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R 0 T TRENCH & CAMP T T
;i;); ¢ Y ¥
m“ 7 &8 the Nallinel Camps and Castsmmients for the soldiers of the
: Fhgooctcmmsinnnos "
e ¥ Hetiouni Beadgmariors e
’ a!-t Oy
e ettt
JOHN STEWART BRYAN
ct.u-_- of Advisery Board of Co-epermiing Publisbors
. Camp snd Lecation Kewspsper Publisher
“ 1d..0. Orieans Times .o eD. MMoore
BR. ST iTR i R
0078,M BPt o[+ L 2 N . amter
Battle Cresk, Mich..... Battle Creck Enguiver-New5..........A. L. Miller
, Ma55......,.q5...805t0n G10be...........,....Char1es H. Taylos, Jr.
Doniphan, Okis. .7, ..Oklshoms 0kiah0ma5..........8 K. Gaylera
Farrest, C ugs, Ga,....Chattancogs (Tenn.) Time 5:........... 5 C Adler
Fremont, , Ca1..ie,:..80n Francisco 8u11et'n....,........R. A. Crothers
w , 8aa....,.. Topeka State Journal..,.,...Frank P. MacLenasn
--nuc’ho‘cao-mu Conltuflhl-,...u....;..'-.m w‘
m 1=:.'...., soo.The Chicago Dally News.,.......Victor ¥. Lawson
c.q‘%”m m..... - 0..'0..'0 ’a m
l, Avgusts, GB......7s..Augusis Mcg':guwg- P!lm
- m 8 c--u-..m ate. .......ed seseseobpoer We w.
: Jacksonville, ¥la......Jacksonville Times-Union. . ... ... .W. A Billett
; , Linda Vista, Ca1.......L0s Angeles T1m.8........:.......Harry Chendier
VR .....vooooo..Richmond News Leader. ...y .Johs Btewsrt Brysn
i ; '-‘"" %+ Tacoma Tribune........ 'co qoocuo-o"‘“h'
¥ m" . Pm.........u%f-fi...w ,a ’w'
8 . Waes, ...EE.:...F... l(omtn,. Ncw-....‘:.;.‘....w B. Marsh
: p By m “0.-.00.m.m M‘) M-o op 04 " m
"", 7 }Am Ga .......Atlants Jotr-t...........a.x"k.j 8. Coben
AT e M vening Siae IR i Heores
! ’ Hi'lZ‘fZSl'AmM.....%nM
3 hB. c---no,q?‘o.om'u,. Dally I’O'l’.’..(.‘ sesece H. Peace
m‘g !m-'-‘u Als. ... Mon mw.;.’...z.,l ‘%H Al
p Zachasy Loutevtile, Ky, Louisville Courler Journai. .. J.irece Haidoman
m‘ , m_z,'“fu Antonio Light. .. e s sispoger Chaties 8. Diohl
h L. L, N t...mfl wm....‘.,q..a-n‘n....m C. Belitz
4 s “0.......". T0h1m.....‘.;......;.u'. ’- m
cesecsscnssss . Charieston News snd C0urfer........R. C. Bisgiiag
Publishes the suspices of the Nationsl War Work Coumell, ¥. M. C. A of the
Pnited m#flo co-operation of the above wnm-&m
T‘m’
¥ . . £ .
~ . THE THING THE GERMAN DOES BEST
PR N Deormen 2o
Gest th the German estimate of
imse] J teports it through the
TOpAE system. Instead they are
Jealing with the German as he sees
hats mroolcwo-."'
: 84 the judgment of our men is that
. tHie best thing the German does is to
" from the enemy.
' it would '
sSt e
% the h‘uruiu quatlities
, gdhhlmohn, u‘thcmofld'rm-
B:t the-mr::n“i:u co!apoed—-
It is patent to all now that the Ger
man propaganda was intended for
runampdon just as much as for
oreign. ¢ leaders of the militar-|
movement in Germany foresaw
o o s
: far and w :toodu ofp::
Wdh%&mdfi:fl&chn—
pondbllg ea military
‘aims of gnpke. ’
.. The German troops cm&h‘t some
mammm propa-
They tried to be valorous.
