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Show LITTLE RELIEF FROM SUBMARINE FREIGHT Special Cable to The Tribune. BKRMN. Sept. 30. The Rhine-West-phallan Gazette. controlled by the Krupps, in an article on the possibilities of securing Germany's food supply by a cargo submarine service, declares that it is wrong to build great hopes on the success of the Deutschland. "Ti supply our needs in cotton alone." the paper says, "woi.ld take at least twenty-live Dewtschlands, and that is the least of all our needs. The submarine service cannot bring any noteworthy relief re-lief to the blockade. "If it be true that the oarer of dyes which we sent to the United States was important, the trifle of copper and nickel brought back In return is of little value. The semi-official press, which declares that the blockade is now broken, is contrail con-trail lr-ting the facts, am I Its intentions are unite obvious. It is attempting to prove to the German nation that the submarine sub-marine warfare is henceforth useless." |