April 3, 1919

Cold, sunny and not at all the day to stay indoors. I’ve just had a long walk and am now fit for a good day’s work. I’m really working now, you know, trying to clean up this stuff that’s on hand, so I can get out and away.

This morning I went over to the old French fort here on an interpreting job. There is a big tournament in the A.E.F. in May and we want to send a pistol team. They want us to use the French pistol range and I went over to get permission and dope. Spent all morning at it out in the sunshine. Then at noon I walked all the way around the fort after lunch. This weather makes me long for the states. What good is sunshine when you’re over here. But it does do a little toward making me a bit more content with France. It is hard to feel anything but resentment for a country that treats you to a mess of rainy weather for months at a time.

Another of our boys got married yesterday. He is the second in about three weeks. He is an ex-boy, for he joined the Red Cross and goes around now in a Red Cross officer’s uniform. He is a very fine fellow, named George Marshal. The girl is the daughter of the man who owns the café across the street from Mme. Jeanne’s. It is a café equally popular with the photofolks, but not patronized so largely for the purpose of eating as it is for drinking. Any day one could see Germaine Minet behind the counter – it isn’t a bar in this country, and there is no stigma attached – pretty and smiling. She is really very nice but it reminds of the refrain, “Only a bar-tender’s daughter.”

No Pershing today. He has probably forgotten us. I hope so. I don’t want to have to stand up and listen to him say platitudes when I want him to say when we are going home. I’m always afraid of over-praised persons. They’re likely to be over-rated.

No peace either. Wish they could come to some agreement soon. Then we’d be sure of getting back.

Time to go out for supper now. — Just had a bath. It’s quite a function here. Around the corner and up the rue de Montreuil 2 blocks. You go in at a tiled door through a large courtyard containing umbrella-shaped shrubs. Then into a rear building with a counter and a waiting room. At the counter they have pink soap and green scent. Also tickets. I paid three francs and got two green tickets, and a lead tag which I gave up immediately to a rather pretty girl. She gave me two towels (I had my own soap) and led me down a long corridor of little bathrooms. At the end she opened a door into a white tiled room about six feet square. I can’t remember how often I’ve been to this place and had one of these rooms, nor can I recall that there ever has been the slightest difference in them.

An enameled nickel tub occupies one side. Beside it is a little square of wood to stand on and another little square of red carpet. There are two chairs, a small mirror, a marble shelf and two clothes-hooks. Hot and cold running water, complete the installation. I had a sulphur bath and it was tres bon. You always fear that the girl isn’t going to get out of the room in time. She starts the water and stays to turn it off, if you let her. But I don’t.


Next post April 6.

April 2, 1919

Do you wonder what I am doing? I come in to the lab. at about 8:30 and get going on pictures. Just at present we are making up divisional sets – thirty pictures on the action of each division, including one or two of General Pershing. I think I mentioned them in a previous letter. I go into the files and pick out the best ones. When they are gotten together I cull them over and pick out the best ones. When they are gotten together I cull them over several times until I am down to the required number then I must have the titles; that means more digging in other files. Then the captions must be written, one for each picture. The whole job takes about two and a half days. The work is divided between Lt. Cushing and myself. He does most of the writing and I do most of the searching. We do the selecting together. I know the files of this lab. better than anyone else in the place with one exception, so it is entirely practical for me to delve in them.

Once upon a time I used to pride myself on being able to remember telephone numbers and such things, but wondered how that could ever be of any use. Now it stands me in good stead. I have a remarkable memory for numbers and facts about these forty thousand still photographs. It is too good. I’m afraid they’ll want it to stay here. We get requests of all kinds every day for pictures. I saw one today from a cook in some infantry company. It said: “Information wanted about picture taken of our kitchen about Sept. 27th.” The one exception mentioned above is the man whose job it is to handle such requests. He knows more than I do, but he gets stuck lots of times, and asks me a dozen things a day. Can you imagine looking through incomplete indexes and files for forty thousand pictures to find one of an infantry company’s kitchen? We probably have no fewer than three hundred like it scattered through the files. The only way out is a couple of good memories. Harry Anderson has one and I have the other. They are the only ones in the place.

