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What Again ?
Camp News
30 May 1941
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Huns Seize Panties to Make Parachutes
Camp News
17 October 1941
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EUROPEAN WAR CABLES
New Zealand Tablet
13 August 1914
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The Common Round
Observation Post
19 June 1942
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WHAT SHALL BE DONE ABOUT Germany?
Korero (AEWS)
14 February 1944
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CARE OF PRISONERS
Camp News
20 March 1942
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ALCOHOL AND THE FIGHTING NATIONS.
White Ribbon
19 July 1920
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RUSSIAN SUCCESSES AGAINST THE GERMANS; IN: THE EASTERN, THEATRE OF WAR. HORSE AND LANCE CAPTURED FROM THE GERMANS IN POLAND.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
18 November 1915
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FAMOUS FRENCH AIRMAN FALLS INTO THE HANDS OF THE GERMANS—M. GARROS, who is reported to have been captured by the Germans.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
17 June 1915
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“THE GERMANS ARE COMING.”—BELGIAN REFUGEES FLYING FROM THE ADVANCING GERMANS. Scene in the great war play “Under Fire,” now being produced at His Majesty’s, Auckland.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
27 April 1916
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GERMANS VIEWING THE DEVASTATION CAUSED DURING THEIR DESTRUCTIVE OPERATIONS IN BELGIUM. A Belgian city destroyed by the Germans, who, however, in this particular case apparently overlooked the church.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
4 March 1915
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Page 7 Advertisement 2
Camp News
21 March 1940
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GAVE HER LIFE FOR ENGLAND—BRITISH NURSE EXECUTED BY GERMANS—MISS EDITH CAVELL, the heroic Englishwoman, who has died for her country in Brussels, where she was executed by the Germans.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
16 December 1915
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VIMY RIDGE.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
19 July 1917
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A NORWEGIAN SUBMARINE.
Camp News
7 August 1942
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FRENCH SOLDIERS TAKING DEAD GERMANS OUT OF THE CONQU Allied artillery fire is having a terrible effect on the Germans is evidence, found in the enemy’s trenches during the steady advance of th
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
23 November 1916
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RUSSIAN SOLDIERS EMPLOYED WITH THE FRENCH TROOPS IN DRIVING BACK THE GERMANS ON THE WESTERN FRONT. The illustration shows a section of Russian stretcher bearers conveying their wounded comrades to a motor ambulance after an engagement with the Germans in France.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
12 October 1916
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ONE TELLING REASON WHY THE ALLIES WILL NOT RELAX THEIR EFFORTS UNTIL THE BARBARIC HUN IS FINALLY CRUSHED.—Pitiful evidence of how France is suffering as a result of the scientific barbarity of the Germans. A street scene in Peronne just after the Germans left.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
28 June 1917
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OUTPOST BATTLES.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
13 May 1915
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Page 41 Advertisements Column 3
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
21 December 1916
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CLEARING A CONTINENT—THE CAMPAIGN AGAINST THE GERMANS IN AFRICA NEARING THE END. British gun in action against the Germans. The gun on the right is in full recoil. The Huns are being gradually driven from the Continent, where they once owned huge tracts of territory.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
24 February 1916
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MARSHAL FOCH ARRIVES AT TRIANON PALACE, VERSAILLES, IN CONNECTION WITH THE HANDING OF THE TERMS TO THE GERMANS. Marshal Foch does not believe in dealing too leniently with the Germans, and his feelings are thus expressed: “Our peace must be a peace of victors, not of vanquished,”
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
3 July 1919
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Untitled
Camp News (Northern Command)
8 November 1940
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Page 28 Advertisement 1
New Zealand Tablet
11 October 1917
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AT CLOSE QUARTERS WITH THE HUN.—A FIGHT FOR GERMAN GUNS NEAR ST. QUENTIN. A military correspondent writes: “During our advance north of St. Quentin a battery of six German guns was captured, and was in the act of being taken away to the rear when the Germans launched a very heavy counter-attack with the object of getting them back. Their first wave was shot to pieces by rifle and machine-gun fire, but the second wave, such was its momentum, managed to recapture the guns before it was spent. Our reinforcements were rushed up, and a heavy barrage put over the Germans, who were eventually forced back with very heavy loss, after which all six guns were got safely away. The sketch shows the moment when the Germans were within ten yards of the British firing line. The supports are seen rushing up to reinforce, and on their arrival the tide finally turned in our favour.”
