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 the transport of troops, 43, 44; on vehicles requisite for attacking force, 73; on remounts, food, and forage, 75; on constitution of an army, 76 n.; on the necessity for cavahy, 77 n.; on transport of horses by sea, 101 n.; on difficulties of concentration, 105, 106; on time and length of road required by Army Corps to deploy, 118 n.; on troopships in naval battle, 123; on the necessity for good weather when landing troops, 129 n.
 * Scouts, number of British, in home waters, 14, 16
 * Sea-transport of invading force, 82–95
 * Skeleton, or maintenance, crew, description of, 16
 * Soldiers, comparison of British and German, 6S
 * Submarines, number of British, 18; number of German, 18; use of, in repelling invasion, 143
 * Supply and land-transport of invading force, 70 et seq.
 * Territorial Force, British, number of, 64
 * Times Correspondent for Naval Affairs on invasion scare, 59 Tonnage of Germany's shipping, 85; amount required for invading force, 86; relation of net to gross, 89
 * Torpedo Boats, number or British, 18; number of German, 18
 * Turner, Major-General Sir Alfred, K.C.B., on invasion of England, 54
 * United Kingdom, See Great Britain
 * Weather conditions required by invading force, 119
 * Weight of armaments of the rival Fleets in the North Sea, 15
 * Wilson, Sir Arthur, on sufficiency of our Fleet to prevent invasion, 57
 * Wireless telegraphy, its use in repelling invasion, 142
 * Wolseley, Lord, on risk of invasion, 51; on tonnage allowance for sea-transport of troops, 87