Ka Hoku o Hawaii, Volume XXXV, Number 5, 29 May 1940 — What Manner Of Man Was This? [ARTICLE]

What Manner Of Man Was This?

- (•*<!. m. mxoH)' j Oo« oT tbe str&ngest ejyperieneea ! I ever had was on the 4ajr th« Ar- ] m!stiee was slgaeū, Nov. 11,1918. j My divlsiou wa£ ou the was tu j the froot line that morning, to relieve aso£her division at Mons, Bei giam, when we rēceive<l the order ; to hall tind remaln wlierē We were, tn a smail village. Tl«t afte]nH>on a bsnch of us werfe Slttlßg arodnct in an abandon-™ ed 60t186 wh«n a wfld-eyed Scotch «oldler sra<MenTy sfuck hls head in f!ie door and Eairiy shouted: *Thi>y-ve raade a mlstafee thts artafstlce. tn Is4o thls war will have to be fought all over Agaln and so U3anj ~wīif be killeU that nobodj' wfll eren stōp to piek ap the dead and woondeS," I None of had ever the oian hefore, knew where he eaine from and he disappeared as sudden!y as he nppeared. I Today tt iooks as though the mau I knew whftt he was tatking about. Was he some sort of propheit drease<i m a uniform, or was he Just the victlm ot an hailucinatiQn: I have often thought of what īie said. His prophecj ? was Uupreas ed so indeiibli' on mi' mind that I iwve never forgotten it.