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
16 August 1917
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KRIEGSZIEL EINES FRANZOSEN !
Deutsche Stacheldraht-Post
9 July 1944
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VENGEFUL AND BARBARIC METHODS EMPLOYED BY THE HUNS IN View of portion of Boisleux St. Mare showing how the Germans ruthlessly giving up the village to the victorious Britishers. THE LIMIT TO WHICH GERMAN SACRILEGE HAS BEEN CARRIED DURIN TION OF FRENCH TERRITORY.—A DASTARDLY ACT. The Germans blow up Mont on the British western front.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
26 July 1917
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Page 6 Advertisements Column 1
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
18 January 1917
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FORT VAUX PHOTOGRAPHED FROM AN AEROPLANE AFTER ITS RECAPTURE FROM THE GERMANS AS THE RESULT OF A DEVASTATING FRENCH ARTILLERY ATTACK. This carefully prepared artillery action made this stronghold absolutely untenable for the Germans, every inch of ground being pierced by shell holes, the ground bearing marked evidence of the accuracy with which the latest types of French guns scoured the enemy’s position.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
10 May 1917
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FORMIDABLE POSITIONS IN THE VICINITY OF TALOU AND MORT HOMME, UNTIL RECENTLY OCCUPIED BY THE GERMANS AND NOW IN THE POSSESSION OF THE FRENCH. These positions were regarded as invulnerable by the Huns, but after an intense bombardment by the French, artillery, followed by a brilliant infantry attack, the Germans were compelled to yield up the ground to the indomitable French soldiers.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
14 February 1918
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SIDELIGHTS ON THE WAR
New Zealand Tablet
29 October 1914
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THE TWISTED IRONWORK OF THE MARITIME STATION AT OSTEND, WHICH THE GERMANS PULLED DOWN TO TAKE THE IRON TO THEIR OWN COUNTRY. The Belgian port of Ostend, which figured so prominently in the war, was reoccupied by the Allies on October 17 last, when a British Naval Force under Admiral Keyes, seized the port, which had been utilised as a submarine base by the Germans.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
6 February 1919
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Page 8 Advertisement 3
New Zealand Tablet
5 July 1917
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THE GERMANS CONTINUE TO PERFORM THEIR ACTS OF VANDALISM BEFORE YIELDING UP INVADED FRENCH TERRITORY TO THE BRITISH.—The City Hall at Chauny after the Huns had left, showing the destruction wrought by these modern barbarians. ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF GERMAN SACRILEGE FOR WHICH THE HUNS MUST PAY HEAVY TOLL.— Athie Church partially destroyed by the Germans in consequence of being driven back by the British on the western front.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
2 August 1917
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GERMAN U-BOAT PRISONERS CAPTURED BY AN AMERICAN DESTR UNITED STATES, WHERE THEY ARE IN CLOSE CONFINEMENT. Sinc.B bers of Germans have been interned as prisoners of war, but the first ener ing against America and brought to that country were the officers and are shown above. These Germans were rescued when the submarine was ning in November, 1917, and have since been despatched to America and Fort McPherson.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
22 August 1918
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EVERY RUSSIAN- Man, Woman and Child is at WAR !
