The Omaha Sunday women 1 Ugion of Death' a Regiment How They Are Fighting in the Trenches Side by Side with the Men, Undergoing All the Hardships of War, and Being Promoted to Lieutenants. Captains and Colonels Through FROM time to time alnee the great war began report! bare leaked through , of women fighting in the trencbea aide by aide with their huabanda, broth era and kver or eltnplr their own countrymen. . Theae report have been received with more or less in credulity. ' It did not aeena poaarble that women ould undergo the hardahlpa, the complete rereraai of all their habita and the primitive, tnannera that neceeiarily accompany trench life.' . ' Incredulity ' haa, lowerer, giren way before actual official reporta of women decorated and promoted for bravery on the battleflelda. ,' It aeema now that in Europe the women actually do put on the uniform of the men, fight, not only in trencbea, but in the cavalry, and in very way measure up to the atandard of a aoldler. ' Indeed, they are harder to conquer, it aeema, than the men. ' A recent aeml offlclal report from Petrograd mentioned that the Raaaiana were aurprlaed, when they captured a line of trenhe along the Bzura River in Poland, to And a number of German women among their oaptlvea. Theae women were found In the very firat line, with hot rtfiea ettll In their handa. . "There waa much more difficulty In making theae women prlaonera than the men." reported the officer in charge of toe victora, , "They would not aurrender until after all their men comradea had thrown down their arma, and they taunted the men with cowardice. Theae women were pot at all heavy, unsexed peaaanta. -Some of tbera ahowed all the in ark a of refinement. Inquiry developed that only a few had donned the uniform becauae aome loved one waa in their company. " The majority had enlisted beonuse . of i pure patrtotlam. "I waa told, that the German author!- , tlea," aald the officer in charge of the vie tore, "do pot openly encourage enllot mrnt by women, but they do wink at It. The men In the trenchea, the officers know perfectly well that thla aod that aoldler la a woman, but they prtend nut to know It officially," The Ruaalana could not have been aur-' priaed at eeelng women aoldlera, however, becauae hundreda of women are appa rently fighting In the ariplea of the Ciar, Mme. Alexandra Koudaaheva la the moat dlatingutahed woman aoldler in the Ruaalan army. She command tb Sixth Ural Oonnaolc Regiment, which haa, cov ered itself with bonora In many battlea In Eaat Pruatla. Wounded twice, Mme. Koudaahera beara the Croaa of St. Oeorge, that ia given only for exceptional bravery, and many orders of Inferior sig nificance. 8he is back again to her regi ment, which consists of msny Cossack woman volunteers, though the majority of the aoldlera are men. A few more suc cessful battles aod Mme. Koudaslieva will be promoted to a general.. When the war began Mcie. Koudaahera entered the army as a volunteer. She distinguished herself in daring raids on the Herman uctana, and waa made a lieutenant, and soon thereafter a colonel of the same rerfment in which ber hus band had served years ago.' During the two months that she has. acted as a com- s mander of the regiment aha haa given proof of 'exceptional strategic glfta and courage. She haa never stood behind, but always In front, of ber men. Natural ly, no man to be surpassed by a woman, and this haa given her company a reputation for unusual bravery. Colonel Koudasheva la by no means a eml-barbarlc adventurer or a Salome who revela in bloodshed. She ia a lady of highest culture and refinement. , He aides being a talented poet and brilliant, writer, abe ia a fine musician and a pas alonate lover of sports. She haa made twice a trip on horseback from China, through Manchuria, Siberia and Kuropean Russia to Petrograd. She made the trip alone, and passed the most danger, oua deserta of the two continents with out having bad any great difficulties. ' "I have felt Juat aa safe in the wildest deserta of Siberia, as I do on the atreeta of Moscow or Petrograd, simply because I have the absolute conndenre In my abil ity to command the man. regardlesa do I ,tneet him In a fashionable aocletv of a big ,city, or aa a highway robber