j I I! 4 DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. 't'M MH I HHtMHMM Me ) It Btl IMb ft Ml'M MHUMIM ft MIIUWHtHtKUHHfrmHI I tMI 9 MMMfIMt MM) I MMtMMlf IMQ8grt0MHHHHtl i 44 OUTWITTING THE HUN By LIEUTENANT PAT O'BRIEN Courclght. ltlS, by Pat Alva O'Brf f A )ttHIM8MI8HMnMHHtetttMntiMHetltMttHIHMMt6MIHMIHiaMHil'WHntMlltHtHHftHtHMHtlHM Hi m D n D II w I ii ? T CHAPTER XVI Continued. 11 From tho kitchen yon could walk directly into the cow-barn, whore two cows wcro kept, and this, ns I bnvo o!ntcd out before, is tho usual con t'tructlon of the poorer Belgian bouses. I could not make out why tho caller recmed to be bo antagonistic to me, And yet I am sure ho was arguing with the family against me. Perhaps tho iact that I wasn't wearing weodcn shoes I doubt whether I could bare obtained a pair big enough for mj bad convinced him that I was not ?eally a Belgian, becauso there was fcothlng about me otherwlao which jould have given him that Idea. At that time, and I suppose ft to true today, about 04 per cent of the people In Belgium were wearing wooden shoes. Among the peasants I float believe I ever eaw any other kind of footwear and they are more common there than they aro in Hol land. The Dutch wear them more on nccount of a lack of leather. I was told that during tho coming year prac tically ell tho peasants and poorer peoplo in Germany, too, will adopt wooden shoes for farm work, as that la one direction In which wood can bo substituted for leather without much Joes. When the young man left, X left shortly afterwards, as I was not at nil comfortables about what Ids inten tions were regarding me. For all I knew ho might havo gono to notify tho German authorities that tliero was a strango man in the vicinity mora perhaps to protect his friends from suspicion of having aided mo thnn to injure mo. At nny rate, I was not going to take any chances and I got out of that neighborhood as rapidly as I could. That night found mo right on the frontier of Holland. CHAPTER XVII. Getting Through the Lines. Waiting until it was qulto dark, I tnado my way carefully through a field and eventually camo to tho much dreaded barrier. It was all that I had heard about it Every foot of tho bordor Una between Belgium and Holland is protected in precisely tho sumo manner. It is Uioro to serve threo purposes: first, to pro font the Bolglans from escaping Into Holland; second to keop enemies, like mys6If, from making their way to free dom; and third, to prevent desertions en tho part of Germans themselves. One look was enough to convlnco any one that it probably accomplished all throo objects about as well as any con trlvnuco could, and ono look was all I got of It that night, for whllo I lay on ray stomach gazing at tho forbid ding structure I heard tho measured stride of n German sentry advancing towards mo and I crawled away as fast as I possibly could, dotcrmlncd to spend tho night somewhero in the fields and inako another and moro careful survey tho following night. The vlow I had obtained, however, ,was sufficient to convlnco mo that tho pole-vault Idea was out of tho ques tion even if I had n polo and was a proficient pole-vnulter. Tho three fences covered a span of at least twelve feet nnd to clear tho last barbed wire fenco It would bo necessary to vault not only nt least ten feot high, but at least fourteen feot wide, with tho cor teln knowledge that to touch tho elec trically charged fenco meant instant denth. Thero would bo no second chnncc if you camo a cropper the first time. The btllt idea was also lmpractlca--bls because of the lack of BultnW Umber and tools with which to coi itruct the stilts. It seemed to mo that tho best thing to do was travel up and down tho line ' bit in the hope that some spot might be discovered where conditions were more favorable, although I don't kaow Just what I expected along those lines. It was nighty disheartening to real tee that ealy a few feet away lay ccr tela liberty and that the only things preveatlag me frtia reaching It were .three confounded fences. I lb "M of ray Machine and wished tl mo Jriad fairy would set it in fr mo for just ono minute. I speat the night in a clump of ushes and kept in biding most of the ext day, only going abroad for an our or two la tho mlddlo of tho day o Intercept some Belgian peasant tnd beg for rood. Tho Belgians In this ectlon were naturally very much fratd ef tho Gormaus and I farod .adly. In nearly every house German Soldiers wero quartered and it was Jut of tho question for mo to apply Jer food in that direction. Tho prox talty of tho border mado everyone ye each other with moro or less sus 'lclon and I sopn enmo to the conclu loa that the safest thing I could do jras t9. live on raw vegetables which I iHild steal from tho fields nt night as had previously dono. That night I made another survoy f the barrier in that vicinity, but It oked just as hopeless as It had the lght before and I concluded that I bly wasted my time there. I spent tho night wandering north, guided by the North Star which had served me bo faithfully In all my trav eling. Every mllo or two I would make my way carefully to the barrier to see if conditions wcro any better, but it seemed to bo tho same all along. I felt like a wild animal In a cngo, with about as much chance of getting out The section