I
/rj
*
i
■
L
"IT’S YOURS AS MUCH
AS PERSHING’S’, BOY!” BO
80
mOJm
if I®® li<XJ
Mr jff A
OWfejHl, ,
f 11 i M'.aEfMik Wk
1 - f OYW wR n pi
4F^9r’” 1 * 1
JAIII6& IIIOIIT®IIIERy <fUU35'
Drawn Expressly for TRENCH AND CAMP, by JAMES MONTGOMERY FLAGG
LAFAYETTE
Our sons vlll fight for you, O
France!-
Their hearts are in the fray—
Their chance has come, grim war
romance,
To pay, and pay today,
To you, O France! in freemen’s
blood
For freedom, sacred debt!
Up Yanks! and stay the Prussian
flood!
For France and Lafayette!
TRENCH AND CAMP
PRESIDENT ENVIES MEN IN
TRENCHES
In a message to Thomas L.
Chad bourne, of the New York
Parade Committee, President
Wilson sent this greeting to the
men of the National Army:
“Please to say to the men
how entirely my heart is with
them and how my thoughts will
follow them across the sea with
confidence and also with genu
ine envy, for I should like to bo
with them on the field and in *
the trenches where the real and
final battle for the independ
ence of the United States is to
be fought, alongside the other
peoples of the world strug
gling like ourselves to make an
end of those things which have
threatened the integrity of
their territory, the lives of
their people and the very char
acter and independence of their
government. Bid them god-
speed for me from a very full 1
heart.”
MONEY NO OBJECT
The United States Government
has already loaned close to three
billion dollars to our allies. Sounds
like a sizable sum, but it is not a
marker to what the United States
Government intends spending to
properly clothe and equip our fight
ing men and to make them comfort
able and contented. !