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Show , . . .0 ; ,. . , - . , t .. , '- - ' . -- : ,.- ' I .- :. ; . , ' ' : . ;- - - DEStrt ' ' TEVENI1(-GT- 1, Th e broth of a Boy - Lord tapt. DUMNIny. ., . . , , ...- . -. - . . 4 . Marched 1600 Miles Afoot From Austrian Prisoil-Calp- 1 Record o a Zealander , I - - p . -- - ., ,. , sr Lieutenant J.: - lorn - . P, Lloyd. : , . to-Fre'ec- t (Special Correspondence) Extremes of fortune fell to tho le; having a little bit of a show. for the ONDON. May 11.It falls to thel of the battalions of the Royal Naval.' and litthe a neutral of the pretic oNoo x . mat 13.,on, a day !Amite from him would het) t.. make lot of few men to command division. Their front extended trent the right of the Highlanders to the , that ia caned la ., Germany, U the thing trO Epic Story of Dash for Liberty by Eight Italian SoldiersFrom Black Sea to ArcticEscape a battalion as the early age Of river. Tho first two lines of trenchee 'cursing .n8ha nt rock Day" a reception ' One can imagine Stumm same time GerBernard i'reyberg of were Hide but front in carried.' the Cyril By Tunneling With Hands for Only ToolsRefugees Ireland to hides. at the In Deep SnowTale of was given by the German-Irie- h en- -, was no older thap that when he found man third hos was a strong redoubt turning it - up in itis German ' Reaches London After' 90 Days And Now On credible and the OCCANIOn cyclopedia.n which had survived our bombardment, and High himself in. commtind of the food Hardship Berlin. down in and 'words CourageParty jotting ,, Society 1 at of of he Royal Naval division on and it proved, for the time. an he, Emerald Isle and harp..andgm ;11k Back to Italy to Resume Fight Againbt,Unspeakable Hun. Way, ppm rie to a filerremetrillit,n Nevem-the of in Somme month this the superable barrier. The left of the dit. touching Ili". ling and making swat political mi.tureo. bore 1918. Itie was well worthy of his vision. too, was checked ,by- mechles .1 for;ePeeth' erman the of von Stumm I responsible I poet, for he had to Nis gun fire from the slope. behind BesscourAd : Ah, Stumm, it is so affecting when s idbeciai Correitpondence.) .., credit a brilliant record of service t-Hamel. A few isolated parties wign trios informed them that the you speak of the Emerald Isle. It ' --- - , .. 1,f0e4Thein government took a lively 4,1I;makes us Irish think of our home in T and Germans the closed ' , war, the but got had'proved through,' throughout ' ... ;' 7r i ()...aDCoys Nbeeniideoaynalidee.reidt of Ireland. himself in' many a hazardous enter- up the gaps behind them, and no news tablaraga:11-:Awes( la the fate no.,!sumther, the most beautiful time ta "1140 'It," 1 .,6,:s1 I had a 606 once that took a came back of their fate. , prime igs be a born leader of men.makes us. think' of the sumf. fvtieltit, It ;Ireland. in war for prisoners to eacape Born In Wellington. New Zealand, 'Inoite---'Interest in the fate of other people's; Liner because then the tourist comes,. , At 1:30 L however, when it seemed ' oall,k cure will Germany i end - 'IrrOm.continemtmt, whenever 1)1-)be --- Whiekens. Nothing ,- as if the division would experience : ot only the English tourint 111, .. '", it, thel le,,w in an Australakia takes t as fame she all .. through as had befallen the the intereet,that the same CeN !who calls )t the Emerald Isle. Art. portunity present s'Ild-4. , .': ' Ile stood Ulstermen on the first of July. a pigeon . tate of email nations. I used to beat s...mm. StUmm t exceptionally fine athlete. milk, A.,; memories you wh a t what 1 ' was hini. cure in his can 1 or them- .,sitt feet opportunities they socks; and broad, flew in with a message from the Hood mlY dot. but even that didn't Cr 'evoke! al0"1 ., But to return .to Berlin and um 4t ' ': ' chested and powerful in proportion. battalion on the right Lieut. Cot t .., like the English touiist: selves. 9n the clear understanding You te, 40, ,.00..(1,0'1 boxeaN, and Football, swimming, rowing, 'Shamrock da Y. the occasion natural- - fOumm. dn't loreyberg who was in &mimeo& stated do you? And naturally not, that they take their lives In their own , : for a speech, and .fortu- ing, all that he had already reached the n,o f thq it natalan), wos oturnnt was Just ihs, man for he has a nasty way with . But-Itihands, I restless being Samson. f' offet,se lust young ag the , trench outside Beattcourt, which ' bayonet now. :But we bit it off bef-- - rules of. w: Itte game for their pursuers1 more excitement than Rol was his line for craved I - ''. dee ' third objective, and was now in than either" him Ireland shoot-101rwith ter t d lo him. dead playing-fielt could gate first On coining within I Tnere is nothing very ,Irish . ,' to waiting for our barrage to lift to torte we pretend. ! ' st, them wandered from New Zealand :' ' of Stumm. Even If ',he or ) I recognize how Irish you wig, sight in the name .. ' t riumm. In The lei- and the village. of eeent America ..,, adventure. search war last pr and has dons first .' , ,-the every.t off, knock ,, t you e Fighting In the Fog. nee you are one of us: but one thing on a ''''. 