(d) “Jack Johnsons”—20 ft. of earth or 10 ft. of cement concrete, reënforced with steel and covered over with a covering of heavy stone or broken brick.
It is very often the case that there is a line of trenches with very few dugouts. Those that exist are mainly occupied by first aid stations with a medical officer in charge, and officers’ headquarters. When such is the case, very narrow, deep trenches, known as retirement trenches, are dug roughly from 20 to 50 yards behind the firing line, so that every one, except those on sentry duty, may retire there during the heavy shelling. It is very obvious that excellent communication must be kept up between this trench and the firing line.
DUMPS
Sandbags, corrugated iron, floor boards, ladders, pails, brushes, rubber boots, periscopes, barbed wire, etc., are what are known as “trench stores.” These are generally brought up by carrying parties during the night and taken to some convenient spot picked out by whosoever may be commanding that particular section of trench, ready for distribution in the morning. This place is known as a “trench dump.” Here every morning each junior officer goes to his company commander with a request for his stores for the day. When this has been handed in and approved by his company commander, he then has a party detailed to go and collect his stores. These are again placed in his particular little sector of the lines and he receipts for their care and proper use; all stores not used are turned over to the relieving troops and a receipt taken for same. These dumps must be made in a central location, both as regards the company dump and the platoon. The company dump is not a permanent home for the stores or utensils brought up, but is merely what might be called the distributing center. When a company commander turns over his trench stores and utensils to the relieving commander, the fact that he has all his stores and utensils in the company dump does not show merit, but merely inefficiency, that the distribution, which should have taken place, has not been carried out, and, therefore, that some of the men under his command probably have not the required tools to work with or the material that is necessary to the small units to carry on their daily lives. Stores should not remain in their center dumps. But each platoon commander should know exactly how much he has in hand, and how much he needs. It is also plainly evident that in a scattering of dumps in this manner, any captured by the enemy do not constitute a “knock out” as far as the trench stores are concerned.
LATRINES
The cleanliness of the trenches and latrines requires the closest supervision of all officers and non-commissioned officers. The bucket system of latrines is entirely unsatisfactory. The ground where the buckets are in use becomes unsanitary, and so does the ground in which the contents are buried. Double labor and carriage is involved, and as often as not a polluted soil is sooner or later to be found in the line of a proposed communication trench. The method used in the French armies is very good and by far the cleanest. It involves no unpleasant labor and is satisfactory. A pit about 12 feet deep, 3 feet wide and 12 feet long is dug in some place which is fairly easy to get at by those who are to use it. Generally thirty to forty feet behind the fire-trenches and off one of the communication trenches. The pit is boarded over, the boards being laid across the width, that is from front to rear; every other board space being omitted. A pail of disinfectant is kept standing nearby, and the deeper the pit is, the better and longer it will remain in use, but should be filled in when contents are within 6 feet of the top. This makes subsequent unpleasantness very unlikely. Care must be taken that men using these places have some protection from stray shells, and are out of sight of the enemy.
When possible, there should be a refuse pail for every section of men, and care should be taken to impress on the men that they must throw in all tea leaves, dregs, all scraps of food, and refuse in general, and should be covered over with disinfectant. If this is not done, thousands of flies and insects are attracted, with the inevitable rats, and disease and unsanitary conditions will follow. Tin cans, etc., should under no circumstances be thrown over the parapets as the same results will occur there.