:<l3r "v. $ j:-r ;s$:tj £-'•••*' * V !<-ma E&GUNNER AND CHIEF PETT^FFfCERnJ.^^AVr. MEMBER, OF THE FOREIGN LEGION OF FRANCE CAPTAIN GUN TURRET, FRENCH BATTLESHIP CASSAKD r«" ifc: WINNER OF THE CROIX DE GUERRE GUNNER DEPEW SEES WONDERFUL WORK OF BRITISH AND FRENCH NAVIES IN QALLIPOLi CAMPAIGN. Synapsia---Albert N. Depew, nutJtor of the story, tells of his- service In the United States navy, during which he attained the rank* of cliief petty offacer, first-class gunner. The world war starts soon after he receives his honorable discharge from the navy, and he leaves for France with a determination to enlist. lie Joins the Foreign Legion and is assigned to the dreadnaught Cassard, where his marksmanship wins him high honors. Later he Is transferred to the land forces and sent to the Flanders front He gets his first experience in a front line trench at Dlxmude. He goes "over the top" and gets his first German in a bayonet fight While on runner service, Depew is caught in a Zeppelin raid and has an exciting experience. In a fierce fight with the Ger mans, he is ^wounded and is sent to a hospital. After recovering he is ordered back to sea duty and sails on the Cassard for 'the Dardanelles. ?'Y\ ; * CHAPTER Xi. Action at the Dardanelles. I tnade twelve trips to the DardA* Miles in all, the Cassard acting gen erally as Convoy to troop ships, but one trip was much like another, and X cannot remember all the details, so I will give only certain incidents of the voyages that you might find Inter esting. We never put Into" the Darda nelles without being under fire--but besides saying so, what Is there to write about in that? It was interest ing enough at the time*, though, you 4|m take it from me! Coming up to "V" beach on owr third trip to the Dardanelles, the •weather was as nasty as any I have ever seen. The rain was sweeping along In sheets--great big drops, and driven by the wind in regular volleys. Ton could see the wind coming, by the line of white against a swell where the drops hit As we rounded the point, the seas gat choppier, and there were cross esffttuu* bucking die snip from every aagie, it seemed. You could not see two hundred yards away, the rain was so thick, and the combers were breaking over our bows three a min ute. The coast here is pretty danger ous, so we went in very slowly and had the sounding line going until its whir-r-r-r sounded louder than a ma chine gun In action. , :J was on the starboard bow at the tiBMi, wd had turned to watch some gatftljes poking at the scuppers to drain the water off the deck. But the •cuppers had been plugged and they were having a hard time of it The on the bridge, in oilskins, was up and do.wn, wiping off the end of his telescope and try ing to dodge the rain. All o£ ^he gar bles but one left the scuppers on the Starboard side and started 'across decks to port The other chap kept •a fooling around the scuppers. Then I saw a trig wave coming for us, just off the starboard bow and I grabbed hold of a stanchion and took a/deep breath and held on. When ijiy head allowed above water again the other end of the wave was just passing over Hie place where the garbles had been, and the officer was shouting, "Un homme a la merl" He shouted before the man really was overboard, because be saw that the wave would get him. 1 rushed back to the port bow and Isoked back, for tile wave had carried Hm clear across the decks, and saw the poor lad in the water, trying to fend himself off from the ship's side. ®ot it was no go, and the port pro-* peller blades just carved him Into bits. On our homeward voyage we re ceived word again by wireless thai there were Zeppelins at sea. We did not believe this and it proved to be •untrue. But there were other stories ft "V ' '-Lijkfr ; . 1 , »4t";'if ^ ' GtllipoL #*«.* t mm GALLI POLIaaiU* DARDANELLES m-'-'. whole. s He had-a lot of other yarns that I cannot remember, but I did not believe him because I saw he was picking out certain men to tell certain yarns to--that is, spinning thefn where they would be more sure of being be lieved and not Just spinning them any where. * So I got pretty tired of this stuff after a While and when we put out from Brest on the fourth voyage I got this fellow on deck in rough weather and began talking to him about the chap who had gone over board the time before and had been cut up by the propeller. I pretended that, of course, he knew all about it-- that the Old Man had had this garby pushed overboard because he was too free with his mouth. %3ut this did not seem to do any good, I had ia think up another way. When we were out two days I got hold of our prize liar again. I figured that he would be superstitious and 1 was right. I said that of course he knew that a ship could not draw near Cape Helles and get away again Un less at least one man was lost, or flhat, If It did get away, there would be many casualties aboaird. I said it had always been that way aid claimed Chat .. the Old Man had pushed this garby overboard because someone had to go. I said on our other trips ho one had been sacrificed and that was the reason