The Omaha Sunday Bee Magazine Pag e fcflT if Las1! Pifc "Si ':', I ?5ff .. r it 1 i 2 t.. rrcrant Klttf Rakrp of tkr KaIUh f rmnlr Vuluatvrr l-'arra r pi'-.-: . ? .A t " 1 ) :) ; -S i,vm. M:a A A f fv JJ- P W ttMa& - .j A Servian Mother Saying Qood Bye to Her Children Before Going to War. By Dr. Hans Utildricksen, !E most RlKnlflrant Indication of the final and catastrophic nature of the present world- war In that women are everywhere reported to be preparing to take part in It. Many of them hare already done bo. This means that the nations In volved are struggling for their very existence. 'When such a crisis is reached, that half of the nation which Is normally tmmllitary but which has at leant as great a stake In the country as the other half, Is drawn in. This Is "the last ditch" stage of warfare. Then the most terrible extreme of human savagery are reached. Woman In war is in credibly cruel, for ahe throws aside all reason and flghU simply with in stinctive fury. Hundreds of episodes can be cited from history showing the reckless ferocity with which women have fought in war. The Instance of Countess Zriny, who blew up her castle and herself when the maraud ing Turks had entered In its walls. Is typical of many mediaeval occur ences. Napoleon's soldiers in Spain were resisted with mad fury by the Spanish peasant woman, and for that reason he never effectively con quered the country. In proportion, as women make their appearance in the present conflict, will its ferocity be determined. The English militant suffragettes have declared a truce in their own war with established conditions, and some of them have announced their readiness to go to the front to fight for the country they have for years pestered and under the leadership of the officials they have heckled. Numbers of Servian women have enlisted, as they did la the late nal kan war, under their battle-tattered flag. The Monteaegrln women are eager to .light for their country. The German women are actively prepar ing for war. French women, at present, barred collectively, are trying Individually to slip into the French regiments dis guised ss men. Fleets of aero planes In charge of skilled avta trlcea are being organt3d ia 1- i O P ma? jfw- ar 4 V France. Rome of those Germans, who paosed the forts at Liege only to die In the dust of the highway, were started on their terrestrial journey by a bullet sped by a flaming eyed nelglan woman. Russian women, who played brilliant parts as spies, are now clamoring for a place In the field, and those acquaint ed with the subtleties of the fem inine Russian, which are without number, expeot to see her figuring In the great engagements. Women are not natnral combat ants. They do not rush into war for war's sake. .They are wtthout the blood lust that, makes fighting a Joy for fighting's sake. They will fight only In desperate straits, and then only for their honor, their children, or the existence of their country. Standing at one of these last ditches, however, they fight with the ferocity of tigers. They do battle without rule or reason and to the death. An Englishwoman, who Is endeavoring to organize a company of women for military training, said that she did not fear that they would not fight, but the fear was that they might fight too fiercely. They are the most cruel of combatants, when they so far overcome their native woman ly gentleness as to enter into com bat. A soldier of experience said that he would rather fight a company of male soldiers than one woman sol dier. He explained that woman Is too resourceful In the matter of weapons. War transforms woman tor the time Into a beast. Kipling pointed out that the female of the species is more deadly than the male, referring to her, without doubt, in her fighting phase. In. moments of the wildest excitation. Induced by war, she has surpassed any of the atrocities ever committed In the name of war by men. There la for the horror of na tions the incident of that campaign in the Netherlands by the Spanish army, whan the Dutch women cut out the hearts of captured Span lards and dung them across the walls of the cities In the face of the approaching army. Women are instinctively afraid ot a mouse. They will flee from it. climb upon a chair and scream. Tet there is record of the bravery of 1.000 Doer Amnions who fought on the firing line and in the trenches at Spton Kop and Ladysmlth. An eye witness tells of fourteen women who fought beside their hus bands. Entrenched In one position, they held It against a British force with incredible bravery. Fifty of the Rrttlah soldiers, with their bayonets fixed, charged the intrenchment The Doers crawled over the earthworks to meet them, and while the women covered them with their shooting, triod with the butta of their rifles to disable the British. Before the eyes A soldier of experience - said r A Regiment of Women Soldiers Recently Formed in China. .'