INDEX
- Aërial torpedoes, [84]
- Agents de liaison, [19]
- Air supremacy, [46]
- Ammunition (different issues), [109]
- Anti-aircraft artillery, [92]
- Armoured motor-cars, [94]
- Army, [17]
- Army corps, [17]
- Army group, [17]
- Artillery, [19], [68], [77], [80]
- Artillery (advance), [95]
- Artillery of an army corps, [81]
- Artillery in trenches, [68]
- Artillery of a division, [82]
- Asphyxiating gas, [17], [89], [150], [152]
- Asphyxiating projectiles, [37]
- Assaulting and occupation troops, [135]
- Attack in Artois, [13]
- Automatic pistols, [121]
- Aviation, [29], [45]
- Aviators (British), [46]
- Balloons, [28], [43]
- Barrage, [44], [87], [92], [109], [138], [143]
- Bastion, [59]
- Battalions of three companies, [147]
- Battle planes, [20], [34], [36]
- Bayonet, [118]
- Biplanes, [34]
- Blockhouses, [64]
- Boardwalk flooring, [61]
- Bombardments, [40]
- Bombing planes, [36]
- Boyaux, [64], [66], [67]
- Brigade, [19]
- Burros, [105]
- Camouflage, [63], [75], [106]
- Camouflet, [70]
- Carrel, Dr. Alexis, [22]
- Carrier pigeons, [145]
- Casemates, [68]
- Cavalry, [19], [148]
- Centres of resistance, [55], [64]
- Check positions, [65]
- Citations, [127]
- Clayonnages, [60]
- Command, [22]
- Commissariat department, [20]
- Communication tunnels, [57], [64], [66], [67]
- Compressed air mortars, [84]
- Counterfiring, [88]
- Craters, [53], [70]
- Defensive, [134]
- Defensive engagements, [142]
- Destructive fire, [88]
- Dirigible balloons, [49]
- Division, [17], [131]
- Division front, [131]
- Division (General), [22]
- Division, its dispositions, [132]
- Dugouts, [57], [64]
- Engineers, [19]
- Engineers (American), [74]
- Field artillery, [86], [92], [143]
- Field batteries, [81]
- Firing tables, [87]
- “Flaming onions,” [94]
- Framework of the army, [147]
- Fronts (distance between), [52]
- Gaz-vésicant, [152]
- Grenades, [53], [117], [119]
- Gun (37 mm.), [94]
- Guns (75 mm., 87 mm.), [87]
- Guns (120, 155, 220, 270, 280, 305, 370, 400, 520, 19, 100, 240, 224, 305, 340 mm.), [80]
- Guynemer (Captain), [34]
- Harvest, [39]
- Hearing masks, [43]
- Howitzers, [83]
- Hydroplanes, [48]
- Incendiary projectiles, [37]
- Infantry, [18], [112]
- Inspections, [24]
- Instruction, [122], [157]
- Italian airplanes, [37]
- Liquid fire, [11], [17], [153]
- Listening posts, [63], [70]
- Loopholes, [62]
- Machine-gun rifle, [117]
- Machine-gun shelters, [62], [86]
- Machine-guns, [35], [113], [115], [117]
- Map (directing), [42]
- Masks, [89], [151]
- Medical department, [20]
- “Minenwerfers,” [11], [68]
- Mines and counter-mines, [69]
- Monoplanes, [34]
- Morale of the French, [58]
- Motor cars, [73], [104]
- Motors, [39]
- Munition parks, [20], [100], [101]
- Munition supply, [105]
- Neutralization fire, [89], [91]
- Observation planes, [40]
- Observation posts, [62], [66]
- Offensive engagements and their preparation, [136]
- Officers (duties of), [123]
- Office staff, [25]
- Pack transport, [116]
- Pare-éclats, [60], [66]
- Periscopes, [66]
- Pershing, General, [58], [120]
- Photographs, aërial, [41]
- Planes for directing fire of artillery and movements of infantry, [20], [43]
- Planes for reconnoitring, [20], [40], [43]
- Plants of the Germans, [38], [39]
- Post of command, [23], [144]
- Powder, [102]
- Prolonged engagements, [143]
- Protecting line of the artillery, [65], [68]
- Railway troops, [70]
- Rear organization, [18]
- Re-entrants, [59]
- Regiment, [19]
