Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

ANOTHER ZEPPELIN RAID

ON ENGLAND'S EAST COAST. The High- Commissioner reports, London. September 13 (4:10 p.m.):—The Admiralty announces that the east coast was again visited by hostile aircraft last night, 'and bombs were dropped. NO DETAILS. LONDON. September 13. , (Received September 14, at 12.20 p.m.) ;; The Press Bureau states that hostile aircraft the east coast last night. SUSPECTED ALIENS. • CARLTON AND RITZ MANAGERS. • LONDON, September 13. (Received September 14, at 12.35 p.m.) Since the German aircraft raid on Wednesday- last Theodore Kroei, manager of the Ritz Hotel, and Jacques Kraemer, manager of the Carlton Hotel, have been interned on the Isle 'of Man. Hitherto they had been registered as aliens and allowed their liberty. Kraemer was originally kitchen boy in a big hotel. THE WESTERN FRONT. PARIS. September 13. (Received September 14, at 9.55 a.m.) A communique states: The German attack north of Souchcz was easily repulsed. • r The mine-duel south of rhs Somme before Fay stubbornly continues. There has been a violent bombardment of the sectors Armaneourtßeauvraignes. and on the plateaux of Quennevieres and De Nouvron. i- . ' BELGIUM'S HEROIC ARMY. PARIS, September 13. (Raeeivcd September 14, at 3.30 a.m.) A Belgian officer states that the Belgian army is more numerous and better armed than at the outbreak of the war. Despite ' the. German occupation of Belgium, the response of tho 1914 class of recruits showed only a 5 per cent, decrease in some'provinces. The maximum decrease in any province was 20 per cent. SUBMARINE HUNTING. . PARIS. September 13. {Received September 14, at 8,30 a.m.) M. Polyre, describing in the' ' Fiearo' his visit to the British Fleet, says: "'England never had finer crews or a better 'aimed and faster fleet, "'Submarinehunting is thoroughly methodical, and is considered fine sport. More have been sunk captured. They are hunted with nets/guns, bombs, and otherwise, nntil snow their crews ,know there ie less . . chance of their returning than of sleeping in the depths of the sea." STEAMER SUNK. LONDON, September 13. (Received September 24, at 8.30 a.m.) . Tho British steamer Minosa has bsen rank. Her crew were saved. , INSULT TO INJURY. WASHINGTON, September 13. (Received September 14, at 9.55 a.m.)' Germany explains that the submarine , commander responsible torpedoed the Orduna because the weather was too thick to see the character or nationality of the .vessel. FIRE IN MID-OCEAN. ITALIAN RESERVISTS ON BOARD 3 - NEW YORK, September 13. (Received September 14, at 9.20 a.m.) The steamer Santa Anna is reported to be afire in mid-Atlantic. She has on board 1,600 Italian reservists. PARIS, September 13. (Received September 14, at 8.30 a.m.) Out of those on board the Santa Anna 574 survivors have arrived at Marseilles. AUSTRIAN TORPEDO BOATS i IN MID-ATLANTIC. ROME, September 13. (Received September 14, at 12.20 p.m.) Official: A French submarine on Thursday . torpedoed a group of ■ Austrian torpedo boats in mid-Atlantic, badly damaging one. [As showing the activities of enemy small craft the captain and crew of the Danish steamer Nogill, which was recently sunk in the North Sea on the way f rem Gothenburg to England, stated on arrival at Copenhagen that the vessel was'stopped by German torpedo boats 125 miles from the Fame Islands (off the Northumberland coast) The flotilla consisted of seven large torpedo boats, all well, armed.. A German officer came on board the Nogill after having stopped her. 'After a two hours' conference the German officer said the Nogill would have to bo blown up. The captain and crew were .ordered to go on board the torpedo boats, and after 10 minutes a bomb that, had been placed in the engine room was fired and the ship blew up. A torpedo boat brought the crew to Wilhelrashaven, whence they proceeded to Copenhagen. 3 DRAIN OF COLD. LONDON,-September 13. (Received , September. 14, .at-,12.35 p.m.) - The .Bank of "England, has set aside , > £2,390,000 in sovereigns for export to the , United States and £50,000, also in gold, ., ~ fair export to- Switzerland. '

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ESD19150914.2.41.2

Bibliographic details

Evening Star, Issue 15908, 14 September 1915, Page 6

Word Count
653

ANOTHER ZEPPELIN RAID Evening Star, Issue 15908, 14 September 1915, Page 6

ANOTHER ZEPPELIN RAID Evening Star, Issue 15908, 14 September 1915, Page 6

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert