"OVER By An American Arthur Guy Empey Soldier WhoWent Machine Gunner, Serving in France EMPEY LEARNS THAT SOMETIMES A STREAK OF YELLOW CAN TURN PURE WHITE. SynopaJavFlred by the sinking of the Lusitanla, with the loss of American lives, Arthur Guy Empey, an American living In Jersey City, goes to England and enlists as a private In the British army. After a short experience as a recruiting officer in London, he is sent to train ing quarters in France, where he first hears the sound of big guns and makes the acquaintance of "cooties." After a brief period of training Empey'a company la sent into the front-line trenches, where he takes hit first turn on the fire step while the bullets whiz overhead. Empey learns, a comrade falls, that death lurks always In the trenches. Chaplain distinguishes himself by rescuing wounded men under hot lire. With pick and shovel Empey has experience as a trench digger In No Man'g Land. Exciting experience on listening post detail. Ex citing work on observation post duty. Back in rest billets Empey writes and stages a successful pluy. Once more In the front trenches, Empey goes "over the top" In a successful but costly attack on the German lines. Soon afterwards Empey and his comrades repulse a determined gas attack launched by the Germans. His next experience Is as a member of a firing squad which executes a sentence of death. CHAPTER XXIV Continued. 22 On his left, In the darkness, he could make out the shadowy forms of trees ; crawling on his hands and knees, stop ping and crouching with fear at each shell-burst, he flnully reached an old orchard and cowered at the base of a shot-scarred apple tree. He remained there all night, listen ing to the sound of the guns and ever praying, praying that his useless life would be spnred. As dawn began to break, he could discern little dark objecta protruding from the ground all about him. Curi osity mastered lis fear and he crawled to one of the objects, and there, In the ncertaln light he read on a little wooden cross: "Pte. H. S. Wheaton, No. 1070, 1st London Regt B. F. Killed in action, April 25, 1918. R. I. P." (Rest In Peace). When it dawned on him that he had been hiding all night In a cemetery his reason seemed to leave him, and a mad desire to be free from It all made him rush madly away, falling over lit tle wooden crosses, smashing some and trampling others under his feet. In his flight he came to an old French dugout, half caved In and par tially filled with slimy and filthy wa ter. Like a for being chased by tho hounds, he ducked into this hole, anil threw himself on a pile of old empty sandbags, wet nnd mildewed. Then unconsciousness. On the next duy, he came to; far distant voices sounded ' In his ears. Opening his eyes, In the entrance of the dugout he saw a corporal and two men with fixed bayonets. . The corporal was addressing him : "Get up, you white-livered blighter! Curse you and the day you ever Joined D company, spoiling their line rec ord! It'll be you up against the wall, and a good Job too. Get hold of him, men, and if he makes a break, give him the bayonet, and send It home, the cow ardly sneak. Come on, you, move, we've been looking for you long enough." Lloyd, trembling and weakened by his long fast tottered out. assisted by a soldier on each side of lilm. They took hi in before the captain, but could get nothing out of him but : "For God'a sake, sir, don't have me shot don't have me shot !" The captain, utterly disgusted with him, sent him under escort to division headquarter for trial by court-martial, charged with desertion under Are. They shoot deserters in France. During hla trial, Lloyd sat as one dazed, and could put nothing forward In his defense, only an occasional "Don't have me shot I" Hit sentence was passed: "To be ehot at 8 :B8 o'clock In the morning of May 18, 1010." This meant that he had only one more day to live. He did not realize the awfulness of his sentence; his brain seemed para lysed. He knew nothing of his trip, under guard, In a motor lorry to the sandbagged guardroom In the village, where he was dumped on the floor and left whtla a icntry with a fixed bayo net paced up and down la front of the entrance, . Bully beef, water and biscuits were left beside hltn for his supper. The sentry, seeing that he ate noth ing, came inside and shook hltn by the shoulder, saying in a kind voice: "Cheero, laddie, better eat some thing. You'll feel better. Don't give up hope. TWll be pardoned before morning. I know the way they ruu these things. They're only trying to scare you, that's all. Com now, that's good lad, eat something. It'll make the world look different to you." The good-hearted sentry knew he was lying about the pardon. He knew nothing short of a miracle could save tb poor lad. Lloyd listened eagerly to his