ITALIAN VICTORY
... and the enemy’* iKMsCision it meant a .serious threat Monte Ga>q>a. tiu* ! ulwark which guards the Venetian plain against invasion from the north. ...
... and the enemy’* iKMsCision it meant a .serious threat Monte Ga>q>a. tiu* ! ulwark which guards the Venetian plain against invasion from the north. ...
... were so bravely facing dangers and constant perils that they Were living in this country free practically from all fear of invasion, and saved from the horrors of war and starvation. (Applause) the the Chairman, ..Irs Mime was awarded a cordial vote of ...
... efficient way in which our R.N.R. has backed up the Navy, has, without doubt, protected our shores and our homes from the invasion the Hun hordes. Surely this faqt is enough to the City's charity! concert arranged in aid of this Fund will the Music Hall ...
... The efficient way which our R.N.R. has backed up the Navy, has, without doubt, protected our shores and our homes from the invasion the Hun hordes. Surely this fact is enough melt the City's charity A ooncert arranged in aid of this Fund will be given in ...
... civil 9 Russia, the d'aorga.n was the discipline and the Army. Similarly was not effectives had completed their ,^ 3 ' •the invasion of Italy P~^ etf .•? German methods, adapting them of* situation, were brought to Dear - Army. Wberaver one look?, the mat ...
... striking articles of this issue clever and comprehensive review by Sidney Low of the military situation Italy. shows how the invasion of Italy distinctive part of the classic strategy Prussia which invariably acts on the defensive, saving itself when in danger ...
... culture. When Turkey entered the war sihe thought that she would make a great advance towards the attainment of her ends by the invasion of the Caucasus and Northern Persia, where the population largely Turkishspeaking, and by an active propaganda in Afghanistan ...
... moment was that made no attempt mini-Ir. I*o the gravity of the immediate situation. The temfiorary defection of Russia, the invasion of Italy, the more recent reversal fortune our own front, of which the truth is slowly leaking through the oorrespoodonts' ...
... very successful entertainment on Tuesday night, when members of the section staged the play, The Last Ditch: a Tale of Invasion, creditable composition A. M. Sefton, M.A., sergeant-major of the Strathspey Company. The leading parts were taken by Lieut ...
... depend on whether the Bolsheviks hold the reins of power Russia, whether their desire far peace 'will influenced by Japanese invasion, and whether they have tbe courage to conclude a separate peace.—Renter. Amsterdam. Friday. Commenting the Chancellor's speech ...
... characterised the •Vather, hut in the evening all eyes turned glance towards the moon. An l wind rose, and the prospect of invasion faded. any other the entrance to raid shelters would been crowded with people waiting for police warning. As it was. nearlv ...
... section, many of the c of the enemy invaders as showing a German victory would mean for us. the story of the Austro-German invasion of Northern Italy comes to be told will found less terrible than that of the happenings Belgium, France, Serbia, and Russian ...