.It. Because, Explains Psychology, They Only Fight When the Existence of Their Homes and Their Children Is Threatened with Annihilation as in the Present War of their wives every one of the Boers was run through and pinned to the earth by a bayonet. Not one of the fourteen women widowed in that bloody engagement screamed or fainted. All fought aa silent furies. A British survivor of the battle said it was like fighting with a mute wild cat. It had taken five minutes to kill the men. The women fought for half an hour, no one of them crying quarter, and, when the Brit ish soldiers wiped their bleeding faces and tried to mend their hope lessly torn clothing, not one of the fourteen widows had aurvived her husband. Two daya later, when the British retired across the Tugela, twenty-eight corpses, fourteen men and fourteen women, were found within a radius of one hundred feet, their bodies crimsoned, their faces set In the grim lines of battle, and the grimmest of the faces were those of the women. A Boer girl, seeing her twin sister shot down by an English officer, her self snatched his sword and ran it through hta body. The sight of the girl fury standing over his body, hacking it as though she wee cut ting a log of wood for a kitchen fire, stopped the onslaught of the British force. The girl died, the sword gripped in her stiffening hand, heap ing curses on the English. These examples of ferocity in bat tle are not exceptional. They are characteristic of the woman at bay. By nature compassionate, when she turns cruel, her cruelty haa no limit. It is one of the paradoxes of human nature that the gentle sex becomes under one condition the cruellest. That state is the atate of extreme war. Not a political war. Not a war of diplomatic hair-splitting or schoolmaster technicalities, but one that threatens the sanctity of her person, the lives of her chil dren, or the existence of her country. Digging through the stratum of undeniable fact that women ar the cruellest of soldiers when at the last ditch, I have found the supporting stratum of reason to be that In war her nature is transformed. Tl.at, too, is evident in the reports of 'every bat tin in whlc'i Amazons have en gaged. But why do the gsntlest of human beings become the most sav age? in part because nature is an ex tremist, sending the pendulum swing ing from gentleness to ferocity aa from night to day, from Summer to Winter. But it is my deduction that they are the most ferocious of warriors because they are Impelled by an in sanity of fear. They fight frantically because they have lost their heads. Terror has driven them mad. It has made them utterly reckless of conse quences. Fright baa made them des perate with an awful desperation. The spirit that leads women Into war Is the same as that which leads bi ths 6lr Company. Urrat Britain " . ,. i, i if ; I'' i1-.- . 4- AiiVvi- '.'.v !r fit nil, '.-T- ; " JSJ y ?''!0iiggS A. Historic Bohemian Episode, in Which the Countess Zriny Blew Up the Powder Magazine of Her' Own Castle to Destroy the Invading Turks. Painting by A. Zick. them into the crime of manslaugh ter; for war is only manslaughter on a larger scale. It Is not in the na ture of the normal female human deliberately to plan the taking of human life. In the breast that has nursed mankind there lives no thirst for killing. When a woman kills It Is in defense of or In guarding some thing she holds dear. In a word, she is frightened Into ferocity. In the consciousness of the' women of Servia and the Montenegrin women there is an obsession that by Joining the army they will double the fighting force of the countries that are threatened with extlnctlor. Fright at thought of what may bo fall their country and themselves If undefended, or If Inadequately de fended, has driven them for the time insane. The female patriot of Ger many has visions in the stillness of the night of her great, clean, calm, strong country being sponged out of existence, of being removed from the slate of 'Europe, sacrificed to num bers, as was Poland. Those visions have maddened her to the point of fighting, killing, mutilating, while the red nvlst of rage is before her eyes. The French women are afraid. They fear the menace of the mailed fist which Wllhelm of Ger many once placed in a phrase, but which' he has now raised to strike. Trembling before that mailed (1st, the French women have inflated There Were Submarines Hundreds of Years Ago IN a book soon tq be published Professor M. Z. Tour neur, of Dieppe, France, says that submarines have7 almost aa hoary a paBt as aeroplanes, which, as is well known, involve ideas that are centuries old. The result of his researches haa proved that ub marlnes were 1 built as early as the beginning of