Camp News
12 June 1942
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Untitled
New Zealand Tablet
6 February 1913
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Untitled
New Zealand Tablet
6 May 1915
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TO FIGHT POISONOUS GAS—WHAT THE ALLIED TROOPS ARE COMPELLED TO WEAR IN ORDER TO COMBAT THE BARBARIC METHODS EMPLOYED BY THE GERMANS.—A British soldier trying on the respirator, which the British War Office has asked the public to supply for the use of our troops as a protection against the asphyxiating gases that are being used as a weapon of warfare by the Germans. The soldier is wearing a piece of double stockinette, with plaited worsted ear loops, which is another pattern.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
24 June 1915
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BRITISHERS WHO HAVE COMMENCED THE OFFENSIVE IN REAL EARNEST AGAINST THE GERMANS ON THE WESTERN FRONT. A BUSY TIME WITH THE WOUNDED ON THEIR WAY TO HOSPITAL. AFTER A LONG PERIOD OF ANXIOUS WAITING THE BRITISH TROOPS RECENTLY ATTACKED THE GERMANS ON THE WESTERN FRONT, AND THEIR FURIOUS ENGAGEMENT WITH THE ENEMY, WHOM THEY MET ON TOTALLY DIFFERENT TERMS TO THE DISADVANTAGEOUS CONDITIONS WHICH EXISTED IN THE EARLY STAGES OF THE WAR, STRIKINGLY DEMONSTRATED THE EFFECTIVE CAPABILITIES OF KITCHENER’S VOLUNTARY ARMY.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
2 December 1915
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HOW GERMANY HAS DEBASED HERSELF IN THE EYES OF THE WORLD.—During their enforced retreat the Germans cut down all fruit trees and valuable shrubs as they were driven back, even in the churchyard, where they also damaged the tombstones. WHEN THE SACRILIGIOUS HUNS HAD LEFT.—A CHURCH FILLED WITH DEBRIS. Abbey Hiret, the aged priest of St. Haast, near Soissons, putting the house of God in order after the German retreat. The Germans did not respect even churches, and put them to various uses.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
2 August 1917
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PATTON’S FORCES CROSS RHINE 20,000 Germans Cut off
Highlander
25 March 1945
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THE HINDENBURG RIDDLE.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
21 June 1917
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IL CORRIERRE ILLUSTRATO
Korero (AEWS)
19 June 1944
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They Were Always LIARS !
Camp News
18 April 1941
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THIS WAR AND LAST
Camp News
12 September 1941
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Untitled
New Zealand Tablet
30 November 1883
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ECONOMY.
War Wit
1 August 1941
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THE GOOD WINE OF GERMANY.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
25 August 1910
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Unforgivable Outrage
Camp News
21 June 1940
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Unforgivable Outrage
Camp News (Northern Command)
21 June 1940
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LIVES OF THE HATIONS.
New Zealand Graphic
9 October 1897
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GERMAN SUBMARINE RUNS AGROUND NEAR CALAIS.—In avoiding mines a German submarine ran aground near Calais. The Germans set fire to the submarine, and destroyed parts of the machinery, making it useless. The illustration shows the submarine at low tide. IN THE MARSHES AND DUNES OF FLANDERS.—Mention is often made' of the probability of a naval engagement, and one wonders whether the Germans will test their strength at sea. The British sailors ardently hope that the day will not be long distant. Naturally, the Belgium coast is of great interest. The above illustration provides a good view of the dunes of Flanders, from where one can see the shell fire from a warship at sea.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
22 November 1917
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A TYPICAL INSTANCE OF THE TERRIBLE DESTRUCTION BEING WROUGHT BY THE GERMANS TO FRENCH TOWNS AND VILLAGES THAT HAVE COME UNDER THEIR MACHINATIONS. The house shown has been rudely shattered, rendering it uninhabitable, the damage being deliberately and maliciously caused by the Germans, whose systematic methods of demolishing French towns and villages before retreating under pressure have become a prominent factor in their infamous war policy. EXPERT FRENCH ELECTRICIANS TESTING AND REPAIRING THE TELEGRAPHIC AND TELEPHONIC COMMUNICATIONS IN THE CHAMPAGNE AFTER A DECISIVE BATTLE, WHICH HAS RESULTED IN A NUMBER OF ADVANTAGEOUS POSITIONS OVERLOOKING THE GERMAN LINES BEING SECURED BY THE FRENCH TROOPS. [French Army Photographic Service. By courtesy French Consulate, Auckland.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
21 March 1918
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A PATHETIC SCENE IN BELGIUM, PHOTOGRAPHED DURING THE FATEFUL AUGUST OF 1914, WHEN THE GERMANS SET OUT TO DESTROY THE PEACE OF THE WORLD.— Belgian families watching the destruction of their homes. A column of smoke can be seen issuing from the village of Termonde, which was ruthlessly fired by the Germans. Little did this group of homeless Belgians think as they watched with deep emotion the wanton destruction of everything they possessed in the way of worldly goods by a merciless foe that as a result of Germany’s infamous crimes the world was to be plunged into over four years of the most cruel sacrifice, bloodshed, suffering and devastation ever known in history.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
17 July 1919
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THE LATEST CRIME AGAINST BELGIUM
New Zealand Tablet
8 February 1917
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Notes
New Zealand Tablet
29 April 1915
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N.Z. PRISONERS AT BARDIA
Camp News
16 January 1942
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A Matron's Authority
Kai Tiaki : the journal of the nurses of New Zealand
1 April 1915
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MOWING THEM DOWN.—BRITISHERS REPELLING A GERMAN COUNTER-ATTACK EAST OF TILLOY. A military correspondent writes: — “Near Tilloy an exceptionally heavy German attack with fresh troops nearly got home. The enemy, in three great waves, crossed our barrage, though not without heavy casualties, and then under heavy rifle and machine-gun fire got up to our entanglements, which were broken by shell fire’ and in some places reached our trenches. Under concentrated machine-gun fire, however, they wavered and finally broke, leaving the ground’ strewn with bodies, in some cases two and three deep. Our infantry then left their trenches and pursued the Germans for some distance, taking prisoners and advancing their line. On the front of one of our battalions 750 killed and wounded Germans were counted.”
