Letchworth Man on the Lusitania
... Letchworth Man on the Lusitania. RESCUED AFTER FIVE HOURS. ...
... Letchworth Man on the Lusitania. RESCUED AFTER FIVE HOURS. ...
... UNRESERVED SATISFACTION. — The Cologne Ga:zette writes :— ‘‘ The news of the sinking of the Lusitania will be received among the German people with unreserved satisfaction, for it proves to Englishmen and the whole world that Germany is in earnest with ...
... Theosophical point of view. BOOKED ON THE LusITANIA.—Mr. C. W. Stanton, the managing director of the Spirella, and Mrs. Creighton, the city organiser of that Company, held tickets to sail for New York on the Lusitania to-morrow. Mr. Stanton was going to the ...
... hundred gallant sons at the war, was also represented at that latest demonstration of German barbarity—the sinking of the Lusitania without warning. One thousand, three hundred and ninety-six men, women and children were drowned as a result of this unparalleled ...
... progressed, the more did my heart open to the English, and when all those atrocious deeds, culminating in the sinking of the Lusitania, were committed by the Germans, | resented the- terrible wrong as much as a born Englishman could do. Had the war been carried ...
... believe that the mass of the German people could, if they were properly informed, join in rejoicings over the sinking of the Lusitania. in regard to the outlook, they could not think of the future without grave misgivings on behalf of British democracy. The ...
... guineas for a box at Mme. Clara Butt’s Red Cross concert as a thank-offering for his rescue during the foundering of the Lusitania. ...
... Stanton, the managing director of the Spirella Companw. Mr. Stanton had booked his passage to America on the ill-fated Lusitania, and so had written his message to the meeting, from which he anticipated he would have been absent. However, he was present ...
... SUCKED DOWN. At this moment the Lusitania sank, and Mr. Colbrook experienced the terrible agony of being sucked down by the irresistible force of the whirlpool of seething water which now raged over the submerged vessel. Fighting his way to the surface ...
... little boy. “ | SHALL BE ASHAMED.'—Mr. George A. Kessler. the American millionaire, who is one of the survivors from the Lusitania, says :—** What the feeling and sentiment of the Americans and those of nine-tenths of the Germans in America are | know ...
... which Mr. Stanton makes, recalls to us the fact that his passage was booked on the next outward journey of the ill-fated Lusitania. We are sure, however, that the spirit of camaraderie evidenced at this gathering will go a long way to lessening the severe ...
... is a better citizen than the beery Sheffield-born blackguards who tried to wreck his shop. . WHAT A LusiTANIA LIFEBOAT CONTAINED.—One of the Lusitania’s lifeboats, having on board the bodies of three women and two boys, has drifted ashore at Schull, near ...