- Relief maps, [42]
- Replacing guns, [107]
- Rest hospitals, [21]
- Retubing of guns, [108]
- Rifle, [112], [122]
- Rigoles, [61]
- Rockets, [43], [44], [146]
- Salients, [59]
- Shells, 150 mm., [54], [102]
- Shelters, [54], [65]
- Shock-troops, [129]
- Signalling, [146]
- Squadrillas, [35], [36]
- Staffs, [24]
- Stations têtes d’étapes, [101]
- Strategy, [11], [14], [15]
- Supply shelters, [104]
- Support trenches, [64], [84]
- Tactics, [10], [14], [15]
- Tanks, [84], [117]
- Tear-producing gas, [17], [152]
- Transportation by road, [73]
- Transportation of munitions by railroad, [100]
- Trench artillery, [83]
- Trench knives, [121]
- Trench of attack, [67]
- Trench organization, [51], [52], [58]
- Trucks, [105]
- Verdun, [12], [144]
- Winged torpedoes, [37]
- Wire entanglements, [63], [68], [86]
- Wireless, [43]
- Withdrawal of artillery, [97]
- Wounded, transportation of, [21]
- Yser front, [11]
- Zeppelins, [48], [93]
- Zone d’étapes, [101]
Tactics and Duties
for
Trench Fighting
By
Georges Bertrand
Capitaine, Chasseurs, de l’Armée de France
and
Oscar N. Solbert
Major, Corps of Engineers, U.S.A.
16°. 35 Diagrams. $1.50 net. By mail, $1.65
000.7 (OD) 1st Ind.
War Department, A. G. O., December 21, 1917—To Major O. N. Solbert, Corp of Engineers, Office of the Chief of Engineers.
1. The manuscript forwarded with this letter has been examined in the War College Division and the opinion given that it has exceptional merit, presenting the principles governing trench warfare in such a clear and logical manner that the publication, with some changes and additions,[*] will be of considerable value to our Officers.
2. You are directed to confer with the Chief of the War College Division regarding the effecting of the changes desired.
By order of the Secretary of War
(Signed) F. W. Lewis
Adjutant General.
[*]These changes have been made.
G. P. Putnam’s Sons
New York London
GUIDE
POSTS
TO
BERLIN
FIRST CALL
BY
ARTHUR GUY EMPEY
Author of “OVER THE TOP”
12°. Illustrated. $1.50 (By mail, $1.65)
In the amazingly vivid and simple way that has made Over the Top the most widely read and talked of book in America, and the most successful war book in all history, Empey tells the new soldiers
What they want to know
What they ought to know
What they’ll have to know
and what their parents, sweethearts, wives, and all Americans, will want to know, and can do to help.
A practical book by an American who has been through it all.
The chapters headed “Smokes” and “Thank God the Stretcher Bearers” will stand among the war classics.
Here is advice, here are suggestions, overlooked in other books, that will safeguard our boys in France.
G. P. Putnam’s Sons
New York London
IT IS THE REAL STUFF
OVER THE TOP
BY AN AMERICAN SOLDIER WHO WENT
ARTHUR GUY EMPEY
MACHINE GUNNER, SERVING IN FRANCE
AUTHOR OF
“FIRST CALL”
For a year and a half, until he fell wounded in No Man’s Land, this American soldier saw more actual fighting and real warfare than any war correspondent who has written about the war. His experiences are grim, but they are thrilling and lightened by a touch of humor as original as the Soldiers Three. And they are true.
12°, 16 Illustrations and Diagrams. $1.50 net.
By mail. $1.65
TOGETHER WITH TOMMY’S DICTIONARY OF THE TRENCHES
“Over The Top with the Best of
Luck and Give Them Hell!”
The British Soldier’s War Cry, as he goes over the top of the trench to the charge