we had suffered so much, and that the Old Man had been called down by the French minister of the navy. 1 told him the Old Man Vr^oald pick on whatever garby he though# he could best spare. That was all I had to tell him. Ei ther he thought the Old Man knew of his yarning or else he did not think himself of much account, for he dis appeared that very watch and we did not see him again until we were on the homeward voyage and a steward happened to dig Into a provision hold. There was our lying friend, with a life belt on, another under his head, and the bight of a rope'around his waist fast asleep. Why he had the rope I do not know, but he was scared to death and thought we were going to chuck him overboard at once. I think he must have told the officers everything, because I noticed them looking pretty hard at me--or at least I thought I did; maybe it was my conscience, if I may brag about hav ing one--and I thought one of the lieu tenants was just about to grin at me several times, but we never heard any more about It or any more yarns from our wireless friend. The fourth vdyage was pretty rough, too. The old *girl would stick her nose into the seas and many times I thought she would forget to come out. We had a lot of sand piled up against the wheelhouse and . after we dived pretty deep one time and bucked out slowly, there was not a grain of sand left It looked like the sea Was just kidding us, for we were almost into quiet water, and here It had just taken one sea aboard to clean up the sand we carried all the way from Brest. During the whole voyage you could not get near the galley, which was where our wifeless frlepd hung out when he could. - The pans and dixies hanging on the wall stood straight out When the ship pitched, and several heavy ones came down on a cook's head while he was sitting under them during a heavy sea. That made him superstitious, too, and he disappeared and was not .found for tWQ days. .But he was a landsman and not used to heavy weather. When we got to the GallIpoll" penin sula the fifth time our battle fleet and transports lay off the straits. We could not reach the little harbor on the Turkish coast but the whole fleet felt happy and fairly confident of vic tory. We lay off Cape Helles, and it was there we received the news that there were submarines lying around Gibraltar. Then they were reported off Malta. We got the news from Brit ish trawlers and transports. Our offi cers said the subs could not reach the wKWmm shelis and ... . ctfwnt "elp bat ran wniilB "flhftt. Ill don't asiad Siid, "that Hi wM'«e*N0"iW4i tM. Attd then HI thinks of whatJoe* Ithe chaplain) told trt bra: ..iitvlce. ®8n times of dynger, loiii'^M^owartls,' 'e says. So HI looks hupwards, and blimey hlf there wasn't a bally plane a-dmppln' bombs hob us. 'What price hupward looks, Oly Joel* I sings out but he weren't nowhere* near. Blarst me, there weren't nowhere you could look without doin' yer bloody heye a dirty trick." When the Queen Elisabeth entered the Dardanelles, the Turkish batteries on both shores opened right on her. They had ideal positions, and they were banging away in great style. And the water was simply thick with mines, and for *11 anybody knew, with subs. Yet the old Lizzie sailed right along, .with .her band up on tlje main deck playing, "Everybody's Doing It" It made you feel shivery along the spine, and believe me, they got a great hand from the whole fleet. They say her Old Man told the boys he was going to drive right ahead and that if the ship was sunk he would know that the enemy was somewhere in the vicinity. Well, they were headed right, but they never got past the Narrows. They stuck until-the last minute though, and those' who went up, went up with the right spirit. "Are we downhearted?" they would yell. "No!" And they were not, either. They did not bnig whin they put .it over on the Turks, and they did not grouch when they saw that their Red Caps had made mistakes. Their motto J was, "Try again," and they tried day after day; I do not know much about the histories of armies, but I do not believe there was ever an army like that of the allies in the Gallipoli campaign, and' I do hot think any other army could have done what they did. I take off my hat to the British army and navy after that. .;; It was hotter than I have ever known it to be elsewhere, and there was no wtfter for the boys ashore but what the navy brought to them--some times a pint a day, and often none at all. The Turks had positions that you could not expect any army to. take, were well supplied with ammunition and were used to the country and tie climate. Most of the British army were greeta troops. lt was the Anzacs' first campaign. They, wereC wonderful boys, these Australians and. NeW Zealanders. Gr£at big men, all of them, and finely built, and they fought like devils. It was hand-to-hand work half the time; all the destroyers tiSeir and It was a to 1m fn no time at breezed out with tJHelr tails in lie a smoke screen arofettd the ships. They hunted high anH low, all over the spot where she had been sighted and all around