to the wild est wilds. A woman if she only knows iher feminine powera--can, conquer any man." thua writes Mme.. Koudaabeva la' Iher "Diary of Ride Throurti Siberia." ' Tbla la how aha wrltea in a letter to a friend In New York of one of ber ad-' ventures while abe waa still a lieutenant and was out to ascertain the strength of the enemy at night i - "It waa a ghastly, moonlight nlgut of the Fait A "bleak wind whistled and bowled around the ruins of ha village, ia So of Servian Women at Rifle Practice Before Being Sent to the Front Agaimt the Autro-Lerman Forced. which there had been ao much human Joy before and so much mlaery aftor. I waa riding with a company of twenty-five men to trace the retreating enemy. Though the amphltheatrlp Mile that rose before ua seemed dead and bare, yet mysterioua flashes of light appeared here and there, like magic signals. They warned ua of the hidden batteries of the enemy. As we galloped on, I could aee the road strewn with broken boxes, 1 ST f t V -it .'-A r t f f-K. Stanialawa Ordinska, the Poliah League of Been Promoted Bravery at knapsacks, household implement. d'ai horses and men which the cnemr had left behind In bis hurried retreat. "Excellency, whispered my orderly, 'I see there beyond the hill a moving dot. It's probably the head of a "dady" (aa we called the Germans). Aa we were In the shadow of the niina, we could discern distinctly the bare field In the moonlight. Before ua was the first line of the trenchea of the enemy. I pulled my rifle and aimed. A ahot. The dot became a black figure that rose and staggered and fell, it waa a distance of 150 steps, and I could aee how a gray ribbon of trenchea etretched In both directlona before ua a ribbon that always fssclnatea and yet frlghtena becauae It la the home of death. Mre black dota were visible, moving ia ... , ' v v ' v ; - -v x f' I v do TS UIW the Their Bravery the direction where the one before bad fallen. "Little by little I could aee dots in every direction beyond the ribbon. A few figures climbed out and started run ning toward us. "One, two, three!' I whispered and then followed a salvo from ay men. The figures either fell or ran back behind the ribbon. From behind a hill flashed a light and then the battery of the enemy opened fire at the village where we were. It was the machine guns. 'Nu-ka, Mlaha, tickle the dadles, Qulckl waa the humorous remark of one of my soldiers to me. We must have killed and wounded a hundred or more. Then we turned around and rode away, without having lost a single man and without having any men wounded." Mme. Colonel Koudaaheva is a student of soldier psychology on the battlefield, as Is shown in another letter. "When you feel the invisible fingers of fate so close to your life, as on the bat tlefield, the problema that interest you before and the feelings tnat you expert- M 1 ence In a peace ful feminine ac tivity die out and a new view opena. it is not the feeling of sport, it Is not the feeling of being killed, that takes hold of the mind on the battlefield, but it la a queer, dramatic hypnose, like an actor, feels before opening a play. "It all seams a huge cosmic play a stern tragic pano rama of life but atlll a play. The whole human organ ism aeema to work against all laws of a Woman Soldier in Austria Who Has to Sergeant for the Front. nature, for, though you stay in the cold and. rain day and night, yet you catch no old, no ailments that are uaual in everyday life." Mme. Colonel Koudaaheva may require a atrlct discipline of her inferiors, but she never applies any punitive mea mires. She commauds with, the moat polite words. "Gentlemen, please, would you do me the favor" la her usual command to the aol dlera. "My boys and girla go to any fire without any forcible measures." she writes. "I just need to hint at an Instruc tion, and already it ia carried out. I have taught them not to shoot with hate, but to leve the man they shoot. And they do love, which ia proven by an incident when once we chaaed the enemy into a river and when we saw that they would be drowned we all went to pull them out. Copyright. 1111. bv the Star Company. Nrf,.