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BERLIN AT LAST KNOWS WHAT AN AIR RAID MEANS.—Millions of subjects throughout the British Empire have heard with satisfaction to-da}/ that at last Berlin is being subjected to intense bombardment by the R.A.F., and mat bombs have fallen on many of Ae city's famous thoroughfares and buildings. Top: German troops returning in triumph from the Western Front, passing through Ae Brandenburg Cate in review. Two bombs fell in Unter den Linden near this archway, which to the people of Berlin, means much the same as the Marble Arch to Londoners. Below:-The Reichstag, seat of the German Government, which was struck b$ an incendiary bomb. This building Was burned down in 1933, and has since been partly rebuilt.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19400912.2.28.4

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Auckland Star, Volume LXXI, Issue 217, 12 September 1940, Page 5

Word count
Tapeke kupu
117

BERLIN AT LAST KNOWS WHAT AN AIR RAID MEANS.—Millions of subjects throughout the British Empire have heard with satisfaction to-da}/ that at last Berlin is being subjected to intense bombardment by the R.A.F., and mat bombs have fallen on many of Ae city's famous thoroughfares and buildings. Top: German troops returning in triumph from the Western Front, passing through Ae Brandenburg Cate in review. Two bombs fell in Unter den Linden near this archway, which to the people of Berlin, means much the same as the Marble Arch to Londoners. Below:-The Reichstag, seat of the German Government, which was struck b$ an incendiary bomb. This building Was burned down in 1933, and has since been partly rebuilt. Auckland Star, Volume LXXI, Issue 217, 12 September 1940, Page 5

BERLIN AT LAST KNOWS WHAT AN AIR RAID MEANS.—Millions of subjects throughout the British Empire have heard with satisfaction to-da}/ that at last Berlin is being subjected to intense bombardment by the R.A.F., and mat bombs have fallen on many of Ae city's famous thoroughfares and buildings. Top: German troops returning in triumph from the Western Front, passing through Ae Brandenburg Cate in review. Two bombs fell in Unter den Linden near this archway, which to the people of Berlin, means much the same as the Marble Arch to Londoners. Below:-The Reichstag, seat of the German Government, which was struck b$ an incendiary bomb. This building Was burned down in 1933, and has since been partly rebuilt. Auckland Star, Volume LXXI, Issue 217, 12 September 1940, Page 5

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