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LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
PAGE | |
When the recruits began to arrive at Camp Upton | 17 |
How you felt the first time the medical officer used your arm for a pin cushion | 23 |
Reflections on liberty were alike at Upton and in France | 29 |
A quiet game in a mess hall at Upton | 37 |
The first time you found a cootie . | 49 |
This map illustrates the travels of the regiment from its landing at Brest to its final billets at Malicortie . | 74 |
The coolies hard at work at Camp de Sougo | 92 |
“The horses never got to like the 'hommes' and 'chevaux' | 111 |
“A group of gaunt walls suggested a devastating fire" | 115 |
The picket line. | 117 |
"Something dead and corrupt | 121 |
The water cart. | 125 |
An observatory. | 133 |
The regiment's home in Lorraine | 136 |
The rolling kitchen | 144 |
The mess line | 153 |
A three-cornered fight | 160 |
On the march | 179 |
“The shelter of broken walls" | 191 |
The Vesle and Aisne campaigns | 201 |
Mess-hour at the Fismes front. | 215 |
A Battery D piece at Chery | 224 |
Carrying in ammunition. | 227 |
“The telephone details were at it day and night | 234 |
The jumping-off place | 264 |
The vicinity of La Harazée | 269 |
Lançon and Grand Ham | 273 |
Grand-Pre | 275 |
The dug-out near which Lieutenant Hoadley was killed | 277 |
Forcing forward | 278 |
Binarville and its surroundings. | 282 |
Refugees flowing out, the artillery going in | 284 |
The church at Arc-en-Barrois | 286 |