A request like the above is handled about this way. From the number of the man’s regiment I figure out what division he is in and then try to remember who was our photographer with that division on September 27th. Then get the file numbers of all his stuff about that date, go look at them all, and make double sure by looking up the official title of the one we think is right. It takes someone who can put his hand on all the necessary cards and books and pictures. I should say that fully half my time is devoted to information work of this kind separate from the news department.

The worst of it is that we have to fill these requests or bother with them at all. Linemen or lieutenants, cooks or colonels – anybody in France can have pictures if he’ll only say they’re wanted for official purposes. What he does with them after they’re out of this lab, nobody knows.


Next post April 3.

March 28, 1919

Last night I went to Streiffs’ for the first time in weeks and had a great reception.

There is a silly rumor hereabouts tonight that Russia, Turkey, Germany, Austria and Bulgaria have united to renew the war. That would be a find mess, wouldn’t it. Guess there’s nothing to it.

Tomorrow night there will be a Bal Masque, given by the 55th Service Co., which is we, at the Chalet du Lac, Vincennes. Since I haven’t been to any of these things, I believe I’ll go and show my face. However, I shall not take anyone.


Next post April 2.

March 24, 1919

Yesterday was not such a good one as the weather goes, but as we went it would be hard to equal. Five of us – Ashlock, chauffeur, Sellars, good fellow, Spafford, ditto, Frank and I started forth about ten A.M. in a good old Ford to go out into the country and take pictures.

We were fully equipped with everything but an idea. Spafford has charge of the cameras in this organization, and we had three of the choicest. Ashlock is head chauffeur, so we had the best car. A person named Abbott wanted certain pictures for a certain purpose of his own, so he provided us with amply ambiguous passes. Thus we set forth.

No we didn’t either. Sellars had an idea that if we took a loaf of white bread, some sugar and some jam – all commodities that are scarce in France at the present time – we would be able to find our dinner more readily. That was a good hunch, so that was what we did.

We went to Champigny, for which town we had passes. By the way, the safety of the passes lay in the fact that there is a Champigny in most every county in France, and that if ever we were stopped the American M.P. would never know that there wasn’t a village named Champigny two kilometers away.

Right through our town sailed we, for there was never a picture in sight and on and on and on. We turned where roads looked attractive and where fancy willed. So it was we came at last to the little village of Carnetin, between the Marne and the Ourcq Canal. Here we saw a little restaurant that attracted Dudley Sellars’ eye. As we were ready to eat, we went in and laid our proposition before the bewildered natives.

Not many Americans had been there, and there were many little flat noses against the window, while we ate. At first, they didn’t quite get our drift. You see we came in and said we were hungry and held out our American food to exchange for a lot of French, with money to boot. But when the old man suggested, some minutes later while we waited for the pork chops to fry, that perhaps we would want some soucisse for hors d’oeuvre, I knew that they had the idea. They certainly did. We dined bounteously and well.

Then we pushed on and found ourselves in Glaye. This is on the road to Chateau-Thierry and I knew the route perfectly, so we pushed on towards the old war area. The details of that road and of the trip over it made on Feb. 22, you already know. We stopped several times to take pictures, and by 6 o’clock had gotten beyond Meaux and La Ferte, well into the 1914 battle area. Then we had to turn back.

All went well till we reached a place called Livry, on the way back, only about ten miles from the gates of Paris. Then the car spluttered and gave up the struggle. There was no more gas. Somehow or other that failed to get me all excited, though France is on a gasoline ration and one must have tickets to get even a limited amount. Three of us set out to find some place in the desert country that had a horse or a little “essence.” Our second query, at a little grocery not a half-kilometer from our car, found us seven liters – enough to get us home – at a reasonable price and no ticket demanded. Nothing was ever as light as that can of gas, and no honey as fragrant. Ashlock had been sick all afternoon and he was worried about being stranded in the country at night. We filled up, reached home at nine, and tumbled into bed. I never came to until 8:15 this morning. Altogether it was very enjoyable and I should like to do it again. I drove the car for a stretch, which was good fun also. First time in about two years.

