Difference between revisions of ".MzQ.MTQ2Mw"
From transcribe
(Created page with "so annoying. Thank Leffie for the postcard of the broom at Beacon Hill. It is quite good but one would like to see the salt water indicated for that is such a set off to the...") |
Rbcm.admin (Talk | contribs) m (Protected ".MzQ.MTQ2Mw" ([Edit=Allow only administrators] (indefinite))) |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
+ | 75 | ||
+ | |||
+ | 3/ | ||
+ | |||
so annoying. | so annoying. | ||
− | Thank | + | Thank Zeffie for the postcard of the broom at Beacon Hill. It is quite good but one would like to see the salt water indicated for that is such a set off to the yellow. |
− | The news shells that both sides use with very quick acting fuses make one respect shellfire a great deal more. They hardly make a mark on a metalled road | + | The news shells that both sides use with very quick acting fuses make one respect shellfire a great deal more. They hardly make a mark on a metalled road & there being no crater the burst is low & widely scattered. |
I hope the Boche like ours. Soon I may see the result of all this noise from our guns | I hope the Boche like ours. Soon I may see the result of all this noise from our guns | ||
+ | |||
+ | BC Archives, MS-0055 Box 15 File 2 / CREASE FAMILY / Letters from Arthur Douglas Crease to his brother, Lindley Crease, 1917. |
Latest revision as of 14:28, 25 June 2015
75
3/
so annoying.
Thank Zeffie for the postcard of the broom at Beacon Hill. It is quite good but one would like to see the salt water indicated for that is such a set off to the yellow.
The news shells that both sides use with very quick acting fuses make one respect shellfire a great deal more. They hardly make a mark on a metalled road & there being no crater the burst is low & widely scattered.
I hope the Boche like ours. Soon I may see the result of all this noise from our guns
BC Archives, MS-0055 Box 15 File 2 / CREASE FAMILY / Letters from Arthur Douglas Crease to his brother, Lindley Crease, 1917.