt (7) is credited with much of the rescue work. Both escaped to land. The waters have already given up the body of Miss Jean Mclntyre (8), aged 24, of Welland, who was assistant cook on the freighter.