TALES OF THE SEA
A TERRIBLE EXPERIENCE. MUTINY ON A CARGO SHIP. Press Association—By Telegraph—Copyright. LONDON, November 29. (Received November 30, at 8.5 a.m.) Captain Coffell and two sons, on the coasting schooner Lone Star, were rescued by an incoming liner, the Mountemple, bound for St. John’s, Now Brunswick. They had been without food or drink for twenty-eight hours, and in a terrific gale. A water-logged, dismasted British cargo boat, the Clan Mac Lean, arrived at New York with half her crew prisoners. A number of Spaniards had mutinied in sight of the American coast. The officers drove, them off with their revolvers. The mutineers cannot land without the Immigration Department’s approval, and they are loth to give tltis. 'The ship cannot load if tho mutineers remain. RIO DE JANEIRO, November 29. The Government are disarming the crews of the warships Minas Geraes and Sao Paulo. TEN A KISSELS FOUNDER. 300 DOCKERS DROWNED. ST. PETERSBURG, November 29. (Received November 30, at 8.5 a.m.) Ten vessels foundered in a storm at Astrakhan, with their crews. The landing stage was destroyed, and 300 dockers were drowned.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Star, Issue 14526, 30 November 1910, Page 6
Word Count
184TALES OF THE SEA Evening Star, Issue 14526, 30 November 1910, Page 6
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