4 drifted to Mexico,- - where be ' - tens of "Von." and write it O'Sturom 'are, I finally scale than war .''''" 4 ..,,,. larger c, 3 any , . I ",' The battalion had not won thissittio- , ft reason why I think that you have only In the history of the world: and per--' fought in 3t rill doesn't seem quite right.., ,..:0 -o I Irish sineetthe at tirreesot moettfiellotwo hap, if all the previous wars He loved fighting- ,for fightinglei cellos easily or without heavy tosses, ..0 were :L.in sdiffintiw,,,m,4,amoutiessmitbeeti ...0r00.YOU war and cloud when was and the added together, or all their mostotrik-i- it rang burst' , o, .' ,hisheart was all right. And his litteak. largely due to the untiring an m 0 le s P eech to that. in the sumnier of coe soci ' .1 Over Europe 1 Mg episodes, the war that now deo- energy and indomitable resolution of tie ppeeeh showed that under a for- - Irish he lost no time in sailing for 1914;1 their colonel that they won it at; all. t ety,la that if you had wow:. estates Europe would outweigh- - the .1:0 I,. bidding German exterior beat atoheart ,,,.. land. Joining the Royal Naval Irish a few houni longer you The battalion aditanced-ithree waves aggregate. Escapes from prison on the Irish ''as whisky, and round wers have -Cr; as h son he accompanied it to Antwerp. across the enemy's first system et known that ':.; s... Part of soldiers and civiliana haven .and harps and all that kind of thin In the band. trenches as far as Station road, thiee- -' wee 1172r had a been he a since where been wounded kingdom 41 "; the esrecalled." ker quote .' exceptionally frequent. Inftre 'The s 1 A) be- That was only the beginning of a quarters of a mile from Beaucourt ' ; whore the barbarous German n wireiewo. ',ohs Eastern !esti. pretty thick sprinkling of kin gs ,': 001 career of rapid promotion. When hist Companies and T. realli ti panially od, and there has been in the position of captor: lost touch . ' oaf of IS IS whet , for the first time fore that peri - 13'4 0,10 ,,,i, battalion was gent to the Dardanellett.4 with each other platoone' much room for an Irish repub,-in the fog, and their The Hun has ruthlesoly violated all ' for a long period republic had been !wasn't 7- o or , en-was alreedy a lieutenant4 '4 one were - The kings Freybertr jostling Piewhen the of In and hi Ireland principles the treatment chivalry Ir', proclaimed eon- -. 7commaildei, too was concentrated such as have fallen into his bands- -colors of the Emerald- - lel., ,...4,1i other In Gallipoli he won high honor for and by the time Station-roa-upon them: , ,, -l'0 tortes.-- - Stumtn; like- - the laimon ,ti For this reason - .harp was have taken building' - of its our prisoner , ';',111... in a n which wonderful tourist-seasohis feat quail,. reached, the battalion was in almost river when the the risks associated with t : , 4 A , , , escaping' were taxed aapital." andof endurance ties 3 ii whim a grit that -- ' - .But. Col. inextricable repub- i from intern mentcamps and Military you say 1,,,, Frey.... -- ,,,,,,- - ' , itiainte. 03ft7tarn, slainte Cad opens. So ...or - to the utmost.' To distract the mitten. berg never contusionpreeleirme41-"fo- e the fleet time Prisons, making lost By superhua bargain with them- - 'Mille Failte, -- and come back to Erin tion of the Turks from more im- man exertions, heheart 14)ng 'selves s wall ' n it very succeeded for In Period," long , ,,,, ., well as be that they might just ; 4as.s1t portant Operations elsewhere. Gen. visiting the battalion in two waves, Y,t - How Irish Srumm Is! One breaks period indeed. 0 Stumm, my frisk dead In :, ' ? ' .1,, a spend their dsYs in-was feint make to instructed Paris don't with addition the Stumm:. of men you several boy-on, of Cheer ccident-when one -by living tomb.. subjected to constant in- ,,, landing at Bulair, the narrow neck of other units who had missed their way , think Fm laughing at Yon do V"'a I dignities to him. and brutallik. the peninsula. Freyburg was placed in called a the fog, and, placing himself at their The record for thin war in the way of Somehow or Othele one gets the im- - We've a funny little senae us In charge of the landing party: but, when went forward once more.' H. after-that though the Wens Ober- - sense of humor theli tells has It the proposed head, unquestionably oonsidering I V Illi prison breaking so close behind our barrage walked But us. '" are one of the t I people an a been made Italian nietun of Sinntt reminds to of he ventured by suggeet eight party scheme, I feel like that. do You: SW mm I iisoldiera.whoescopetliroman frequently burst within 20 intern- - ' alternative plan. which, he claimed, that shells out ,"stiVe- - bills, and Shine- -- don't of him and twice he was slightt!ment as good w chance of suexeito and yards ... .lagits and cromlechs. and faked bog- a Mit' rm notStumm. Ti is what tamp at Czernowitz where thiji thad wounded ly One by flying splinters. so the republic. had been Incarcerated fir eighteen involve teem lose of life in the oak in shop windows; yet, implored him to keep event of a failure. The scheme that of his officers I months. Their names are: Corporal flI tinpreiution goes. be has only been people want. 0 n n of your very he but if he Aid back, replied that, Giovanni Castellani: privates. Stefano i Irish for an hour or so: since. in fact, you know. he proposed was typical of the man. that, 4 the .men would lose confidence. ' MY greetings to You. Stumm. office was. simply., that he should take' at the It him Giovanni Dann!. Armando. 