Today was uneventful and rainy. The Spring is in a very unsettled stage now and it is hard to say whether a raincoat or a Spring bonnet is the thing to wear. However, the army isn’t so generous with its Spring bonnets so I usually wear a raincoat.

The last crop of rumors did not turn out so well. You remember I told you about some moves that were to be made, and about certain happenings that I knew to be official. That was before I went away. When I came back, there was no sign of these things. They were authentic enough, coming direct from the officer in charge, but the plans were changed or didn’t work out well, I don’t know which. That leaves us rumorless for the present and prospectless, as well.

Someone once said we were to be here to photograph the last man going home. I doubt that. We’ll miss that by several months, I hope. But it doesn’t seem today as though we were any nearer going than we were a month ago.

If I had dependents or a dying father or a tumbling business, I might get home. These are all things I don’t possess and am not willing to forge. No Red Cross job calls me, no senator pulls for me. I’m here till they see fit to begin the ending of the photo division of the A.E.F.


Next post March 28.

March 22, 1919

You don’t know how war and sergeant’s stripes have changed me. I’m very strict and stern now, and accustomed to being obeyed. You ought to see how embarrassed I get when strangers call me sergeant (no one else ever does). Guess it hasn’t spoiled me much.

Well here I am wasting time chattering when I ought to be telling you all about Nice and how I went and how I came. But I’m not going to do that. It talks much better than it writes. Suffice it to say that I left Paris on Wednesday, the 12th, at 9 PM arrived there again on Thursday, the 20th , at 5 PM. That gave me about six days in Nice, which is almost as good as if I had had my leave there.

Perfect freedom, beautiful surroundings, good weather and nothing to do but enjoy myself. How could I fail to like it? I did Nice thoroughly, and even went to Monte Carlo, which is only about fifteen kilometers distant. I couldn’t get into the casino, because American soldiers are not allowed in after 10 AM, at which hour the play starts. I could not do, for military reasons, several of the things I wanted to. For instance, the day before I got there, Bori sang in the Monte Carlo Opera in Boheme. She did not sing again while I was there, or I might have taken a chance and gone over to hear her. Battisini, the tenor whom I was to hear the time I went with the Bellamys in Paris, was also at Monte Carlo. The exterior of the opera there is quite pretentious, and those two names sound big; perhaps it’s good.

You see I was obliged to remain at Nice to await another courier from Paris and I couldn’t go far, for fear that the very minute I left he’d arrive.

But I did manage to get in that little ride to Monte Carlo and am glad of it, thought I had only an hour there. The trip is along the seashore, which is clean and blue. It differs from most seashores in that it is mountainous. The Maritime Alps come right to the Mediterranean there. They are steep, high and green. If one continues on from Monte Carlo a way, there is Menton, and then the Italian border. I wouldn’t go there just to say I’d stepped on Italian soil, and there is nothing of any greater interest near enough to the border for American visitors.

I passed many places going and coming that I should like to be able to visit. Cannes, for instance, and Marseilles, which is a most interesting city, I understand. Also Tarascon, famous for Daudet’s “Tartarin”, and Avignon, once the seat of the popes. This last named place appealed to me especially for some reason. It is in a perfectly beautiful section, and is itself a gem. Well, some day, maybe.

When I got back there was nothing new. They tell me I got fat and sun-burned. The first thing I did was to count noses. I find them all here. No one else went home, and as far as I can see at the present writing, there is no good sign of any one’s going right away. The rate of return of the A.E.F. seems to be improving, however. The standard of nine divisions in two months (that’s about 275,000 men), in addition to a lot of casuals (that’s odds and ends, not solid combat divisions) is not so hard to figure on. That would get the whole A.E.F. home by October, and there is no reason to believe that we are to be the very last.

It is now nine-thirty PM, and I am to go out tomorrow early, for a day in the country, so I think I’ll stop.


Next post March 24.

March 15, 1919

Perfect days must have originated in Nice. It is so perfect here that I feel the imperfections keenly. To enjoy this place to the fullest I’d have to be a civilian. The orders on which I came say that I am to courier material down and take photographs. So this morning I set out to take some. The doughboy on leave is a study. But he is an interior study. He is always inside the Y.M.C.A. I am our for little human interest touches and things the other unit may overlook. I’m not trying to do the place. I got a few.

