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| RETREATY ; g s . TAPS ~~ |
' Free Legal And Business Advice Will Be
~ &mmwmrn-aa
~ Announcement has been mads by
the War Depsriment that the Judge|
+ Advocate Gemersl of the Army, the|
- Counecil of Natiomal Defenmse, the|
~ American Red Cross, and the Ameri-|
:&um:uflm
giving free legal and business ad
¥ice to men of the armed service and
their families.
In a majority of States lawyers are
organised in legal commaunities|
the State counciis of defense with
- she sid of the State bar assoclations.
- - #pecial efforts to see eacli man abo
to emter service for the purpose of
helping him to set bris affairs in order.
The gnel of the legal advisory
Wfld st the time the|
:m:nnm‘ml“
) for them by the State legal
tommittees, presenting not only Fed
of soldiers, sailors, and thefr depend
: ents. ‘.
In States which have not yet organ
ized local legal committess the legsal
advisory boards and the local bar as
sociations are offering their services
| free to soldiers, saflors, and their de
pendents.
" Legal advice for men who are ian
the camps is te be obtained through
. the division or camp judge advocate.
If the problem nrust be settled at the
= man’s home, the Red Cross represen
tative iz charge of home service at
. the camp will refer the case to the
home service section in the man’s
- home town. There the case will be
Bandled by the local home service sec
- BAD NEWS POR BERLIN
To insure an adequate dose of gas
for the Hun, the United States Gov
ernment h:.du.l.i:t contfol ot&?_
production ribution of
M'ls‘w:ola}hw,'&ehb
, - wused ia the manufacture of fume
shells gnd also forms the basis for one
-+ of the most effective smoke screeas.
‘ T - Y B "';i- 5 . - .- .~
o , 4 74 f - 2 s “ S ) ;e a8 VhE— Ro ‘
: .P¢ \/ > .‘34,,.; e D & O s NI .
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s B i eye kwfig "U?"fi sW2 r Ve ele o R %l‘
- soLeT)Nyb 2poSAR”m 'fi B % \‘S} k R :‘m LR e s - .fl’"‘-w’ eePR e
2w T gfi_)u%& . i; : :““* Me e T BRI R Don ee S L .
TRENCH AND CAMP.
tion with the assistance of the local
legal committes or such other legal
committee or such other legal advi
mm\ machinery as it established
-e. 3
_ ‘The American Red Cross prewides
financial eid end whatever other
forms of assistance needed, including.
information and guidance respecting
allotments, allowances, compensation,
and insurance under the war-risk in
surzace uct, and in respect to other
matiers which make for the weifare
ol:.t}n men in service and their fami-
In doing this work the Red Cross
necessarily encounters a lasrge mum
ber of cases reguiring legal sdvice or
the justitutien of legal proceedings.
To attend to these matters the home
‘Cross edui‘“ e the lawyers i
are upon . £TB
organiged in a legal commiétee of the
State council of defenss, a legal ad
visory board, or otherwise to furmish
State ceuncils heave organized legnsl
committees, the home service sections
are, wherever consistent with extsting
arrangements, providing legal assist
ance through these legal committees.
As maay of the matters handied by
the home service sections relate to al
lotments, allowances, compensation,
and insurance, and as these problems
are the subject of freguent rulings
and deeisions by administrative au
thorities in Washington, the Ameri
can Red Cross maintains an informa
ticn service by mesans of which deci
sions and rulings made in Washing
ton are promptly communicated to all
home service sections. These rulings
are available at the home service sec
tions for legal committees, legal ad
visory boards, and other lawyers co
operating with the Red Cross.
" TWO LITTIE NEEDS
Almost everybody is ingumiring
“What do the American soldiers in
France need?” Here are two little
things: Bright-colored cotton bagsin
whick to keep their checkers ond
dominoes and stubs of lead pemcils
with which to write letters while in
the tremnches. :
MILES OF AMUSEMENT i
. Every week the Y. M. C. A. sends
| fifteen miles of new meoving pieture
{l films to the war zone fer the enter
tainment of Americamn soidiers in
{France. In six months a tetal of close
' t% sog miles of films was shipped
| abroad. - . |
{ ¥ ad ", : : 3 4
-~ “Getting The Range™~
0 ' ” A
Observations On The Trarspoet Trip “*Over There™
1- ' By Private Williom E.- Meagher
American Expeditionary Force, Somewhere in France:
All abeard that's ing aboard. :
- “‘ Birdie thought dmyudfla&h
R to provifdc such ;;t’u sght-seeing wip and epean
g voyage for the ; S : :
lA\ Voo minds wih bt &5i hought: The
- s, FAF ' M,“Ca,ldfilwcw." Tm,
i “Gee, | wish | was o sailor” 4
B The final annowncement before we embarked was
| , ] that anyome cought jumping overbewrd while at
‘ ! sea wowld be dropped from the payroll forthwith.
