THE WILD ... OF OCTOBER
... THE WILD/Sj OF OCTOBER ...
... THE WILD/Sj OF OCTOBER ...
... Japan Militant Some Glimpses of Life Among the Efficient Soldiers of Nippon ...
... Of the African Ivory Coast Mr. W. B. Seabro er before pictured Taken by a Recent Expedition ...
... I OPENING of the ART EXHIBITION SEA SON Pictures from the Two Great Paris Shows. THE PARIS SALON Societe Nationale des Beaux Arts (2) Society des Artistes Francoises The leading art institutions are now opening their doors in Paris in the same way as ours are now opening in London. The two chief exhibi tions in Paris are the Academie des Artistes Franpaise and the Societe Nationale des Beaux ...
... . FRENCH WOUNDED RESTING ON STRAW IN A VILLAGE CHURCH i DRAWN BY E. MATANIA FROM MATERIAL SUPPLIED. 1915 Copyrighted in the U.S.A. i i i i i I.. i This little church in Northern France lies close to the fighting lines, and is used by the French Red Cross to shelter wounded soldiers who are being moved out of the danger zone. The wounded are arranged in rows down both sides of the church and ...
... i The Proclaiming of the Emperor: ^Where the Ceremony Took Place. ...
... News From Three Capitals!* 3a)rjarch's Funeral in Jerusalem Herr Hitler Opens Berlin Motor w ancj the People See the £47 10s. Car M. Lebrun's Retirement ...
... After Belgium, Serbia, Roumania, and France, it is the turn of Italy. The soldiers who re treated across the Friulian plain, marching day and night with little rest and less food to save their guns before they could be overwhelmed by sheer weight of numbers, were accompanied by large numbers of civilians from the invaded districts. Old men, women, and children joined the throng that poured ...
... Bimbo Goes to the Mines: An Episode in the Life of a Young Kaffir in fhe Rand Gold Fields ...
... In Quest of By ASHLEY COURTENAy G ood Hotels BexfiiK Maintains Its Steady Succeeding Waves \eputation, Unaltered by o\ Fashion ...
... J Part of Italy long and low and whitc- lrough an outer gate, and now wearing services in the field is rarely publicised. and orderlies are accustomed to acclaim from the general public, ever stinting in their praise of the 1 S'ngly from the often overworked 'lie! f^Ve sucre(' a more than usually fth' victims have mostly been ls experience, it has been stated that e within the ranks of the R ...