'Acura(); foreign up rang they I ' i Only a little more than two hours : end told him a thing called the Ger- - one Irishman to another- Cued Mill, a few colored flares and swim ,,Tozsi. Silvio Ricci, Ouglielma Manuele.! - that he should then light the flaretr after the attack had begun - the . ..mano-Iris- h r. !Felice society was thinking of Sallie, Slainte. Erin to Brach. Aria, Evaristo Parenti. of the Hood battalion had -- a if it.. remnants and was intended, , arrived landing Italian Thee "escapadoer : estim out again to a waiting destroy-- I reached the German positions out,in London a few weeks ago and I met side Beaucourt ,mow , !them immediately after their arrival No other troops: either north or plan was adopted. and, one ln a little Italian resitaurant where . a south of the Ancre, had gone so far, of24th 1015).1 (the night April, I they were the guests of the proprie- , 4f kreyberg was rowed close inshore in and the battalion was in grave dantor. Private Stefano Dann' who wee a boar. his.face and shoulders "camou ger of being surrounded. Food and , selected as their spokesman for the over- ammunition were sent up to them raged" with paint. He slipped ;reason that. be spoke French. told me , and was soon hiet to view in along the river bank, and, reinforced board. TREE FROW vo1Rit 1r, pr1 I they bad reached 'London after crew stood while the boat's the by a territorial battalion, they clung traveling. Partly on bloc Ithat Photograph Taken in London of Eight Italian Soldiers Who Escaped From by togloom. await his return. Presently. the grimly all that foggy day to the ground (Continued front page one) rail. and partly by sea: Their A n I land-- I watchers the gating 'ea. t the they had won. That night the obstin- ding at ",.611111 sa'.wwille."' ,.,....11,e2der...:.18.Stast, w'nulr,:":: kamp 'We at eternowIts wax so in- -, lit one sifter redoubt. which .had held out ail strew t , and if Rimmed to me that bailie imbihed a little 100 freely of y:?, ;sufferably bad from the first that they! 1.1116 '"'" (Mr Ule Batt Row "P" the Klett. Corporal Castellani if Seated till othwards, followed by ridesanswering pimIthe previous day. wa'P omme'lled into "I a". f PO. 11" ra i ,.,! Tat i which Il points Af flame Alunr indifby two tanks. and it was Could nine months make such a and,irery cheap, suddenly became prepare a plot of eiscape. that the ruse had been successful ;submission possible next morning to organize an Jerenee in a .boy of 20? Thug OnO, II spired .to sing. The only thing he "It was very Irritating at first,"I able to smoke. They had no matches told "We would all have rather been tlikt had been and the alarm given. ,erith the absurd little scrubbing could think of was the doxology, and d ead than alive in that Inferne.e saw said Stefano Dann', "but that did not to give us. and kept their fires turn- - They waited anxiously for the "land- - ILISRUlt on Beaucourt Itself. ' had now barely 100 . Colonel the rap on the he San g one whole line of it before he Danni, "andsooner than fall into the distrosa us very much when we could ;brush mustache and and day in the grat es on Big Pa. rtr to come back. the minutes men left Freyberg with him, and none knew side of his head, was taller. broader, WSW pulled back Into his seat and his bands of the Auldrians again, every lee plainly that the ruseecould be lag FreYno was and of that there account To sign I make the story Paaseu better - he ;:;;-- strength of the posi- straighter than My son. He wail more vocal efforts extinguished in as roar one of us would commit auclde, or l verY useful to us if we were chaeed." the bear a short one berg I t'..ste'.. '1'1; ut he , That was the sole and die of a, broken heart. if the means sintenstly alive. Yet be walked like of laughter. Scarcely had they thus reversed that we ate its tender ehaijutsay . But not been con- - '''''');.