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
16 August 1917
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SUMMARY FOR PLATOON OFFICERS
NZ Services Current Affairs Bulletin
15 March 1943
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Overseas News of Interest
Camp News
2 April 1942
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Universities' Mission to Central Africa.
Waiapu Church Gazette
1 July 1918
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Letters from New Zealand Nurses.
Kai Tiaki : the journal of the nurses of New Zealand
1 January 1915
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ARDUOUS TRAINING
Camp News
29 May 1942
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QUARRYMEN AT WORK CONSTRUCTING UNDERGROUND DEFENCES ON THE AISNE IN FRANCE. These quarries have figured prominency in operations since September 1914, when, after the great Allied victory at the Battle of the Marne, the German retreat ended in the quarries adjacent to those shown in the picture, which are held by the French. With the French forming a veritable fortress on the border of the River Aisne and the Germans occupying another part of the quarries, the two armies are always face to face, every available means of shelter being taken by the opposing forces. The time must come when the Germans must quit these quarters in view of the increasing pressure being exerted by the French at this notable battlepoint on the River Aisne. [French Army Photographic Service, By courtesy French Consulate, Auckland.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
1 March 1917
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HIGH COMMISSIONER’S CABLEGRAM.
New Zealand Tablet
1 October 1914
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THESE MEN DID A GRAND JOB
Camp News
20 February 1942
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EMPEROR WILLIAM ON EDUCATION.
New Zealand Tablet
20 March 1891
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NATIVE BORN IN CITIES.
New Zealand Graphic
15 August 1896
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A QUARTETTE OF BRITISH TANKS IN READINESS TO GO UP DURING AN ATTACK ON THE GERMAN POSITIONS ON THE WESTERN FRONT. The remarkable capabilities of these iron monsters have been proved over and over again, and are briefly summed up by a war correspondent in the following description of a British tank recently in action in No Man’s Land:—“It lumbers out over the waste of No Man’s Land towards the German lines, mowing down the Germans with its deadly machine guns, and then, undeterred by rifle or machine gun fire, goes crashing on to and over the enemy trenches. Few Germans are brave enough to face an advancing tank, so the monster goes on uprooting the toughest of barbed-wire entanglements and trampling under it notice boards, cartridge belts, petrol tins, abandoned equipment and all the jetsam of the trenches.”
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
4 October 1917
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THE BRITISH HOSPITAL SHIP ASTURIAS, WHICH WAS SUNK BY THE GERMANS, THUS ADDING ANOTHER DASTARDLY ACT TO THE HUNS’ APPALLING LIST OF CRIMES. The Germans, who regard the Hague Convention as a “scrap of paper,” have given effect to their brutal threat that they would torpedo hospital ships, and since November 21, 1916, have torpedoed without warning the British hospital ships Britannic Braemar Castle, Gloucester Castle, Asturias, Salta, Donegal, La France and Dover Castle. The Asturias was sunk on March 26, 1917, despite the’ fact that all the proper Red Cross distinguishing marks were brilliantly illuminated. Forty-three persons were killed and thirty-nine injured. This was not the first occasion on which the Asturias had been attacked when engaged in her work of mercy as earlier in the war a German submarine discharged a torpedo at her.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
7 June 1917
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What the Germans are Like at Home.