sentry' words, and believed them. A look of hop cam Into his eyes, and be raven ously at the meal beside him. In about an hour's time, the chap lain cam to see him, but Lloyd would hav none of him. lie wanted no par son ; he waa to be pardoned. Tb artillery behind the lines ami tool pAd up with vryihlnj they THE Copjiigbt 1917, by Arthur Guj Kmpj had. An Intense bombardment of the enemy's lines hud commenced. The roar of the guns was deafening. Lloyd's fears came back with a rush, and lie cowered on the earthen floor with Ills hands over his face. The sentry, seeing his position, came In and tried to cheer him by talking to lilm : "Never mind them guns, boy, they won't hurt you. They are ours. We are giving the Boches a dose of their own medicine. Our boys are going over the top at dawn of the morning to tnke their trenches, We'll give 'em a tuste of cold steel with their sausages and beer. You Just sit tight now until they relieve you. I'll have to go now, lad, ns It's nearly tlmo for my relief, and I don't want tlien'i- to see me a-talkln' with you. So long, luddle, cheero." With this, the sentry resumed the pacing of his post. In about ten min utes' time he was relieved, and a D company man took his place. Looking Into the guurdhouse, the sentry notic ed the cowering attitude of Lloyd, and, with a sneer, said to him : "Instead of whimpering in that cor ner, you ought to be Buying your pray ers. It's bally conscripts like you what's spollln' our record. We've been out here nigh onto eighteen months, and you're the first mnn to desert his post. The whole battalion Is laughln' nnd pokln' fun at D company, bad luck to you I but you won't get another chnnce to disgrace us. They'll put your lights out in the mornln'." After listening to this tirade, Lloyd, In n faltering voice, asked: "They are not going to shoot me, are they? Why, Hi Betrayed His Country. the other sentry said they'd pardon me. For God's sake don't tell me I'm to be shot " and his voice died away In a sob. "Of course, they're going to shoot you. The other sentry was Jest a-kld-din' you. Jest like old Smith. Always n-trjln' to cheer some oue. You ain't got no more chnnce o' beln' pardoned than I have of gettln' to be colonel of my 'batt' " When the fuct that all hop was gone finally entered Lloyd' brain, a calm seemed to settle over him, aud rising to his knees, with hla arms stretched out to heaven, ha prayed, and all of bis soul entered Into the prayer. "O, good and merciful God, glv me strength to die like a man! Deliver tne from this coward's death. Olv me a chance to die like my mate In the fighting line, to die fighting for my country. I ask this of thee." A pence, hitherto unknown, cam to lilm, and lie rioin linl nVd cowered no more, but cuiiulj waited the dawn, reaily to go to his death. Th thlli It k'C j 1 &; . T OP were bursting all around the guard room, but be hardly noticed them. While waiting there, the voice of the sentry, singing in a low tone, came to mm. ni was singing ine rnorus ot tne popular trench ditty : I want to go home, I want to to home. I don't want to go to the trenohei no mora. Where the "whliibangi" and "tauiagea" roar galore. Take me over the lea, where the Allemand can't get at me. Oh, my, I don't want to dtel I want to go home. Lloyd listened to the words with a strange Interest, and wondered what kind of a home he would go to across the Great Divide. It would b the only home he had ever known. Suddenly there came a great rushing through the air, a blinding, a deafen ing report, and the sandbag walls of the guardroom toppled over, and then blackness. When Lloyd recovered conscious ness, he was lying on his right side, facing what used to be the entrance of the guardroom. Now, It was only a Jumble of rent nnd torn sandbags. His head seemed bursting. He slowly rose on his elbow, and there In the east the dawn was breaking. But what was that mangled shape lying over there among the sandbags? Slowly dragging himself to It, he saw the body of the sentry. One look was enough to know that he was dead. The soldier's head was missing. The sentry had had his wish gratified. He had "gone home." He wns safe at last from the "whizz bangs" and the Allemnnd. Like a flash It came to Lloyd that he was free. Free to go "over the top'.' with his company. Free to die like a true Briton fighting for his king and country. A great gladness and warmth came over him. Carefully stepping over the body of the sentry, he started on a mad race down the ruined street of the village, amid the bursting shells, minding them not, dodging through or around hurrying platoons on their way to nlso go "over the top." Coining to a communication trench he could not get through. It was blocked with laugh ing, cheering and cursing soldiers. Climbing out of the trench, he ran wildly along