GIVING THE DEVIL HIS DUE.
WHERE THE GERMAN IS NOT A HUN. So many evil things have been done by Germans on the Western front that it is well to set in relief to them their more humane conduct in the East. On the Egyptian front at least their air service has maintained a chivalrous relationship between the armies. German airmen flew over our lines, dropping messages asking us to mark the site of our hospitals more clearly, so that they, might not be hit, and flying off with the cheery message, “Good luck to the British ambulance.” That was not all. A further message was dropped, notifying our command that there had been cholera in the Turkish ranks, and indicating the place where its victims were buried, so that pur troops might avoid it, A trap was suspected (such as the desire to conceal a cache of ammunition, and the place w r as dug up K The Germans’ message proved to be quite true, their spirit was recoprocated, and in this command, as elsewhere, wmr’s strange comradeship of enemies has been kept up. I hear the same account of the East African campaign. Here the German command —a very able one—■warned our troops that they had had an outbreak of smallpox, and even sent a message to our hospitals that the district was infested with man-eating lions,- and that we should do well to guard our wounded at night.
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Bibliographic details
Taihape Daily Times, Issue 220, 16 July 1917, Page 6
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241GIVING THE DEVIL HIS DUE. Taihape Daily Times, Issue 220, 16 July 1917, Page 6
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