The Great Round World and What Is Going On In It, Vol. 1, No. 17, March 4, 1897 - A Weekly Magazine for Boys and Girls by Various
page 11 of 40 (27%)
page 11 of 40 (27%)
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The _Three Friends_, the filibustering steamer that has been in so much
trouble, will soon know her fate. She is to be proceeded against for piracy. The officers, agents, and lawyers are not included in the new case, and so there is no danger of any of them having to pay the penalty of piracy, which the law says is hanging. The vessel alone is the guilty party, and if her guilt is proved, she will be confiscated, which means, taken away from her owners. We spoke about the trial of the tug _Dauntless_ and the _Three Friends_ in No. 14 of THE GREAT ROUND WORLD, and told how Judge Locke had set them at liberty, because he said that if no state of war existed in Cuba, the tugs could not be guilty of breaking any of the laws between nations. Attorney-General Harmon says that this decision of Judge Locke's makes the _Three Friends_ guilty of piracy, for in time of peace she fired a gun on the subjects of a friendly nation. It seems that whichever way they fix it, the _Three Friends_ is in trouble. The whole case rests upon the statement, made in certain New York newspapers, that the _Three Friends_ had a Hotchkiss gun in her bows, with which she fired on the Spanish gunboat that tried to prevent her landing her party. If this statement is true, the _Three Friends_ is guilty, and will have |
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