--- was a u had latter the raw flesh and never hesitated. and was himself .the e house .I their to rough my Julian. a when approach clothing light-thBefore only were to only--teornmit auicide not flame tent o within companyof ur, was a it -- - , I banquet. -, . I waited for him to come ulreiair s. nemed in German soldiers came info .view &p-- thought On one or two occasions we tame ha finally turned for home. he had first man to leave the trench,He was but he did hot come. I decided thatntiv- marching in their direction and the :The Itsaithy enjoyment of the strength and khnisocfkee down by a ulicethweebriedch struck someth learnt dead In upon birds the r7,snow, Amer-rooand he had gone directly to the dining- tonsistent-goorose to nel Italians bohavior of the lay down in the enemy. This rec- had not de- - disposons of the he so I went downstairs and into leans seemed to impress the French as know anything about life inhe an Ana-he-, ano ir and theinstantly t and went German &Dithers passed these we ate when Itthey waded out to by his had is most remark- - onnaiseance over, On the left without detect-woul- d composed too far. of- - trian internment camp. It the big room, every table of which them no French his by dozen mennow a waitHalf miraculous. the fine o towards t example, longer the have Included It among whatecant food and drink men abnoat. was filled with uniformed men., eat-irtheir whereabouts." ing on leave In the famous watering the the darkness. which the ZOOnever faltered under survive "a rim and great was talking. ;Ing, at M. laughing a hardshipsof A. ranks.-- C. lashed lead She storm of T. that their in ,t before.badshielded him , nowproved place spent hours course ere- are all yOung menand 'Treated take Demist Raid Danni. andverynarroW,escape." we An were two colonel head. Army at Their and hours friend. a their false For Adopting thought townspeople long ye gallant headquarters. Mi dead men. But here we are In here we are today looking almost as be battled with a strong cross-curthey swept through the village. and It was mi boy. 1 was so over- - brought their families to see the They were accommodated like beasta l all : well as anybody you wilt pass In the I London enjoying a first rate dinner street. Over eve, damp bed, of atraw and. lusty swimmer that he was,; tong before noon there watt not a sin- whetmed at the sight of him that I American s. hear them sing ale,p But every one of us will car- - rent, . but exhausted. ca was all German left in Beaucourt. into Them". and "Joan of Arc," and stag with rate for their companions in the. under his 7L,coul4 not tie take a step strength They , n ry to hie grave the marks of at last he ew the welcome took 500 pritioners. and large quanti- the room. I could not speak. Some- - dance to the music of Lieut. Europe:, night Their hours. of labor averaged thedral." In our hands and feet." bite Sixteen Intlesi hundred' of out before loom the of up bulk lay of mold fell emotion into Intense Mores ties their bands. destroyer famous regimental band. thing of my Europe, sixteen for seven days of the week.khe aoldiera and .the Arctic ocean. reached him. for he looked up, who used to play for idle New York a nd their food coneleted of unpalatable, They had still several hundred the night in front of him. For the German shells soon began to pour wherew-larthewhich he onb, chance of as-- miles to go to reach Monne& on the resourcefulness-an- d saw me. and In one bound was beside tangos, has & band of colored soldiers black bread waisited pluck Cotonet Freyberg---down to England. The first stage shores of the Arctic ocean. to the displayed in this adventure the young at Tn. with his aims wide, just as when who are going to be known all over dreuehts of a nauseating once set to work to organ-nort- h beveraice raping route lay through Beenaratheir Distinguished-eiswas awarded the of officer Russia. The were now used to visit him unexpectedly at the continent before the war ends. The called coffee, Mat no more like coffee of defense ita days -. against the inev- counter-attacschool. "Itiother. mother!" he cried. men all sing as well as play, and their than treacle Is like honey. Only the hi- across the province of Podolia. extremely short. and their progress Service Order. stabale l halite Minsk on to , and Voihynia through talk word at the C. hoitiy the slow. More than fished poets to the east and 'Instantly ,; music is really remarkable. Whenever !pangs of hunFer and thield.comPelled a distance trt 350 miles every yard of correspondingly , Winning the V. ; d, and stepped-deaevery lost once, their ,and to Lapway crossing laughter they 4 &colored soldier appeared tql the street Ithem to awallew their repulsive re which they must 4.raverseand did guard againarkurprist. At Some 111 Months liter he won the northeast .man in the room sprang to his feet. the land and it was only by the help 0- t- Victoria In !tint's. &toll man had his appointed traverseon foot-was his followed when on work children almost him French attack 3;15 the p.m., Cross during with the result the Almon, Borealis that they- - were It was not a tribute to me, but to their the village of Beaucourt in the battle; done. he wait bit for the fourth time. procession. They followed all dole of hard work te do. while over that upon reaching own mothers at home. Right there I rept Mintit, their able In a general way to men had him stood a soldier armed with a boots were reduced to tatters wounded