Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 233, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 February 1934 — Page 11

FEB. 7, 1934

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LEFT (top to bottom) — "On, on oh my soul." Headlong retreat of the Russians on the eastern front, 1917. Tchaikowsky’s mournful plaint twisted into a ribald jeer. German infantry breaking through barbed wire a* they plunged ahead with confused motive and pur104*. “Quo vadis!” (Whither goest thou?) The Uhlan

THIS TS THE FOURTEENTH PAGE OF AUTHENTIC WORLD WAR PICTURES BEING REPUBLISHED IN THE INDIANAPOLIS miTY 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 DAILA

grey has no answer but the blind and futile trust, “Gott mitt uns.” French veterans in front line trenches as home newspapers reveal a kaleidoscope of news Fiench pierce twenty-five-mile front, take 10,000 prisoners ,* British in seven days have smashed ten German divisions; great general offensive opens.” RIGHT —British struggling through the slough at

ties _

the Somme. Stubborn mules and a soggy stretch of land were the least discomforts of the war. Aerial view of a battlefield on the western front. Hindenburg, the Kaiser and Ludendorff in conference. The kaiser’s ambitions for a far-flung empire were used skillfidly as a pawn by cunning European politicians to burst the war clouds on an unwitting world.

No earthquake’s wrath, but the effect of German long-range bombardment on Paris. “Killed in action.” Burial of a Canadian officer at Vimy. Bareheaded and silenced, his men pay last tribute. * Collecting casualties at a British field dressin station. The weary wounded watch in painful languo _ %

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