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Association’s Insignia Beacon to Tommies as
sy.A» 1 . J 1 .
iney Plod Along Road From Front to Medical
v ’ At
Huts Built Just Before a Battle Begins. ,
|
This is a first-hand story of the Walking Wounded. John Oxenham
went to the British fromt. He gaw the Walking Wounded, He helped the
Yo M. 0. A do things for them. This is what he gaw and what the Y, M, (.
\, did. Alimost everyhody in England knows John Orenham. He has been
publishing stories for twenty years. America knows him hést for his mix-‘
stomary “Pageant of Darkness and Light,” produced in Bogton, Baltimore,
Cincinnati, C'leveland and Detroit, ag the “World in Boston” the "II'OI’M’
in Baltimore” and so on, At least three hundred thousand Americans have
taken part in it, ‘
By JOHN OXENHAM. 1
The long rolling sweep of slightly
¢'evated land on which stood Wiyts
chnete and Messines was once a pros
perous and smiling countryside, Now,
Wytechaete and Messines are only
handfuls of rubble. It is all an abom
ination of desolation and death—a
cratered, crevased land, pited and!
pockmarked with shell holes, Its lm—l
¥ harvest ie mud, barbed wire, the
remnants and refuse of the great bat.-
tle. “and many never-to-he-forgotten
memories,
Now indeed it is busier than ever it
wns hefore, but now with death as|
onte with life. For, from somewhere [
back there. the camouflaged big guns
are hurling death and deqtrumlnnl
into the driven-back German lines,
night and day without ceasing, and
the enemy does not always take his
MAaying quietly, The ground we now
occupy, after driving him out, has
miffered flery torment from both sides
and bears the tragic markse of it,
¢ Walking Is Hard.
Tt s arduous walking there even for
#.At and healthy man in full posses
&fon of all his limbs and his wind. To
the hroken men coming down from
;x fight it must have been a verita
s purgatory, a Via Dolorosa from
which the imagination shrinks. T was
wading through its mud and dodging |
ite pltfulln\ but a few days ago. So
T know.
But a great and imperishable mem
ory of good deads nobly done attaches |
to Messines and thousands of mo‘n'
I%" recall them as long as they live,
But for them, indeed, many of the
m-n might never have had the chance
oga'\'nr recalling anvthing again.
_Before this, the Canadlans In their
%’*mm:"m fizht at Vimy Ridge, and
the Australlans at Polvgon Wood
and Glencourse and the Menin Road,
and the New Zealanders before Pass
cheéndnel had received the prompt as
sistrnce of their Y. M, C. A's as they
_eame out of their ights, and the value
of that assistance had been so ob. |
vious, and had recelved such grateful |
sc'\tnlflon from headquarters, that|
hen the great advance nt Messines |
was planned, the British Y. M. (', A
was taken Into consultation, and m‘-I
rangements were made for succoring
the wounded on a scale never before
attempted.
* The director of medieal service had
it all most carefully planned out be
forehand with their leaders. The ad.
vance was to be along such and such |
es, The wounded who could wnlk!
; uld come down from the advance
ing stations, about 100 yards be
% d the front, by such and such
cks to the Cors collecting posts
Ifway down, and so, by other clear
indicated tracks to the rear, where,
the railway evacuation stations, the
bulance trains awalted them. .
ery road at the rear would he
cked and jammed with the where
ithal to consolidate the advance, the
of which was never for one
ent doubted—ammunition wag
service motors crammed with
i , guns, ,Hmbfrl. fleld lkitdhens,
, horses, mules. No room for
S ,ndc‘ men in such a maelstrom,
- 8 thev'were to keep to their own
" marked tracks, where at all events
- they bou'd take their time and walk
. unhindered nnd unhindering.
B acks Nearest the Firing Line.
