Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 11, 1919, Page 7, Image 7

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    .i
NEBRASKA BOYS
EXPECT TO REACH
HEW YORK soon
Wr. L T. Andrews of Lincoln
Is Member of State Recep-'
tion Committee fpr,;'
Overseas Soldiers.
By a Staff Correspondent
Washington, May 10. Mrs L.
t.
Andrews, widow of, the late Dr. An
drews of Lincoln, rho is connected
with the Red Cross office in New
York City, came to Washington
Friday in charge of a casualty train
destined for Atlanta, Ga. . Mrs. An
drews left the train here and re
t turned New York Saturday. As
"f -'member of the Nebraska recep
tiow'committee tojwelcome returning
Nebraska soldiers, from -foreign
strVice Mrs. Andrewy who is a sister-in-law
of Congressman VAn
drews of the Fifth district, said that
the best advices the New York
boys would probably reach New
York late this month "or early in
June. It is expected Governor ULt
Kelvie will be in New York to wel-
L1- . 1 .
come me ooys on weir aisemDarKa
tion. The chairman of this recep
- Hon committee if, Mr. Hughes of
Norfolk, vice president of. the
American Press association1. Bert
Whcdon of Lincoln also is a mem
ber.; , , . . S
Lieut. Max Bachr, jr.. of St. Paul,
who made a most excellent record
for himself in the naval , aviation
strviceMn overseas work Vith the
English Zeppelins, has been placed
on inactive duty at his own request
and leaves tomorrow to 'join his
family,- at present Jiving at Long-f
utach, Cav '. '
Congrtyman Reavis has returned
to Washington for the coming ses
sion of conjgjess. ; N . 1 '
Want "Back Taxes.
The state of Wyoming has been1
losing from $60,000 to $100)00 year
. ly in taxeson property individually
owned in ellowstone park, accord
ing to Special tjDeputy-Collector of
Taxes H. A. Luce of Cody, who re
cently urged the . commissioner of
Park county to take action looking
to the colleetionof this money. It is
understood the matter has-been
ken trp with state officials and that
?ome concerted actiotuvjill be taken
, in the near.future. The situation ha
u- parallel, in that Yellowstone
Wyoming was admitted to the union,
and" in the act of July 10, 1890, cre-ati-ig
the park, no provision, was
made for the imposition or collec
tion of taxes of state, or county au
thorities. In all national parks crea
ted from states, express provision
nas oeen incorporated into tne en
abling act reserving to the state ihe
' right to colliechwtaxes ,and agree
ments made as to "DroDortions of
In ka nn irl Ia itAiinfia.
"which lands were taken for ""park
vxurposes. ; Park county, which has
initiated the movement, was not in
yicf.nrift when fit V1lrni7cfifi a
park, was created,:: 'the Wyoming
area takeji coming 'from-what was
then Fremont county,
-r: - ' i .
Suspend Reform Schaol
, Senence If Boy is "Good"
, Robert Price. 12 veal's old. was
sent to Riverview home with an
order to go to the Kearney Reform
school if he jn't "good." Judge
Troup, sitting in juvenile court, made
the order after Robert had confessed
his second burglary. He and' Lee
Matherly confessed that they en
tered the school room wliefe they are
pupils at South Central school and
iduring the absence ofMhe teacher,
Miss Gross, stole $1.75 each from
her desk, besides a ball and two'
' knives. " ' . -
ln August, 1919Robert was in
into a bicyclestore and for breaking
into a buteher shop and stealing 22
cents. Lee Matherly was allowed
to have anothyf chance after he had
ntade tearful plea.
--,-. ' ... (
Boy Burglars' Sentenced ; N
To Rivervievy Home by JudgeJ
Francis Walters, 13 years old, and
Albert Johnson, 14 years old, boy
burglars wer sent to Riverview
home by Judge Troup, sitting . in
juvenile court The? are negroes and"
confessed that they broke into the
grocery storjR of Rudolph DietZ, 4820
South Twenty-fSUrth street and
stole a Liberty bond, 20 war savings
stamps and some tobacco. Francis
confessed that he tore up the stamps
and put them in the, pocket of an
other boy when he feared .detection.