of the country in which I was now wandering was very heavily wooded and thero was really no very great difficulty In keeping myself con cealed, which I did all day long, striv ing all the time to think of somo way In which I could circumvent that cursed barrUr, Tfc Mm f tags steptadder oc tcf to mm, tot 1 ssarcsed hour after hour hs vain for lumber or fallen trees out of which I could construct one. It I could only obtain something which would enable me to reach a point about nine feet in the air it would be a comparatively simple matter to Jump from thai point over the electric fence. Then I thought that perhaps Z could construct a simple ladder and lean it against ono of tho posts upon which tho electric wires were strung, climb to tho top and then leap over, gottlng over tho barbed wlro fences in tho same way. This seemed to bo tho most likely plan and all night long I sat construct ing a ladder for this purpose. I was fortunato enough to find a number of fallen plno trees from ten to twenty feet long. I selected two of them which seemed sufficiently strong and broko off all tho branches, which I used as rungs, tying them to tho poles with grass and strips from my handkerchef and shirt as best I could. It was not a very workmanliko looking ladder when X finally got through with it I leaned it against n tree to test it and it wobbled consid erably. It was moro like a ropo lad d6r than a wooden one, but I strength ened it here ami there and decided that it would probably servo tho pur pose I kept tho ladder In tho woods all day and could hardly wait until dark to mnko tho supreme test If it proved successful my troubles were over; within a few hours I would be in a neutral country out of all danger. If I failed I dismissed tho idea sum marily. Thero was no uso worrying about failure; the thing to do was to succeed. Tho few hours that wore to pass beforo night camo on seemed endless,' but I utilized them to ro-enforco my ladder, tying tho rungs moro securely with long gra3 which X picked in the woods. At last night came, and with my ladder in luind I mado for tho barrier. In front nf it thero wns a cleared spaco of about one hundred yards, which had been prepared to mako the work of tho guards easier in watch ing it I waited in the neighborhood until I heard tho sentry pass tho spot where I was in hiding nnd then I hurried across the clearing, shoved my ladder under ihe barbed wlro nnd endeav ored to follow it My clothing caught in the wire, but I wrenched myself clear and crawled to tho electric bar rier. My plan was to' place the ladder against one of the posts, climb up to tho top and then jump. There would bo a fall of nine or ten feet and I might possibly sprain an nnklo or break my leg, but if that was all that stood between me and freedom I wasn't going to stop to consider It I put my car to the ground to listen for the romlng of the sentry. There was not a sound. Eagerly but care fully I placed the ladder against tho post and started up. Only a few feot separated me from liberty, nnd my heart beat fast I had, climbed perhaps threo rungs of my ladder when I became aware of am unlocked for difficulty. The ladder was slipping. Just as I took the next rune the ladder slipped, came in contact with the live wire, and the current paseed through the wet sticks nnd into my body. There was a blue flash, my hold on the ladder relaxed and I fell heavily to tho ground unconscious. Of courso, I had not received the full forco of tho current or I would not now be here. I must have re mained unconscious for a few mo ments, but I camo to just in time to hear tho German guard coming, and the thought camo to mo if I didn't get that ladder concealed nt onco he would seo It even though, fortunately for mo, it was nn unusually dark night I pulled tho ladder out of his path nnd lay down flat on tho ground not woven feet uwuy from his feet, lie passed so. close that I could have pushed tho ladder out ami tripped him up. It occurred to mo that I could havo climbed back under the barbed wire fenco and waited for the Bentry to re turn nnd then felled him with a blow on tho head, as ho had no idea, of course, that there was anyone In tho vicinity. I wouldn't have hesitated to take life, becauso my only thought was te get Into Holland, but I thought that as long as ho didn't bother me, perhaps tho safest thing to do was not to bother him, but to continuo my ef forts during his periodic absence. His beat at this point was apparent ly fairly long and allowed mo more tlmo to work than I had hoped for. My mishap with tho ladder had con vinced mo that my escapo in that way was not feasible. Tho shock that I had received had unnerved me nnd I was afraid to risk it again, particu larly as I realized that I had fared more fortunately than I could hopo to again if I met with a similar mis hap. There was no way of making that ladder hold and I gave up tho idea of using it I was now right in front of this electric barrier and as I studied It I saw another way of getting by. If I couldn't get over it, what was tho matter with getting under it? Tho bottom wlro was only two Inches from the ground and, of course, I couldn't touch it, but my plan was to dig underneath It and then crawl through tho holo In the ground. I had only my hands to dig with, but I went nt it with a will