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Date

1900 - 1949
14 1910-1919

Countries

England

Regions

London, England

Access Type

14

Type

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Illustration

... forces. The above caricature, by M. Jolliot, was one of the exhibits. As regards its subject, we muit leave the drawing to speak for itself, as no explanation of it has been supplied beyond the words in French that appear upon it, doubtless in allusion ...

Illustration

... with its dark, slowly moving figures standing out in silhouetted clearness of outline against the light in the distant sky, speaks eloquently of the incidents which must be part of the everyday life of the brave men at the Front. piece to fire is another ...

Illustration

... we reproduce. The soldiers seen crossing a bridge are on their way to relieve their comrades, *nd their steadfast resolve speaks in their sturdy gait, which is purposeful and expressive. The reflections In the stream and the woodwork of the bridge are ...

Illustration

... curious and interesting as representing, in each case a characteristic expression. Nos. I and 2 are two leaders on, so to speak, the outer fringes of the world-war operations : Geifer a I Botha, the great leader of the South African Union forces in the ...

Illustration

... drawings. The reference is to Mr. Churchill's speech at Liverpool, in September last, when the First Lord of the Admiralty said, speaking of the apparently incurable shyness of the German Fleet, and its timid sheltering behind the harbour m.ne-fields -7-5, ...

Illustration

... employment for that purpose—the incident being suggested as taking place during trench-fighting in North-Eastern France. Speaking of the German mortar, a correspondent says, In trench-warfare it is a weapon to be reckoned with, as it throws a murderous ...

Illustration

... protected by parapets of earth and concrete. They are connected with each other by underground teleohone. telautograph, or speaking-tube. The predicted range is sent to the guns, and the *• predicted time is given by a beL1.—{Drawn ...

Illustration

... Tekeh and Cape Helles, V beach, between Cape Helles and Sedd-ul Bahr, and S beach, in Morto Bay. An official correspondent speaks of •' the desperate struggle which raged all day for W beach and the adjoining hills. Just at daylight (he continues) ...

Illustration

... FRENCH WOMEN MUNITION-WORKERS: M. ALBERT THOMAS SPEAKING AT SAINT-CHAMOND. ld M. Albert Thomas, French Under-Secretary of State for Munitions, who recently Tisited London, consulted with Mr. Lloyd George, and subsequently assured the French nation of ...

Illustration

... Passehendaele, Mr. Philip Gibbs remarks that the overspreading swampy mud all the battlefield is just now worse than ever. Speaking of one part of the advance, he tells how battalions of fighting wen' j busy, not with their rifles, but with shovels and ...

Illustration

... matchless heroism, such as those achieved by our men in the Dardanelles pTp^itinn, have been done and are being done, so to speak, by the hundred day after day, it would be invidious, and, indeed, really impossible, to particularise, or draw comparisons ...

Illustration

... party halt and the man earth. does so and touches i key, the operator at the base should receive the signal and be able to speak directly with the party laying the line. If the base operator does not receive the signal, it shows that the wire has been ...