Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Jan 1917, p. 17

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A # The Daily British Whig~- KINGSTON, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1917. - "Victory is Certain, I Give You My Word en 2 . > A French seaplane in the harbor at Dunkirk, France, just about to be launched. Dunkirk is a channel station and base for a French seaplane flotillia, from where they start out for bombdropping operations on Zebrugge. "As Hard as Nails"; mud-bespattered Canadian privates from Trench duty. (Photo. to right.) "Victory is certain. 1 give you my word on that" So said General Nivelle, of Verdun, France's new Ueneralissimo. "(Above.) The illustration to the left shows men of a British battalion occupying a German dugout. They are seen just inside the entrance. Over the door : \ way the German notice-board still remains in position, with its lettering Embarking & serious case. This wounded sailor is being i " Tr . es w i CR to warn off intruders on the privacy of the ariginal inmates. slung on board by means of a Neil Robertson stretcher, which \ > : prevents the patient from being injured in the process. also saw service in. Pervia, and then made another remarkable journey back to Odessa, to the Dobrudja. "Probably no unit of the British forces," safif.s recent Reuter act those that fell to these devoted \ 4 Rie yy 3 ps .

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