EUROPE IN WAR TIME
|.\'-. AUSTRALIAN MOUNTED i: :', CADETS I." v •;- I '-■=,. ■■ —-r- ■•/■ •' OFFER TO SERVE '■•'t '■':.■' London, September 16. '. [' Mr. Lewis Harcourt (Secretary ;of !.'•. State for ihe Colonies), in reply to ! : Mr. H. T. Barrio (Unionist member for / !' - . . Lcndonderry), said the Government bad" i . accepted the generous offer of the Aus- ;■■'.■;■'. tralian Mounted Cadets Contingent of its services for the remaining period of their stay iu England. He had com- ' municatcd with tho War Office with a view ,to'the employment of this effi'cient body in some useful and congenial - ;duty v ! DUTCH CONTRABAND LINER RE- ■ .' • ' LEASED. i (Roc. September 17, 8.50 p.m.) Liverpool, Septembe/26. ;.» ._ The Hollarid-Amerika liner Noordam '■ '. (12,531 tons), which, when bound from New York to Rotterdam with 'German reservists,; and a general.cargo, also destined for Germany, .was captured on September'* 10, and brought to Queenstown, has now been released. GERMANS CARRY THE "WAR INTO THE SCHOOLS. (Rec. September 17, 8:50 p.m.) : • ' Amsterdam, September 16. The German Ministry of Education has dismissed all alien enemy teachers and professors from the schools, and excluded children, of alien enemies from tuition. '' ' HOSTILE MONAROHS AND THE ■ "ORDER OF THE GARTER. (Rc'c." September 'IT,- 5.10 p.m.) London, September 16. The Kaiser, tho Crown Prince of Germany r Emperor Franz Josef of Austria, , and the Dtike" of Saxe-Coburg are memthe Order, of .the Garter, and the officials are how considering the question of depriving them'-of their honours. -.. GERMAN NAMES ON BRITISH .. . SHIPS. (Rec. September 17, 6 p.m.) London, September 16. ' The German names of many British ships are being altered.—("Times" and Sydney.. ",'Sam" .Services.) ..-:.• "PRY'S-MAGAZINE" OFF. TO THE :..;-.- „•-..■:■ FRONT. . . (Rec. September. 17, 6 p.m.) -""'' London,' September 16. .f'Fry's Magazine," . iu euspending publication, announces, that'-'This is aot
- thoitime for sport. The staff is joining f Lord Kitchener's Army."—("Times t and Sydney "Sun" Services.) GERMAN WAiTINDEMNITY CLAIMS. (Rec. September 17, 8.50 p.m.) Paris, September 16. Germany's indemnities claimed by her from the occupied towns in Belgium and Franco aggregate nearly , £29,000,000. • , A PROPHECY HALF FULFILLED. ' (Rec. September 17, 6 p.m.) '' ( London, September 16. : The "Times," in a leading article, says: "Long ago we announced that '■ the German manoeuvres would begin i on a Monday, and that- the Universal Peace' Congress would open iu Vienna on a Tuesday. We have no nows of the congress, but the army is manoeuvring .in a manner certainly as arranged in Berlin."—("Times" and Sydney "Sun" Services;) ALIENS DETAINED IN LONDON. London, September 16. ';' In the House of Commons, Mr. R. M'Kenna (Home Secretary) stated that 2780 alien enemies had. been arrested and detained in London since the war. KAISER'S DINNER IN PARIS. Potrograd, September 6. The newspaper "Novo© V-remya" says: "William not having succeeded in dining in Paris, i 3 hastening with an empty stomach to Petrograd." .. : "— : • "
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Dominion, Volume 7, Issue 2258, 18 September 1914, Page 6
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456EUROPE IN WAR TIME Dominion, Volume 7, Issue 2258, 18 September 1914, Page 6
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