[Uncle Sam’s Boys with Pershing’s Troops by H. Irving Hancock]@TWC D-Link book
Uncle Sam’s Boys with Pershing’s Troops

CHAPTER VII
13/15

"Me, I've always been an American, and I'm one now, and will be as long as I live." "Let me have those vials," Dick ordered.

"Sergeant, take these, and mark them as soon as you get back to company office.

Then we'll turn them over to the medical department.

Sergeant, march your prisoners." Heading toward the road Sergeant Kelly and his four soldiers led the German captives away.
Captain Dick, with Mock and Wilhelm, followed, but did not attempt to keep up with the sergeant's party, When Kelly showed up in camp again he did not have his prisoners with him.

He had taken them elsewhere, and they were soon on their way to an internment camp, where, like "good" Germans in America, they would live until the close of the war, cut off from all further chance to plot against Uncle Sam's soldiers.
Halting at a farm-house on the way, Dick telephoned to regimental headquarters.


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