as he was, such was sommr. et but the ..iSeverely Americans, the keeprthe Europe's hardly adopted the American army. on the rememb ling footgear at all. The frost right direction. The Royal Naval division had seen the grit of the man. that be refused them hypnotized. hip eihich he used freely r I am proud to say that a email see- Cainin to the dressing station and be to had taken come at service snow hard had about and. and when Antwerp miles no 1,200 bitten They In Aix I saw the beginning of what slightest provocation their feet until army. ail of It 1 believe ,,onthato t the American me. Provocation was forthcoming, applied every movement watt an agony and by this time. practically front the poll. but never before had they faced luntil he had given detailed orders for g is SOMS to be a Some were tin hotel, adopted them as confronted the defense of the village to his secnothing but the passion for freedom shores of the Black sea. and their ob- - so stern a task and understanding between as a devilish dittersion. too shy to come up and be introduced. friendship ' Austrian officers condescended to enabled them to bear up and struggle jective was the Arctic oecan. To 1101V., While further south the Oar-- 1and the French. but I had broad smiles whenever I the American people defenses had crumbled away beIn recommending Colonel lereyberg hovel, stopped In Petrogmd- would not Tou have heard. no doubt, about bow such base tricks as 'spitting on the on. met any of them. and always. when tit food they had practically none have rerved their purpose. It aly could 'man the swellinefidod of the British for the honor of the Victoria Cross. it them with their, and the name the French double the price of every- - Italian. kicking entered the dining room, were of front the stubborn to or subsist . the be reached miani..! and laughing at their officer of his corps said of him: obliged a voyageladvance. mainly only by way thing as imon as . an American soldier- jackboots chivalric greeting. upon raciishes and other roots which to England. and wnere they could ob- - right bank of the Antra bad stood Ihigh was the personality. gallantry. enters a town. Some French shop- I festations of pain and reeeMMent. On ....theY , I talked with hundreds of of the.snow. Lain a ship was the problim that ex- - firm as granite. The German soldiers complete contempt of danger of and keener have done this, of course). The one occasion anltallansoldier. baited The ttussienat the'bottom during that week in one man which enabled the lodge. peasants extended every ercised- their minds. .mow the war lived securely, behind at solid wall of American soldier merits to be rolling in to desperation by the taunte and 'n)n the little fourteenth century o 'this trenches within that in their but hospitality wire. was power, in the most advanced objective deep not concern even of did counts be and could not bisi.abuse progressing wealth, or Chambray. two 'miles distant,.-alsrarely anituptrian officer, In this.direction were so much and the stories that reached were full of cunningly 'devised to be permanently held." The temptation to overcharge i refrain from retaliating by landing a ' their resources a vacation center for our men. It Is change. , ' limited.madeeidedlY thick with studded and hi clenched fist full in the them of trouble in .Russia were of .doubta No soldier could. desire a finer trite-sua 60 franc blow with , are a man ieho throws down , 4 e, not mere boasting to say that they The were Trains chine emplacements, gun could do more to earn an a none loffieer'e cartface. knocking him senseless' and running frequently apple. contradictory character that man for man. the most amazingly note it payment for behind were honeycombed with lute, , Freyberg iit than Lieutenant-coloniefrtom400,Moirnsic540to rnPieles,trograbutd,thaeoeditatrawninces they dismissed them from their minds elopes lessly inquiring 'lie that enough," muM 'to the ground. i ..... beneath the i, fine looking 'soldiers in, the world. be pretty strong. But let me tell you and contented themselves with the tunnels that ten deep The which followed this, did. They average rather larger than the that avarice is not the ruling passion act of punishment could battalions whole , .. where earth. to the only Ital completion of their journey. Insubordination was of an in,i proved tantalizing .,.,.....,......0..........,..... : English. and broader and more muts- - of .. d which no reasoncould The least severe lane who had no money with which thejsrench. and their dealings with describable nature. well be asked, How did the apeenlette r tatLn into It or French. might ... cater than either English to their Not without fares. Here again the Italian soldiers pay : the American soldier are often marked of it took the form of tying the i themselves enemy thought that here he had in-- 1 , 1 HE.. , Of the ss " Regardm done, lea epauleel" Look with consideration most extraordinarY,I !part position drove them against the cold.protect Italian's bands . to .. his feet and leas,. necemes which grew more deed at the shoulders. 