it, thinking to ram It or bring it to the surface, so we could take a crack at it. All the rest of the fleet--battle ships and transports--weighed anchor at once and -steamed ahead at full speed. It wail a great sight Any new shlp -f' coming up would have thought the British ami French navies had gone crazy. We. did not have any fixed course, but were steaming as ^fast as we could in circles and half circles, and dashing madly from port to star- and taller ones, told us by one of the wireless operators, that some of the garbles believed. This chap was the j Dardanelles without putting In some- rea original Baron Munchausen when J where for a fresh supply of fuel, and M . . . t%*. ft came to yarning, and for a while he Jiad me going too. He would whisper acme Startling tale to tis -and make us itniBlae not to tell, as he had picked it from some other Bhlp's message, and the Old Man would spread-eagle him if he found it out. They probably Would have logged him, at-that, if they Jtad known he was filling us full of Vij,, wind the way he did. fie told me one time that Henry Invented something or other tfMr kfcifeting subs miles away, and also --XHig device that would draw the MKfat up to It aud swallow It that the allied fleets were <pn the loOk- ou. ft every place where the subs might try to puUn. But they got there Jost the same. Then the British superdreadnaught Queen Elizabeth, "the terror of the Turks," came In. She left England with a whole fleet of cruisers and de stroyers, and all the Limeys said, ' She ll get through. Nothing will stop her." One of the boys aboard of her* told me he had no Idea the Dardanelles would be as ho« a place as he for.ad It was. "Gaw blimey," he said, "what "Un Homme a la Merl* hardly any sleep, no water, sometimes no food. They made a mark there at Gallipoli that the world will have to gt some to beat Our boys were on the job, too. We held our part of the worki-until the time came for everybody to quit and it was no picnic. The French should be very proud of the work their navy did there in the Dardanelles. On our sixth trip I saw H. M. 8. Goliath get it. She was struck three times br torpedoes and then shelled. The men were floundering around In the water, with 'shrapnel cutting the waves all around them. Cnly a hun dred odd Of heir crew were saved. One day, off -Cape Helles, during our sevenin tries ac the Dardanelles, we sighted a sub periscope just about dinner time. The Prince George and a destroyer sighted the sub at the same time, and the Prince George let go two rounds before the periscope dis appeared, but did not hit the mark. Transports, battleships artd cruisers were thick around there, all at anchor, WHY SHE BECAME CHRISTIAN Religions of Orient Make 8laves ef < jVtomen, Says a Japanese, and < , Rebelled. . ' "And how did you happen to be come a Christian?" I asked Mme. Hl- rooka, a widely known Japanese, writes Tyler Dennett in Asia. "I wanted women to be good and 1 wanted to help them to Improve their lot," she replied tersely. "I found that I could not accomplish what I de sired without religion. That conclu sion sent me to etudy* religion from the woman's point of view. I found that there Is np .hope for women In any of the religions M the Orient They teach that from the cradle to the grave women are Inferior to men. They reglrd women as evil. Confu cian ethics, for example, teach that fools and women cannot be educated. A woman cannot be a "heavenly crea ture.' 0t teaches that It Is better to see a snake than a woman, for the lat ter arouses passion. "Japanese women hMf been so long oppressed by this kind^Tteachlng that they no longer stop to ask why. They are a|rald like slaves. Then I began to read the Bible. I did not like some parts of it any better than I like the religious of the East. I did not see why any woman should call her hus band 'Lord and Master.' St Paul made me nw angry. H« was an aid v,fV "I 8awH. M. 8. Goliath Uet It- board. We were not going to allow that sub to get a straight shot at us, but we almost rammed ourselves doing it. It was a case ef <;hase-tall for every ship in the fleet. But the sub did not show Itself again that day, and we anchored again. That night, while the destroy ers were around the#ships, we slipped our cables and patrolled the coast along the Australian position at Gaba Tepe, but we did not anchor. The following day the Albion went ashore in the fog, soufti of Gaba Tepe, and as soon as the fog lifted the Turks let loose and gave it to her hot A Turkish ship came yp and, with any kjnd of gunnery, could have raked her fore and aft, |>ut the Turks must have been pretty shy of gun sense, for they only got In one hit before they were driven off by H. M. S. Can- opus, which has made such a fine record in this war. Then the Canopus pulled in close to the Albion, got a wire hawser aboard, and attempted to tow her out under a heavy fire, but as soon as she started pulling, the cable snapped. The crew of the Albion were ordered aft and jumped up on the quarter deck to try and shift the bow off the bank. At the same time the fore tdrret