This afternoon I went for a long walk all around town and up some of the hills above with Sgt. Gross, of the photo nit. It is all very picturesque and southlike.

Nice has some beautiful hotels. American soldiers live in the 7 days without paying a cent. The gov’t pays them at the rate of 12/16 francs a day for each soldier. I believe Nice can accommodate about 3000, and it must be full now. I am at the Atlantic, which is a 2nd class house, near the ocean. The meals are fine, and the comfort good. I have moved my room again, to a small one this time but large enough to sleep in and very clean. I’m alone in it. Of course I pay for all this, but get the money back when I return.

Nice is on a bay called “Baie des Anges”. I think the angels must find it an improvement over heaven. Surely there is no water as blue as this in the celestial regions.

It is a heaven for shoppers too. The windows are uniformly more interesting, artistic, varied and expensive than in Paris. One would have to be flat broke or stone blind to resist. My sight is still good.

A leave area would be nothing without a Y. Here they have taken over the casino called La Jetee, which is built over the water, at the main point on the chief promenade. It is a pretentious place in its Gallic way, and abounds in domes with minarets and colors. Inside it has about six magnificent halls with beautiful chandeliers and glass walls.

One hall is a reading and lecture room, another a writing room. A third is used for dancing, and afternoons and evenings the boys can have American dancing music and partners. In another is a canteen that sells smokes and candy; a light-lunch counter and a billiard room. There is also a large theater hall where they have vaudeville and movies.

Never before have I seen a place where the women are so uniformly good looking. The south makes beauties out of ordinary children, and does it early. But I fear it spoils them early, too. One of the most remarkable things about Nice is the kind of people one sees. They all look like real folks – honest-to-goodness people, which is so different from the rest of France. One wants to know them all.

You never can tell when you pass a person whether he’ll be speaking French, English, Italian, Russian or Spanish. All of these languages are current, and in about that order. All the natives speak and understand English.

Orange, olive, palm, cypress and acacia trees line the streets and fill the gardens. There are many magnificent villas set in delightful grounds. Most of the buildings are glaring white and the roads are white rock. I have never seen as clean a place.

These are just a few wandering, not to say rambling, impressions, but they may serve to show you that life in the army isn’t so bad.


Next post March 22.

March 14, 1919

Nice is a fine place. The Riviera is well named the world’s playground. Monaco, Menton, Nice, Cannes and other well-known names. A clear, sunny sky, balmy air and the blue, blue Mediterranean. An international affair and a wonderful one.

But let me tell you how I came here. There is a photo unit covering leave areas and touring from one to the next. They wired in for some material which, of course, had to be convoyed down. The man who makes these assignments is a friend of mine and got me orders to come. That was mid-afternoon, Wednesday. By nine that night I was safely ensconced in the aisle of a second class coach where everyone could walk on me.

It was a great trip and I shall not attempt to tell you all of it now. From Paris to Marseilles is 850 kilometers and from Marseilles to Nice, 400. The whole is not far from 800 miles. It took 25 ½ hours.

I got here at 10:45 last night. By the time the military red tape was finished and I’d found a hotel it was getting to be midnight. I had a splendid bed and room, and after a bad night and wearisome day in the train, I was able to appreciate them. I did this morning, when I set forth to find the Lt. in charge of the photo unit.

I spent all of this morning there and finally moved down to his hotel. There is a complication now in regard to the material sent him which may keep me here till Tuesday. You can imagine how worried I am. If it straightens out, I shall leave here either tomorrow night or Sunday night. It depends on a telegram from Paris.

After four months in the A.E.F. a soldier is entitled to a leave. It means 7 full days at one of the leave center (traveling time not included in the 7 days) and all expenses paid. It is a fine thing; the only drawback is that you may not choose your place but must go where you’re sent. Nice is a center, and it is full of soldiers – Americans, French, British, Italian, Belgian, Czecho-Slovak. And I can think of no better place to spend a week or a few months.


