Current History, Volume 8New York Times Company, 1918 - History |
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Page 21
... ships . A Seattle ship- yard had already broken all world's rec- ords by launching an 8,000 - ton steel ship in sixty - four days , and yards on the Atlantic Coast were preparing to beat the Pacific Coast record . At the Hog Island yard ...
... ships . A Seattle ship- yard had already broken all world's rec- ords by launching an 8,000 - ton steel ship in sixty - four days , and yards on the Atlantic Coast were preparing to beat the Pacific Coast record . At the Hog Island yard ...
Page 252
... ships , 1,145 ships in all , and 490 wooden ships , with a total tonnage of 1,715,000 . Only a small part of this enormous total could be constructed in the first year of the war with the shipyard facilities availa- ble , and it has ...
... ships , 1,145 ships in all , and 490 wooden ships , with a total tonnage of 1,715,000 . Only a small part of this enormous total could be constructed in the first year of the war with the shipyard facilities availa- ble , and it has ...
Page 304
... ships into serv- ice ; it was then concluded to exercise the sovereign rights of a belligerent un- der the international law of " angary , " and to place the Dutch ships under American jurisdiction . The President concluded as follows ...
... ships into serv- ice ; it was then concluded to exercise the sovereign rights of a belligerent un- der the international law of " angary , " and to place the Dutch ships under American jurisdiction . The President concluded as follows ...
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advance Allies American April April 12 Armentières army artillery attack Austria-Hungary Austrian battalions battle Beersheba Belgian Belgium Berlin Bolsheviki Bolshevist bombardment bombs Bourlon British Cambrai Canal captured Central Powers Chauny command conference Corps Council cruisers declared defense delegates divisions east enemy enemy's ernment fighting fire Flanders flank fleet Flesquières force Foreign France French front German Government heavy Herr infantry Italian killed Labor land Lassigny Lichnowsky London losses machine guns March March 21 ment miles military Montdidier months naval negotiations night officers Oise operations peace treaty Petrograd Poland position President Prince Prince Lichnowsky prisoners raids railway reached Reichstag reported Rheims rifle Rumania Russia Secretary sector Serbian shells ships Sir Edward Sir Edward Grey Socialist soldiers Somme submarine supply territory tion tons troops Trotzky Turkish Turks Ukraine United week wounded yards