SHELLPROOF MACK h' -1 II A Common Soldiers Recital ot Thrilling Adventures in'the Terrific Struggle for World Democracy By ARTHUR JAMES M'KAY. Copyright. 111, by Small. Harnard A Co., .. -.. . Inc.) Artk June McKsr. who woa the etibrl met of "Shellproof Meek" thra be joined k Prltleh regiment after the (inking of th : Laeitania and wbea tho Vol ted Motet bad MM to declare war Immediately, reaehed tha front and wu wounded eereral tlmoa tad aaod one. " - Bo withdrew aa appllratloa for dlacharae, accent of twin oa American eltlaen, when told of hi need by the Knrlleh. The 1- rtto battle of Melnee Hldre waa related Mack In connection with the plan to fenrw ay Hlil 00. Hark and comrade go ear tho top when 1,000,000 ponnde of am-mi-- are exploded. They roaeh tho enemy ti ear tin thronca a beery machine and rifle Are. The Brltleh eaeualtlea were to per cent mt teiei nea wbea who went over, i n Tom rale war palnr a terro white aawteaa with Bed Croea aifna painted oa . awof am aide. tadleatln hoepltal, wbea 1 teMf face tremendous runflre. They aeon tho treaeheroua ehanteaa and eap : 4m aha Harmon therein roneealed. i Week relate the aevera dUvlpllae of the Eaa-jieh army and refer to an ineiance wnea Br) faced the flrlnc eqaad beeanfte be re 4 t dtralffe Identity of comrade who I -4 him in retting away to llt hli ; "),. a Mat reet In the rear Xaek and r "l tralM rtart op to to ar the 1 IhM troaehe. Burlnt the flmt IIt i t there ar tlx attack mad by tho .MM aaetl tearing windrow ef dead f t M man lead. All attack war repnleed U fd atyla by the Brltleh. L.mt the bet attack Mack and hi "batt" awwa ordered to the roar for U week1 , Two week of total reet were had by i tired men, after which they were or to the front to take orer the Una ma Faeaehaeadel ridga. Tho flret air raid aorieaeed by Mack and hi oomradee waa while they wore earent to tho front. 3 g Bartered m niuei leey awwm 0 to take Orer too una iron m ureuroeu CHAPTER XV. Vt Mat an met and two men Czzi in th norninr to pick tnt oest to Railway wood, but they nevef r" -nied, at all three were killed by a i We atarted ont at 9 in the ere t -3, without knowing exactly where r. were going. C-inf p the road we could aee bursting ahead of u in large -sr. tint we hurried, because we ' -ttd it oyer. And we walked right . it -1 was plugging along with . 1 other men, one a mate of mine zi Higgins, who had been my pal . r nearly two years, and another . named Bott, that I thought a ' ;J deal of both of whom I have .:dy spoken of and four stretcher :ws that I diant Know oy name. A thell burst right in the middle of ' v I was thrown down and rolled the ditch and half knocked out z'. aa I was getting up shell- if still, for I wasn't marked and : :t badly shaken another smashed t- aame olace. I saw two of the richer bearers who were just get x :y to their feet bo down, and I lay liw a while longer. Then I got out ni looked. Poor old Hig had gone t. smashed to bits. Bott had an j off . and both legs smashed and ' :i to be dead. The four stretcher were all dead. Strangely 1 X I afterwards ran across Bott , , and. He stm nan tne arm 1 one leg missing, but he was oth iae ablebodied. So you see a i takes a lot of killing, Veil, after I had counted what I --seed were the dead I lit out . :t lots towards where X could see 1 eld tree stumps. I wanted r and wanted it bad. I was going tp speed when I went into an 1 trench. 1 turned upside down, 1 like a pinwheel, hit the .water 1 first and started to trV to x I got my feet under alter a l ., tJid my head was still a yard or c from the top and water up to my t x. r r ( ( 1 .. r I ' 1 ! K ( l i i i ' f i - - So I knew it was aa old in trench. No Britisher would r dig ao deep. I fished up the 1 tad tried to climb out . -. . col Too slippery. So I started '. mader along the trench. I had gone a little way when I ran man who covered me with an ;r-ttic and called to mo to halt I 1. It was my company platoon of .7. He didn't say how he came rf. but I sunoose the same wav I 1. We cot out of the trench and ! i what was left of the comoanr. ) (bells were flying over by now, 1 r plodded along without further until we found tor place in . zt front line I It was a throw ; ta the old days of the"Wioen.' the Canadians were living like rats, or even to the days of 1916 w tky village, when our own batt J Tuning that they were mud tur v :. However, there was no kick ( ";z, because there was an excuse 1 tt this time. J--rkg 1917 the British had been jg on pretty fast and there -t been much chance to dig in; 5 r-body eared. We were oa the ' ta Berlin. . 1 Boche had discarded trenches Cis oart of the line, too, but he r iid it because he had something --the pill-boxes. I'll tell about 1 in just about a minute. L Jt line was a narrow trench about ; r feet deeo and two wide, with t j thin parapet of sand bags and r cramunication trenches. We turn I . ia and wedged ourselves down ' Che bottom of this crack in the t ..x We were some surprised when tyere told that we were not to y this trench, but were to move 1 uto some shell holes a few yards , . was still dark when we took ' the holes. From four to eight . were atsigned to a hole. Our 1 were about like this: "There : ale on there with four men in -en yards out Take vour A end run for it at the word. All now. Carry on." t on we did. The hole 1 l tad the prescribed four men in 1 tney lert witriout waiting to the toss or even for a lull in enine run fire., which was aw. .2 bullets were cracking and X overhead in a torrent that tor a few seconds now and knt on the whole might be 1 continuous. We had ducked 1 m one of the ouiet soelli. " ; day broke it was easy to see .s men we had relieved had 1 each t nurry. 