and the fore six-inch guns opened up a hot fire on the Turkish positions to lighter the ship and shift her by the concussions of the guns. For a long time they could not budge her. Then the Canopus got another hawser aboard and, with guns going and the crew jumping and the Capopus pulling, the old Albion finally slid off and both ships backed Into deep water with little harm done to either. Then they returned to their old anchorages. At Cape Htelles every one was wide awake. We were all on the lookout for subs and you could not find one man napping. Anything at all passed for a periscope--tins, barrels, spars. Dead horses generally float in the water with one foot sticking up, and we gave the alarm many a time when it was only some old nag on his way to Davy's locker. On the Cassard the Old Man posted a reward of 50 francs for the first man who sighted a periscope. This was a good idea, but believe me he would have had trouble making the award, for every man on the ship would be sure to see it at the same time. Each man felt sure he would be the man to get the reward. The 14-pounders were loaded and ready for action on a sec ond's notice. ( But reward was never claimed. i !i "ii when he volunteers for service In' the trenches at Gallipoli. After a battle he finds his pal a victim of Hun frightfulneas. The next Installment tella the story. (TO BE CONTINUED.) bachelor; any one can see that Ha didn't know much about women. But Peter? He was fine. He had a wife, he understood women. One can see that from his epistles. > "When I read the gospels I found that JeSus made no distinction between the sexes. I liked that We are all, women as well as men, children of Go<L I came to the conclusion that the only hope for the women of the Orient to attain their true posltton is through Christianity." .Martial Law. . Martial law Is not a law at all In the usual sense of that term; It is really the abrogation of law. It Is an order that supersedes civil law, and is em ployed in time of extreme peril-to the state or municipality from without or within, when the general safety can not be trusted to the ordinary admin* Istratlou of government, or the publl^ welfare demands the adoption and ex ecution of extraordinary measures. Many Mothers Ignore Science. The: doctors say we must not, but what harm does it do to rock a baby? It brings sleep, and it brings music, for no mother ever rocked her child with out a lullaby accompaniment It's all gone, however, because steely science has said that It must go. The only baby that has a chance today is thi one who Is born at sea on "the first day of a long voyage.--Exchange^ A World's Record. " What is said to be the world's rec ord production of marketable pota toes on one acre--49,531 pounds, or 825 bushels--has been made on an acre of land near Kanab, in the southeast" oooHnn nf TTtn V» o . "<3 Arlaoua state line. The record yield was made in response to a com petition fostered by the Mormon church, and the church authorities drew a check for $1,000 payable to a representative of Kanab ward of tha Kanab stake of the church, which Is responsible for the production. This yield Is certified to by mqre ^haa SO tenners. V:' p'TV> Extracting Sato "'Fr&i'rtr Experiments In Norway with a view to extracting salt from ocean water by means of electricity have been suc cessful, and two salt factories will be started for this purpose in the near future. In recent years it has been difficult to get salt from abroad and sometimes It has been impossible to salt down the fish. The new salt works should greatly improve the sit /uation. .. Phonograph Educational Fadar. . The phonograph as an educational factor has tremendous value. Through this means the children can become familiar with all that Is best in music, either vocal or instrumental; they can learn not only the music but about the composers, and the great men and women who sing and play various in- strwnents. , * . How Ytkey Dl#%. • "Say, Ezeklel," said Samunthy Punk* invyne as she looked up from the pa per, "how do you reckon them soldiers kept their dugouts from cavln' in?" "Why, Samanthy, I certainly am sur prised at your Ignorance o' military af fairs. They cemented "em with this here trench mortar." Uncle Eben's Philosophy. "Dir. kind of optimism," said Eben, "dat aln' hitched op to hard work canU last" Old Bull Gnu, Driven From Herd, Found Other Companions •'"hp.*" •••••>• • ' ^ n.i" .Lifojij. ^; - ^ Wart-Hegand Outcast OstHcHAI lowed , to Travel Wjmt Deposed King-. ; . , O U L B a o h e t o r e H o h a a f c f f l y ^ ! 