the top, never heeding the rain of machine-gun bullets and shells, not even hearing the shouts of the of ficers, telling him to get back Into the trench. He was going to Join his com pany who were In the front line. He was going to fight with them. He, the despised coward, had come Into his own. While he was racing along, Jumping over trenches crowded with soldiers, a ringing cheer broke out all along the front line, and his heart sank. He knew he was too late. His company had gone over. But still he ran madly. He would catch them. He would die with them. Meanwhile his company had gone "over." They, with the other com pnnlijs had taken the first and second German trenches, nnd had pushed steadily on to the third line. D com pany, led by their captain, the one who had sent Lloyd to division headquar ters for trial, charged with desertion, had pushed steadily forward until they found themselves fur In advance of the rest of the attacking force. "Bomb ing out" trench after trench, and using their bayonets, they enme to a German communication trench, which ended In a bllndsnp, and then the captain, and what was left of his men, knew they were In a trnp. They would not re tire. D company never retired, and they were D company. Right In front of them they could see hundreds of Germans preparing to rush them with bomb and bayonet. They would have some chance If nminunltlon and bombs could reach them from the rear. Their supply was exhausted, and the men realized It would bo a case of dying as bravely as possible, or making a run for It. But D company would not run. It was against their traditions and principles. The Germans would have to advance ncross an open space of three to four hundred yards before they could get within bombing distance of the trench, and then it would be all their own way. Turning to his company, the captain said: "Men, it's a case of going West for us. We are out of ammunition and bombs, and the Booties have ui In a trap. They will bomb us out Our bayonets are useless here. We will have to go over am) meet them, and tt'i a case of thirty to one, so send every thrust home, nnd die like the men of D company should. When I give the word, follow hie, and up and at them. Give them b 1 Lord, if we only had a machine gun, we could wipe them out! Here they come, get ready, men." British prepare for the "Big Push," the forerunner ef the battle of trie Somme. Read about It In the next Installment (.TO HIS ION TINUhUJ.) Striving After Strength. W think that w shall win trutk by striving after strength. Instead of knowing that we ahull gala strength Just In the degree that v a tmt, Phillip Urooka, WORLD WEI OF CURRENT WEEK Brief Resume Most Important Daily News Items. COMPILED FOR YOU Events of Noted People, Governments and Pacific Northwest and Other Things Worth Knowing. A new Ukrainian ministry has been formed with M. Lisogub as premier, says a dispatch from Kiev Wednesday. With the approval of the emperor, the Japanese Red Cross has awarded Colonel Theodore Roosevelt a medal of honor. : Three British trawlers, although out ranged by the- enemy guns, recently fought four German submarines until put out of action by the U-boats. Forty-five thousand railway work ers in Prussia and Hesse are incapaci tated with influenza and passenger traffic is much restricted in conse quence, according to the Tageblatt, of Berlin. An exhaustive inquiry by govern ment officials into allefeed plots of German industrial representatives for the establishment of German trade in America after the war was started in New York this week. A dispatch from Washington to the New York Sun quotes Fuel Adminis trator Garfield as saying that produc tion of coal in re.cord-break.ing quanti ties has virtually eliminated the pos sibility of a coal famine this winter. Lieutenant James Saunders O'Neale, nephew of Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo, died on October 2 of wounds received in action. Before entering the Plattsburg training camp he was a sports writer for the New York Trib une. Colonel Theodore Roosevelt was pre sented Tuesday with a portion of the seat of the airplane which his son. Lieutenant Quentin Roosevelt, was killed in while flying in France. The gift was made by Arthur E. Hunger- ford, a returned Y. M. C. A. official. It was announced in the house of commons Tuesday that since the com mencement -of the war British troops have taken 327,416 enemy combatants, including 264,242 Germans. There are, It was also stated, 97,000 German com batant prisoners in the United King dom 'at present. The war department does not plan to call all men within the draft up to 45 years by January 1, Secretary Ba ker said Wednesday in discussing press dispatches crediting John R. Mott, international secretary of the Y. M. C. A., with saying that he had