BMh@uborsmcommuhq
were driven forward by lies. Not only
Bliey' ot Godeae hut they wet Faumas
e
the certainty of it. , s
What conquered Russia?
m dc%goltt“h‘leut
s or —at
‘an order 'm sounded simple. It
Bt i libzm e5%
hflifiwwnmt, ‘was the
order which r the army to a
-mob, and the nation to a helpless mass
T !im&"f' :
from gaining control of it.
What was the order?
- It was this: “The men will not in
future salute officers.”
- A few i words—and great Rus-
L
army m Gegun soil, be-
W'nfi a?figyh org
M ?&QMM‘ was de
troyed by that order. An army with
m% is a mob, and a mob
cannot battles in modern warfare.
An army is only as good as its disci
~ When a soldier salutes, he saluteawin, °
bt bt BEING A SOLDIER
T
mw‘bi::ha-&dy
BWi LS
mmmufiw'?fi.
mmmfi begin at once
to make new and to build up &
pew outht jn place’of the old,
w:zfiou-—vmhnn
, cuth Jongh © be “Over Thure® AR
-W'—" |t aw Rl e L
4} § ~
B . f : i > £ " o : - ' . R ix
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o Be Y 4 et ™ T . : Tiy % ST g ; . : : ™ =
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e e. L e s : gy eg o IS =o et R
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M&zm:‘-‘dm =
There an by-word, “Dut
e” Itisa a cruel libel,
so far as the Germans are concerned,
it is the truth, . - ;
Dutch courage, i German
ulus of strong Dntebc%
o Coh et e T o e
of was the product of the stim
uluoo!mog‘mbudthe
of men in ranks with
sabers and loaded pistols in the
of their officers,
s e L gt
wor : save
&mdm&m
The German has reacted str e
he has turned and run, S
Our men are in bot pursuit. They
can run too,
| But our men always run with their
faces towarlls the enemy.
The cowardice -manifested on the
battlefield by the Germang and their
ability to n:;othto 100 yards in “no
seconds flat” to get away from the
Yanks, has wmd‘ a revision of meth
ods etaglmdongbctifleml:ug
e RN
Gmmlndmthemto%ht,m—
g‘eéu shaped Hunes, faces
nt, were in use. The targets have
been turned around so as to train
American goldiers to shoot at the
backs of scared sprinters. : ‘
WHY RUSSIA COLLAPSED
the Commander in Chief, represented
in“the person saluted. In a demo
cratic country like the United States,
the Commander in Chief is the Presi
dent of the United States, and as the
Prflcgi&:&&dhth;wfllofitbe
peaple country, and represents
the wishes of the majority :rvoton,
the goldier is saluting the head of the
government which he himself helped
tohi‘;hh“ you:‘n&mmede.‘
w you cr are you
,nmmmcmmmcfid
into power? He is the leader you
{ chose, and the officers he has selected
;to_mthkumhgnfl
rarcmvh'&n. M
{the man who salutes. And the re
turn of the salute by the officer
| acknowledges your willingness to
robeythoordendthpl’nddu&,md
~th,rg:qled&cflm
e salute .is the sign between
| brothers in arms, both serving the
| same leader.
The salute is what holds an army
| together, and gives it the ability teo
| cannot go at once. A division is a
;mmuhumm,m
{that, It is a school for training .sol
| diers. - :
| Those men who do not realize the
l‘ucdtolmadwbolo::mam
| fancied grievances are delaying
| their own chances. The beat men for
|57 it foy” Ty
lcen:hmhrmhpr;
L RB P T YRR ge T e e L e s
¥ o e T . e G o 3 G el g S e
bs v Sl Ol T B e eAy
3 AT e B R L i e o b . g o R
-1 . v P g 7 E oo £ , tn 5
ot oSSR BB R e i 3 ’fi ST L
u:mmmn;sm:
a Texas town. men were hot
;&‘d‘m.*amymm&-
ageww m’%hmm&e
lctiq{.". '.'tlmd?oo:::s
get along with less
fight than other soldier in
tbwo:fl—‘dvzleuccnphht.