L 80, behind the nine-mile bat
et nts tlie night before the ad
. vanee, in four-and-thirty different
I 8 little mushroom shacks of
or. corrugated iron, sods, any
~ thing that would afford a semblance
% shelter were hastily erected and,
th the help of limbers, service wa
“gons, and motors, were amply sup
plied with all necessaries. and above
Al with the choicest spirlts among
‘t‘hose men who carry their lives in
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their hands and their hearts on their |
sleeves in the device of the Redl
Triangle. There are two or thro«i
leaders to each post and a number of
picked orderlies,
shat little Red Trlangle on the
black ground hag done more to win,
this year, and still ymuch more mj
save men's bodies and souls, than we |
at home as yet fully recognize. But!
the army chlefs out there know it
to the full and their appreciation is|
large and warm. To hundreds of;
thousands of our men it represents a
new evangel --the gospel of practical
and mogt genlal (C‘hristianity. It has|
come to a new birth, and has opened |
Ilt.« lusty new-horn arms wide ¢-nnughi
to take in the whole world, !
The Red Triangle asks no ques- |
tions, requires no creeds, when it of- |
fers its help, Like the Samaritan in |
the parable, it sees simply the need|
and to the uttermost of its nnwor}
supplies {t. Wherein Is a mighty les
son for the churches and for all an
ns, If we have the wisdom to learn!
ft—well! The Red Triangle has|
learned on flery flelds the way to|
win men, [
The nearest posts were not more |
than 250 vards from the actual hattle |
front. The Red Triangle had attain- !
ed one among its many summits an
desire. It wag no longer merely an|
adjunct to advance camps and restl
camps. At last it had its regular
place of service on the hattlefield. nrAI
Irunzl-d and ordered by headquarters,
Innd ite leaders were invited . the |
medical conferences which Rf‘l“?d'
the program for dealing with the|
wonnded, i
At 3:30 a. m. on June 7 the curtain |
went up to the tune of the explosion |
of the great mines, and the roar and|
crash of the barrage hegan, All night |
long the Red Triangles had been!
toiling ltke busy ants and—do permit |
it!—genial-faced uncles! The flresl
were burning brightly, kettles galore |
were steaming, chocolate cakes, and
|nlhc-r comforts were all lald out|
llmnd,\' and the eager-faced workers|
waited, tight-strong, for the event|
land for their work to begin.
I The First Wounded.
The men went over the top follow
ing the traveling line of fire, and a
few minutes later the front posts
were receiving their first guests, wel
coming them with cheery words,
handling out hot drinks, coffee,
cocoa, lemonade, beef broth, choco
lates and cakes. and speeding them
on their way down the slippery
tracks to the next house of call,
where just the same attention await
ed them-—and so to the next, and the
next, till they arrived at last at the
railway evacuating post. And how
some of them would ever have reach
ed there without the assistance of
|the Red Triangle it isghard to say.
Some could barely stumble along,
|faint with loss of blood and dazed
with the horrors of that rush through
the hell-fires of No Man's Land.
Some had to sit down every hundred
vards. They helped one another and
1 got along somehow. And, no matter
what their injuries, the Red Triangle
put a bit of new life into them at
{each stopping place.
One irrepressible joker indeed ex
pressed the belief that if he died on
the road "“one of you blooming fel
lows would be waliting at the gate of
hea\:en with another cup of cocoa for
| me.’
'| BEvery man whose wounds permit
ted of his walking walked that day.
| The stretcher-bearers had their
hands full to overflowing of the too
|'badly broken. But as they came
down all were succored, the German
| wounded exactly as our own, To the
| Red Triangle a wounded man is al
iman in need, and they are there to
HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think — SU
supply the need of every wounded
man, even though this one may have
blown off half the face of that one
alongside him a minute or two be
fore. Our man would have done the
same for his enemy if he could and
without doubt the German casualties
were of our making.