. They also broke int,q Woolworth's
Sand 10 cent store on the.South Side
and stole a number' of flashlights
and 7Z boxes' of Wrbles. -
, Muddy Roads' Fail' to Stop' '
tlissouri Wedding Party
In a ear bespattered wjth mud and
showing evidence of its battle with
'the elements in reaching Omaha, Jo
r seph Lobba and Miss Ethel Stewart
' arrived at the court house in quest
of a marriage license. They gave
their home as Ridgeway, Mo., and
were married by. Rev. Cftas. W.
Savidge Friday night. They were
-accompanied by Miss Emma.Hend
ren and H. "R. Spicer.' After the'
ceremony the party continued, on the
honeymoon trip in a more leisurely
manner. . .- " v- '
.
Makes Score In Ball Game,
But Suffers Broken Wrist
Charles Paisley, "schoolboy, 4614
South Fourteenth street, broke rec
. ords for sliding on home plate and
also his wrist Friday afternoon in a
J' ame of tiase ball at Riverview park.
, J. Isaacson and Fred Hunter, offi-
cers of the Amateur Base Ball asso
ciation, watching the lengthy slide,
took the injured boytq the police
station, where his wtist was set His
only solace was "that he made a
.score. - .. ' ' , ' '
' Will Give Kensington. '
Ladies. Auxiliary 78, N. A. L. C,
will give a Kensington, Wednesday
at the home of Mrs. Jack Hurley,
J710 Howard afreet, v
Rainbow-Troops Livened Up Quiet Sector. ,.'
In WJhich French Were Smoking Pipes and
Huns Were Washing Clothes in Shell Holes
..- "', - -
Troops of All American States. Had Their First Battle at 4 O'clock In the Morninst
of March 5Though -Yanks Lost One 6fiiceFrl8
H7.'A "XTii.-. j Tv.i At.- T 1 ' m.1' ii
hyuu yittury ana rut
HIT 11.. TTTiAl j 1-k
... mourns vvunout itest.
" . ,j' " .
Tin (HI hntillmit t Hie kMery ar'niT
l 'Tin Bm lut Smdiy. . It toM of tin Mtitliitl
III Ihll InttattMtllt Mr. T.m.kin. hlu
t SeMlee aaa W hwi ll what, ip ttiet flat. Had kMR t tulrt tMtor la Ltrralnt. H d.
Mrttm raid wlilek dontopad lata katttai, kaaara woa, aad tha Saal detail ta a rait area, alter a
record of thrtt aMatka I trn traaakaa. ' , , f . -
Tha ital laiUllaiaat at tka Wataqr KII iiptar ta .Tkd Baa atxt, Suaday. . . V ,
V-
ay KAxMOND
(CaayrbjM, I9li. ky Raymad
V SECOND INSTALLMENT. i
v; It wasvtne day before the
tonUhat th Rainbow, division finished-detraining within
marching distance of the trenches in the .Luneville sector
about 10 miles back. The-67th artillery brigade, national
guard artillerymen from Indiana, Illinois and Minnesota, had
finished shooting at targets around Coetquidan an had
caught up. ; :.;, '- ',-. ' - .
. Luneville was the V'quiet sector" the War department
was telline the neonle about back home. Actnallv there, had
been no fighting there since
reached Kambervillers, and destroyed the villages.
,,' Rainbow Men Changed All That. "
. A rolling wooded country was
this part of -Lorraine altogether
toa. beautiful to be the scene, of
battle. .And by a sort of tacit
agreement both , Germans and
Frenclr had been sparing the villages.
Neither' side used gas and in the
daytime a shot was seldom heard.
With the arrival of the Rainbow
division things changed. N '
k They went into v the trenches
quietly enough. The First division,
when it, had entered the litre pre
viously in a nearby sector, nad
aroused the suspicions of the Ger
mans and had brought down on
their own heads a deadly burst of
fire and a raid"in which they had
lost prisoners. Profiting by the
First's experience the Rainbow
sneaked into position. and took up
its vigil ovec Net Man's land in the
night without the knowledge of the
Germans and without ;losing a shir
gle man. - -
But a new foe wasS, facing the
boche inx Lorrairie' a youthful,
eager foe, confident of his. .untried
strength and impetuous to use it.