4l \ AH of T&m. f • t . There was some trouble ot|t in the flare of the mm'm the bare Plain, and the dilst was filing in <4ou<&, T. St. Maris writes in London-Answers, A single vulture hung oyer the scene, as if expecting profit from the inspec tion, and a little black-backed jackal, prick eared and doglike, was watching attentively from an unsuspected hole under a wait-a-blt thorn. * Presently forms began to loom up among the dust as the cloud itself be gan to move. Beasts, extraordinarily strange and odd beasts, with shaggy heads and curved horns, likp buffaloes, long, horselike tails, and sturdy but graceful, somewhat antelope-like bodies, began to loom up indistinctly. One heavy, massive, very shaggy beast was fighting with the rest But always the heavy, shaggy fellow, whose very nlasslveness spelt age, gave back slowly on the whole, though often master in the single contests. He could not fight the whole herd, and that, In fact, was what .he was being asked to do then. In other words, a piece of wild justice was taking place, which is to say that because of his "crustiness," jealousy, lack of chivalry, or for some other, or all these reasons, that old shaggy brute was being kicked out of the herd, , A s t h e y d r e w n e a r e r , o n e s a w t h a t they were blue gntfs, which ate brra- dled gnus, which are bearded gnus, which are wild beasts, and devilish wild beasts, too. If you did not know they were antelope, you would have said they were buffalo, musk ox, Jifijrse and antelope mixed In one beast The result, anyway, was a queer cus tomer. At last the old bull gnu--perhaps he had been^ord of 'tbe herd till then-- acknowledged J defeat, and, realizing that he could not do the impossible, cleared himself cleverly from a terri ble mixup among three other bulls, and set off at a gallop alone. Then at length he remembered that It was sundown, and time for all good wild beasts to take the evening drink, and he walked to one of those well- worn paths which all his, kind make toward water, and slowly plodded his heavy way to the river. It was not a great distance, in and out among the shattered clumps of thorny acacias, and he was not alone,, for as he drew into the river he met many herds of antelopes and of zebra, going to or coming from the water. " Coming up the bank behind a herd of gaudy zebra, he was the first to sight, over a ridge not far off, the two great, tawny, heavy, giant dog forms, seen and gone in an instant, dead ahead. They were lions, and his in stant, loud warning snorts said so, and drew the zebras' attention to the danger, so that they broke away, and stampeded thunderously In the op* £o«ite direction. And again It was he, galloping olilmslly with them, who shied suddenly at a clump of acacias and began zigzagging and swerving wildly In and out at top speed, snort* in^ madly, so that the zebras scat tered, and the lioness that had been told off from her companions to lie In wait for the stampeded herds, could only come out and growl her dlsap- pointment at them*, „ That night he kept with the zebras, feeding with them wherever they went; and they did not drive him off. Per haps they realized that as a sentry he_ was an asset. And next day an old wart-hog, as ugly as sin, came and struck up acquaintance with him, and later a cock ostrich--all, perhaps, old, bad-tempered outcasts. Anyway, when the day dawned they were still together, and the zebra had gone, and, for all I know, .they are to gether to this day, surely as strange^ an alliance as ever faced .the battle of life--bird, pig and antelope--eld bachelors all. 0 and influenza leave thcraaanda with weak kicbu andackms back*. The kidneys have to do moil wont of ngntiiiRoff a cold or a contagious diseeae. weaken--alow up. Theft you feel dull and dra or nervous, and have headaches, dizxy sjpeSe, backache, aore joints and inegular kidney action. Give 1&* kidneys quick help and avoid serious kidney troubles. Doem'* Kidney Puk are always in unusual demand after grip < " * " wa ku unusuai aemana iner gnp epidemics as so many people nave learned their reliability. Doarit wkm euabiiity. ledetTbj Personal Reports of Real Cases used the world over. They are recommcnded~by your own mends and neighbors. AN IUJNOI8 CASK. , Mrs, J. R. Pittson, 002 Chestnut St., Monticello, HI., says: "I had such a bad attack of kidney com plaint I had to give up entirely and for a week I was almost help- less, I had terrible pains in off back and waa lame aatTsO^e tfD over. I had cold chills Mad had flashes and my liands and fiager* became cramped witl̂ rlMmmatlB pains. I used Do*$'ff K£dttey fill* and when I had i5ni«hed five boxes I was entirely free from the pain and other suffering and felt like a different woman." , AN IOWA CA8E. • C. B. Weston, justice of the peace, Traer St., Greene, Iowa, «aya: '/I have used Doan's Kidney P{Us off and on for attacks of kid ney complaint. When I take cold it settles on my kidneys and brings on the attacks. Mornings I have a lameness in the small of iriy back and the kidney secre tions are unnatural and irregular in passage. I always use Doan's Kidney Pills at these times and receive prompt relief." , }*% , '1 " 'ft ! v' V:t-: KIDNEY PILLS Wo a ftax at All Stores. Foster-Milbom Co., Buffalo. N.Y. Mfjf. Gtem. Impossible. "The kaiser cannot exclaim with the famous French king; "All is lost but bonorl" "Wfey not?" , . "Because his Huns never had any* honor to lose." To keep clean and healthy take Doctor Pierce's Pleaaant Pellets. . They regulate Over, bowels and stomach. Adv. Should Turn Over a New Leaf. 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