There were ghastly enough
woundsg ?an among the walking
cases, and soon every one of the four
and-thirty little aid posts was a
blessed center of bleeding humanity,
with clotheg and flesh in shreds, with
faces gory and haggard and twisted
with pain. At times no face what
ever could be -seen, nothing but
bloody bandages: hastily fixed by the
stretcher bearers under flre. But in
most cases there was a mouth some
where, and if it could by any means
drink .and eat, it felt 100 per cent
happier for these things and thou-
Imndn per cent better for the broth
erly love that had provided them
right there in the very thick of things
and just at the exact moment when
they were most needed, It is doing!
exactly the right thing at exactly the
right moment which is more than
ever needed nowadays. It is that
which will help to rebuild all life.
There has been, unnecessarily, so
much of the reverse of this spirit on
every side since we tumbled inte this
hideous world war,
Not One Man Groans.
I can not refrain from quoting the
words of one good worker up there
that day. He savs the experiences of
it.he day left indelible impressions on
| his mind, as, indeed, how could they
| fail to do—“A sense of horror at the
|dread price at which even an over-
Iwhelmlng success has been purchased.
| The horror of blood everywhere. It
|is horrible, horrtble. A sense of
|amazed admiration at the fortitude,
| courage, and modesty of our men,
Nos one groan or whine did I hear as
|1 moved about among them, from 4 in i
the morning till 6 at night, and again
{from 12 at night till & next morning,|
C‘onstantly in and out between close
ly laid stretchers, not one man madel
|a groan, not one man pitied himeself, ;
[but even the most sorely wounded |
Imw!ur(-d their pain and the additional
| pain of redressing without a murmur.
| The man to whom the lifting of his
ihmxd and shoulders, so that he might
| drink, must have given additional
| pain, gave no sign save of his grate
| ful appreciation. The man whose
Iwounded foot 1 accidentally touched
|as he sat on a crowded bench, met my
japology by smilingly saying it was
inothing. The man whose jaw was snl
badly smashed that he could not have |
Ia drink, did not repine; the men
;whose wounds were such that drink
| must not be given them were just as
'grateful for a spoonful of water with
| which to wet their parched lips and
| throats as though for a cupful. The
| courage and fortitude of the men is a |
| thing never to be fbrgotten.. And
'their modesty! In normal times we
|have to limit supplies and no man is
|allowed to buy more than three bars
'of chocolate. On this day we were
luslng Fry's—which breaks most easi- I
{ly into half bars—and almost everyl
{man had to be asked to take a second. i
| Their chivalry also knows no
ihmmds, as just this incident wllll
|show. About 2 o'clock we had to re
-Ifuse drink€ of water to unwounded
| German prisoners, as our water sup- I
ply was very nearly giving out and
'we could not be sure of the early ar- I
{rival of a water cart. Almost imme
|diately 'T caught a wounded British
| soldier offering, hefore he had touched
it himself, a drink of his cocoa to two
unwounded Germans.”
Risk of Work.
Roughly speaking, all the wounded
| had first claim, next them the stretch
er-bearers, whose work is as risky
and taxing as any, and lastly, the
battalion runners who keep ‘up the
difficult communications between
front and rear and between the lines,
la business full of risks and terribly
trying.
The German wounded were amazed
at thelr unexpected good treatment.
Unwounded German prisoners acting |
as stretcher-bearers appreciated it soI
highly that one batch, who accident- |
ally got lost by their guard, came
| back to one of the stations to carry
more wounded—and get another
drink, ¥
The actual cost to the Red Triangle
of that three days' service was 2,000
pounds sterling, or about SIO,OOO. The
actual gain to humanity—who shall
assess {t? It runs beyond the com
putation of all the flgures in the
world, for it touches men’s souls,
Here are 3me telling little inci
dents: Afte?™ his refreshment—and
until you have been through the fire
and smoke which has left your throat
like a lime kiln, and your nerves
quivering. and your limbs shaking in
spite of themselves, to your Intense
disgust, and are plastered with mud
and blood from head to foot, you can
not fully appreciate the vivifying
wornder of a clean drink of hot lemon
ade or coffee or beef hroth or cocoa.
