The evening world. Newspaper, November 12, 1919, Page 19

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) , ’ } 1 ~ 10 SUBMARINES OSE BY ERMAN INTHE WORLD WA ‘All But 45 Were Constructed During Hostilities, Says von Capelle. “BERLIN, Nov. 12 (Associated Press), —Vice Admiral Eduard von Capelle, former Minister of the Navy, was “Westioned yesterday about the con- (Strection of submarines during the day's session of the committee that Is | investigating the war, In opening his testimony von Ca- pelle read a summary of his contri- bation to U boat construction. “Bight hundred and ten submarines were built before and during the war,” he said. “Of these 45 were constructed before the war, 186 were built during the administration of Admiral von ts ait 579 were built by me in the two and @ half years I was in office, §) “T took office in April, 1916, and in the nine months remaining in: that year I ordered built 99 U boats, in { 4917 I ordered 269, and in the nine Months I was in office in 1918 I or- > dered 220." “Why was there such a discrep- eee Sr ©, eee ee oe eee been built in a series of one type at one wharf and another type at a dif- ferént wharf. Von KE replied that toward the end of war that was done, but said at the outset it ys ible because of pressure 0! ir work and lack of wharfs and skilled labor, Herr Sinsheimer attempted to elicit the exact purpose of the submarine campaign against England—whether it was the intention to crush England or merely to compel her to agree to a “usable peace.” “We believed we could force Eng- land to a ‘usable peace’ within five months,” von Capelle replied. “Was the submarine war planned to take feeding of England impossible and, therefore, make impossible the asked Herr David, that food or ammunttion could kept from England,”.replied von Ca- pelle, sarcastically. “We should have been’ more suspicious of England.” Herr David asked where the éxpre sion “force England to her knees originated and what it meant. Von ying: terpreted in several ways. T inter- preted it to mean making England pliable and war tire SUGGEST CHURCH WEALTH British See Significance in Plan Outlined by Widely Recd Financial Journal, | LONDON, Nov. 3 (Associated Press) — | Observers of Great Britain’s financial | Problems attach significance to a sug- gestion made recently that the main burden of paying the huge national debt created by the war should be laid upon the Church of England and the Church of Scotland, more particularly on the reaching by England of her goal?! “There was no hops in the navy | be PAY BRITAIN'S WAR DEBT| REFUSES TOCONPLY WITH ARMISTICE Peace Council at Paris Looks Upon the Document as One of Defiance. PARIS, Nov. 12.—The reply of Rou- mania to the Allied note recently pre- is regarded in Peace Conference cir. |cles as wholly unsatisfactory.’ The note, which was taken up for consid- eration by the Supreme Council this, |morning, was characterized ag ex-| | tremely evasive. | | The Roumantans indicate a willing: ness to retire to the River Theiss, but they decline to respect the original armistice lines and also decline to comply with the Allied request that they name a member of the Inter- Allied Commission to compile the value of the goods seized In Hungary by the Roumanians so that this amount could be deducted from the | total of the reparations due to Rou-( | mania. While the Roumanian note 1s word- ed in terms of extreme politeness, it |1s hgld to indicate continued defiance! ENING W RLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1919. ROUMANIAN NOTE WAR HAS CAUSED MANY CHANGES IN Declares Old Views Found ~: Unimportant. sented, in which it was again de-, fore an audience at Columbia Uni- manded that Hungary’ be evacuated, | Vérsity last night on “The Contem- sewer MOREA AARNE Sere oe ] he salt, are nov the most influential people In France, for there is a large! humber of peasauts and middle-class| people who want to work in peace. “Another danger,” he said, “in quite| a different line, might be feared if France, intoxteated by her victory, should try to misuse ft and become in sinning. Problems which seemed all Important before 1914 have been! Pushed back, at least for a time; ) others which were not believed to be urgent are burning to-day. A vast and sudden displacement of views LETTS MAKE BIG GAINS IN THE