CONTENTS
This group of stories for VOLUME V has been selected by the Board of Editors according to the plan outlined in "Introductory" to Volume I. It includes episodes from thirty-one story-tellers—tales of Dragoons, Marines, Bishops, Foreign Legion, Fleet Surgeon, Scouts, Exiles, Soldiers, Spies and Eye-Witnesses. The selections have been made from the most authoritative sources in Europe and America. Full credit is given in every instance to the original source.
VOLUME V—THIRTY-ONE STORY-TELLERS—142 EPISODES
| TALES OF THE DARING RIDES OF A FRENCH TROOPER | [1] |
| WITH THE TWENTY-SECOND REGIMENT OF DRAGOONS | |
| Told by Lieut. Christian Mallet of the Dragoons | |
| (Permission of E. P. Dutton and Company) | |
| "TO RUHLEBEN—AND BACK" LIFE IN A GERMAN PRISON | [18] |
| WHERE THE BRITISH CIVILIAN PRISONERS ARE HELD IN | |
| DETENTION CAMP | |
| Told by Geoffrey Pyke, an English Prisoner | |
| (Permission of Houghton, Mifflin and Company) | |
| AN AMERICAN AT BATTLE OF THE SOMME WITH FRENCH ARMY | [36] |
| ARMY LIFE WITH THE SOLDIERS ALONG THE SOMME | |
| Told by Frederick Palmer | |
| (Permission of Dodd, Mead and Company) | |
| AN AMERICAN'S EXPERIENCES "INSIDE THE GERMAN EMPIRE" | [53] |
| Told by Herbert Bayard Swope | |
| (Permission of The Century Company) | |
| "DIXMUDE"—AN EPIC OF THE FRENCH MARINES | [64] |
| STORY OF THE MURDER OF COMMANDER JEANNIOT | |
| Told by Charles Le Goffic of the Fusiliers Marins | |
| (Permission of J. B. Lippincott Company) | |
| A BISHOP AT THE FRONT WITH THE BRITISH ARMY | [75] |
| Told by Right Reverend H. Russell Wakefield, Bishop of Birmingham | |
| (Permission of Longmans, Green and Company) | |
| SHORT RATIONS—THE TRUTH ABOUT LIFE IN GERMANY | [83] |
| AN AMERICAN WOMAN IN GERMANY | |
| Told by Madeline Zabriskie Doty | |
| (Permission of The Century Company) | |
| FIGHTING "WITH THE RUSSIAN ARMY"—ON THE AUSTRIAN FRONT | [92] |
| THE COLOSSAL STRUGGLE OF THE SLAVS | |
| Told by Barnard Pares | |
| (Permission of Houghton, Mifflin and Company) | |
| THE ROMANCE OF THE FRENCH FOREIGN LEGION | [107] |
| THE "GLORIOUS RASCALS" | |
| Told by E. S. and G. F. Lees | |
| (Permission of Wide World) | |
| ADVENTURES OF WOMEN WHO FACE DEATH ON BATTLEGROUNDS | [121] |
| LITTLE STORIES OF WOMAN'S INDOMITABLE COURAGE | |
| Told by Hilda Wynne and Others | |
| (Permission of New York American and New York World) | |
| AN AMERICAN WOMAN'S STORY OF THE "ANCONA" TRAGEDY | [142] |
| Told by Dr. Cecile Greil | |
| (Permission New York Times) | |
| THE STRATEGY OF SISTER MADELEINE | [151] |
| THE STORY OF A FRENCH CAPTAIN'S ESCAPE FROM THE GERMANS | |
| Told by Himself and Translated by G. Frederic Lees | |
| (Permission of Wide World) | |
| TALES OF THE SPIES AND THEIR DANGEROUS MISSIONS | [169] |
| REVELATIONS OF METHODS AND DARING ADVENTURES | |
| Told by Secret Service Men of Several Countries | |
| (Permission of New York American; New York World; New | |
| York Herald and New York Tribune) | |
| WHAT HAPPENED TO THE "GLENHOLME" | [192] |
| ADVENTURES WITH SUBMARINES IN THE MEDITERRANEAN SEA | |
| Told by Captain Groome to a Friend | |