1 have beard dozens to desiserate fortress a The unvanquishable, which nieasures. trains . , , bent in him that Infant. GOOrtriall position And-- . they where-lnIntense for, ling How and Big Frenchmen exclaim. every I day? in a moved on storm. could ,of . this earth very leisurely manner. did they troops and three nights. it() that Vacations do not come cheaply te 'three day'swas sleep at n'eht? Were they MIT IlfIT , r might as well exclaim look at their On the morning of the ISth of No- full of soldiers. who released. the poor fel-- .' &floor, were mostly be 1.1 In em'faa4 danger of starving to on a pink and healthy skins. their,. clear the American soldier In France. or at whenrolled front Mtatkod be Ital.. likely vember the Briltigh friendlyThe on floor the to ,toAlLappear-death? Did i was Aix of them lea not Heins become ;low the and any tam, at least ae, Grandeyes splendid stay from the rmetiendskthmeamteeion.lves dead- He was brought to con- -, anda aklittolanewanyf and threaten to Put an extending roughly ego we were known as a nation of cheap. Every man who went there lane road just south of the e by Ste barbarous reetnes-- i ou:side trains left in the dark buidneme by the last means river to the end, No one In France or Eng- - was supposed to have a minimum of 'sehmlne" of Serie on the .dyspeptica., they village from page ono) land will ever call us that agatn. Our 160 francs. or 127, in his posseesion tive of the lash. The Italian soldiers, jumped On behind and as they ex- - left to men in overwheimine difficul- - north. At 5:45 am.. in darkness (Continued .t. mentioned many other horrors which Peeted were well received by the out- - ties? : e h ste red si h rest When at office of the as feet near the are cal soldiers y p a per dense y was intensified which , by r fog, Intermit. cam11.1 diets to woom in .tim.success of the division. : provost marshal he drew a slip of I they endured In that conveerd aa best Life in Snow Huts. specimens as any men alive. the British troops croesed their para- ele!nent an ideel of their position. ,: ";'i paper with the name of a hotel on it. from which they soon determined to, they mould On the left the stronghold of This also holds true for the whole -- -.!, answers and pets. The to Eater Ready questions ... To that hotel he was obi iged to go. , frontEach diviaion In Brie Two of the Italians jumped on the , the it haA done American They are remarkably leteithre. Tbe tatifflariectfrOm11 to 12arpano l the most other is encouraging itself to outdo the othwith his fellow ..e,.. on the first of July. but at Mid ears , j'heir.eyee .. e van, an d i n t li at post- - consultation is sum. at7.6.1 to 'to a thi emetins 1 ay 1 n Poring an aper- - and the brak k e wee k . an or ers The brigades and in turn troop. made- conaiderable learn all they can of the wonderful $21.04, ha. d 1,1) be Paid in advance. - II ture in the soft ground- - under - the thm-- - ther- - traveled withoot - food or capadoes." They eonstructed huts of !points our The and the artillery and other Territorial 4i4esirs 4 -4 Highland progress. -, snow and litas discovered. freand of little of travelers the for walls of the and Front. drink esPeolally two by units are rivals. Although, unfortu I in front of Beaumont-are- l r uf.,, wimu'e""alleci to 'retitle. ! as opportunity affordSd. oar...401-- 1 4tistorie past which lives in old cha-- , quently do in the Arctic, that warmth division nately, we have no regimental tradiFifty Days to INgroArad.r the whole of that r, nht,.1,,,h1. in .ph pip. had o gss,s,,,o,,,,,uy , tions to uphold an4 no such foundawee before and round fortress considerabie there fell, night was '' by! ; reached borrowing Eventually !silently cumstances. bed and Willa" Franceover Their Petrograd tend i e l mains all clothes" Aix..,1,,,,Raina. stealthily dug ' first few days. Lucky were they the primitive spade Work tif fingers! after the fugitive had been SO days were snow; their drink was derived had even established posts as' far as tions in hixtory which mean much to as every one probably : knows. tit in who hid t thaartnieeofthefighting--European---- friends from whom to bor--1 i and, nail& The execution of their plan, on. their Journey., The Spectacle they by ; to '13 hukst.tre neTheymat :Savoy, which Was once an 'Italian rowon calling at. the Italian dug out 1,400 Ger- countries, Our men in France have shy youth from Geocyta. , oecupied their minds the I aitsett- French I - Ont talL by holding each othor keep together instead the plain- American idea of . was warrens. and mans came to from their it their Y. the think Georgia. tedium of confinement. When even- consulate ass that of famishing, nu- bands. and Incising in single '.