GOLD NOW THE WORST ENEMY.
MEN FROZEN STIFF IN THE TRENCHES. SEHajAKT'S HEAVY LOSSES ON BELGIAN COAST. iltecovcd 0.50 a.m.) LONDON, Norrmber 25. An eyewitness at KrcncrTs headr ( carters, in a dispatch dated Mondayrta«-d that the cold wa.- affrrting both sides more than the operation, lie mm wrp no lonjrr suffering thr misery of mud and siush. but arter a nipn in thr trenches many arc «uff with cold, and have to be carried out, whDe others have hern taken to tlif hosf.; I suffering from frostbite. Toe aviator? after their li.uc to be lifted out of their machines. The artillery bombardment i-ontinue? day and night, the enemy Csis? giant howit.Trr« and al-o a new gun who-o discharge is silent, but it has done no damage .-o far. A travclW just retornH to Kngland tatcs that tho British w ar ih. P -, fcfl?d so many on thr Belgian coast that the corpus lay for a month unbnried. Tdc other day a train of thirty iarrrag°s passed Ghent with the blinds A sentine! showed him the interior, filled to the roof with bodies, which were being seat to (■γ-hhth-
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Bibliographic details
Auckland Star, Volume XLIV, Issue 282, 26 November 1914, Page 5
Word Count
188
GOLD NOW THE WORST ENEMY.
Auckland Star, Volume XLIV, Issue 282, 26 November 1914, Page 5
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