REGION OF RIGA Drive Back the Forces of Col. Ber- siders, are economic reconstruction and giving ati answer to the demands of labor: In the last six years Prof. believes that the republican Constl-| Raltlc 3 Deficit. Henry J. Fisher, Chairman of the Es M Committee of the United Hos-|tirély freed from menace by Col i "| | mondt’s forces » were advised to-day The attack resulted in Riga being en-| er Bruhl coutive |firat woman member of House of | mone. The oppositios yonterda,, ord Nai tne Astor’ y's arin the poll The nominat Ireland and commissions in the Twenty-third Mew attacked American Astor peerage was bought | American money and concluded by Lieut. n candidates, tn okt everything f record birth, intimated A: tieal ition really was he tt and interests has taken place. We] fhowld tr » : . 2 bate walter and Ue U possessed by a militarist) —, . | are much too near the gigantic events | spirit, falling a prey to the evil cqn-| mondt Several Miles and Free gould, not be _ depended upom to just now going on to be able to un- | sequen hat this spirit implies; for City From Menace. Lady Nancy had answers for, , + ive them| instance, political reaction and anti-| me * " | posit arguments, That Lo we ea ee oe ce wilt get a| democratic tendencies,” | DORPAT, Livonin, Nov. 12 (Asso-| {id not getinte active fighting wae Meee rightly. Only our Sithian aeBlat re itil e snliedis fated Press).—Letlish troops in the a fault, Lady waney rn go clear view of the unprecedented his- region near Riga attacked the Germano-| offered himself five times and wae mbes: torleal changes we are witnessing. (HOSPITALS NEED $2,244,058, | ftussian forces or Col. Bermondt. yeu. |J#*te® because of door health, she he two paramo’ e , eo A) e ron. -—_——— lterday and pushed them back ae Harvard Exchange Professor] tho cessation of hostilities, he On| 0, wage io Public te Make U one, Ene entice tine. the ts ASSIGN GUARD OFFICERS. | apt, Rutherford 8. D. Davies for ion of 4 eo poet Ver a{Pital Fund, declared‘ to-day that the) phe Letts captured battery of | York Infantry were announced to-day Prot. Levy Bruhl, French exchange|most severe test. In 1870, he aad. | rine Howlal palicipaine im ime guns former’ oflicate. of” Gotapeiey heal no one attempted seriously te P| oe 'Twenty-third who saw service Professor at Harvard, speaking bée-| the tottering Napoleonic empire, but|deficite which reach a total of $2,244,+ were wounded a# officers of the 166th “ | r “in August, 1914, after at of} 058.11 UNITE AGAINST LADY ASTOR. |i 8. Infantry overseas. Charleroi, not a soul rance| “These institutions must face the most = | crea irgcand, recpivea the Taam thought of throwing down the re-\ serious financial crisis in thelr history,” | Laber and Liberal Candidates Com. | sulshed Seivice Crow after an enge porary Political Situation in France,” | public t buik of the French nation|he sald, “unless t responds oy Attack He has also received the Italian * 4 eat bulk o Frenc ype i ota ome » | Crom Davies was wou! sald: that: “nothing political has been |." coposed to Bolshevism, he an-| 66" days’ of noaplinl ‘Seeliat| PLYMOUTH, England, Nov, 12.—|Cros (Lieut, Davies wae | wesmaag left unchanged, especially in France"! vounced, even thouge a few “Red” | ( of their entire work lagt| Labor and Liberal candidates havelhravery, Capt. — Ire and ‘He continued: agitators may give another impres- | \, m by th forty-six hos- | joined fore in an attack upon Lady vies are reassigned to service wil “A new period in her history is be- ‘sion, The labor leaders and Socialists, ‘pit Nancy Astor's campaign to become mpany [ of the Twenty-third. wancy between 1916 and the two fol-| former. The’ proposal is that all their |! the Supreme Council. I @oWing years?” asked Herr Gothein.