Heroic French war dog,
honored by the Army now un-American, thanks to Y. M. C. A. Man.
Pottsville Miners
Journal. June 11, 1919.
Loost, credited with
two official citations, spent years in no man’s land on slopes of Verdun’s
protecting outpost from German raiders and patrols.
If the airmen were the
eyes of the Army this dog was the ears of at least a part of it. For two years
he lay every night out in no man’s land. Watching and listening for Germans
patrols and raiding parties. His name is Loost, and as a real veteran of the
war he has two citations to his credit for having saved French troops from
surprise attacks by the Hun patrols. He did this while it staying on the outer
defenses of Verdun. So acute is Loost’s hearing that he could detect sappers
trying to tunnel under the French trenches, a gift that enabled him several
times to spoil the plans of the German engineers. After the armistice was signed
he came into the hands of the French war dog society which encouraged the
breeding of such dogs long before the war and later has taken care of those
animals which became disabled or too old to be longer fit for active work. It
was while he was a guest of the society that Loost met his present owner. Ralph
H. McKelvey, a New York insurance broker who was doing welfare work for in
France for the YMCA.
McKelvey’s work was the
dispatching of tons of books for the doughboys in all parts of France. A great
warehouse in Paris was filled with volumes pamphlets and reading matter of all
sorts and it was McKelvey’s job to keep this mass of literature moving to the
points where it was most needed. So well did he do this that the president of
the war dog society from admiration of McKelvey’s work and knowing McKelvey’s
love of dogs promised him a canine war hero to bring to America and give a
home.
Loost does not know a
word of English and has to be spoken to in French, but when talked to in his
native tongue he seems to understand everything and anything. The “Y” man
said,, when on the liner on the way home ,, “Loost got only a puzzled stare and
a wine when McKelvey cried, Go up the ladder Loost, but when McKelvey said,
“Alles”, Loost! “Montes “Loost at once scrambled up the ladder, to the cheers
of the voyageurs.
On one of the occasions
when this dog was honored. The French commander of a company at one of the
outer defenses of Verdun officially recommended him for a citation, and another
time loosed was cited by a kernel and paraded before the grateful French
troops.
In all probability,
Loost never will see his native land
again Mr. McKelvey has a large country place in northern New York and there the
war hero will go to live. Having nothing more difficult or dangerous to do than
an occasional drive home the cows.
McKelvey foresees the need of a French course for his farmhands if his new dog
is going to escape being homesick.
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