- ;;,.a, . -r f??Hv$r$ &i y Bee Magazine Page in on y'V ft X-T V v. ;mHK.4.,M ,.JBKiU, 11 ",v. t r 7 ?K ( Servian Women Recruits for the "Legion of Death" Receiving First Instructions After Enlistment. and thua saved a whole company." Another Russian heroine is Natalie Tychnlnl, a high school girl of Kier, who haa received the decoration of the Order of St. George for distinguished service at the front. She had arrived at Opatow among a detachment of colunteers tor the campaign against the Austriana. She waa dressed like a man, and pasaed for a remarkably handsome boy. She waa detailed to carry ammunition to the trenches. She waa In the hottest fire and waa wounded twice. The Russians were forced to retire, and she waa left lying on the field. The Austrian Red Croaa workers found her. "Why. thla la a woman!" exclaimed the Austrian surgeon who examined her. The Auatrlana nuraed her. When the Huaalana again took Opatow she was atlll In a hospital. She waa recaptured by them and aent back to Kier. where she waa given her bonora. Austrian women are also fighting Stefa Pa Ilea la a young Croatian who enlisted with her husband in the same regiment. In thla caae her ex waa well known, and she waa not forced to uae men'a clothea. She haa already been made a corporal for her bravery In the field. A almllar caae ia that of Stanlslawa Ordinska. who enlisted, masquerading; aa a man, in the Polish legion for Aus tria. She waa made a eergeant -for bravery ahown at the front before it waa discovered ahe waa a woman. Then she waa allowed to keep her rank and her gun. One of the moet intereatlng bodies of x.oraen aoldlera la the Serbian organize Hon called the "Leg la Smlrtl." or le gion of Death. The Legion of Death ia composed of women who have been trained in the uae of firearms and In the acience of war. In the Balkan tStates, where women frequently fellow their husbands through- Ortat Brltajn Rlajite Rjrvi pa P J U A J " ' .ill '-'i-r'''"''J l 1 A.'- i St 3vVj rV r"e"J-,.v0. out military cam paigns, acting as pack-carriers, camp attendanta, and even as trench-diggers and sappera when neces sary, it is not unusual for them to take their places beside their huabanda or their lovers on the firing line. There are many expert rifle shots among them, many indeed who are ca pable of taking men's places under necessity. Accus tomed to attack In solitary places, and more or less Inured to bereavement, a kind of grim quiet follows them wnerever they are seen. The Legion of Death Is recruited from sll classes of women, from the wives of rich merchants to the wives and daughters of peasants. This Amazon corps had Its origin in the patriotic en thusiasm of a woman sixty-two years old, whose husband died for Serbia in the war for liberty against the Turks. The women handle the regulation rifles and are held In deadly fear by the Aus triana and Germans. Indeed, it seems that on both aldea the aoldlera dread the women soldiers more than they do those of their own sex. Kipllng'a "The female of the peciea la more deadly than the male," recalls Itself, of course. Dr. Hans Hulduckson. writing of this same phenomenon, said: "Women are not natural combatants. They do not rush into war for war's sake. Tbey are without the blood lust that makes fighting a Joy for fighting's sake. Tbey w ill fight only. In desperate straits, and then only for their honor, their chil dren or the exltitent-e of their country. Standing at one of tbeae last dltchea, J i if' u Mme. Colonel Alexander Koudaaheva Who Commands he Czar's Sixth Ural Cosaack Regiment of Which One Fourth of the Soldiers Are Women. Mme. Colonel Koudaaheva Showing the Trousers and Typical Male Dress She Wears n the Battlefield. however, they fight with the ferocity of tigers. They do battle without rule or reason -and to the death. An English woman, who U endeavoring to organize a company of women for military train ing, said that ahe did not fear that they would not flibt. but the fear was that they might fight too fiercely. They are the most cruel of combatants when they so far overcome their native womanly gentleness aa to enter Into combat. "A aoldler of experience said that he would rather fight a company of male aoldlera than one woman eoldier. He ex plained that woman is too resourceful in the matter of weapons. War trana forma woman the time Into a beast." 1