Daily British Whig (1850), 18 Feb 1916, p. 13

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

= The Daily British Whig -- 150) KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19 19 EVACUATION OF GALLIPOLI. CHURCH ON THE FIRING LINE British troops waiting under cover of shore to be transferred to the transports. Photo shows a unique chapel, somewhere in Champagne, with its member of the clergy standing to the left of the entr auditorium of the church is inderground, and it was necessaryto protect the entrance with nine layers of sand filled b That the departure was attended with danger car be seen b : bursting of a shell from a Turkish battery, just off shore PONTOON BRIDGE BLOWN UP ON THE ISONZO As is customary in warfare, all means of retreat and advance are destroyed by the enemy whe er possible Photo is striking illustration of the actual blowing up of a bridge of the pontoon type which crossed the BIDDING GOOD-BYE AND GOOD LUCK TO THE RANGERS AND LONDON SCOTTIST A scene at the railroad station at Mertlake, in Surrey I London Scottish left "or the front Isonzo River gland, on the 'thames above London, when the Rangers and N OASIS FOR THE WO NDED. Photo shows one of the newly installed machines for making ice, now being used by the French : victims of shells and fever ¥ MMANDER'S HEADQUARTERS IN THE CHAMPAGNE. i Photo shows the unusual care gone to in protecting the person, ete., of the leader of men whose responsibilities are greater than those combined of many under-officers Mere headquarters to be destroved by a too well directed shell, confusion would reign, perhaps fatally. Thus the cause for the ingenious methods of protection. Army to manufacture ice for the

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy