Page:History of the 305th field artillery (IA historyof305thfi01camp).pdf/156

134 it should not be observed. The captain called for high burst shrapnel, and not long after we heard its swishing flight we saw appear near the corner of the trench a pretty white ball of smoke. There was an error of only three mils in deflection, and less than a hundred meters in range.

Corporal Andrew Ancelowitz laid the piece. Sergeant Fred Wallace gave the command to fire. Private George Elsnick pulled the lanyard for the shot that put the National Army artillery in the war.

"Guess," said someone drily, "they heard that shot in Berlin."

Certainly it was the first note of the music to which the Hun danced back to the Rhine and defeat.