On the Sea
T H V SINKING or THI ARABIA. A <six;i;it.io»t Copy! mill, Australian and N.Z. Cable Association. .Marseilles, November 1-1. 'Hie Arabia’s survivors deny Unit the sinking of the submarine was tiie result of gunfire, A mail boat brought a number oi passengers irom .Malta, with -if) survivors of the English steamers Clan iaslie and lluntsvale, both of whieh were torpedoed without warning. The Daily Chronicle’s .Marseilles correspondent states (hat only hazard, fortunate circumstances, a smooth sett the nearness of a few steamers, had the. slowness wherewith site succumbed, prevented the Arabia from becoming a second Lusitania, bo one listening to the survivors’ narratives fails to ho impressed with the similarity of the two crimes. The passengers were left to shift for themselves ami drift in open boats for 300 miles to land. Germany has deliberately broken her pledges to America, and is defying the world. x _ new super-submarines. Press Association. -Copyright, Australian and N.Z. Cablo Association, Copenhagen, November 14. North Sea fishermen states that the Gormans are using super-submarine-'; of a new typo and of gigantic size, some being bigger than the steamers they torpedoed. liner kapunda sunk. London, November 13. Lloyds report that the Kapunda, a Moss liner (3007 tons) has been sunk.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 92, 15 November 1916, Page 5
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207On the Sea Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXI, Issue 92, 15 November 1916, Page 5
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