. A story of the war and family war service record, 1914-1919. ts to soldiers and sailors. Be-sides these huts many dug-outs close to the frontline trenches for serving soldiers under fire. Threehundred rest rooms equipped with papers, books,magazines, etc., 866 Salvation Army officers devotedtheir entire time to social and religious work amongthe soldiers; 4,000 beds in hotels near railway sta-tions and landing places for soldiers and sailors,100,000 Salvation Army members fought with Al-lied armies. Many of the largest buildings of theSalvation Army w^re used for hospitals and shel-ters for


. A story of the war and family war service record, 1914-1919. ts to soldiers and sailors. Be-sides these huts many dug-outs close to the frontline trenches for serving soldiers under fire. Threehundred rest rooms equipped with papers, books,magazines, etc., 866 Salvation Army officers devotedtheir entire time to social and religious work amongthe soldiers; 4,000 beds in hotels near railway sta-tions and landing places for soldiers and sailors,100,000 Salvation Army members fought with Al-lied armies. Many of the largest buildings of theSalvation Army w^re used for hospitals and shel-ters for refugees. Salvation Army huts were inoperation at the following camps in U. S. A.: Bowie,Cody, Devans, Funston, Grant, Logan, Lewis, Mead,Sherman, Taylor, Travis, Kearney, Dix. The handling of these activities required rare ex-ecutive skill, for it was most efficiently done, yetremarkable as it may seem, the business routine didnot take from the organization any of its humanity,but on the contrary accentuated it. It was a matter of chance that brought the 14.


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Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectworldwar19141918