General Sarrail, commanding the Allied armies in Greece, making his first landing in Salonika | Frontispiece |
| FACING PAGE |
President PoincarÉ on a visit to the front | 18 |
“Of another house the roof only remained, from under it the rest of the building had been shot away” | 48 |
The stone roof over this glass chandelier in the Arras cathedral was destroyed by shells, and the chandelier not touched | 50 |
General Franchet d’EspÉray | 70 |
King Constantine of Greece and commander-in-chief of her armies | 102 |
“In Salonika the water-front belongs to everybody” | 122 |
“On one side of the quay, a moving-picture palace, ... on the other a boat unloading fish” | 124 |
Outside the Citadel, which is mediÆval, Salonika is modern and Turkish | 126 |
“The quay supplied every spy—German, Bulgarian, Turk, or Austrian—with an uninterrupted view” | 139 |
“Hills bare of trees, from which the snow that ran down their slopes had turned the road into a sea of mud” | 154 |
American war correspondents at the French front in Serbia | 160 |
Headquarters of the French commander in Gravec, Serbia | 170 |
After the retreat from Serbia | 176 |
The ruined village of GerbÉviller, destroyed after their retreat by the Germans | 190 |
“Through these woods ran a toy railroad” | 192 |
A first-line trench outside of Verdun | 200 |
A valley in Argonne showing a forest destroyed by shells | 208 |
War in the forest | 216 |
A poster inviting the proprietors of restaurants and hotels and their guests to welcome the soldiers who have permission to visit Paris, especially those who come from the districts invaded by the Germans | 228 |
All over France, on Christmas Day and the day after, money was collected to send comforts and things good to eat to the men at the front | 232 |
A poster advertising the fund to bring from the trenches “permissionaires,” those soldiers who obtain permission to return home for six days | 236 |
“Very interestin’. You ought to frame it” | 252 |
“They have women policemen now” | 262 |