EVENING LEDGER PHIIELPHIA WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1916 --J PSYCHOLOGICAL AFTERMATH ADDS TO HORRORS OF BATTLE Trivial Incidents Touch Memory's Chord and Warriors Weep or Rage Outbreaks Are Heartrending ; as Awful Recollections Start m ? I i K HHjt LssK . v iJflP ssssa S 4sV w jBjBB- .iHH9nH By ELLEN ADAIR BpwUllr WTlltan. for th. Ktixiko trait. LiUNugNi Oct. 14. Ths after effects of battle on ths mind e-f ths Individual fighter are not Been e!ly, and yet one has but to touch certain chords oi memory the casual mention of a date, the name of a French town, a note of muslo and surprising evidence of nerve-strain will result at once. A large and bur y policeman who had done wonder ful fighting at Loos In the famous "London Scottish" regiment proved a most charming In dividual to con verse with on things military. Thera was little that he did not know concerning hand grenades, tactlos and so on. As he lay peace fully tucked up In ,Ms lime hospital loot " feet 4 of ELLEN ADAm convalescent hu manity one would aoaroely have Imagined him In any oharaoter other than the cheery, smiling, genial London "bobby" whose duty It was to control the Piccadilly traffla and pilot babies and old ladles across the crowded streets. But we all knew the little story of his special fight at Loos. Coming upon four temporarily unarmed German soldiers, he pitched his own rifle and revolver away, and. gashing upon the astonished men In all his great strength, strangled each one In turn with his hands I " TOUCHED MEMORY CHOIID All went well with our little hospital chat until a foolish nurse referred Indi rectly to this special deed. A chord of terrible memory was touched. The refer ence woke that short-lived spaco of mad ness again. The effect on the ex-mlnlon of the law was sudden and startling. Ills eyes glared like those of a maniac's and the veins stood out on his forehead. Stam mering and stuttering unintelligibly, he twisted a corner of the eiderdown quilt In tils big hands, and then very deliberately tore that corner Into shreds, lie was back again on the terrible battlefield of Loos, one man against four Germans, and stran gling each of the enemy with his hands. It seems to me there Is a psychological kink or flaw In the poise of the average man who has seen much fighting In the present war. It Is only natural that such should be the case. One has to walk warily with him In discussing certain phases of warfare. There are places so dark In his memory that they must not be touched. An acquaintance of mine came through a pretty sharp experience In a famous skir mish "somewhere In France." Ills leg was shot away and he lay out for three days and nights In the wind and rain before he was brought In. The new artificial limb which he now wears Is so perfectly made that he walks without a limp. To outward appearances he Is the same gay, cheerful youth, aa of pre-war days. He Is not ynhappy. He will talk of past battles and of the war freely. But In his mind there Is one dark spot. and. probably always will bethe sight or a deep pool of water or a small, datk pond Is anathema to him. Ha cannot bring himself to walk past either. He will go to any Inconvenience to avoid them. He can give no explanation, and the subject must never be mentioned I His doctor thinks that during the three J". nd nlnt wnn " T, minus a leg "u m ureai pain, out Between the trenches, tie must have crawled near a raln-nlled shell hole, and the memory of that black pool Is somewhere deep In the recesses of his brain. But no one will ever know. Another soldier of my acquaintance, who had got his" In Mesopotamia, absolutely refused to have any kind of plant or grow ? ir1? ner hlm dulng convalescence. His bed had to be placed so that he could not see the trim lawns through the wln flows, and if any visitor brought him flowers he turned his face to the wall and wept. His face was scarred and burned. And his hatred of flowers was due to the fact that a Turkish sniper, his body and head cleverly disguised with foliage and flowers, had crawled toward this British soldier through the long grass and hurled a hand grenade full In his unsuspecting face, REMEMBERS "MAILED MONSTERS Yet another soldier cannot bear the sight of an ordinary steamroller such as Is used forcibly of the "mailed monsters of the Somme those British Juggernauts of d.hv.w.hlc.h "' before them at that historic battle. Talk about terror r said he. "The Huns went crajy. I don't blame them. Imagine a slab of battleship suddenly coming over the lip of your trench, raising Its terrible bow as If It were going to plunge Into the trough, and then, with a Jerk, to straddle over Jo the other side and begin to pour out a hall of load. The Huns looked up, goggle eyed with terror, and then fled in consterna tion. "All day Jong It was like that tanks and men. men and tanks, racing hither and thither, obliterating and stamping out the enemy, or rounding them up in daxed and broken bunches. "Mind you, the ground's not like what you see at home nice, rolling gross fields, with bits of green hedges, and that sort of thing. Oh. not It's lst one huge. torn, tumbled mass of earth, pock-marked with shell holes and craters, deep and ragged holes which go down feet and feet, and Into which you could put and hide a whole company of men. Well. then. Just picture to yourself these cam going straight through that No track, no road did they take there were none to take but Just straight ahead t . , ,. The armored ears, huge, ungainly, hideous, went ahead In a tort of stupid lollop. To see them run up toward a crater. pole for a moment on the ridge, then plunge down, aa we thought, to de struction, then suddenly 'emerge again, grunting and spitting fire. "We ran alongside or behind them, with Axed bayonets, yet feeling Immensely se cure. The Germans were In full rout at places, fleeing from the terror, or backing Into our midst in oroves ana ueina nrp herded to the rear by the British. My last view of the famous tanks,' Just after I was shot down, was a blurred and misty vision of them trundling about the horlson with men streaming before them Oerman pris oners." And aa the soldier flnlehed his narrative. Into his eyes came the strange reminiscent gleam which one always sees when men who have been wounded talk of their past experiences, and which shows that on the mind the after-effects of battle are very real and very poignant. vSsWv8 jsKjiflGi Save Money and Waate By Installing THE KINGS Emrr houa. owner Is now In- talllnc a wUr inattr quickly. It mora than rays for ftaalf In a vary abort tlma. lie pr.par.d for wlntar and. aak your rlumb.r to Inilall It NOW. Madt by Union i,,Sr J;on"',nir' .." no' fnetalttd by November 1 will not t.i. ..,.. ..& ... mi. ...- .J7 -T ''-' -i.v.". i"r..,,n f is fiwi mu ma moat nolaa. I tba aim . s i teErji iiVflKPkafln nBssain Ipaa mad Jo KM out Nothlnr Eaar to In.tall. Write at one. for partleu. lara. Our aiwrlai rp. rtaentatlve will cladly sirs you information. hjscxZxos.G TWI Our Xatllv Ktaehtd Skowrooma t-40-4S BO North Sth bt. Opvotitt Independence nail DOES YOUR CATALOGUE SPEAK A UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE? 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