Next post March 15.

March 11, 1919

Today thinks look good. In the first place it is beautiful, warm, sunny, American weather. Every one, officers and men, was out front this noon, playing ball. In the second place, rumors have begun to look likely, some of them officially confirmed as truth. One that has a lot of color is that the still negatives of the lab are to be sent home piecemeal under convoy of four or five men. That would be good; once the negatives are out, there is nothing more to do, and they must clean out the thing. Also they are looking for a hundred men to volunteer to stay here till Sept. That is positive and official, because Frank Phillips was officially given the opportunity to volunteer for it. He hasn’t decided yet. Now if they are going to keep some of us here till Sept., it is a cinch that they are planning to send the rest home before that. My guess is that they will do it gradually, sending groups of five or six or eight to convoy these valuable historical documents home. It is not without hope.

Six o’clock now and time to manger, after which I am to go around and get a new coat, which is being altered to fit me, and then to Bellamys’ for the regular Tuesday lesson. If it gets much nicer I’m going to have them adjourn these sessions to the Bois.

Mme. Bellamy was a bit indisposed tonight, having worked quite hard during the day. I was not sorry, for I haven’t exactly the proper feeling today to teach. Did I ever tell you what she and her husband do for a living? Well even if I have, here goes: She has worked in the color department of Pathe’s for some twelve years. Her husband has been in the army from almost the beginning of the war – something over four years. He worked in the Joinville Pathe plant before that, as head of the “colorie”. She is an authority here on tinting and toning and color work on movies. His case is not so good. When he came back into civil life and wanted once more to take up his old job, there was someone else in it, and he had his choice of working under this other man as developer, or of looking for another place. I have told you how these people around here build their lives on the one factory as a foundation. It would ruin thousands if it ever toppled. So Bellamy, knowing nothing in life but Pathe, took what they offered and resumed his old life. The war has set him back not alone the four years, but also all that it may have taken him to reach from a subordinate position like his present one to a headship like his former.

I shall not stay here long because it is too hot, and it is too nice outside. But I want to tell you how we live. French rues are not like American streets. They are usually a succession of high walls, before private residences, or of flush houses, in the case of apartment sections. Apartments are more usual here than even in New York and are of about the same general character of appearance and livability as ours. The entrance is always simpler than in ours; elevators are scarce; it is not uncommon for eight story buildings to be without lifts; rooms are smaller and less airy. The average height is six stories.

Private residences are indeed private. A twelve foot wall all around the property makes them so. In the front, along the street, this wall is surmounted with red tile, which combines picturesquely with the gray of the cement wall. The entrance is always by a gate, most commonly of iron. The larger and more impressive the double feudal portal, the greater the lineage, commercial or heraldic, of the owner.

Inside the same is true of detached homes as of apartments. But let me tell you about ours. The Pathe villa property is on the corner of the rue des Vignerons and the rue de la Villa, about a hundred feet on the former and two hundred on the latter. The wall surrounds it all, except that near the gate it is replaced by a fence of iron palings. The gate is on the center of the long wall. It opens out upon the rue de la Villa opposite the rue du Bois, which, as you might have guessed, leads to the Bois de Vincennes. Our own little rue de la Villa is quiet and narrow and clean. It is only a full block long, running from the rue des Vignerons to the old fort.

There is a guard at the gate 24 hours a day. One Sunday an English lady came up in the factory where I was writing a letter and wandered all over the floor before she came to my little corner. She was looking for one of the boys, whom she knew; I said she might find him if she went over to the “chateau,” as we call our quarters. Not long after, I left the plant and went home. I found her outside the gate, with the guard barring the way. She laughed and said, “How strange you Americans are. Over in your laboratory full of valuable historical records and all sorts of tempting things, I might wander about quite undisturbed. Here where there is nothing but a few beds and tables you guard it like the king’s treasure.”

I tried my best to explain that it wasn’t the Americans who caused these things but the army. It left her rather unconvinced, and, to tell the truth I didn’t get over very strong to myself with that story.