New Zealand Graphic
14 December 1910
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ITALIAN UNIVERSITIES IN THE MIDDLE AGES.
New Zealand Tablet
5 December 1884
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Page 48 Advertisement 5
New Zealand Tablet
18 November 1915
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METICULOUS DUTCH
Camp News
7 February 1941
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THE PARROT DIED.
War Wit
1 March 1941
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German Samoa.
New Zealand Graphic
26 January 1910
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Notes
New Zealand Tablet
10 February 1916
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A Disadvantage of German.
New Zealand Graphic
28 June 1911
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BREST-LITOVSK IN HISTORY.
New Zealand Tablet
8 August 1918
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Untitled
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
2 December 1915
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GERMAN SELFSEALING TANKS
Camp News
9 February 1940
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NEWS BREVITIES
Down the Hatch
19 February 1944
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SALUTE OUR AIRMEN !
Camp News
4 July 1941
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BRITISH ENDURANCE
Camp News
18 April 1941
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This is the VOICE of the HUN !
Camp News
9 May 1941
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BISHOP OF ARMIDALE ON FRENCH BATTLEFIELDS
New Zealand Tablet
21 October 1920
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“I WAS WRONG ABOUT THE FRENCH”
Korero (AEWS)
22 May 1944
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VIEW OF FORT VAUX, WHICH HAS BEEN CAPTURED BY THE GEEMANS AFTER A TERRIFIC BOMBARDMENT.—The village of Vaux lies in a steep little valley. The fort is on the hill forming the southern side of the valley, and on the northern side the heights are covered with what are known as the Haudremont Wood and the Caillette Wood, which separate the valley from Douaumont. The Germans pushed up the valley soon after their first big attacks, and they won the greater part of the village of Vaux in the second week in March. Then they gradually worked westward in the wooded country on the heights, their object being to take the hill on which Fort Vaux stands in the rear, and also at the same time to threaten the flank of the French positions near Douaumont to the north. Commencing at the beginning of April the Germans launched massed attacks upon the fort, but failed to dislodge the French until June 2 last, when they succeeded in capturing the position after experiencing very heavy losses.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
15 June 1916
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VIEW OF THE HALL OF MIRRORS TAKEN WHILE ONE OF THE TWO GERMAN ENVOYS, HERR HERMANN MUELLER, WAS AT THE PEACE TABLE (SEEN IN CENTRE OF PICTURE). In the historic hall where the German Empire was proclaimed with glittering pomp in 1871, the two envoys of that now fallen State, Herr Mueller and Herr Bell, signed the Treaty on June 28 last without a murmur. The Germans cigned with all possible speed and without uttering a word. Not a quiver passed over their faces, not a sigh escaped them. Their entry into the hall was the most dramatic incident at the ceremony. Mueller, thin lipped, weak eyed, a drab, slim figure, and Bell, with ragged black moustache, stooping shoulders, nervously restless, bowed low to Clemenceau, to Lloyd George, to Wilson, looking around with undisguised interest upon all these leaders of countries which had brought theirs to the dust, and passed stiffly to their appointed seats. After the signing of the Treaty by the Allied potentiaries, the Germans hurriedly took their departure, being whisked away in French military cars.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
11 September 1919
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GOOD VIEW OF AIR BATTLES
Camp News
1 November 1940
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BUTCHER BOYS
Camp News
31 January 1941
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Page 3 Advertisement 2
Camp News
17 May 1940
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GOOD VIEW OF AIR BATTLES
Camp News (Northern Command)
8 November 1940
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GERMANS PULL OUT OF NETHERLANDS AS MONTY’S MEN CLOSE IN
Highlander
5 April 1945
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Modern French Artillery in Action Against the Germans.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
30 September 1915
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A RUSSIAN HOWITZER BATTERY IN OPERATION AGAINST THE GERMANS.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
23 September 1915
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A SNOWBALL BATTLE BY THE GERMANS IN RUSSIAN POLAND.
New Zealand Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic Review
13 May 1915
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THE EUROPEAN WAR
New Zealand Tablet
3 September 1914
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