PREFACE il a won idea that the age Perhaps it is. but ie about ny there Is a comn - t wey v1 ig ¢ 1 i miracies is past, if so, ithin t} aped into Holland, For {if this life it ever would have been written but for | in the ehar 12¢ must have con Ww 1e past few weeks—after I es- anything is is this: this book | n the succession of miracles set forth these luck, eoincidence, Provi- matter much tainly played an impor- n the series of hair-breadth which I figured during my eventful appearance in the a now being enacted across » seas, Without it, all my efy nd Yorts a Yori would have un- ~it doesn’t what you call it—certa tant part i ARCADES 1 g SCapes in = short but great drar been quite CHAPTER |. Folly of Despair. i i Lieut. Pat O'Brien in the Uniform of | the Royal Flying Corps. cealed the fact, because they don't a cept older men for the RR. F, C, | Nine of the squadron were British subjects; the other nine were Ameri | cans, who, tired of waiting for their own country to take her place with the allies, had joined the British colors in Canada. I was one of the latter, We were going to England to earn / which member of a qualification n before a XK. F.C. on the western front. 5 in May : 1017 st of ly « us were full- ngaged at vari- ous parts of the line in Ww fledge ive ith the By eos us who ha net the every man jack enemy in France, had isualty list. The with one exception, ired on was rican, at the Italian Whether his appe: the ¢ H. K. last r front st good fortune has time I don’t know be exception doy who onort ill uns , but if it has I would very much surp tion one Canadian, hiree more were «Jd In act ited mere « ion les ir ive mad te, if this record of my ad should prove instrumental in ho nes end ourage t my tha sufferings ¥ that anyone will experiences, but I haven't the doubt that many ave to go through trials equally racking and suffer disappoint. ments just as disheartening. It would be very far from the mark to Imagine that the optimism which I ie slightest will h nerve ne through all my troubles, On f way to often, for hours at a time, felt so de- Jected and discouraged that 1 didn't care what happened to me. But despite all my despondency and hopelessness, the worst never hap Ped, and I can't help thinking that my salvation must have been designed to show the way to others. CHAPTER II. | Became a Fightig Scout. I started flying In Chicago in 1012. 1 had a hankering for the air ever since I can remember, As a youngster I followed the ex: ploits of the Wrights with the grentest Interest, although I must confess 1 sometimes hoped that they wouldn't I got more O’Brien Standing Beside the First M than I was go at the sfaction of int: part of the regular for cadets In rant to say right he has turned fliers the France, { In May, 1017, I and seventeen othe Canadian fliers left for England | Meganic, where we were to for service in France, | Our squadron consisted of nin Americans, C. C. Robinson, H. A. Mil ler, F. 8. McClurg, A. A. Allen, E. B. Garnet, H. K. Boysen, I. A. Smeeton and A. A. Taylor, and myself, and nine | Britishers, Paul H. Raney, J. R. Park, . Nelmes, C. R. COUrsn BR. | hat « the Pe re t : out some of it have ever gone Or qu { Smith and A. C. Jones, Within a few weeks after our ar- “wings"-~the insignia worn on { left breast by every pilot on the west- { ern front. We were all sent to a place France known ns the Pool Pllots Mess | Here men gather from all the training await assignments to the particular squadron of which they are to become members, The Pool Pllots Mess 1a situated a | few miles back of the lines. When- ever a pilot is shot down or killed the Pool Pilots Mess {a notified to send an- | other to take his place. for new pilots is quite active, but when | a fellow is itehing to get into the fight {as badly as 1 and my friends were I | | Saa in the R. F. C. at one point of ch He Saw Active Service. a little im- it was ralning Ww an overcoat over into the machine, and we made r time to the airdrome to which I had been ordered to report. I alighted from the automobile at blew open and displayed form attired in “shorts” in- in the regulation flying and the sight aroused cone siderable commotion in camp, “Must be a Yankee!" I overheard one officer say to another as I ap- proached. “No one but a Yankee would have the cheek to show up that way, you know I" man stead of breeches, I came up to them, and welcomed me much at home, My squadron was one of four sta- tioned at an alrdrome about eighteen | miles back of the Ypres line. There were 18 pilots in our squadron, which wns a scout squadron, scout machines carrying but one man. A scout, sometimes called a fighting scout, has no bomb dropping or recon noitering to do. His duty Is just to fight, or, as the order was given to me, “You are expected to pick fights and not wait until they come to you!” When bomb droppers go out over the lines in the daytime a scout squad- | ron ‘usually convoys them. The bomb | droppers fly at about twelve thousand feet, and scouts a thousand feet or so | above them. If at any time they should be at | tacked, it is the duty of the scouts to dive down and carry on the fight, the | orders of the bomb droppers being to | go on dropping bom! u There an time that machines go out ovs nless they have to. 3 on this work In the daytime Fare not acked at i . inger con yy ' EB und | and 1 my apg for more of the same kind, and not hax It what a spinning nose bend is yotite I did a te long may be well to explain here just A few years ago the spinning nose dive considered one of the most things a pilot many men were killed getting spin and not knowing how out of it In fact, { thought that when a nose dive there way out of it. It used, however, in actual fiving. machines that are controlled {both by hands and feet, the feet working the yoke or rudder bar which controls the rudder: that steers the machine. The lateral controls | fore and aft, which cause the ma- chine to rise or lower, are controlled by a contrivance called a “Joy stick.” | If, when flying In the air. = pilot should release his hold on this stick. it will gradually come toward pilot. In that position the machine will begin to climb, So If a pilot is shot | and loses control of this “joy stick.” [his machine begins to ascend. and climbs until the angle formed be- comes too great for it to continme or the motor to pull the plane: for a was dangerous and into this + could attempt, to of got was lots you pilots into no is now once spinning of coming i “he in ways, nse are France in two motor then being the heaviest, causes the nose of the machine to fall | forward, pitching down at a terrific | rate of speed and spinning at the | same time, If the motor is stil run- | ning, it naturally increases the gpeed | much more than It would If the mo- | tor were shut off, and there is great report, some balloon sends In a ort, it when a hundred feet ground the supposed dead man in spin of the gone merrily on his way drome. artillery observation rej few from the and aire has come out &pin for his In a desperate battle with four Hun flyers, O'Brien is sent crashing to earth behind the German lines from a height of 8000 feet. The next install ment telis of his miraculous es- cape from death and of his re. gaining consciousness to find himself a prisoner of war. (TO BE CONTINUED. Why They Are Lonely. The people who are lonely In thw \ ing for something to come to them; they hope for pleasant adventures; they exact much from their friends and from ‘their family-—and they are never satisfied. But the happy men and women are those who never think to demand for themselves—who give and give and give again, and find Joy whenever they find opportunity to give Joy. ~Exchange. Strange Contradiction. “De man dat don't see de bright side o' life,” said Uncle Eben, “is generally e same feller dat's afraid of his dow,”