But to continue, let us go inside the gate. It is never closed. The barring is done by the presence of the guard. There is a shade of sense in having him. The poor little French children would like mightily to go inside those huge double gates and browse around among the possessions of the “millionaire” Americans. And then they’d take their brothers in, and among them all would divide up our entire interiors. Perhaps they would even take their sisters in, and that would leave us but little privacy.

Inside the gate is a large artificial natural fountain, pretty and cooling in the summer. It is in the center of the road and just in front of the big house. To the right and left stretch the grounds of the place, large and spacious beyond the conception of a Frenchman’s thrift. Mr. Pathe had undoubtedly been to America. There are little winding roads and elm, chestnut and evergreen trees, shrubs and even bits of lawn.

We are still coming in the gate, and we find at our right a two story house running at ninety degrees to the street, from the wall back about seventy-five feet. There it makes a right angle with a garage. It is in this little house that I live. It was formerly a servants’ pavilion. It is divided into three attached residences, each complete in itself. I am in the middle one. Let me tell you about it.

The house is about twenty feet wide; the single door is on the level of the ground and opens into a room about fifteen feet deep, running the width of the house, Off of this to the left is a small room six by seven, which brings us to the rear wall. Off the main room to the right is another little square of about the six –by-seven extent, with a door leading to the back alley, and a stairway to the cellar and to the upper story.

Upstairs, a little hallway, from which open off another 15 by 20, and another 6/7. It is in this last that I live. The three parts of the pavilion are identical, even to the number of steps in the stairs before the curve begins. It is evident that in the large room downstairs, the servant family lived and ate. The little one to the left was a sort of storeroom. The little one to the right, with the back door and stairways, the kitchen. Upstairs were the bedrooms.

Now there are “double-deckers” and single cots in all the rooms, except the kitchen. This has been fitted with a wooden sink and several faucets, and serves in an insufficient French way as our washroom. The back alley contains a little outhouse.

Over the garage the rooms are somewhat differently arranged, but of the same character. Although we have about ten Fords here, and a large Packard truck, outdoor storage is all they seem to rate, and the garage-stable-shop building is used for sleeping quarters.

At the other end of the garden, some 200 or more feet away, parallel to our pavilion and to the rue des Vignerons, runs a long low greenhouse, just inside the wall of the last named street. It is in a state of disrepair and disuse that would pain old Charles Pathe’s flora-fancy. It also extends back the full depth of the property, and joins, at the rear, a brick rabbit and hen-house of ingenious design. The American despoilers have put up two long wooden barracks of the French “Adrien” type next and parallel to the greenhouses; one is the mess-hall and the other a sleeping hall, filled with double-deckers. Now let us proceed to the main building – the villa, or “chateau” or big house; we have covered all the rest of the grounds.

The chateau is of stone and cement, three stories, with an attic. In front it displays a porch and a portico, reached by a flight of gracefully curved stairs by either side. Every time I go up the steps and go into the magnificent entrance, I have to exert my will to keep from recalling that the whole villa boasts no bathtub. But perhaps the French soldiers who occupied the house before we took it on July 4th, 1918, had the tub uprooted. If they had its former site would certainly be covered with frescos, gilt, red velvet and pink angels. That’s what they’d do over here.

Inside the main door is our canteen, bulletin board and mail box, in a vestibule. Then a large room, formerly part of the mess hall; since we mess in the Adrien this room and the one opening off the right of it have become amusement rooms. In the larger, tables and benches, a piano, two phonographs, writing materials and a whole library of novels and things. In the other, a billiard table. The first floor also contains the company offices and medical office. On the upper floors are well-filled sleeping rooms.

The decorative scheme is elaborate and Gallic. In its day, the house was intended to be the last word in modernity, not to say beauty. But the French are ever voluble, and one feels that as each word seems to have been meant for the last, the speaker couldn’t bring himself to stop.

