Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 229, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 February 1934 — Page 19

EEB. 2, 1931

LEFT (top to bottom) —French noncoinbatants removed from the zone of tire. .4 German soldier stands by a<* hoary old men and women, ignorant peasants. are ivhceled away from their homes. Note the apathy on the faces. French children in occupied areas are taught a strange gutteral tongue by German army teachers in an effort to shift the roots of national loyalty and culture. ' J

THIS IS THE TENTH 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 WILL BE PRINTED DAILY

German children in occupied areas toil laboriously over French verbs while French pedagogs look on. Both sides attempted to jerk out a congenital national paternity knowing well that youth forgets. German fortified line which ran from the North Sea to Switzerland. From behind these barren fortresses Germans struck at the allied lines. General Hindenburg's strategy to check the allied forces from breaking through into German territory.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

As shabby and forlorn as these posts look they were a mighty shield for Germany. RIGHT (top to bottom) —Suspected Belgians rounded up for court-martial. Swift and ruthless military justice will place them again against the same wall. "Dead men bear no tales.” A deathy celebration for “the war to end war” with its unconscious participants, grotesque and twisted, lined in formless review.

“Alms for the love of God!” Rumanian prisoners hogging for bread while a grinning little boy. two peasant women and an armed German soldier watch the sport. French infantry in support trenches give.a grim twist to the French expression for boredom, "Ennui.** INSET —Grimy but grinning over the capture of a German weapon.

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