been so informed by Mr. Baker. Eighteen new ships of 98,900 total deadweight tons were added to the American fleet during the week end ing October 25. The deliveries, an nounced by the Bhlpping board, In cluded the Victorious, an 11,800-ton vessel built at Alameda, Cal, and the Cape May of 10,100 tons, built at Spar rows Point, Md. Victor L. Borger, former, congress man, and three other prominent so cialists, who were indicted last week by the federal grand jury on charges of violating the espionage act, pleaded not guilty Tuesday when arraigned be fore Judge F. A. Geiger at Milwau kee, Wis. Berger was released on bonds of $10,000 and the others on bonds of $5000 each. Restrictions on the manufacture of furniture, eliminating all new patterns for the duration of the war and cur tailing active patterns 50 per cent are announced by the War Industries board. A bill increasing the travel allow ances of army officers on duty from 7 to 8 cents was sent to congress Thurs day by the War department with the explanation that 7 cents a mile is inadequate. Sinking of the American cargo steamship Lake Borgne off the coast of France without loss of life was an nounced Thursday by the Navy de partment The ship foundered after striking a rock. Thomas W. Lawson, the Boston fin ancier and independent candidate for United States senator, was injured when his limousine was overturned on the State road in Northboro, Mass., late Wednesday. The whole of the province of West ern Flanders and part ot Eastern Flanders and Halnaut having been re covered from the Germans, the Bel gian government has decided to estab lish Its administrative departments In Brugea. U. S. CANNON ARE LARGEST Mammoth L'jng-Range Guns Pound Huns in France. Washington, D. C. Details of the achievement of the navy department in making available for use on the western front of great 16 inch naval guns, which press dispatches have re ported to be hammering the German railway centers back of the Oise-Serre front, were made public Saturday by Secretary Daniels." The naval guns which have been in operation since September 16, orig inally were intended for new battle cruisers but a change in the design in the vessels left the guns unavail able for that use. Rear Admiral Earle, chief of the navy bureau of ordnance, then recommended that the guns be sent to the western front and he was directed to proceed with the design and construction. The guns are manned and operated by officers and men of the United States navy, under the command of Rear Admiral Plunkett, ex-director of the office of gunnery exercises aud engineering performance. The first party of officers and men to handle the guns arrived in France June 9; the first shipment of material left this country June 20 and the entire organ .zation was completed and ready to move to the battlefront in France late in August. The guns are of 50 caliber, 66 feet long, weigh about 100 tons without their carriages, and are said to throw a heavier projectile and have a greater muzzle velocity than any weapon ever placed on a mobile land mounting. The weight of the explosive used with each projectile is many times greater than that used in the freak German long range guns, and in point of their destructive force they are incompar able. The organization to man one gun requires an entire train, including the gun car itself, ammunition cars, a crane car, and construction, sand, tim ber, kitchen, fuel, workshop, berthing and staff radio cars. Many of the cars were especially manufactured, and the locomotives, 83-ton types with four pairs of drivers. One car is a com plete machine shop, equipped with forge, lathes, grinders and drill press. The gun car as well as the ammuni tion cars are heavily armored, 1600 square feet of plate being required. MONOPOLY IN RUSSIAN MAIDENS IS DECREED London. Russian maidens under the jurisdiction of certain provincial Bolshevik Soviets become the "prop erty of the state" when they reach the age of 18 years and are compelled to register at a government "bureau of free love," according to the official Gazette of the Vladimir Soviet of workers' and soldiers' deputies, which recently published that Soviet's decree on the subject. Under the decree, a woman having registered, "has the right to choose from among men between 19 and 50 a cohabitant husband." The consent of the man chosen is not necessary, the decree adds, the man chosen having no right to make any protest. A similar privilege of choosing from among the registered women is given every man between 19 and 50 "with out the consent of the woman." This provision is described as "in the in terest of the state." Opportunities for choosing husbands and wives' are to be presented once each month, the decree stated. Chil dren born of such marriages are to be come the "property of