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THE GERMANS.

OFFICERS WITH DOG WHIPS (Received Nov. y, 8.40 a.m.)

London, November's. During the recent lighting in the North the Allies' Red Cross corps picked up 700 wounded Germans, and removed them to a held hospital, winch the Germans shelled during the night, not knowing that there Germans within. The damapo was small.

Evidence of German officers driving their men forward ia accumulating. A dead officer way found with ji dog whip in one hand ;>nc\ a rovlvcr m the other.

Soldiers facing the British glad'v use opportunities to escape. The British found many Germans hanged on trees.

(Received Nov. 9, 9 a.m. ) Paris, November 8. Hie Germans have adopted a new ruse, that of soldiers working in the Held:, dressed in women's attire. TheFrench shelled a number of grenadiers disguised as potato-pickers." An eye-witness of the St. Mihiel lighting says the German losses wero frightful. The Germans are now closely hemmed in in front ami on both flanks.

General yon der Golta issued a pro claniation at Brussels stating that hostages had been taken in all towns near railways liable to damage, and they would he shot if damage to Hie railways was attempted. Amsterdam, Novemhor S Ihe interment of British of m iii tar v age in Germany is proceeding rapidly, including 2000 in Hamburg and 130 vi Frankfurt.

r-ocal newspaper* state that many trains conveying German infantry,

THEY KEEP ME FREE. . "1 used to suffer considerably from indigestion and liver trouble/ says Mr James Healy. "Yorkdene," Eden A r ale road, Mt, Eden, N.Z. "Having tried several so called cures with no good effect I followed the advice of a friend and took a course or Chamberlain's Tablets. They jjavn me immediate relief, and T was soon rid of indigestion. Now I take them regularly and find they keep me free from my old eomnjbint." Sold by all chemists and storekeepers.

The Manawatu. Sbtn*- ib close at hand. Men folk in need of new outfits should visit the Peru Marche and :-e« the high-class Suits there mg—quite equal to tailor make and fit at much less cost. Spence and Speneo have also on hand great selections of Youtha' Suits and Boy»' Suits in the latest styles.

cavalry, and guns are passing Brussels and Louvain towards German v. , . London, November 8. ru i Tlmes states that Prince Charles of Hohenzollern, who is King Albert's brother-in-law, superintended the removal of the furniture from a looted house in Brussels; and adds that a Belgian noble was allowed to search the Brussels depot, where he found 200 packing cases full of plunder. The conduct of the Germans who occupied the house is unprintable.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/FS19141109.2.15.4

Bibliographic details

Feilding Star, Volume XI, Issue 2499, 9 November 1914, Page 2

Word Count
443

THE GERMANS. Feilding Star, Volume XI, Issue 2499, 9 November 1914, Page 2

THE GERMANS. Feilding Star, Volume XI, Issue 2499, 9 November 1914, Page 2

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