TABLE OF DEATH.
GRIM DISCOVERY. A grim discovery has been made in the village of Chevregny, Aisne, which formed part of the German front for many years during the war. While cleaning a cellar near his houso a peasant came across an underground corridor, which led to a war-time German dug-out. In the dug-out •fe-'ere the bodies of 50 German soldiers. Some were sitting at a table, and others were lying on rough beds. Their rifles were hanging on the walls. It is believed that these soldiers wero asphyxiated by a gas shell.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 19974, 16 June 1928, Page 2 (Supplement)
Word Count
93TABLE OF DEATH. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXV, Issue 19974, 16 June 1928, Page 2 (Supplement)
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