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Music Trade Review

Issue: 1918 Vol. 67 N. 15 - Page 8

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Music Trade Review -- © mbsi.org, arcade-museum.com -- digitized with support from namm.org
8
THE MUSIC TRADE REVIEW
OCTOBER 12,
in whT— —
—.——^™
Uwmselves at Archangel.
WITH THE AMERICANS NEAR
SOISSONS, July 19, (8:56 A. M.) -
The Germans retreated so rapidly yes-
terday that the Americans and French
moved forward at the rate of more
than a kilometre an hour.
Officers had great difficulty in bold-
ing back the victorious doughboys
in order to keep the line straight. The
Americans wanted to go to Germany.
One company got so Car ahead that
an airplane was used to order «t
back.
Everywhere along the line the Ger-
mans were In a panic. They left their
artillery, machine guns, rifles, and
supplies, and sprinted eastward.
"We were so busy chasing Germans
we haven't had time to pay any at-
tention to the stuff they left behind
them." said one officer.
Berlin or Bust!
That's the way our men are
fighting.
Months of weary waiting, watch-
ing, and patrolling they had,
before General Foch gave the
order that permitted them to
leap out of their trenches and
put the Huns to rout.
Months of hard, gruelling pre-
paratory work behind the lines
in France; months of strenuous
exercise and iron discipline in
the training camps before they
sailed.
Liberty Bonds will do it
But, when the word came, they
were FIT—nothing could stop
them—"Everywhere along the
line the Germans were in a
panic,
Keep them fit—trained to the
minute—wanting for nothing to
help them win.
Send them reinforcements, as
many million as may be needed,
until that panic spreads through-
out the whole of Germany's
forces—until it reaches the rulers
of Germany themselves.
Buy them—to your limit
Contributed to Winning the War by
WESER BROS., Inc.
520-530 West 43rd Street, New York
1918

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