Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 228, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 February 1934 — Page 15
FEB. 1, 1937
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LEFT (top to bottom) —Sinking of a German Zeppelin off the chalky coast of Kent. The waters are again smooth and placid after the huge monster of the air falls. Row on row, orphans of the war drink their frugal fare, only a little astonished and troubled as
THIS IS THE NINTH PAGE OF AUTHENTIC WORLD WAR PICTURES BEING REPUBLISHED IN THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES DAILY. THEY ARE FROM LAURENCE STALLINGS’ FAMOUS COLLECTION, “THE FIRST WORLD WAR.”
SCORES OF OTHER PICTURES OF THE WORLD WAR AND ITS CONSEQUENCES WILLBE PRINTED DAILY
children are at the swift change their lives have taken. Type of heavy Italian artillery that defended the Piave front. Hidden from view in a ditch it belched out a flaming revolt against peace and order. A grewsome task, loading the German dead into wagons. Sight of such wholesale butcheries has slight interest for the burial party which gazes curiously at
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the camera. Oncisthe dead men goose-stepped proudly through German streets, received benedictions from the clergy and praise from the government. CENTER —French children in a bomb-proof cellar at Rheims. When the siren’s scream warned of an aerial attack, children and women were rushed to the few safe places.
RIGHT (top to bottom) —A Canadian, whose interest in the war was all for the glory of His Majesty's forces, struck by a shell and fumbling in the dirt. British policewomen hastily shouting the Zeppelin alarm in London. Italian army shelters on Mount Altissimo niched among the crags and covered with snow.
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