Then we spent the winter on the Maas River, a place called Lith
and then the Polish division was supposed to be, some of them
were up at Wilde and we had to night patrol every night between,
so that.. Once in a while we went into a German patrol and
get a few prisoners and sometimes we didn't. But, but we were
pretty lucky. And then, I guess I should tell you when we're
at it that, that they had a standing patrol across the Maas
River, on the German side, and it was no mans land and they
would, they would send a group of ten or twelve or quite often
mostly five, across in a boat and then leave you there and
come back the next night and get ya. And so you had to find
a place to hide and, and in the daytime you didn't do much
moving around, but all we would do was take bearings of,
of German gunfire and if you see a troop moving, you took
bearings and then our artillery was to bomb them or,
shell them like. And I think, I made three of four trips over
there, being young, oh yes. Being young they picked the guys
that were, seemed to have a sense of what's going on.
We got close enough to hear the Germans talking, oh yes,
lots of times. And, and but it was dark, when we'd get...
Once in a while we'd hear a Schmeizer, that's a German
submachine gun. And Bill said, "Close enough Cliff,
we'll get the hell out of here." But they weren't shooting at us,
they were shooting at movement, you know and maybe a dog
or a cat or, you know, just to let us know that they were awake.
And the last time that we were over there, this guy from the
14th Battery, his name was Sergeant Chalmers and he took
a crew over and relieved us five. And the Germans, they knew
we were there I'm sure, maybe not sure what house we were in,
but they come along and called out in English. They were lost
and he opened the shutters on this house he was in and they hit
him with a Schmeizer, that's a real fast German machine gun.
And the guys thought he was dead, they pulled him out of the
thing and, and then of course I don't know, the Germans didn't,
just got him and took off. And, and they come back the next
night when they went to pick him up and they said that Chalmers
was dead. Well 25, 30 years later we had a reunion in Moose Jaw
and this guy sitting across the table, big, nice looking fellow
and I said, "Chalmers," I said, "The only one I knew,
he bought it across the Maas River. He said, "No he didn't!"
I said, "What are you talking about?" He said, "That was me!"
And he said, "You know", he said, "They pulled me out of that
window, took me back to their camp," he said. "I got the best
medical treatment I could have gotten." And he said,
"They treated me real well." This is exactly what he told me
and my wife was sitting right beside me when he said that,
like you know. And had he had've waited until the next night
to get that boat to come get him, he'd have bled to death.
So there, you know some of them treated people well too.