Fighting in France
there was going to be a fi
ght though and from the way the rest of th
tside their quarters behind the fighting line. The scene was in Champagne, one of the pro
t and uncle in a suburb just outside of Paris. At the earliest possible moment Leon had enlisted in the French army. Assigned to the aviation corps he had take
nces and hardships Jacques Dineau, a young Frenchman, had been his inseparable companion. These two boys, for they were nothing more than that, had more than once distinguished themselves for bravery and dar
his missing brother at all hazards. This Earl had endeavored to do and after many kinds of adventures had finally been successful. The lur
ghtest suspicion of an accent, "there will certainly be some real
hem as especially quiet
in the trenches all the time. Now we will have
the German lines,
an awful bump anywa
half our men," a
"We are assigned to the front line, the post of honor.
ous of us anyway," said Earl.
ning at nine-f
the first line trench
act
thirty minutes ago that he had just been talking with Ca
ything is arran
"Our officers are not the kind to send us into a
l have," cried Leon enthusiastically
l we have?" d
every minute in every yard of
every space three feet long a shell
rtain
tered Earl. "Why, there'll
smash their trenches to pieces then we can drive them
es will all have the e
ficers' maps. What do you think our aviators are for? Don't you know that they take pictures of the enemy's fortifications
enly. "Here comes one o
ed in size as it came nearer. At least four thousand feet above the trenches the gre
hite smoke appeared
re firing at i
e horizon. It was lower than the French machine but rose in great circles with amazing speed until it had
fokkers," remark
hine, you mean?
are very
r line though," said Earl
f our machines up to
latter and noise. A moment later a big monoplane came into view and
downward at incredible speed. All about him the bombs from the high-angle guns of the enemy were exploding and it did not seem p
it," cried
cautione
cribing huge circles in its flight. The little white clouds all about told with what zeal its destruction was sought, but st
man turn back now,"
?" demanded Earl.
hine before the other comes up," said Jacq
suppose they are
said Leon. "Is that
just about," replied
ls in the air were not infrequent but they never lost their power to thrill. To see two huge mechanical birds each maneuvering for a ch
you?" demanded
chines did not attempt a pursuit, but after one or two triumphant circles were headed for home. A few moments later th
d Leon. "They were two to one and it seems to
, had a faster machine than theirs. Then that scout of ours may have very important news for
t forgotten this attack to-morrow I go
lanc said," Earl reminded his brother.
what regiments hold the line opposite. He said that along the whole length of our front line steps had been cut in the trenches so that we can
"It looks as if we me
All shoes and extra clothes and blankets are to be turned into the quartermaster; every man is to put on clean underclothes so that if he is wounded he wo
into the trenches
clock t
inspectio
ur befo
d Jacques. "It's almost supper-ti
among all those thousands who was not glad that on the morrow he was to come up out of his hole in the ground and meet his enemy face to face. An air of quiet confidence per