| Property, including Westminster Abbey| The Council during the morning's! »- “Phere are a number of reasons,” | ShOUld be sold and converted into cash | Session approved the report of the| Van Capello replied sharply, “why | SF Tellet of the debt-afflicted country. {commission which had investigated feo small a number was ordered in| q 7h, attention attracted by the idea is|conditions in Symrna, Referring to jane. Fi due largely to its source, it being|the incidents which occurred during . rirst, the Reichstag took an| brought forward by tho Statist, one of |the 1 overwhelming stand against the sub-| the widely read journais of finance and | thé landing of the Greek troops, which marine, and I could not start to build, | $84 The writer of the articie asserts |are declared to have been caused by +. because I saw myself in opposition to} 0 000 which he estimates Iingland | CK of Precautions on the part of the A the Government; second, 1 had bee £500,000,000 which he extimates England iss facing, will hang like a milestone |Greek military authorities, the Greek out of the naval service and was una- Lappy ie predecinlhtnss aroun ‘s nec le: around the nation's neck unless got |authorities are \ y race. of the technical improvements | mfkine? Re poggealty, he writes, of order be maintained in the future and > sin U-boat building and had to give|large sacrifice,” with those who have | tat there be no recurrence of similar most |ineidents, It is pointed out that ‘the military occupation of Smyrna by the the most mo in the emergenc; ‘ intimate study to the subject, and contribution the third, the Skagerrak battle caused | Greeks must be understood by them" | serious damages to our boats. Their NEW to be merely provisional, Parcs say) the contruccnat| NEW AIRSHIP MAY CARRY. SERS” 23H | her boats.” \ ef es have taken energetic meas- | ures to solve the Hungarian political | situation, according to reports from Germany had decided to live up to| | Budapest to the Lokal Anzeiger. { international law and not sink mer- | 150 ACROSS ATLANTIC | REGAIN PRRELIRG reacties Is rma: : Sir George Clerk, the. Allied emis-| chan i} " , has el | | ved von Capellg, but he said ne | Orval Dirigible Being Built Near | gary, has delivered iS stated, anulte thought that in ‘the fall of 1916 the Admiralty had issued a second order | to attack British ships because England, “poisoned against us,” had Rome Has Hollow Tube in Frame for Passengers, ROME, Nov. matum to Premier Friedrich notify- | ing him that a Conlition Cabinet must be formed within forty-eight hours er 12,—The alrdrome at that he must retire from the Premier- ship, WSs the work of U-boats very diffi- | ciampine, near Rome, is building a banc ke Seis 6 gat by mines which covered the en- |New dirigible destined to cross the At- 001 : Ure North Sea, There was a demand |lantic Ocean. ‘The airship, it is sald, HIGH SCHOOL EXPELS 150. for mine-searchers, torpedo boats | will be capagle Of travelling 3,126 miles Ham! 0. Papils Pent md motorboats, which further re-| without refueling. The frame of “duced U boat construction, he added. | J aem von Capelle asserted he! been consulted three times with| regard to submarine construction by | wilt freer rygebryiag tne createed Dr. von Bethmann-Hollweg, the first|senger carri and will be able to time, when Herr Struve (a member |*Ccommodate 150 passengers, ‘ef the Reichstag) had presented to the Chancellor a memorandum urging Increased U-boat construction, which had been signed by George Gothein i | Sapaecter Reichstag member); the sec 4 ‘ona time when in 1917 the Chancellor Armistice Day Truancy. HAMILTON, 0,, Nov. 12.—Approxi- | mately 150 students of the Junior High iehool to-day were expelled for cele+ | brating the armistice anniversaty Tues- aay instead of being at school, | students were told not to return brought ck by their parents. the | ship includes a hollow steel beam ex- tending from the prow to the stern unt Honey Saves Sugar and is inexpensive. Less milk ‘s re- quired in baking with Airline Honey— and one cup goes as far as several cups of syrup. And as for flavor and healthfuiness— there’s no comparison. WP wrote, saying +U-boat construction | /Smiust not be left out of consideration, | ; showing, von Capelle said, that the hancellor counted on a long war, ‘and third, when von Bethmann-Holl- | weg telegraphed that Deputy Fisch- beck had expressed doubts whether | Germany had enough U-boats, where- | e e upon von Capelle said he visited the| Chancellor and assured him that| f irlin everything was going well b Herr Struve wrote to Gen. von ppee HONE _‘Ludendorff urging more U-boats, von | “ Capelle added, Ludendorff replied in This trade mark frarpatens you purity and uniform Mavor, In several inexpensive sizes. At your dealer's, this matter that there was unanimity 150 Honey Recipes Free. 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