the state." Stringent rules and penalties are laid down for the protection of girls under 18. The decree further states that it has been based on the "excellent" ex ample of similar decrees already is sued at Luga, Kolpin and other places. - A similar "project of provisional rights in connection with the social ization of women in the city of Khvel insk and vicinity" has been published in the Gazette of the workers' and sol diers' deputies of that city. Six-Day Flight Success. Washington, D. C. Using two army training airplanes, three aviators have completed a flight from Houston, Tex., to Washington. The aviators left El lington Field at Houston October 17, and completed the trip in six days. The flight, said to be the first be tween the two points, was undertaken in part in the Interest of the fourth liberty loan, the aviators dropping loan liarature on towns In Missouri, Illi nois, Indiana and Ohio. Nut Sheila Need I Great. New York. The government needs 1,000,000 pounds of nut shells and fruit stones daily for manufacturing gas mask charcoal and at present Is unable to purchase one-third that amount. This and the failure of the public to co-operate fully by saving and sending In this form of waste from the kitchen have made It necessary for the chemical warfare headquarters here to renew It appeal. GERMANY AWAITS ARMISTICE TERMS Solf, in Latest Reply to Wilson, Says People Rule. MILITARISTS OUSTED Note Declares Berlin is Ready for First Step Toward Peace Versailles Council is Called. Copenhagen. Germany's answer to President Wilson's latest communica tion says: ,;The German government has taken cognizance of the answer of the Presi dent of the United States. The Presi dent is aware ot the far-reaching changes which have been carried out and are being carried out in the Ger man constitutional structure, and that peace negotiations are'being conducted by a people's government in whose hands rests, .both actually and consti tutionally, the power to make the de ciding conclusions. "The military powers are also sub ject to it. "The German government now awaits proposals for an armistice, which shall be the first step toward a just peace, as the President has de scribed it in his proclamation. (Signed) "SOLF." Washington, D. C The unofficial text of Germany's reply to President Wilson was received Sunday night too late to be seen by President Wilson and other officials. The question of an armistice and peace is already being considered by the allied governments and the United States. It will be discussed at a meet ing of the supreme war council at Ver sailles, France. The Cerman reply is expected to clear the way for a general discussion of the individual views of the entente powers on peace terms and an agree ment among the nations fighting Ger many so that a united front on these questions may be presented to the common enemy. A London dispatch announced that Premier Lloyd George and Foreign Secretary Balfour had gone to Paris with military and naval advisers, indicating that the confer ences between the representatives of the allied powers and the United States soon were to begin. Germany's reply does not change the diplomatic situation. Those in the confidence of President Wilson have said that his dealings with the Ger man government ended with his note Informing it that the request for an armistice and peace had been trans mitted to the allies and that further action rested with those governments. The German reply may or may not prove that Germany will accept such terms of an armistice as may be pre sented. LUDEND0RFF QUITS; KAISER ACCEPTS Copenhagen. General Ludendorff, first quartermaster-general of the Ger man army, has resigned, says a tele gram from Berlin. In accepting his resignation, the emperor has decreed that the lower Rheinish infantry regi ment, No. 39, of which General Luden dorff long had been commander, shall bear his name. London Official announcement was made in Berlin Saturday night that Emperor William had acceded to the request of General Ludendorff, the first quartermaster-general, that he be permitted to resign. Fighting Ceases In China. Washington, D. C Cable advices Sunday from Pekin said the policy of reconciliation of the new president of China, Hsu Shlh Chang, has already met with considerable success. Hos tilities have ceased and the leaders of the southwestern provinces who have been opposing the central government at Pekin have sent delegates to confer with the new president The progress of the conference,, it is said, has been satisfactory. Austria's Reply la Ready. Basel, Switzerland. Austria's re Joinder to President Wilson's note la ready, according to Vienna papers. It was submitted to authorized quarters Sunday, and will be sent at once to Washington. It la couched in the most conciliatory term.