On the Sea
THE BRITISH NAVY. i OUR HELP ID TIME OF NEED. CORRESPONDENT’S GREAT TRIBUTE. United Press Association. (Received 12.25 p.m.) London, November 5. A correspondent of the Telegraaf. after a .visit to the British North Sea Fleet, writes; “Say never more that the British have not done enough in this war. If she had equipped the greatest army in the world, the war could not he won by it, but only by her strength at sea. The commerce of her Allies lias been kept going and the sinews of war provided by the ever-watebful British Fleet.” The correspondent adds that he cannot conceive conditions wherein the British Fleet could get the worst in a naval engagements.
SUBMARINE vfCTHyIS. TRANSPORT SUNK IN AEGEAN SEA. 225 INDIAN SOLDIERS PERISH. (Received 12.25 p.m.) London, November 5. The Press Bureau states that a submarine sank the transport Tamaz an in the Aegean Sea by shell fire on the 19th September. Of three hundred Indians aboard seventy-five were saved.
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Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXVIII, Issue 58, 6 November 1915, Page 5
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166On the Sea Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXVIII, Issue 58, 6 November 1915, Page 5
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