Apart from the actual joy of them,
there is the unfailing glory and won
| der of beinz still allve after going
| down into hell over there, the magical
flavor of life and safety which adds
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Inasmuch
By John Oxenham.
As you did it to my brother, ?
You did it unto Me,
His Wounds were Mine, his hard
ships Mine, 3
Wa bore them all for thee, §
It was | whom you did succor, s
When hi trod that toilsome track; |
He had been in hell, and you knew
it well, I
When you gave us weicome back. é
[ am there with all my brothers, .
Who give theirtall for Me {
Can Life grudge aught to those !
who ;;ought . §
At such a cost to set her free, g
And on their painful crosses
bougnt ¢
Har Larger Liberty? ;
its keen and dearly bought zest, After
his refreshment, one man emptied his
pockets of every farthing he pos
sessed, three francs and fourpence—
halfpenny in English money, and in
sisted on giving it to the Red Tri
angle by way of acknowledgment. An
officer who received assistance at the
same time laid down a 50-franc note.
All honor to them both, but the Tom
my gavé even more than his master,
Like the w@low, he gave his all.
A man came staggering in, on the
third day, one solld cake of mud from
head to foot. His story was very sim-
Iple'-as the greatest deeds are. He
was badly wounded in the arm. His
chum at the same moment had his
legs shattered and rolled into a shal
low trench Mmif full of water, The
other followed to see what he could
do, and found his chum’s head under
water. He held it up lest he should
drown, and sat by him, holding it up,
for two and a half days till he died,
and only then staggered down to the
~station to be seen to. That will take
a lot of peating.
| Chum First.
Another—a burly Australian, badly
Iwnunded, head all bandages, shaking
with fatigue, was brought down in an
‘ambulance, He was handed a cup of
‘hot coffee and was needing it badly.
'He had put it to his lips when he
glanced round at the ambulance and
saw a chum just being carried out,
Imore sorely wounded even than him
self. He put down the coffee un
tasted, staggered back to his friend
and bent over him, “Skinny, old
Iman. I hope you'll opull through.
Good-bye!”—and then staggered back
and drank up his coffee.
Chum first—then self. That is one
of the many mighty lessons men are
learning out there. For this terrible
stress of war, with all its unhuman
'and unbalancing conditions, has pro
|dn<-ed in the minds of men a state of
absolute objectivity. The things that
'appeal to the oufer senses are the
things thut bulk largest—llife, death,
shelter, food, rest, mud or worse
things—and glmdship-—-palishness. it
I.you like. That is one of the great
vital and redeeming forces. What
lwlll a man not do fgr his chum?
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Greater love hath no man than this—
and many a man, unknown to all save
One-—has proved it in his dying. His
expression of it may be amazing at
times and his language sulphurous
and hair raising, but the. newel of
that greater love Is there, like the
pear] amid the putrifying oysters, and
its surroundings can not impair the
luster of it. |
Dr. Kelman's text to the men one
day is an old story but worth repeat
ing. “Faint, yet pursuing' said the
doctor. “Fed up but sticking it,”
translated the men. And that, from
my own experience, is the spirit of
them all .
No human man bwt is sick of the
horror and waste of it all. But\we
are in it, not of our own will, but
of direct necessity. and the men in
tend to see it through. You see it
in every hard-set face as you pass the
‘soldiers in mudcaked thousands
tn}mping steadily to the: front,
‘ hey also intend something more—
‘that, when this dread thing Is over,
Ithe world shall be a better place to
live in, for those who are lef*‘nd for
those who are to come. And&in the
still greater work which is to follow
the job on hand, the Red Triangle
will have its appointed work. It may
prove the salvation of the State as it
has meant the salvation of her hroken
sons,
Canadian Universit
Back of Firing LirlTe
LONDON, Feb. 9.—W. A. Willison,
the Canadian correspondent at the front,
states that a Canadian division has es
tablished a university behind the firing
line to equip men on active service for
| ‘‘greater efficlency in business, the pro
fessions, agriculture and other great in-
Idustrius of the Dominion.” The mode
| of operation is threefold, including:
- 1. Lectures to large groups dealing
with ecivie and imperial topics, or look
linz forward to duties and opportunities
of the future.