1 holes were absolutely the - stiferous spots that I ever Toe new pill-boxes were es : i m a row at a point about JS away, and were raking us. ' .lytime it you stuck a finger : vould take the top off. I lay in my first shell hole two days and saw only the gray, wet sky over head, and once during a short lull in the fire 1 peeped and had a glimpse of a torn and tortured terrain of mud, with here and there black stumps, and over there in the mist the low yellow wafers that we knew were the pill boxes. The smell in these holes was dread ful. TJiere were hundreds of bodies all about, lying unburied in the mug gy August warmth. Bluebottle flies by the million settled over every thing and bit like Jersey mosquitoes. When we went into the holes we took with us rations for two days. Each man had two rashers of bacon, about two pounds of cold roast beef and a half loaf of bread. For each four men there was a tin of jam, a tin of condensed milk, two cans of baked beans, plenty of tea and sugar, and a Tommy's cooker. We had our water bottles filled and took along a petrol can with two gallons of water. The cooker was a spirit lamp affair for making tea and frying bacon. We had no overcoats, and while the days were warm and sticky and sick ening, the nights got awfully cold. Two days were as much as any man could stand in these1 places. Lying there all day looking up at a gray sky and breathing the foul air, soaking in ihe filthy mud and unable to move about at all, was enough to put the huskiest lommy nearly out ot business. When we were relieved, at the end of two days, we went back into the support trenches, about 90 per cent of the men 'had temperatures of over 100 and were out and out sick. Scores wanted to report sick, but the M. O. was at Railway wood, and it would have been Impossible to get back tnere, so we naa to suck 11 our ana go into the holes again a day later. we were to so over the top on tne morning of August 21, and we did, four battalions of men, more than half of whom were fit subjects tor the hospital. CHAPTER XVI. t . Taking the Pill-Boxes. This was not a big battle. There were, as I have aaid, only four bat talions engaged on our side. The affair was more or less of an experi ment The pill-boxes were a new German defensive and had never been thoroughly tried out. We were the goats. ' The little forts were to be given a chance to rake us and see how we stood it. It had been proved pretty clearly already that the boxes were the most effective defense ever devised. They were simply fortified shell holes. Now, for some strange reason, shells rarely strike twice in the same place. We had found that out when we were lying in the holes. Shells would urst all about us, but only once in a hundred times would there be a direct hit over an old hole. It follows that if you fortify an old hole so that it takes two or more hits to dislodge the machine gun that you have placed there, why, your machine is going to be in commission and dangerous ever under an extraordin ary neavy and well directed shell fire, and is going to be hard thing to take. Well, on this attack, our orders were very simple. They were to go over and take those pill-boxes. , That was an. ine boxes were m a row about 300 yards away. They were in groups of five, about 10 or IS yards apart, and a gap of perhaps 50 yards with 1 section of sap or trench. Uur artillery commenced slam ming them the night before and kept t up hard and fast up to 7:30 in the morning, when we were to go over. About I took a look through the periscope and atudied out the terrain in front It was level and muddy and pitted with shell holes, end away off there the white steeples of Fasschen daele showed dim against the haxe. To the rear and to the left and nearer, the jagged, black ruins of "Wipers" broke the skyline. in the fores-round the low boxes were spitting fire regularly, unharmed after a night of it Shells burst all around them, tossing off lumpy clouds of gray smoke with daubs of red flame in the middle, and up above air planes circled ready to chase the Boche fliers if they should come out to laxe a hand. This was our first sro at tha nill. boxes, and in our sick and discour aged condition we tuny expected a ted washout The four of us, in ourMiole, naa no otneer with us, but we ar ranged our tactics ourselves. Two of us were to bomb the box through the gun slots. And two I was one of these were to so around to the rear, where we assumed there would be a door, and prod the outcomlng cocne in nis tenaerest parts. The fact is we didn't any of us ex pect to get halfway across. About five minutes before sero starting time our artillery laid down a smoke barrage in front of us. When we went over wa couldn't see the boxes and they couldn't see us. It worked beautifully. They raked the ground with the machine guns, but they were shootinsr in the dark. . Tha mud wa kicked up all around us for ISO yards, um uuuuuv waa mi, we advanced slowly behind the barratre. Halfwav across. Jackson, one of the bombers, copped his, a piece of shell that took his head nearly off, and he