But the American soldier cannot un-
Columbia’s Heart Beats True
By WILLIAM E. KERRISH :
A Veteran Of The Camadian Expedition To France
SOLDIERS OF AMERICA—
' Columbia has called you in this hour of the world’s
need fo take Midde&tdudmyu—
Mwholz‘tththmi&“ civilization may live.
‘She has called you to follow true soldiers of liberty
ammdurhnd—Wdem
rest of the old heroes, who lived and that America
‘Moudthemmm-dmhm
of the free and of the brave. :
. No words of mine can tell you how very deep and real
m_ammhthmddfisflu;ufl
at seeing the boys of the Great Republic meas
gflqhnn&hamhfl-uhmd
M:adc,h @hdrnha.fionalbdu. &‘:hh ; ’“t:
which you and the people of America have set their hands,
&_cwfimlau-o.ktg-'ndwhh,hm
; beok of mations, of those nations that have always counted
WMMbWafldctcmMufi !
The khaki uniform you wear muhmedsy
e e hes & aeht oeth
call forth all that is manly and noble in every ome of you—
calling you, as it does, to take a real man’s part in the ;
greatest game ever played on the world-stage. In this
fl.cmmwmgowthuewbommtmdnre. The
e and future of America, and all that that name stands
for, are on the field in this great game of nations. The
finest men in this nation, and of all the free nations of the
earth, are in this same game, and you share with them in
the glorious labor. e
- You will be called to endure some hardship in the ful
filling of this your mission. You will meet new conditions
in the old world, and new temptations, of kinds and of
degrees which you have never known here in America.
This will test your manhood ; and I know you will measure
up, like those brave soms of Columbia, who have gone
“Over There” before you, to all that is best in your sturdy
As a European, I would like to tell you that the people
oftheOldledmzroudbeyoldwordsofthest .
from “the other side,” and are grateful, with a rightful -
gratitude which knows no measure, for the things which
you are doing and have done. : :
Soldiers of America—the world is in the melting pot.
The fires of Armageddon blaze below it—and it were
_pettetforamtobet:orundwukaduyiaedforthe'
whole of his life, than that his eyes should be blind to the
- irreversible destinies of this drama of nations; than that
his heart should mot beat in umisom with humanity’s :
bleeding heart in this hour e¢f hours in the history of
The world knows that the great heart of COLUMBIA
BEATS TRUE—the spirit of her soldiers on land and sea
wil:l?hya-hktypflinthehmyofthemtmwu -
of all times. ~ - > :
é¢ & 9
Getting The Range
‘“More Observations On The Transport Trip Over There™
By Private William E. Meagher '
-~ American Expeditionary Force, Semewhere In France
; _ - Itis a well established fact that seasickmess
& A N\ L)~ cannot be ‘ ;
IV While the G Quartet sang “Over the
- mu;um ! o
e : 2 i
lJ Sh‘:d‘l: after we:fi the dnekwwl:.:ue i
"*‘ mmummm& ;
fl| # . Our veteran K. Ps felt like feudal barong
. Uif] while watching the sailors swab the decks. b
A Water, water everywhere, but not a bath in
& sight. : g )
: "3‘ The bounding deep bounded with a vems
/ =k geance and the ocean seemed to wave ~
20N {) Priv:::hnl offered a sailor two-bits for
{2 5 bunk on m“o q
K/) The Jolly Tars sy “You don’t mind sleeping
‘, R ‘hah-fl,mmgathu&ofit.”' ;
il / ‘ Auflorandapuaix—imhphk,z‘
‘ &mfldhfinhfiunfluu fie
1 : Corporal Johnsos heard the ship’s 3
;%as&uaflmuWahMuitmm
wa :
£
derstand why he has to carry 8 -
T e e
And neither can I L.
The Colomel was quick to see tHY
point. The men were ordered to
%;:chudmwthemcn X
they m
as mar :
%mmhuominthestfl'}- :
One is that the American soldier is §
thinking soldier whose morale is
ministered to by bumane, '
treatment. &l 3
The other lesson is that the Come
mander-in-Chief is 2 human being.