Newsreel XXVIII

Oh the eagles they fly high

In Mobile, in Mobile


Americans swim broad river and scale steep banks of canal in brilliant capture of Dun. It is a remarkable fact that the Compagnie Generale Transatlantique, more familiarly known as the French Line, has not lost a single vessel in its regular passenger service during the entire period of the war


RED FLAG FLIES ON BALTIC


“I went through Egypt to join Allenby;” he said, “I flew in an aeroplane making the journey in two hours that it took the children of Israel forty years to make. That is something to set people thinking of the progress of modern science.”


Lucky cows don’t fly

In Mobile, in Mobile


PERSHING FORCES FOE FURTHER BACK

SINGS FOR WOUNDED SOLDIERS; NOT SHOT AS SPY


Je donnerais Versailles

Paris et Saint Denis

Le tours de Nôtre Dâme

Les clochers de mon pays


HELP THE FOOD ADMINISTRATION BY


REPORTING WAR PROFITEERS


the completeness of the accord reached on most points by the conferees caused satisfaction and even some surprise among participants


REDS FORCE MERCHANT VESSELS TO FLEE

HUNS ON RUN


Auprès de ma blonde

Qu’il fait bon fait bon fait bon

Auprès de ma blonde

Qu’il fait bon dormir


CHEZ LES SOCIALISTES LES AVEUGLES SONT ROI


The German government requests the President of the united States of America to take steps for the restoration of peace, to notify all the belligerents of this request and to invite them to delegate plenipotentiaries for the purpose of taking up negotiations. The German Government accepts, as a basis for the peace negotiations, the programme laid down by the President of the United States in his message to Congress of January 8th, 1918, and in his subsequent pronouncements, particularly in his address of September 27th, 1918. In order to avoid further bloodshed the German government requests the President of the United States to bring about the immediate conclusion of a general armistice on land, on the water, and in the air.

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