. The book of dogs; an intimate study of mankind's best friend. Dogs. THE NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE valley below to the front line on the mountain above. In the X'osges Mountains more than •a thousand Alaskan sled dogs helped to hold the Hun during the last year of the war. DOG TEAMS THAT WON THE CROIX DE GUERRE One woman brought back to America a Croix de Guerre awarded by France to her intrepid teams of sled dogs. The occa- sion that won them that honor was their salvation of a storm- bound, foe-pressed outpost in the French Alps. Dispatch bear- ers had been sent back repeatedly, but no s
. The book of dogs; an intimate study of mankind's best friend. Dogs. THE NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE valley below to the front line on the mountain above. In the X'osges Mountains more than •a thousand Alaskan sled dogs helped to hold the Hun during the last year of the war. DOG TEAMS THAT WON THE CROIX DE GUERRE One woman brought back to America a Croix de Guerre awarded by France to her intrepid teams of sled dogs. The occa- sion that won them that honor was their salvation of a storm- bound, foe-pressed outpost in the French Alps. Dispatch bear- ers had been sent back repeatedly, but no suc- coring answer came, for the messengers were overwhelmed as the}' ])assed through the blinding blizzard. At last matters be- came desperate. The foe was pressing his advantage with dash and courage, and noth- ing but quick action could save the situa- tion. So Lieutenant Rene Haas hitched his dogs to a light sled and started through a blizzard be- fore which human flesh, in spite (.)f the '"urge" of a consecrated patriotism, had failed. In "sweepstakes racing time" they covered the trip down the mountain and over a perilous pass to the main army post. There the 28 dogs were hitched to 14 light sleds, and these were loaded with ammunition. Back over the forbidding trail they went, under an artillery fire, facing a bitter wind, and plowing through blinding clouds of snow. On the fifth. Photograph by Hariy F. lilancliard FRIENDS TIIROI-nn SUXS?nNE AND STIOWERS From their present state of mutual trust and comradeship, it is difficult to picture tlie age when the forebears of these three play- mates were bitter antagonists—the cave-man and the wolf. day, at sunrise, the jxmting malamutcs reached the outpost, their burden of am- munition was rushed to the gunners, and the mountain was saved from the in- solent foe. The stories of courage and bravery among individual dogs on the battlefield are many and inspiring. Michael was the name of a dog which, unaided
Size: 1359px × 1840px
Photo credit: © Library Book Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookauthorfuertesl, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1919