and fortu nately tho ground was not very hard. When I had dug about six inches, making a distanco In all of eight inches from tho lowest electric wire. I camo to an underground wire. I knew enough about electricity to real lzo that this wlro could not be charged, as it was In contact with tho ground, but still there was not room between tho live wlro nnd this underground wlro for mo to crawl through, and I ether hud to go back or dig deep enough under this wlro to crawl under it or else pull It up. This underground wlro was about as big around as a lead pencil nnd there was no chnnce of breaking it Tho jack-knlfo I had bad at tho start of my travels I had long since lost and even if I had had something to hammer with, the nolso would havo mado tbo method impracticable. I went on digging. When tho total distance between tho live wire and tho bottom of tho holo I had dug" was thirty Inches, I took hold of tho ground wlro and pulled on it with all my strength. It wouldn't budge. It was stretched taut across tho narrow ditch I had dug abou. fourteen Inches wide J, nndjtfj4&8 tugging didn't serve to loosen it I was just about to t4rVe up in de spair when n stnplo gave way In tho nearest post. That enabled mo to pull the wire through the ground n little and I renewed my efforts. After a moment or two of pulling as I had never pulled in my llfo before, a staple on tho next post gave way, and my work became easier. I had more leeway now and pulled and pulled again until In nil eight staples had given way. Every Umo n staple gavo way, it sounded In my ears like tbo report of a gun, although I suppose It didn't really mako very much noise. Never theless, each tlmo I would put my ear to tho ground to listen for'tho guard. If I heard him I would stop working nnd lie perfectly still In th dark till he had gono by. By pulling on the wire, I was now nblo to drag it through the ground enough to plnco It back from the fence and go on digging. Tho deeper I went tho harder be- camo the work, becauso by this tlma my finger nnlls wero broken nnd I was nervous afraid every momont that I would touch the charged wire. I kept at it., however, with my mind constantly on tho holo I was digging nnd the liberty which was almost with in my reach. Finally I figured that I bad enough spaco to crawl through and still leave n couple of Inches between my back and the live wire. Before I went under that wire I no ticed that tho laco which tho Belgian woman had given me as a souvenir made my pocket bulge, and lest it might be the innocent means of elec trocuting me by touching the live wire, I took it out rolled It up and threw it over the barrier first Then I lay down on my stomach and crawled or rather writhed under tho wire like a snake, with my feet first and there wasn't any question of my hugging mother earth as closely as possiblo because I realised that even to touch tho wlro above me with my back meant Instant death. Anxious ns I was to get on the other side, I didn't hurry this operation. I feared that thero might be some llttlo detail that I l.ad overlooked and I ex ercised tho greatest possiblo care in going under, taking nothing for granted. When I finally got through and straightened up, thero wero still sev eral feet of Belgium between mo and liberty, represented by tho six feet which separated tho electric barrier from tho last barbed wire fence, but beforo I went another step I went down on my knoes and thanked God for my long series of escapes and es pecially for this last achievement, which seemed to mo to be about all that was necessary to bring me free dam. Then I crawled under the barbed wire fence and breathed the freo air of Holland. I had no clear idea just where I was and I didn't cno much. I was out of tho power of tho Germans and that was enough. I had walked perhaps a hundred yards, when I re membered tho laco I had thrown over tho barrier, and dangerous as I real ized the undertaking to bo, I deter mined to wnlk back and get it This necessitated my golqg back onto Bel gian soil again, but it seemed a shamo to leave tho lace there, nnd by exer cising a little caro I figured I could get it easily enough. When) came to tho spot at which X had mado my way under the barbed wire, I put my ear to the ground and listened for the sentry. I heard him coming and lay prose on tho ground till ho had passed. Tho fact that he might observo tho bole In the ground or the ladder occurred to mo as I lay there, and it seemed llko an age be foro ho. finally marched out of ear shot Then I went under the barbed wlro again, retrieved tho laco and onco again made my way to Dutch terri tory. It does not take long to describe the events just referred to, but the Inci dents themselves consumed several hours In all. To dig the hole must have taken me more than two hours nnd I had to stop frequently to hide whllo tho sentry passed. Many times, Indeed, I thought I heard him coming and stopped my work and then dis covered that it was only my imagina tion. I certainly suffered enough that night to last mo a. lifetime. With a German guard on ono side, death from electrocution on the other, and starva tion staring mo in tho face, my plight was anything but a comfortablo one. It was on the 10th of November, 1017, when I got through the wire. I Heard the German Guard Coming. had made