And he knew there were 100.000-
000 people back home wofidering
ta-rh?whe would use it and hdw he
was getting along, iso the uermans
were not long without knowledge
of the change in their enemy's or
der of battle. - :,
Stopped Hun's Laundry.
It was many weeks later that
there went abroad the, story about
the Germans who came out of their
trench to wash some clothes in a
shell hole in No Man's land, in full
'sight of the Americans. It was a
true story, and it happened during
the Rainbow division's first few
days in the trenches.
The Germans had washed clothes
Ki that shell hole before and nothing
had happened. They had known that
nothing would happen. On their
side the French had peacefully
smoked their pipes, in the cool of
ihe evening on the very top of he
trenches. It was simply , one of the'
workings out of the tacit agree
ment, j i i .
But a little outpost Alabamians
got one glimpse Of this group of
boches in , undershirts arrogantly
dipping dirty clothes in" -the water
of No Man's land and they opened
fire. The Germans scattered like
rabbits, some ' of them . hugging
wounds.
.' A French officer came rushing
to the outpost in a fury of excite-.
ment. What did the Americans
mean? They,had done a terrible
thing. Now, the Germans would be
angry and everybody was in for "a
period of shelling and gas and raids.
He rebuked the hot-headed Yanks
men later. "I came out here to kill
these boches, riot to sit and watch
them wash clothes."
Officer Was Right.' "
But there was justice in thfci
French officer's rebuke. The Rain,
bow division was the pupil of the
French arrjiy. Going into the line it
had l been divided into small units
and brigaded with four French di
visions of the beventh rrench
corps.
. The 165tbr from New York plus
two companies of the 150th machine
gun-vbattalipn from i Wisconsin
were with the 164th French infantry
division, with their front line in the
Foret de Parroy. The 166th infan
try from Ohio plus the other two
companies of the 150th machine
gun DattcHion, were in the St. Clem
ent sector with the ,14th French di
vision. The 168th infantry, from
Iowa; 167th from Alabama! and the
151st machine sun battalion .from
Georgia, were in the Baccarat sec
tor wiYh theJ28th French -division.
The rest of the Rainbow units were
distributed along the front of the
Seventh French corps where they
could be of most use and get the
most experience. "
v Germans Give Battle.
The irate French officer had been
right, too,' in his estimate of the
result of the Alabamian s rashness,
rThe tacit agreement for a kid-
elove war in Lorraine went some
what to pieces from that moment
The Germans knew now-that flew
American troops were just across
the'wy. They didn t have, to de
nend unon instinct to prove it.
