The War Romance of the Salvation Army - BestLightNovel.com
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December 10, 1917.
Commander Evangeline C. Booth, New York City.
MY DEAR COMMANDER:
I have just read in the New York papers of your purpose and plan to raise a million dollars for your Salvation Army work carried on in the interests of the soldiers at home and abroad, and I cannot refrain from writing to you to express my deep interest, and also the hope that you may be successful in raising this fund, because I know that it will be so well administered.
From all that I have heard of the Salvation Army work in connection with the soldiers carried on under your direction, I think it is simply wonderful, and if there is any service that I can render you or the Army, I should be exceedingly pleased.
I have read "Souls in Khaki," and I wish that everyone might read it, for could they do so, your million-dollar fund would be easily raised.
With ever-increasing interest in the Salvation Army, I am, Cordially yours,
(Signed) J. WILBUR CHAPMAN.
Moderator of the General a.s.sembly of the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A.
SALVATION ARMY IS THE MOST POPULAR ORGANIZATION IN FRANCE.
Raymond B. Fosd.i.c.k, chairman of the War Recreation Commission, on his return from a tour of investigation into activities of the relief organizations in France, gave out the following:
"Somewhat to my surprise I found the Salvation Army probably the most popular organization in France with the troops. It has not undertaken the comprehensive program which the Y.M.C.A. has laid out for itself; that is, it is operating in three or four divisions, while the Y. M. C. A. is aiming to cover every unit of troops.
"But its simple, homely, unadorned service seems to have touched the hearts of our men. The aim of the organization is, if possible, to put a worker and his wife in a canteen or a centre. The women spend their time making doughnuts and pies, and sew on b.u.t.tons. The men make themselves generally useful in any way which their service can be applied.
"I saw such placed in dugouts way up at the front, where the German sh.e.l.ls screamed over our heads with a sound not unlike a freight train crossing a bridge. Down in their dugouts the Salvation Army folks imperturbably handed out doughnuts and dished out the 'drink.'"
WAR DEPARTMENT COMMISSION ON TRAINING CAMP ACTIVITIES, WAs.h.i.+NGTON
45, Avenue Montaigne, Paris.
Commander Evangeline Booth, Apr. 8, 1919.
Salvation Army, New York City.
MY DEAR COMMANDER BOOTH:
The work of the Salvation Army with the armed forces of the United States does not need any word of commendation from me. Perhaps I may be permitted to say, however, that as a representative of the War and Navy Departments I have been closely in touch with it from its inception, both in Europe and in the United States. I do not believe there is a doughboy anywhere who does not speak of it with enthusiasm and affection. Its remarkable success has been due solely to the unselfish spirit of service which has underlain it. Nothing has been too humble or too lowly for the Salvation Army representative to do for the soldier. Without ostentation, without advertising, without any emphasis upon auspices or organization, your people have met the men of the Army as friends and companions-in-arms, and the soldiers, particularly those of the American Expeditionary Force, will never forget what you have done.
Faithfully yours, (Signed) RAYMOND B. FOSd.i.c.k.
From Honorable Arthur Stanley, Chairman British Red Cross Society.
BRITISH RED CROSS SOCIETY JOINT WAR COMMITTEE
83 Pall Mall, London, S. W.,
December 22, 1917.
General Bramwell Booth.
DEAR GENERAL BOOTH:
I enclose formal receipt for the cheque, value 2000, which was handed to me by your representative. I note that it is a contribution from the Salvation Army to the Joint Funds to provide a new Salvation Army Motor Ambulance Unit on the same conditions as before.
I cannot sufficiently thank you and the Salvation Army for this very generous donation.
I am indeed glad to know that you are providing another twenty drivers for service with our Ambulance Fleet in France. This is most welcome news, as whenever Salvation Army men are helping we hear nothing but good reports of their work. Sir Ernest Clarke tells me that your Ambulance Sections are quite the best of any in our service, and the more Salvation Army men you can send him, the better he will be pleased. I would again take this opportunity of congratulating you, which I do with all my heart, upon the splendid record of your Army.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) ARTHUR STANLEY.
Extract from Judge Ben Lindsey's picture of the Salvation Army at the Front:
"A good expression for American enthusiasm is: 'I am crazy about'--this, or that, or the other thing that excites our admiration. Well, 'I am crazy about the Salvation Army'--the Salvation Army as I saw it and mingled with it and the doughboys in the trenches. And when I happened to be pa.s.sing through Chicago to-day and saw an appeal in the _Tribune_ for the Salvation Army, I remembered what our boys so often shouted out to me as I pa.s.sed them in the trenches and back of the lines: 'Judge, when you get back home tell the folks not to forget the Salvation Army. They're the real thing.'
"And I know they are the real thing. I have shared with the boys the doughnuts and chocolate and coffee that seemed to be so much better than any other doughnuts or coffee or chocolate I have ever tasted before. And when it seemed so wonderful to me after just a mild sort of experience down a sh.e.l.l-swept road, through the damp and cold of a French winter day, what must it be to those boys after trench raids or red-hot sc.r.a.ps down rain-soaked trenches under the wet mists of No Man's Land?... Listen to some of the stories the boys told me: 'You see, Judge, the good old Salvation Army is the real thing. They don't put on no airs. There ain't no flub-dub about them and you don't see their mugs in the fancy magazines much. Why, you never would see one of them in Paris around the hotels.
You'd never know they existed, Judge, unless you came right up here to the front lines as near as the Colonel will let you!'
"And one enthusiastic urchin said: 'Why, Judge, after the battle yesterday, we couldn't get those women out of the village till they'd seen every fellow had at least a dozen fried cakes and all the coffee or chocolate he could pile in. We just had to drag 'em out--for the boys love 'em too much to lose 'em--we weren't going to take no chances--not much-- for our Salvation ladies!'"
HARRY LAUDER'S ENDORs.e.m.e.nT.
In speaking of the Salvation Army's work before the Rotary Club of San Francisco, Harry Lauder said:
"There is no organization in Europe doing more for the troops than the Salvation Army, and the devotion of its officers has caused the Salvation Army to be revered by the soldiers."
Mr. Otto Kahn, one of America's most prominent bankers, upon his return to this country after a tour through the American lines in France, writes, among other things:
"I should particularly consider myself remiss if I did not refer with sincere admiration to the devoted, sympathetic, and most efficient work of the Salvation Army, which, though limited in its activities to a few sectors only, has won the warm and affectionate regard of those of our troops with whom it has been in contact."
Mr. David Lawrence, special Was.h.i.+ngton correspondent of the _New York Evening Post_ and other influential papers, in an article in which he comments on the work of all the relief agencies, says of the Salvation Army in France:
"Curiously enough the Salvation Army is spoken of in all official reports as the organization most popular with the troops. Its organization is the smallest of all four. Its service is simple and unadorned. It specializes on doughnuts and pie, which it gives away free whenever the ingredients of the manufacture of those articles are at hand.
"_The policy of the organization_ is to place a worker and his wife, if possible, with a unit of troops. The woman makes doughnuts and sews on b.u.t.tons, while the man helps the soldiers in any way he can.
"_The success of the Salvation Army_ is attributed by commanding officers to the fact that the workers know how to mix naturally. _In other cases there had been sometimes an air of condescension not unlike that of the professional settlement house worker_."