قراءة كتاب Over the Seas for Uncle Sam

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Over the Seas for Uncle Sam

Over the Seas for Uncle Sam

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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OVER THE SEAS FOR
UNCLE SAM


men standing on ship watching explosions off in the water"Only the hits count!"

OVER THE SEAS
FOR UNCLE SAM

By
ELAINE STERNE
Author of "The Road of Ambition," "Sunny Jim" Stories, Etc.




"We're ready now!"—Navy slogan.




New York
BRITTON PUBLISHING COMPANY


To the Honorable Josephus Daniels
Secretary of the Navy,
whose devotion to the interests of the men in the
American Navy has been an inspiration to them
no less than to the nation as a whole.


CONTENTS

  PAGE
The Wherefore of My Little Book 11
Sunk By a Submarine 21
War Clouds Gather 35
The Stuff Heroes Are Made Of 49
Depth Bombs and Destroyers 61
In Training 73
Zeps and Torpedoes 91
"The Leather Necks" 107
The Way with the Frenchies 119
A Yankee Stands By 135
A Taste of Hell 147
The Wanderlust and the War 161
Under the Red Cross Banner 175
"Abandon Ship!" 191
Prisoners of War 209
Fritz Gets Tagged 221
The Flower of France 233

THE WHEREFORE OF MY LITTLE BOOK

We have learned some things in war times that we did not know in days of peace. We have made the amazing discovery that our own fathers and brothers and husbands and lovers are potential heroes. We knew they were brave and strong and eager to defend us if need be. We knew that they went to work in the morning and returned at night just so that we might live in comfort; but we never dreamed that the day would come when we would see them marching off to war—a war that would take them far from their own shores. We never dreamed that, like the knights of old, they would ride away on a quest as holy as that of the Crusaders.

As for army and navy life—it had always been a sealed book to us, a realm into which one was born, a heritage that passed from father to son. We heard of life at the army post. We saw a uniform now and then, but not until our own men donned khaki and blue did we of the outside world learn of the traditions of the army and of the navy, which dated back to the days of our nation's birth.

We did not know that each regiment had its own glorious story of achievement—a story which all raw recruits were eager to live up to—a story of undaunted fighting in the very face of death that won for it its sobriquet.

Because the army lay at our very door, we came to know it better, to learn its proud lesson more swiftly, but little by little the navy, through the lips of our men, unlocked its traditions, tenderly fostered, which had fired its new sons to go forth and fight to the finish rather than yield an inch.

As a first lieutenant in the Girls' National Honor Guard, I was appointed in May, 1917, for active duty in hospital relief work. It was then that I came

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