- '''''''" some time sin the eigliteen-fittie- s In , ils included more than 50 machine making history. eetablishing tradi- men attired in ing on each other's shoulders la an ancient chateau which M.. c. A. with a pathetic tale of trig- -- tually the light of day was Sten Iti washed. ;Pl An number of prisoners Bona doing great things in a great based on the fart that he had Cr- through the hole in the wall the mew raga and IGoking .aa If their reason ' ' was the seat of the former dukes of edy tering of weary melt weak and bent fell, into theequal in Aix 'with only SO franca in his!, experienced their first thrill of JoylI had left them...-- The Colima imme- from hands, of the new army waynot muddling through or ' eshaustion. SavOy.--- It ..,., I. a picturesque Old pile. rived trudging through the right, at a cost of less He had probably never been since they had fallen into the hands diately prorured food and Clothing; the ,but breakitt through with built in the thirteenth century and pocket. ,' pitiless Arctic region. buoyed up !division on casualties. ' 20 miles from hie home village before' of the Austrians. and for three days they remained in by the They took St. glory. ' ', remote . still habitable. of hope yet reaching In one Ae Or one division the to went he division Pierre France with his regisnent, kompany Locally early morning, overran' length a time was fixed for the Petrograd. when they homeland Thoise American None 'soldiers their alive..., 1 i of them refreshed to resume their journey; gave up. though all of them had and by the evening the British line may be out for revenge for one of the the chateau, climbing the eorkscrew and here be. found hismself shut out dash for liberty. Watching the seni i on the south of the Ancre ran from enemy'. many infamies, and although - atone staircase to the to of the tall- - from his hotel in a strange EuroPean try as bepaced along from end - to t for the object upon which they had threatening fits of leas with $13.60 Stuff trenth on i'the heights lo the our men generally have not learned to than he needed end of the dimly lighted corridor- in set their minds was to reach England. Was there ever a picture In the bank est watch tower. swarming over the ,,town. hOw It to calculated existence. of the river opposite Beaucourt. hate. they know what they are fightthe long i and thereafter. to return to their own world of Ice and know. like this night. they support .1 'walla, exploring every corner piotake him to reach the extrem- .t country and fight the to they had ture of zee Y. ing for. Individual1 y. if one may 'e "creteee euggegted would of the place. They speaulated on Italian soldiers eight . tramp. and of his beat ' returnragain. It learned so earthy to detesL' , judte them from a Week's sharing of methods of warfare and de- - that he go bark and 11" Peemnonon to ity afsnowsterms. was Its blinding and ing which through first probable voyage was of making moments a few a matter One of Stefano Dannir Comrades every day existence and thoughts in tense in the thirteenth century, and etaY aa long as tile money lasted. but but only of the Ice. arrived and singing. as they did for hours togeth- - ter the break-u- p so had near skillfully they the perfected our trenches. of was many called too kim boy frightened and forlorn their at this' stage of his Cr. the stirring strains rof the Gari- - at Newcastle. where they were men are quarreled cheerfully as to hoW long !the arrangements that they had a II narrative andaside to feel about the BPSIdeRt. he baldi Ilymn, to keep up their droop. clothed. and nourtihed back to life war what beginningBrooke could have held the to make the llintlinv. their regiment whispered in his ear. dotappeared through the hole before expressed in Rupert Ah:" said Dann!. 1 had forgotten Mg spirits? ' chateau - against the assaults of the vipoke no French and could never- ex- - he was aware of their escape. In Newcastle fitness. Their and stay linee: the to himaelf that terrible patronne. to tell You of diso little adventures On the seventy-fift- h other fellow's regiment They had ptain day of their was short, money and Italian uniforms The ft. Fecal" In France women the who more fun with that chateau than any i from Czernowits far being given to them at the consulate tionor has come back. as a king to in our walk to Minsk.- One of Abe pilgrimage - i hold the cashbox and manage the bust. They etepped out Into meow that Pessanis----of hi original owners ever had. , earth.. very wise mangave me away- behind them in Austria, Mur- - there. On their reaching London lay in the open country several feet 4,4 en man around n,"18 end of 'hotel keePing knit& the And paid hie subjects with a royal big shores of the- - Arctic' the Italian ambassador understand They climbed mountains Ww did not had every ' In all day hikes': 'The Y. M. C. A. secretary put on his deep. so that progress was exceed- Ia he meant as herould not speak ocean was reached by tortuous routes thing done to minister to their corn-andelight taking wage;' at the most critical ' above the early spring snow line. They hat and went back with the drooping ingly difficult unspeakably painful degrees.1 forts. They spent a week in the And nobleness walks in our ways aTt we could not speak of their enterpriee. tieveral of ttalIsn But period to with the at Georgian seemed thrilled was where the plead that it same to us in a strange Hera tl; thought patronne.' the xpen were actually weltering i everybody again: metropolis enjoying, as Stefano Lanni underatood the, wand way. And we have roma into our heritage. While. me.... were they, fresh. from Iowa. North Dako.