pitched forward oesiae me, tace down. We didn't stop. . , Then the barrage stopped and we found that we were right on top of the boxes. I saw Green throw a bomb, but it didn't go in the gun slots, and bounced off. The third man and I dropped on our bellies to get( under the gun fire and crawled rapidly forward. Green threw a cou ple more bombs which went over. By this time I was right under the box and I pulled the pin out of a bomb with mv teeth and reached up and dropped it in. It seemed to be the (Continued on Opposite Page.) "Terrible eaa of Kctemer-cootraeted when a mere boy fought dleeu for ten year, with half doer a ipecialtati. Both leg in terrible condition. Almost a nerroa wreck. It took juat S bottle to dear up this diataet." Thia I tha late tertimooy of a procalneot new- Hi name and hi reajarKaMe ftory : Baoer in fall on request. We hero am ao aiaoy other rufferen relierad by thia Btarreknai liqaid wah that w freely otter yoo a bottle oa onr peraooal aaorwaie. Try it today. tc ate tod tu. nDo Bo BDo for Slrin Diseaco Shernua St MeCoaaall Drug Co, Frei CD!3 nrelf nnD l Mm mm eaK - i-y. Mi pi if tliuH1 7.MI Ml" ll. Dllllm ; Himil' III WE ARE NOT SELLING OIL STOCK WE ARE SELLING OIL LAND TO RAISE DRILLING FUND mm m m mam mmmw m mm p -w m - mmrnw- fNe own approximately 1,000 acres of Land at High Island, Texas, i Practically every county surrounding is a big oil field. 1(28,000,000 barrels of oil were produced in this district in 1917. flU. S. Government' geological maps and reports on High Island convince us the great mother pool exists on our property, and when we confirm the geologists' reports by bringing in oil it should mean millions to be divided between our company and the people who assist us in our great drilling campaign. flWe offer you the opportunity of joining us in proving our property to be a great oil field, and share in half our profits. HERE IS OUR PLAN JfWe have subdivided our holdings into i4-acre tracts, which we are offering for $30 each Warranty Deed with each tract. flWith money received from tract sales we guarantee to drill at least one well to prove up this land, and at least one well on proven Humble lease. flWhen we bring in oil from test wells, we would then naturally want to drill hundreds of wells. f A small percentage of profits from each well brought in will be used for drilling additional wells. fTract purchasers can never l)e assessed for any purpose whatsoever. liEach tract puchaser receives Profit Sharing Contract, entitling him to share proportionately in 50 of net profits from all wells drilled at High Island, and proven Humble lease. 'Should our experts select your tract upon which to drill, you will receive a royalty of 1-10 in addition to your pro rata prof its. . 1 fiThe value of these !4-acre tracts should be enormous when we prove this High Island property to be a great gusher oil field. Quarter acre tracts in Famous Humble, Spindletop, Goose Creek and Sour Lake Fields, in counties adjoining, have sold from $25,000 to $50,000 each. fiThese tracts were purchased in the pioneer days of these great fields for small sums. Open Letter From Hon. George D. Melklejohn Vice President of this company, former' Lieutenant Governor and U. S. Congressman, State of Nebraska: To My Friends: ' After a thorough investigation of the officers, and property of the Gulf Coast Develop ment Co., I invested in this company, and accepted the position of vice President. I have examined the title of the High Island holdings, and find the company owns fee title to this tract of approximately 1,000 acres, and a valuable lease in the heart of the Hum ble Gusher oil field. . . . I feel certain that we shall be successful in producing oil on our Humble lease; and I have every confidence of seeing our High Island property developed into a remarkable gusher oil field. From the investigation which I have made, and from my study of the Government geo logical reports, I do not hesitate to recommend the proposition of the company as a good, sound investment, with reasonable possibilities of great profits. You may rest assured that the agreements of the company will be executed with the ut most fidelity. Yours sincerely, GEO. D. MEIKLEJOHN. AMERICAN TITLE GUARANTY COMPANY. 1 Capital $300,000.00 ' Union National Bank Bldg. ' j ; ' Houston, Texas, Mar. 13, 1918. Railway Commission of State of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb. Gentlemen: . I have known Mr. H. R. Ellwood, President of the Gulf Coast Development Com pany, of Houston, Texas, and Mr. W. E. Langley, Secretary and Treasurer of the Com pany, many years and am intimately acquainted with Mr. Ellwood. They are gentlemen of fine business ability, and would engage in no enterprise not entirely legitimate and feasible. Yours respectfully, 1 GEO. H. BREAKER, Vice president. Yowi are 1c. a ioirtasiieiul iroe-FoMirth :Sfj.i ; T,r- maHm M $Ht r. ut you sitg' where; bljEQ reaso wtthrwondipl H Your good judgment should tell sfou selling our property and using proceeds with our time and labor, unless we w t?? gusher oil field. z ' - jj Our big profits are made from SQyb, for us to make big money, we mur 7 .a .1-' We are operatiiijgtp compliance with th d . Phone :Tt: 740 First Ncticr.1: orAUA, r: Think What theValue off One-Quarter-Acre TractpJ "mm Villi p '"ft ni'u! if II I-' :" ' V 3 2 1 f - iiDiiWi. jiliii iil.iil 8 Op n si 4