my leap from tho train on September 0th. Altogether, therefore, just seventy-two days bad elapsed Blnce I escaped from the Huns. If I live to be as old as Methusatah, I never expect to live through another seventy-two days so crammed full of in cident and hazard and lucky escape. CHAPTER XVIII. Experience In Holland. But I was not quite out of the woods. I now knew that I was In Holland, but just where I had no Idea. I walked for about thirty minutes und came to a path leading to tho right, and I had proceeded along it but a few hundred yards when I saw In front of mo a fence exactly llko tho one I had crossed. "This 13 funny," I said to myself. "I didn't know tho Dutch had a fence, too.'' I advanced to the fenco and "xamlned it closely, nnd judge of my astonishment when I saw beyond It a nine-foot fenco apparently holding live wires exactly llko tho' one which had nearly been tho death of me I I had very llttlo tlmo to conjecture what it all meant, for Just then I heard n guard coming. He wns walk ing bo fast that I was sure It was a Dutch sentry, as the Huns walk much slower. I was bo bewildered, however, that I decided to take no chances, and as the road was fairly good I wandered down U and, away from that mysteri ous fence. About half a mile down X could seo tho light of a sentry sta tion and I thought I would go there and tell my story to the sentries, real izing that as I was unarmed it was perfectly safe for mo to announce myself to the Dutch authorities. X could be intoned only if I entered Holland under arms. As X approached tho sentry box I noticed threo mon In gray uniforms, the regulation Dutch color. I was on thy verge of shouting to them when the thought struck me that thero was jdst a chanco X might be mistaken, no the German uniforms were the samo color, and I had suffered too many privations and too mnny narrow escapes to lose all at this time by jumping nt conclusions. I had Just turned off the road to go back Into somo bushes when out of tho darkness I hoard that dread Ger man command: Haiti Haiti" Ho didn't need to holler twice. I heard and heeded tho first time. Then I heard nnothor man come running up, nnd there was considerable talking, but whether they wero Germans or Hollanders I was still uncertain. He evidently thought somoone was on the other side of the fence. Finally I heard one of them laugh and saw him walk back to tho sentry station where the guard was billeted, and I crawled a little nearer to try to make out just what it meant X had begun to think it was all a night marc. Between myself and tho light In tho sentry station, I then noticed tho stooping figure of a man bending over as if to conceal himself and on his head was the spiked helmet of a Ger man soldier I I knew then what another narrow escnpo I had had, for I am quite sure he would havo shot mo without cere mony if I had foolishly mado myself known. I would have been burled at once and no ono would have been any wiser, even though, technically speak ing, I was on neutral territory and im mune from capture or attack. This new shock only served to be wilder me more. I was completely lost Thero seemed to bo frontier be hind mo and frontier in front of me. Evidently, however, what had hap pened was that I had lost my sense of direction nnd Had wandered In the arc of a circle, returning to the samo fenco that I had been so long in get ting through. This solution of the mystery came to me suddenly and I at onco searched the landscape for some thing In the way of a landmark to guide me. For once my faithful friend, the North Star, had failed me. The sky was pitch black and there wasn't n star In tho heavens. In the distance, at about what ap peared to be about threo miles away, but which turned out to be six, I could discern the lights of a village, and I knew It must be a Dutch village, as lights are not allowed In Belgium In that indiscriminate way. My course was now clear. I would make a bcellne for that village. Beforo I had gono very far I found myself In a marsh or swamp and I turned back a little, hoping to find a bettor path. Finding none, I retraced my steps and kept straight ahead, determined to reach that village at all costs and to swerve neither to the right or left until I got there. One moment I would be in water up to my knees and the next I would clnk in mud clear up to my waist I paid no attention to my condition. It was merely a repetition of what I bad gone through many times beforo, but this time I had a, definite goal and once I reached it I knew my troubles would bo over. It took me perhaps three hours to reach firm ground. The path I struck led to within half a mile ef the village I shall nover forget that path ; it was almost as welcome to my feet as the opposite bank of the Mease had seemed- The first habitation I came te was a little workshop with a bright light shining outside. It must have been after midnight but the people inside were apparently just quitting work. There were three men and two boys engaged In making wooden shoes. It wasn't necessary for me to ex plain to them that I was a refugee. even if X had beon able to spmk their language. I was caked with mud up to my shoulders and I' suppose my face must have recorded some of tho ex periences X had gone through that memorable night 1 want tho British consul I" I