$h.hd not previonely struggling sympathetic. ,they astayed nearly.: e I remarked.,k very good, time- - among deep and it seemed atilt they throng - ta. ship-tweek. for the GEORGE it- BELDEB. a we heard take Georgia.- .Texas, were- - actually Calie, and pow was- all kindnesa and intuit be them friend Italian And waiting snow, strange English left but aympath. by grasping nob behind; across sYMPattly. and ' hills like at (Copyright, 1918. by Edward Map. Valleys looking that of a boast in trouble. to England where they knew ail tzars." each other's hands they somehow "T ..Mont Hlanc AndtheAlpaicyclea . .. Li shall.) 5 are KIIIa wnen We, begin could be, rented for bout 15 cents "So far- away from home and only SO anything was heard by them of the 'sound came from. we laW little bear of fate a steamer. called the "Mini"-- fighting agaln. said, Stefano Dann'. 14 Vilna I con, an bout, and hundreds of men spent francs- Walt monsieur, send"' was plated at their disposal, "it will be a glorious thing to die in Half a mile i cub not any bigger than a big lamb. Austrians in, pursuit.. my husband." The cub Ises not very ferocious and bound for Newcastle-on-Tynox me holtheir, time exploring the country suit cause of liberty; so very much was from the the a camp convenient came back sniping 'It la low, into which Soon she waa a steamer of. the better than to have died In a prison around. in the late afternoons and we were terribly hungry it "Hunteend" IA-Fthey scrambled out she monsieur." said. The big of sight, of the prison. and here it Ialthough to take the little fellow's life. Hamburg-Amerik- a line that had been camp under the lash of the unspeakevenings.' they gathered In the big. ')all'right, magnificent easIno, now under lease to Infant may atay the week for SO franca'. wag decided that the mahogany colInfants and Children that we understood what captured by the BrItsh and was now able Runs." woes. Abe' Y. M. C . A... and delighteuityltWe alma have a eon under the colors. ored uniform which they wore showed the to British In mind It sate blit had We would like to lire to pay the being put 4 some one ,be a littla kind to him up conspicuously , the white i when he gavepeasant we the Italian isoldiers a. peculiar satis- Austrians; hack for all the terrible In knife. Vet against experiences. us the : when he needs 'It" snow To overcome this difficulty i had no firewood and , we , had no faction to know that In this way their thinga they did to us." said one of nude No Avarice.- story. I believe :is more truly they disrobed in the cold and. to make II tire' Not once in barbarous enemies were so to .spealt, Danni's comrades. During the entire week I never ono typical f the spirit of the French oeo- off their white undergarments. taking Wore imatches fire of compelled to Minister to their wants did. we have R. A. FOSTER. aaw a drunken or a disorderly soldier. lois toward our men than any tale of these on top- of the unifortns which littipmento,. al tei'grititioru and only in one or in the last stage of their adventures. 1 (Copyright, 19111. by Edward One 'day at luncheon one youth who extortion. however true two of the peasant1' houses they put on nextto their skin. were we I In due course tn. "Huntsind," ' , . .. . (Special Carrespondence.) ' . 1 :,L , .,. i It bat-teno- 1 . t - . , f . ' .- -- 1 ' 1 0 )lac ol - ? v , 1 ' 7 r. Ar ,",. - ' ,,. , .. . .. ' StCTION ,..,- 11111t Et-- - . e . ,,, - ,....::LLL , , i I - :111111hqii ' a !i-- ., t ; ,'', , . -- .. 0, d-- -.. , -- z Ihich - I .. It ' r - -- - - ' --- -- l 01 1 )(' Ole, 0 4 1 -- 00 ' - - , -- 1 , - 1e-was ,,f ,- 2:Into-Gaelic- 1 o. -a- I- t 1 , - I i FA - '. -- ft, . 1 Sympathetic France Opens Arms To Great America's "Big Infants" ij i !The I ' i . .... :17,.P 7 1.,,....s-r1"1- alate I ; I , , . vt I .' , -- Preach. - - A. , , is . -- , - .2 , I - - - - h- .'- rg ;k -1 frost-whe- ir i , ; I never-endin- I , , i !nd ' thbarbed re-t- ot I ch el , U . . ., , '' : - - , n" - - faint-hearte- d. f:''',--''''""- I 1 , . , ., - the . , .. dh t esettPsiaedieemoot - - ''''"" ,.. l H. ways i I --'- I ' -- ; i I I court-Thiepv- al to-th- ' ' ---- , -- ,smil,,tatho seeklegice--andthey-irrtanage- - "ay - ' ,. - okt i - s. I I - , . .", - - ' ,Alit d. Rue-ela- I - -- ---- - I - -- t I CASTO Ft e. ' - . "'red Use For Over 30 Years , I .,. - . ,,. . ' , . , . tt .o...V. Me. bASMS1.,,.... ,.. ,,,.,.......,,, ,,.....7....., , ,, ... , ,,,, mze t. .. .. . ..- .. t . .. ' . - . d . 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