the seventeenth century. - The origin of the invention it older still. Aristotle tells how Alexander the Great made use of submarines during the siege of Tyre more than 300 years before Christ A Dutchman named Cornelius Van Drebbel astounded London in 1620 with a submarine that held twelve oarsmen and some passengers, among whom was iting James L Previous to this, in 1334, a monk suggested the idea that a ship be constructed of metal so as to be water tight and able to resist the pressure of water. "If a sufficient weight be placed in such a ship bo as to equal the volume of water displaced it could go on wheels at the bottom ot the water or else sail beneath the sur face by means of oars." he said. The necessary aera tion, be suggested, could be established by means ot water-tight leather tubes, which could also serve as a means of communication with the outside. He also suggested other means ot constructing a sub marine. It could have the shape ot a large bell wita Klshts Reserve! r " -& - - "'ji- ,V i A, 8 $ 2 i their souls with courage. Some of them, still sane enough, despite their terror, for sustained consecutive thought, have turned to the uses of war their unique talent. French women, the most skilled avlatrlces of the world, are planning a cam paign of the upper air. They will be scouts and Warriors of the skies. Will such an appalling disaster over take them as befell the German avi ator, who, flying above Liege,, was attacked by a Belgian aeronaut, who cut his aeroplane to pieces and sent his body hurling .through space to the feet of a group of the women of Liege T Ordinarily these women of Liege would have screamed and cov ered their. faces at the crumpled horror. But the dispatches say that . these women laugbed, bhat one of them Bpurned the broken body with her foot; that one, a young girl and beautiful, fiancee of a Belgian offi cer, ran to her home to bring a knife to mutilate the limp, helpless thing that five minutes before had been an enemy. It was the Belgian officer himself, according to the story, which is reasonable In the light of the unreason of women in war, who prevented her from carrying out her hideous plan. It - illustrates the truth that though in the planning for war men are more cruel, in the car rying out of war women exceed them ia cruelty. If England permits the enlistment r Wis v y J of women, every fair soldier of them will be as mad as the maddest mili tant. It will not require the sight of Mrs. General Drummond leading her army upon the Houses of Parliament to set loose the fighting devils that slumber in the breast ot the gentlest woman. Fear of the enemy will re lease Imprisoned hatred, and hatred will run amuck into murder and pil lage. The Russian? Scratch a Russian and you will reveal a savage. Tha Tartar blood rises to the highest flood in the women of the Russian Empire. All women are more elemental than men. Farther removed from the plane of logic, they are more prone to extremes . Women are na ture's radicals. . - I myself saw a husband and wife, both in the uniform of the Servian army, bid farewell to their eight children. They - ordered the little, ones to sal te, and when one, tbs littlest. Instead wiped away his tears with the back of his hand, it was his mother who berated him for cowardice. It is fitting that. war should be represented not by a mailed fist, nor by a man In amor, but by a woman, a female fury maddened to her work by the deepest motive for crime whether the single crime of murder or the wholesale crime of war the motive of fear. . windows and a flat floor suitable for passengers. How ever, the form of a fish he recommended as the most logical and convenient. The ship would be able to go backward or forward without turning. The propulsion could be . obtained by wheels or - by ordinary oars. . Leather machines for agitating and purifying the air would be necessary. Lighting would be obtained from phosphorescent bodies and the direction learned by aid of the compass. Such a submarine was constructed and was shown to be practical to a certain degree. In 1537 a ship with, twenty cannon, eighty sailors, and many bags ofi, ' money on board blew up and sank In the port ofi Dieppe. Three years later a Frenchman, Jean Barrle, called Pradlne, built according to the old monk's ideas a submarine with which he promised to rescue the bags of gold and silver from the wreck and possibly some pieces of artillery. The Government guaranteed Pradlne the privilege of working on the task for twelve years, authorized him to "collect and appropriate" the iron and other things that the lost ship contained, and even protected him while working with an armed force. The great Pascal, then a little boy, was an eye-witness to these experi ments of Pradine, which were carried on till 1650 with ultimate success. ! f