They could see'our men in uniforms
just as our men could see the Ger
mans, so close together were tne
trenches in some places. It was
At 4 o'clock 'on the mornings of
March 5 the boche came over, and
tne men of the Rainbow had their
first battle. ''"- ,
For several minutes the German
batteries poured a rain of shells on
every" trench and on every known
position from which the Americans
mieht fire back. The -counter-bat-
teried the artillery; tfifcir 77's cut
the orortecttnsr barbed-wire to pieces,
They dropped a barrage behind the
trenches to cutvoff both retreat and
supposed that alt the green AmerU I
cans who did not die of fright wouldN
. - - 1 '1 1 J 1 A. - V
oe ciuicr kiucu uy iuc uic ui, tay-
tured by" the picked German raid
ers who now came across behind
the barrage about 100 strong, with
ready bayonets. -
The Americans were geen they
were not veterans. They were hor
ribly scared too. Bat they were also
wie oucnes xo rngnt Liivision neia lrencnes inree
I ,
Rilibsw flvltlM. r IUvm4 t. TmiIIil inmni
h Jluft.laa lute th .n.K.. fc.ii. til
S. TOMPKINS.
. Toaiakhla. All Rlikta Ratanad.) ..' , ;
birthday of Georore Washincr-
1914, when the Germans had
at that moment the mostalert and
desperate bunch of young lowans
in the world. : ' ,
Jjnt 19 Men Killed. s
The spot toward which the raid
was directed was a little groupjif
ruined brick buildings just north of
Badonvillers, known as Le Chamois
Ferme. The lj8th infantry wfas
holdirfg it. It was right at the junc
tion of two valleys, an ideal plaee to
sneak up on, but a death trap if
properly defended. -
What it took to defend it proper
ly the Iowans were all broken out
with. Within one minute after the
first alarm they opened up, down
the valley with- their rifles, the
MarylanderS cut loose with trench
mortars, and the Georgians turned
on the machine guns. It was their
first chance to fire and they were
as vivacious about it as a debutante
at a coming-out ball. The field ar
tillery, French and American, join
ed in. Dumbfounded and maddened
at the resistance, the Germans tried
to rush the trenches, but they got
not even 4o the first line. Dawn
breaking slowly through the mist
and smoke, showed three bodies in
field-gray hanging grotesquely over
the torn wire. v
One officer and 18 men of the
Rainbow division were killed in this,,
the first battle, and 22were wound
ed. But it was a victory; the raid
had been repulsed. No Man's, land
was strewn with German, dead.
Won French Honors.
The spirit of the division took a
great leap. It had discovered Jor
itlelf one of the biggest truths the
war produced that the American
doughboy could . lick the boche.
Their French comrades were like
wise enthused and reassured. The
Rainbow's first batch -of Croix de
Guerre were awarded for bravery
in this brush. , -
Four - days later, March 9, the
Kainbow participated in a raiding
party ot its own, assisted by the
frtnch. for four hours American
light and heavy artillery, trench ar
tillery and machcine guns beat upon
the German first and second lines,
and at 5:10 p. m., French and Amer
ican soldiers went over the op to
gether, destroyed the German shel
ters, capturad a tew prisoners and
returned with light losses. CaptJ
t-. . . . ... i r r rr
Douglas MacArthur. chief of staff,
captured one of these prisoners. He
had gone over the top in a dough
boy's uniform and held a boche up
with a .45. The French gave him
the Croix d Guerre for it. 1
On March 17 in the woods called
Rouge Bouquet, in She Forret de
Parroy, two officers and 50 men
graaaT wmiatu mum
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THE OMAHA SUNDAY
Men and 22 Wounded, They
TT.u m i ml
from the First) battalion of theJ
165th fought the Germans out of a
strong point and destroyed it. Four
Mew Yorkers werej killed, three
wounded and one reported missing.
Twentv Croix de Suerres Mm ta
Jhe 165th for that bit of work. They
took tne German trench and .held
it J hat was the first permanent
gain ever made by the American
troops in France.
Earned Rest; Got None-
By this time .the Rainbow's first
turn in' the trenches had gone along
for almost a month. It had earned
a rest; it vtii ordered to take one!
It has been suggested since that the
Rainbow division's" story ought to
oe "Kests we never uot
From that time on it never had
a rest as other divisions came to
know the term. Rest after rest was
ordered foi it, but the war always
canceled the orders. Once between
Ainuittf. 20 and AitrH in'
into intensive training around Bout-
mont, south oj Neufchateau, but it
diditt rest
And here coming out of the Lune
ville sector on March 20 and oeing
concentrated by March 23 near Ger
bervillers, about 15 miles behind the
line, prepared to match leisurelv
back to Rolampont, it got orders to
stop.
The great Gefinan offsensive on
March 21 had begun. For two days
every German gun from the North
Sea to the Swiss border had fired
steadily on towns,-roads, batteries,
posts ot command. Ihen came the
news ofthe "German break-through
oeiore Amiens.
Thev Rainbow division turned
around and marched back to the
front, and from that moment its
history is the history of the war,
First to Hold Sector.
