Here come the Sons of Britain, bands playing, banners flying to the breeze. They have come to France to fight, to stand beside their ancient enemy in battle against a common foe. Heroic France welcomes these soldiers with open arms. Her citizens crowd the sidewalks and cheer ; her streets are brave with flags ; her daughters pin flowers on the coats of their Allies —for these men have come to join them conflict with the greatest war machine the World has ever known. These men are marching up the Champs Elysee (shan'-za’le’za’), that noble avenue extending from the Place de la Concorde to the Arc de Triomphe, an avenue that has no counterpart in any city of the world, lined on either side with hundreds of tall trees, with palaces and noble b...