told them. Apparently they didn't understand, but one of them volunteered to con duct mo to the village. They seemed to bo only too anxious to do nil they could for me; evidently they realized I was a British soldier. It was very late when my compan ion finally escorted me into the vil lage, but he aroused somo people ho knew from their beds and they dressed and came down to feed me. The family consisted of an old lady and her husband and a eon, who was a soldier In the Dutch army. The cold shivers ran down my back while he sat beside me, beeause every now and again I caught a gllmpso of hla gray uniform and it resembled very uracil that of tho German soldiers. Somo of the neighbors, aroused by tho commotion, got up to see what II was all about and came in ans watched whllo I ato the meal those good Dutch peoplo prepared for met Ordinarily I suppose I would hav been embarrassed with so many peo plo staring at mo while I ate as though X wcro somo strange animal that has just been captured, but just then I was toe famished to notice oi care very much what other peoplo dlo There will always be n warm plac in my heart for the Dutch people. 1 had heard1 lots of persons say that they wero not inclined to hlp refu goes, but my experience did not beaj these reports out They certainly di more for mo than I ever expected. I had a llttlo German money lefti but as tho valuo of German money U only about half in Holland, I didn't have enough to pay tho fare to Bob terdam, which was my next objective It wns due to the generosity of thesi people that I was able to reach tot British consul as quickly as I did, Some day X hopo to return to Holland and repay every single soul who played the part of the good SamarV tan to me. With the money thnt these peopU gave me X was able to get a third class ticket to Rotterdam, and I was glad that I didn't have to travel flrst class, for I would have looked as muck out of place In a first-class carriage as a Hun would appear in heaven. That night X slept in the houso' oj my Dutch friends, where they fixed me up most comfortably. In the morn lng they gave mo breakfast and then escorted me to the station. While I was waiting at the station a crowd gathered round me nnd soos It seemed as If tho whole town had turned out to get a look at me. It waj very embarrassing, particularly as 1 could give them no information re garding the cause of my condition, al though, of course, they all knew that I wns n refugee from Belgium. As the train pulled out of the sta tion, the crowd gave a loud cheer and tho tears almost came to my eyes as X contrasted in my mind the conduct of this crowd and the one that had gathered at the station in Ghent when I had departed a prisoner en route for tho reprisal camp. I breathed a sigh of xellef as I thought of that re prisal camp and how fortunate I bad really been, despite all my sufferings, to have escaped It. Now, at any rato, I was a free man nnd I would soon be sending home the Joyful news that J had made good my escape! At Elnhoffen two Dutch officers got Into tho compartment with me. They looked nt me with very much disfavor, not knowing, of course, that I was a British officer. My clothes were still pretty much in the condition they were when I crossed tho border, al though I hnd been able to scrape off some of the mud I had collected the night before. I bad not shaved nor trimmed my beard for many days, and I must havo presented a sorry appearance. I could hardly blams them for edging away from me. The trip from Elnhoffen to Rotter dam passed without special incident At various station passengers would get In the compartment nnd, observ ing my unusual appearance, would endeavor to start a conversation with me. None of them spoke English, however, nnd they hnd to use their own Imagination as to my identity. When I arrived nt Rotterdam I asked a policeman who stood in front of the station where I could find the British cccsul, but X could not mako him understand. 1 next npplled to a taxicab driver. "English consul British consul- American consul French consult" 1 said, hoping that if he didn't under stand one he might recognize an other. Ho eyed me with suspicion nnd mo tioned ma to get in and drove off. X had no idea where he was taking ma, but after a quarter of an hour's ridab brought up in front of the British consul. Never before was I bo glad to see the Union Jack I (TO BB CONTINtllED.) When a Prisoner Is Exchanged. Ivan Bosslter, captured by the Ger mans and later exchanged, says In the Farm and Fireside : "Thon I lay down, not to sleep but to think. I thought oc the day when I enlisted In Canada, of leaving home, tho training camps, the trip overseas to England, the training In England, going across the channel to Flanders, the terrific fight ing at Ypres, of tho mnny friends wh fell on thnt bloody battlefield, how X was wounded nnd captured, the lnhu man treatment I received at tho hands of tho German surgeons, who had four husky Germans hold so ftron while thoy cut five bones out of my wrist nnd nmputatcd my middle finger at the second joint when I wns wounded in the palm of the hand, tho kicks and tho cuffs from prison guards and the terrible stuff the Germans called too In the prison camps." Enough matches to light all its con tents are attached to a recently 1 vested dgaretto bor i