The house has a central heating system that often works, and the side buildings have lots of open fireplaces. During the cold weather, wood and a sort of coal were available. That doesn’t mean that the gov’t provided them always, but a soldier must be a promoter above all things. Right next to the Pathe place is a French wood yard. Many a night I’ve gone out and climbed the wall to do a bit of forestry work. After a while the French took to keeping a dog; luckily just about that time several big loads of wood were delivered into the cellar of the chateau, and it was very easy to keep warm. Later I tried again; the dog was gone, but in his place reigned a sharp-toothed cold. The logs were frozen to the pile, and the snow lay four inches deep over all. But we had to live so Billy and I climbed the wall numbed our hands prying loose and carried home several polar pieces.


Next post March 14.

March 8, 1919

Everybody has gone to a dance tonight, but I don’t feel much like dancing, especially with a lot of French girls, who can’t dance anyway.

Of course it’s all right to say, “Get out of the army.” But the fact is that three of our men who left here in December and January are down in a little hole 20 miles from the coast and have not yet been deloused. The process of delousing a man is deemed necessary by an all-wise government, whether the subject need it or not. It is a pre-essential to embarkation. It consists in a thorough cooking of all wearing apparel, which is then fit for salvage, nothing else; and a thorough bathing of the wearer, who in the end, is also about ready to be salvaged. They want to wash all the year’s accumulation of dirt in France of you at one fell swoop, as though the frogs were charging them extra if they carried off any of it.

But to continue, these boys had fine excuses to get home and suffer no delays, and they aren’t at the embarkation camp yet. Small detachments and single men are easily lost or still easier sidetracked. The machinery of demobilization in retail lots is not yet hitting on all eight. Perhaps it is as well not to buck that proposition for a while. When men begin going home in numbers, there will be plenty of little odd corners on the boats and they will have learned how to handle individuals. Then I may try to get out.

But of course there is always the possibility of a release before long, in case the whole outfit goes back. The 26 who were to leave here have not yet gone, but it is beyond question that they are going; it will probably be tomorrow. They are going to Washington to work in the photo lab. I have had enough photo labs, what with Columbia and this, but at times I am sorry I did not get on the list.

Every one of the men on it is really needed for financial reasons at home, though being a soldier in Washington is hardly calculated to restore the fortunes of any family. But the point is that every single one I have spoken to expects to exert influence and to get out of the army. That will be fine. More power to them; I know that each case is really deserving and it is one of the fairest things that has been done in the Photo Division. Besides, if they were really needed and they get out, they make a hole which must be filled; they may make room for more of us.

It is very hard to tell, rather to foretell, when the lab is going to quit. One day things look very bright for an early release and breaking up, and the next they are a dark sienna. Officers don’t know – nobody seems to know just how far this elastic cinch can be stretched. Cinch it is, for certain of them here, who are making far more than a normal world thought them worth. They are the real profiteers, taking unholy gain from the government and from the lives of others. You have seen how the signs veered from hopeful to despairing. Today it is a little of each.


Next post March 11.

March 7, 1919

I didn’t tell you that Frank and I were down Monday night to see old man Lozach, the photographer. He isn’t really old, but seems so, when you first notice his face. He is only about thirty-five or –six but seems old enough to be my father. That is one thing common to both men and women in this country – at thirty they look forty.

We had not seen Lozach since last summer. On account of the high cost of materials and so forth he was obliged to quit the photo business and take to aeroplane electrical work. This paid him much better, but he is an independent soul who preferred to be master. However he had no choice; he is still in the plane place, working very hard, getting good pay (40 francs a day) and saving up. In April he is going to take his own photo shop with a partner in the picture frame business.

The important part of the visit was that he had moved from his old bachelor quarters (he is a grass widower) and in the process of moving, had acquired a family. He is now in the smallest apartment I have ever seen, living with a pretty and very agreeable young woman, name unknown, who has a little girl aged four. It is all right in France, and hardly the occasion for comment. They could not understand a country like ours, where such domestic (let us say) arrangements do not exist. To them it is just this; A not old man, an attractive woman, each lonesome, why not? Perfectly logical. But it was funny.

Today I have worked little and loafed a lot. The day turned out just as I had expected – very beautiful and sunny, too springy in fact for any real work. Tonight I am going to Bellamy’s. Mr. is a pretty keen chap, and as I think I remarked once before, too rational for a Frenchman; he should be an American. Sunday I shall go there for dejeuner, also.


Next post March 8.