The Lusitania Outrage. TERRIBLE DIATH ROLL
... The Lusitania Outrage. TERRIBLE DIATH ROLL. ...
... The Lusitania Outrage. TERRIBLE DIATH ROLL. ...
... there was a muffled drumlike sound coming from the direction of the bows of the Lusitania, accompanied by a trembling motion of the Ship. Immediately afterwards the Lusitania began to list to starboard. With such startling suddenness did it come in that ...
... V• Spatial.) There is one consolation to be drawn from the last murderous art committed by the enemy In torpedoing the Lusitania. The destruction of over a thousand innocent lives, the majority of them of our own race and blood, must have wakened to conscious ...
... wants of the injured. A good many, myself Included, Were suffering front and went into the engine-room to get warmth. As the Lusitania dived beneath the waves I itsw two or three persons jump from the topmast point of the stern. One of three was a woman. I ...
... her father and his secretary await- ing her was extreme. Lady Mackworth came ashore In the same boat as the captain of the Lusitania. While there admittedly was certain amount of confusion, she thought the officers and crew acted eery bravely, but she could ...
... survivors. As the Lusitania went down her stern rose high in the air, and when she took the final plunge quite a number of men took a leap of quite 70 feet into the sea. Many turned over before striking the sawface. As the Lusitania took her final plunge ...
... the Press Association telegraphs—Dr. C. E. Foss, of Montana, has given a thrilling narrative of his experiences after the Lusitania was torpedoed. He was one of a party of qualified physicians on a mission of mercy—that of offering service to the Red Cross ...
... the aid of this glass I could discern that this distant object was causing quite a wave of water on the shore side of the Lusitania. Several persons, of whom I was one, were standing together. More than one of the watchers said. 'That looks like a submarine' ...
... various stories told regarding the launching of the boats ; but there is agreement on one great point, namely, that the Lusitania's crew nobly upheld the tradition of heroism In the British mercantile marine. Those who were not actually engaged in the ...
... That final sentence conveys no more than the truth, as is shown by the comments of the German press on the sinking of the Lusitania. One example is a sufficient Illustration of the Teutonic mind. The Kolnische Volkszelsung declared that, The sinking ...
... ministration • protests against the foolish revival of the question. - Where is the ftritiah Fleet? The torpedoing of the Lusitania is but the climax so far to the German policy which has fur its object the foiling of the efforts et our .tdmiralty and ...
... who had an idea that we were to be conveyed by British cruisers all the way. There were more women and children on the Lusitania than men. It was whispered that the Lustiania would take 300 men Cana' dian recruits for the British army. Whether such a ...