| [} A sailor never worries abowt getiing his shoes
(13, Wewddy. S i
| - Keeping up one's spirits is guite impossible when -
: a fellow cgt keep down his meals. %
A X Heave, He!
= = Harold didw't miss the home folks as much as
LB After getting eggs for breakfast Sevellon wanted
-"‘* to know if they came from the crow’s nest aboard
U - Ship. : g
3 lfl: y A The members of the stromg-arm squad in charge
e ‘\l,:"' ; of the barracks-tags did not reccive amy tips for
| 2% NS ~ handhng the baggage.’ . :
Jerry had some good stories but was unable to
spring them as there were no Marines on board
Muster roll and submarine dnill were the only events important enough
to insure a full attendance on deck. : ;
Sadlors eat more and far better rations than soldiers, but soldiers have
‘b?acomuddommtowh“&mh. f :
wo deys of trying to perform ablwtions with sait water makes one
| join the Order of The Great Unwashed. e
| One of the Jack Tars, upon being asked about the absence of wilk from
| #he coffee hazarded the guess that perhaps the sea cow was not producmg
| any lacteal flsid during the war. : ;
The Danger Zone, we fownd, was principally dangerous-o submarimes.
. i (: o
+With special instruction recetved
in shooting at moving objects at the
twenty aviation schoels that are
eguipped with trsps, American sire
men are guite preficient to wage war
on the Hua fiess when they take
their place in the sir with the allied
forces. -
Fifty per eeut. of those who have
enlisted in the air service never shot
at clay targets or in the fleld, and
therefore it was necessary for the
Government %o give the recrufts the
nec';;.?ryinstnctton. :
success of the English and
Cenadian air fighters, who in many
cases were expert clay target shots,
caused General Squiers, head of the
United States Army Air Service, to
adopt trapshooting as a means of fit
ting the aviators for owérseas work.
Usually the course of instruction is
200 targets, 26 esch week for eight
weeks. This gives gach student eight
days at the traps, and esch time he
receives individusl {mstruction on
every shet. Students are being grad
uated each week snd as the grad
uates leave others take their place.
At the ground school of the Uale
versity of Tiiinofs there are four traps
and about 600 students. Here the
students are alpbabetically nrremged
in pections and take their turms at
the traps in this order. There are
three traps at the grouad school of
Princeton University. Here the stu
dents go to the traps twice each week.
There are three traps at Cerasll Uni
versity aviation school and four each
at the grouad schools at the Taiver
sity of Califorais and Ohie State Uni
versity. At Califernia the course is
50 targets a week for six wesks.
‘The aviation school at Milliagton,
Tenn., has four traps in use and three
hundred stedeats. There sre four
traps siso at the school im Austin,
Tex., and in each of these pinces tar
gets are thrpwn for the bemefit of
the sirmen on and of the ground.
About 50,000 targets are thrown each
weelk at these two scheols. Thers
are three traps at the Scheel for
Aerial Observers at Fort Bill, Okla.;
three at the aviation camp at Bslle
ville, I1L.; two st the school at Min
eola, L. 1., and two others st Kaily
Pield, San Antonie, Tex., for the use
1 of the 181st Aevo Squadron. At all
of the sbeve schools there are im
structers and a eareful record is kept,
.dthvofld:filt“
{ At each ome of the fellewing avia
tton schools these are three traps:
Atlgnta, Ge.; Daitus, Tex.; Fairfield,
Obio; Lake Churles, La.; Mt OClem
ens, Mich.; Raatonl; Ili.; San Diege,
gd., Waco, Tex.; ' Wichita Falls,
ox. .
| Ome or more tzaps are to be found
lat thepe cantonments: Glll’ufi
| Tacama, Waesh.; United States Na
{ Traiming Stetion, Pelham Bay, N. Y.;
| Quantico, Va., sad Camp Funston,
| Kan, Therw are imstructors st these
cantonsments also. ;
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