Item 03: Peter Turnbull diary, 1 January-31 December 1918: No. 052
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[Page 52]
[April 1, 1918]
Letter from McCaskill wrote to McCaskill.
No bread
Its a very nice morning & I had a walk to Pommers [Pommier] before dinner. After dinner I was reading the Sydney mail when a dud shell dropped about 5 yards from me. I think it is an Anti aircraft shell which Fritz had been firing at our planes & failed to explode. After tea a mate & me went to 3 villages to try & buy some bread, we walked about 10 miles & all we got was a 1d[?] of bread from a French lady & a Tommy gave us a loaf I gave him a Franc for the loaf & I felt as if I had made a fortune, Its alright going one day without bread but you feel a bit hungery after 4 days, we get porridge in the morning & sometimes rice in the evening to make up for no bread. Things seem to be settling down on this front again. We saw 4 observation baloons set on fire we think they were Fritzs, but we are not sure. The Plane got them one after the other.