Show I Ui B Ll CT 3 9 i of p Ie 1 to I G of- of b o to 4 4 I 1 He Yelled and Charged Th Through ough Whizzing Shrapnel Dodging Flying Bullets ta r s r t rt St 1 nl r rt T r G N 1 S 5 r I r rr r- r t J h p c t a f v r r C r I r titer ti ter 1 1 r. r r t J i 5 v W N l G r t a 7 Q t 0 L 1 c tR 1 td it rr f. f l t J t ol i H 3 i r 1 JI Ii 1 rIi t 1 t. t t I S k 7 t 11 i t r. li 4 1 1 f I t-J. t t f Y C rC r- r t I ft r 7 lM 6 1 k 1 r I J s. s t. t 1 7 t y- y l JAA A tl b- b 6 rf r Z it Heros Hero's another of th the tho Ten Best Hero Stories Stones of th the tho W War r picked by General Pershing By A. A E. E Geldhof Tele Telegram ram Washington Bureau 1134 1128 ASHINGTON April 24 24 WASHINGTON vate George DUbay of or Boston a R. member of or company H One Hundred Third Infantry was waI one of or the heroes of oC the Marne who gave C his lifo life for far his hia country countr Inthe in inthe inthe the start of the tho great allied ailed offensive that won tho the war His Ilia regiment was part of or tho the Twenty Twenty- Twenty sixth division which took part In tho the great drive drle through h Belleau Bel- Bel leau wood which began on July Juh 18 On the tho first da day of or the fI fight ht Private ate made a a. name namo for tOl himself that will live IIvo In American history A railroad embankment alon along a little stream near the town of or Belleau was the objective of or Dilboy's platoon You r remember member how overwhelmingly ly the tho doughboys carried everything before bo- bo fore tore them platoon reached th the embankment and there haJt halted d Young was selected by hl his platoon leader to accompany him on ona ona ona a reconnoitering expedition over oer the I ground beyond tho the railroad They climbed the tho embankment but no I sooner h had their heads appeared ov O over r the to toy toj than a a German machine run gun I Ho He rushed down the with bayonet fixed i posted yards ar s away opened up on them Yelling defiance at the Huns boy hoy stood up on the railroad track tracIe exposed to tho the view of or tho the Germans atH and opened fire ire on them with his rifle eWe while the bullets ran rang ag against the rails beneath his feet II however howe had Apparently J his fire no effect on the Hun machine gun ci crew ew i Ill get Jet cm em sergeant he ho yelled to his platoon commander and with his bayonet fixed pa paying in no more moie attention to the bullets flying about him than as if Ir the they were hailstones he ho rushed down the tho embankment and charged ahead through h a wheat field flold toward tho the gun un emplacement t For seventy five yards dashed dashe ahead unhurt Then a apiece piece of ot shrapnel struck him In the right leg e Just above o the knee nearly severing severing sev sev- ering the leg At It the tho samo same time several bullets lodged In various parts part of or the tle body The Tho bravo soldier dropped d and ana stretched out on his stomach but with undaunted courage to us use ue General Pershing's own words c he be kept up a continual stream of or bullets bullet Into the German Germin position with his his' nw rifle Lying thero there In tho the wheat field this seriously wounded hero killed tw tup of ot tho enemy and drove the tho rest or of orthe ot the gun Jun crew off ocr As the Germans fled led DUboys DUboy's companions came to hi his nis r rescue and bore boro him to a baso base hospital has hos- pital where he died of or his wounds He dies for liberty liberty we we who stayed I. I at home are merely asked to buy r 1 Liberty VICTORY bond s bonds ff 1 |