2. (lasses for smaller groups taught
by experienced teachers in each unit
Ithmuzhom the division.
3. Private instruction for more ad
vanced students, with recognition and
credit on their return to Canada for
work, accomplished.
The classes will be held in"the Bri
gade Divisional Schools, Y. M. C. A,
huts and other available buildines, and
the senate and staff of the university
inclunde men of recosnized academic
standing throughout Canada. The es
tablishment of the university is largely
due to the activities of the chaplain
services and the Y. M. C. A.
MISSING HOG RETURNS.
FRANKLIN, ‘PA., Feb. 9.—Last No
vember M. 8, Logan missed a hog val
|ued at SIOO. Tearing down a haystack
the other day, he discovered the hog,
which had been imprisoned there for
[over a month. The animal was a mere
skeleton, but the present price of hogs
lmakes it worth while refattening the
porker.
This Is Louis Chevrolet’s O. K. Just
As You Find It on Every
: - AMERICAN SIX |
} When you raise the hood of an AMERICAN SIX
you find this signature, just beneath the nameplate,
on the inside of the dash, in Chevrolet’s own hand—
‘o. K. Chevrolet.”” This is the last touch that is put
lupon all finished cars as they leave the American
plant, and it means that such cars have been passed
land approved by Louis Chevrolet, head of the engi
neering organization behind this truly great car.
~ Taken by itself perhaps this is a small detail. But
‘when you consider it alongside the record of unfail
ing service which the AMERICAN SIX is building
up in thé hands of owners and dealers you begin to
see that it is @ Big Thing.
Not a broken spring, a bad axle, a weak transmis
sion or an underpowered engine among all the hun
dreds of AMERICANS that have been put upon the
road this season! This fact and a large and fast-
5-pas. touring ...........$1,845 R e
Witn two auxiliary seats..sl,69s U \’Ql\gx\‘\\‘x\
3-pass. sportabout .......$1,685 I%‘\r,f\- |
2-pass. speedster _.......51,645 e R
All prices . 0. bt Plainfleid, N. J. S
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491 Whitehall St.
Atlanta, Ga.
NDAY, #¥EBRUARY 10, 1918
. . I
Bill Would Raise Age
Of Pupils t 0156 Y
upils to 16 Years
LONDON, Feb. 9.—A bii to make
further provision for education in Scot
land has been introduced in Parllament.
The bill woujd raise the school age
from 14 to 15, make attendance at con-
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tinuation oclagses obligatory on pupils
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AT T L SO e L T
( ||l R ERR tg i
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‘ New Spring Pumps |
|
| R, $6.00 |
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{ We have received our New | II
I Spring line of Patent:and Plain -
Kid Pumps |
! They are suitable for Street ;
f and Dress wear, and are a re- ‘
markable value at five dollars .
the pair. 1
| See Show Window. i
Order by Mall,
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growing army of satisfied purchasers indicate the
real significance of those little words—‘o. K. Chev
rolet.”
A road-tested car—how often do you find it in these days of
‘‘quantity production?’’ The output of the AMERICAN SIX is
growing fast, but it is not yet so big that each car can not be
built right and proven on the road before it is put in your
hands.
Louis Chevrolet’s 0. K. is- a sure guarantee of the sterling
qualities that set the AMERICAN SIX apart from lesser cars
DEALERS |
We Have Some Choice Territory Open
at the Present in Georgia, South Carolina, |
Florida and Alabama. Wire or Write for
Full Particulars. |
TOMBS UNEARTHED AT ROME,
i ROME, Feb, 9.—Excavations near the
‘basilica of St. Paul have revealed {y.
teresting pagan and Christian tombs,
‘dnnng from the first period of Chris
tianity in Rome. Professor Lanaiani
Ihopes to discover the tomb of St, Paul,