To begin with it figured in the
complete change of the Allies' mili
tary oolicy. The menace of Amiens
had produced Marshal Foch as su
preme allied commander. General
Pershing had made his historic offer
To 'Marshal tFoch-!-the use joi the
whole American army to handle as
he wished. All previous plans were
dropped, and in order to release the
128th French division to eo to the
Somme, the Rainbow was ordered to
take over the Baccarat sector. Thus
came to the Rainbow division the
honor of ''being the first American
division to occupy a divisional sector
all its own, under its own command
er. Command of the Baccarat sector
passed to Major-General Menoher
on March 31.
Ail tnrougn April there were
raids and patrols, but nothing un
usual, happened. The Germanswere
not trying to. bceak through here;
their effort was Concentrated much
further to the north and west? and
the Rainbow division, with a-month
of trench vigil already to its credit,
(was content to take what rest it
could.. A he weather grew warm andj
sunny, the military outlook on the
bomme impsoved.'the men began to
feel at 'home in the trenches.
Asking' for a Fight
Rainbow busied Itself im
Th
proving all the defensive works of
the sector and Uomp'leting its or
. t -
gamzations. Every man was given
ao opportunity to become proficient
in his own fighting specialty, wheth
er sfhat was stringing -telephone
wires,"- digging trenches, sniping,
hauling ammunition, observing ar
tillery fire or cooking army rations.
Gradually the division began to find
itself; slowly, with the budding of
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BEE: (MAfr 11 .1919.
spring' it began Xo "feet its oats,"
and by the beginning of May ' it
passed, that point where it could be
Fights just burst right out of it.
There was a beautiful little forest
called the Bois de Chenes ncir An
cerviller. It was full of boches. They
had mad ai apparently impreg
nable position of it, filling i( with
networks of wire and concrete
trenches and blockhouses conceal
ing minenwerfer, machine guns and
the deadly 77s, The whole thing
wascayered with dense forest and
commanded the open level ground
on three ides.
Into this stronghold on May 2
French and Americans artillery
poured a destructive fire, which con
tinued until dusk of the next day.
At that time the Third battalion of
the 166th, iifaritry, an Ohio regi
ment, penetrated the entire salient
under command of Major Hender
son with virtually no losses. A "go
and come raid," they called it. The
raiders found the forest of oaks
completely destroyed. Its trenches
were filled, all works were entirely
torn down sfnd the forest itself
turned into almost a bare field. .
Got Relief In Raid.
Two rrtprninge later, May 5, Lieu
tenant Cassidy; sof the 165th led a
party over and sneaked around be
hind a German outpost at Hameau
d'Ancerviller. They jumped on the
Germans, killed two and captured
four.' Sergeant O'Leary matte one
resisting German his own special
prize. While O'Leary was killing
him with a trenck knife, Lieutenant
Cassidy held up two others with his
nistol. Thev brought the firisoners
'back across No Man's land nder
heavy , machine gun hre. Lieuten
ant Cassidy-was made a captain be
fore the war ended and was twice
wounded. Sergeant- O'Leary was
killed in battle on the Ourcq.
. Three Alabama snipers brought
on arother mixed fight oh May 12,
when-they went out in broad day
light to see if their new camouflage
suits would camouflage., They lay
in front ofa dugout and when Ger
mans began filing out they began
firing as fast as they could, load and
pull. Almost immediately the Ger
mans began rusting out in such
great numbers that the Alabamians
would have been overwhelmed if
they hadn't started a retreat Two
got back safely. The third was miss
ing. ' ; N'
i ' Got Quick Revenge
"Let's go get him," said the souh-
etners, so a party of about a dozen
went over the top.jThejfc found No
Man's land full of Germans waiting
f or, them in the tall grass. Greatly
outnumbered he f Alamabians ex
changed shots with them tor a
few minutes and more Germans
came out, until there were more
than 100. So the rescue party, too,
retreated, while one man with an
automatic rifle lay in a shell hole
holding the Germans back from the
chase with a steady stream at bul
lets. And when the Alabamians got
into their own trenches, instead of
one man missing there were two
The automatic rifleman1 hadn't come
back. . I
Two snipers private little hunting
party bade fair now to become a
pitched battle, v The blood of the
Alabama mountain men was up
Lieutenant Breeding, who, they say,
was a full blooded Indian, gathered
ud nearly a whole platoon and went
out to swipe the boches up and
bring back both the Americans.