| (Permission Wide World) | |
| WHAT THE KAISER'S SON SAW ON THE BATTLEFIELD | [203] |
| PERSONAL EXPERIENCES OF A GERMAN PRINCE | |
| Told by Prince Oscar of Prussia, Fifth Son of Emperor Wilhelm | |
| (Permission of New York American) | |
| A DAY'S WORK WITH A FRENCH SUBMARINE | [222] |
| AN AMERICAN'S EXPERIENCE UNDER THE SEA | |
| Told by Fred B. Pitney | |
| (Permission of New York Tribune) | |
| TALE OF THE CHILD OF TERBEEKE | [233] |
| HOW IT SAVED A BRITISH BATTALION | |
| Told by Oliver Madox Hueffer | |
| (Permission of Wide World) | |
| A HERO TALE OF THE RED CROSS | [242] |
| Told by G. S. Petroff | |
| (Permission of Current History) | |
| LIFE STORY OF "GRANDMOTHER OF THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION" | [246] |
| TRIUMPHANT RETURN FROM FORTY-FOUR YEARS IN | |
| SIBERIAN EXILE | |
| Told by Catherine Breshkovskaya, the Russian Revolutionist | |
| (Permission of New York Tribune) | |
| TALE OF AN AMAZING VOYAGE | [262] |
| GERMAN OFFICERS ESCAPE FROM SPAIN IN A SAILING VESSEL | |
| Told by Frederic Lees | |
| (Permission of Wide World) | |
| THE POET'S DEATH IN BATTLE—HOW ALLEN SEEGER DIED | [278] |
| A YOUNG AMERICAN IN THE FOREIGN LEGION | |
| Told by Bif Bear, a Young Egyptian in the Foreign Legion | |
| THE GUARDIAN OF THE LINE—HERO TALE OF LITHUANIA | [286] |
| Told by G. Frederic Lees | |
| (Permission of Wide World) | |
| WITH A FLEET SURGEON ON A BRITISH WARSHIP DURING A BATTLE | [295] |
| UNDER FIRE ON HIS MAJESTY'S SHIP, "THE FEARLESS" | |
| Told by Fleet Surgeon Walter K. Hopkins | |
| (Permission New York American) | |
| AIRMEN IN THE DESERTS OF EGYPT | [304] |
| ADVENTURES OF THE ROYAL FLYING CORPS IN SINAI | |
| Told by F. W. Martindale | |
| (Permission of Wide World) | |
| HOW SWEENY, OF THE FOREIGN LEGION, GOT HIS "HOT DOGS" | [312] |
| Told by Private John Joseph Casey | |
| (Permission of New York World) | |
| THE DOGS OF WAR ON THE BATTLEGROUNDS | [316] |
| THE "FOUR-FOOTED SOLDIERS" OF FRANCE | |
| Told by the Soldiers | |
| (Permission of Wide World) | |
| TRUE STORY ABOUT KILLING THE WOUNDED | [328] |
| Told by A. Pankratoff | |
| (Permission of Current History) | |
| HOW WE FOILED "U 39"—IN THE SUBMARINE ZONE | [333] |
| ADVENTURES ABOARD A HORSE TRANSPORT | |
| Told by H. O. Read | |
| (Permission of Wide World) | |
| MY WORST EXPERIENCE IN MESOPOTAMIA | [344] |
| Told by a Man Who Stopped a Bullet | |
| (Permission of Current History) | |
| SPIRIT OF YOUNG AMERICA—HOW WE WENT "OVER THE TOP" | [349] |
| EXPERIENCES OF A NEW YORK BOY WITH THE CANADIANS | |
| Told by (name withheld), wounded in France | |
| THE SINKING OF "THE PROVENCE II" | [358] |
| Told by N. Bokanowski, Deputy of the Department of the Seine |
© International Film Service.
THE BALLOON CORPS EXPERIENCE THE SENSATIONS OF THE POLAR EXPLORER
DROPPING A BOMB FROM A DIRIGIBLE
It is Pleasanter to See This in a Volume Than Overhead!
A FEW MINUTES BEFORE THIS WAS A GERMAN BATTLE PLANE
But the Aircraft Guns Got His Range. The Insert Shows a Naval Plane
© International Film Service.
SOMEONE IS ALWAYS WATCHING IN THE FIRST LINE TRENCH
A British Trench at Orvillieres