The Boy Allies with Haig in Flanders; Or, the Fighting Canadians of Vimy Ridge
Crawford, taking advantage of the inky blackness of the night, crept from the
ectator it would have seemed that the occupants wer
e from his trenches in another of the night raids that had marked this particular sector for the last few weeks; but the ever vigilant sentinels stood watch
an trenches with full knowledge of these se
ward the German trenches less than a hundred feet away-just the distance from
driving back the legions of the German Emperor, who still clung tenaciously to territory he had conquered in the early stages of the great war. These b
he outbreak of hostilities, when they were separated from Hal's mother. They made their way to Belgium, where, for a time, the
reat assistance in training men Uncle Sam had selected to officer his troops. They had relinquished their rank in the Bri
ican expeditionary forces. In one hand Chester carried a little hardwood box, to which were attached coils of wire. In the other hand the lad held a
s-to get in their work, and the voices of the big guns, which, almost incessantly for the last few wee
ed close
epy out her
ng myself. It forebodes, trouble, this silence, to my way of
ft of it, with that thing you have u
ply, and he added: "We'r
their way witho
nce, suddenly uttered
hester touc
tter?" he aske
we have come to a barbed-wire entanglem
ht your 'nippers' along," s
the work of a moment to nip the wires,
le hardwood box upon the top of the trench, and scraped over it several handfuls of earth. The lad now took the coil of wire in his
nt. Before their own trenches the
he command. "W
," retur
recognized th
said with a br
boys were safe back
ful as our own sentries, we would
eply. "I saw a German sentinel, but
ess to see, howev
's listen and seen if we can ov
ttle receiver to his e
ester removed the re
hear some of the men talking, but
ten a while
eard nothing save the jabbering jargon of German troopers apparently interested in a card game.
old Chester that something
the German trenches, which was carried
lonel Blucher to open with all his guns at the mome
t, sir," wa
t is
es becam
ed to Chester what
Captain O'Neill," said
ced at h
10 o'
ttered. "Well, I guess
troops were in their present positions for "seasoning" purposes. They had been the first to be given this post of h
n O'Neill, Hal made hi
and approached the qua
nced that he bore a co
Ne
ad delivered his message. "So they will attack us in t
a moment. T
vance ten yards and then move one hundred yards north. You may tell him that I will post a fo
d reported to C
idn't understand the situation fully. Ho
e said. "I guess he knows what he
from the trenches in silence. There was a suppressed air of excitemen