Now crawling, now dashing for
ward, whooping and "yelling as they
came, Breeding s men fell upon the
Germans and routed them, when
ever thev could they used the
bayonet, and they killed seven Ger
mans and wounded many more,
without a single, casualty to them
selves.
And they brought back the auto
matic nneman, but the missing
sniper they never found. In his
place they brought one dead Ger
man whom they hung oveivfhe wire
as a challenge, guarding him con-J
stantly until the division came out,"
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and "left hinf there a skeleton in
rotted, bullet-torn field gray.
... Gas Takes Heavy Toll.
TJnii the Rainbow again took the
"quiet" out ofNthe "quiet sector."
The Germans retaliated with deluges
of gas and with raids. On thevqight
of May 26-27 they launched -a pro
jector attack on the village Negre,
northeast of Badonviller. seven
hundred big gas -shells of large
Calibre descended all. at ance and
without warning upon the Rainbow
along a front of about 400 meters.
It caught the Iowa infantry by sur
prise and the high concentration of
deadly gas killed and disabled 251
officers, and men. ' Simultaneously,
the boches laid down an artillery
barrage and attempted to raid the
trenches, but were repulsed.
Two. nights later they tried the
same thing, but this time the Rain
bow- was ready. ,It had improved
its gas discipline and. its losses were
only 53 officers and men.
Then came rumors of a great
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German offensive iu Lorraine. The
bivouac of a battalion of storm
troops was discovered on the Rain
bow s front and pro'mptly destroyed
by" artillery. Defensive works were
strengthened and every' night the
entire command prepared to receive
the attack, determined to beat it
back. . But it never came.
Rest Cancelled Again.
Another "-relief .-order' arrived.
Again -the Rainbow division's
thoughts were directed backward
toward the quiet res area, where it
could browse around peacefully for
a few weeks and sleep st night and
get cleaned up.- , ' .
The order warteceived at'divi-
sion headquarters at Baccarat on
lune 19. Bv June 21 he Rainbow
was out of, the trenches, leaving
the 61st French division and the
77th American national armydivi-
gion, from New York, to hold theJ
-rBaccarat sector, and it was concen
trated between Rambervillers
COR. KB! tS. JACKSOU
Price Attractions
Attractive, Rugs
Ruga of every conceivable color scheme desired In any
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8-3x10 Seam
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9x12 Seamless
Velvet Rug '
$23.75
$34.50
4 Rooms
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5 Rooms
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$175 I $225 $295
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- Bed by Night
m best Spanish (POH C A and
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7 A
Charmes, ready to start again for :,
Rolampont. It had been holding the
line for three full months, and thet)
record for' continuous duty was
neither broken nor approached by ,
by any . other American division
throughout the war. At last, thought .
everybody, the long deferred rest
was in sight That, to repeat., was
June 21. f - ,v ;
- On June 22 the Rainbow division
was entraining, not for Rolampont.
but for another part of the front ,
The blood-red pen of war history J
was moving too fist -for American
soldiers to rest ? N, ' '
' 4h third fautellmrat Ff th fclatarT
f the Rainbow dlrliloo will mpmt to
The 11m nut Nunday.) i
Belgium Objects to Flag.
Pari May . 10. (By Associated
Press.) Belgium has protested to
the entente allied powers against
the proposed use by the German re
public of a red, .yellow a.d black
flag which is alraostyidentical with
that of Belgium. . v " i
Opposite Hotel Rome
urn
STSS
in
8-8x10-6 Ax
minster Rugs
9x12 Axmin
ster Rugs
$39.50
$44.50
6 Rooms
Furnished ,
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"Nationally Advertised : v
Duplex Fireless
Cooker
$14.50
Complete with alt cook
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Oak Porch
SWING
Big Special afv
$2.25
l Complete uith non-rustable
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ts.