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Trench and camp. ([Admiral, Md.) 1917-1919, October 10, 1918, Image 2

Image and text provided by University of Maryland, College Park, MD

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn92068220/1918-10-10/ed-1/seq-2/

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“TRENCH AND CAMP ™
"WHAT'S COMING TO THE KAISER :
' U]%%[E’SZSM?TMS serom (FNSW .
Wil prevent fla TeCUNTNCE §o o ~
¢f the samg. 3. disorder! P EIRY
A R B
e . G e O
T A E / k‘i o """" ‘.fff!i"’ ; \\\ R
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NS . BTR
TAMNILR” - y
“%CK HATTIE” m
PERSHING’S BOYHOOD
Though Time E whitened her
hair, her skin the.rich hue 61
polished walnut and her fingers have
lost no m‘l:‘.t: trisking up such co’n
and chicken a8 haunt the
‘& City knows her as Mr. Gil
lam. glthfinoqoxonow
"nn&' attie Lewis,” and those were
the hen she used to attempt to
mufi. “Jack” Pershing and get
on the shins for her trouble.
Laclede, Mo., the town which (‘n‘o
m\ to America’s fleld commander,
TR : And the remembrs
amx * And she remem
J wits well. She even has heard
tmgc'nhmtmy,thon‘hnot
mnlch of a reader, she has little
his rank or just where he’s
Even detailed explana
tions have left her curiously unemo
e ‘
Hattie” glanced back over
the years and declared that John xs
& “terror,” and such he will remdin,
80 ‘%t a8 she is concerned.
h, my soull” guoth she, “you
couldn’t mk; ngthhlfi' of h!::. k" you
slapped ?ln e’ you back—yes,
he would! If I slapped him to-day
he’d bust me to-morrow. I dom’t care
how little slap it was, he'd get it back.
“He was full of tricks. Always in
}o somethin’ all the time. His brother
im was more blond and quiet, like
his mother, but John was a terror.
“One time he made a little sled and
coasted it down hill—right smash in
to me—on purpose. And tease! He
used to sing & colored folk song just
to get me mad. Something about
comin’ from the cotton and the corn.
I can’t exactly remember it, but it
:2.1;0 made }he mad, and he knowed
John w& pariicularly averse to
putting good clothes on, according to
“Black Hattie.”” He used to protest
in fights and kicks, she said. Fur
thermore, he didn’t like to get up in
the mornin;.
- “] used to wash him and dress him
and send '‘him to school,” she ex
plained, “and he said one time he’d
kill me—sure did! Used to call meé
nigger, Oh, he was full of tricks.
Had to-fight with him all the time.
““Seemed like he was always work
in’ on something, though. Always
usy. He was what I call ambitious
—always doin’ a lot of tricks. Kick
me on mah SN‘?B- hit me with a stick
—he'd get it back on you. I mever
got the best of that John, n,g time.
“I remember him just a little after
he wgt away, He'd comeé back to
town in summer time. They said he
was awful smart. They sald he was
smart in school, too.
“My sister worked for the Per
shings, too. They was fine people;
slways had help round the house. It
John sees the E‘m with this in, he'll
know who it Guess he ought to
remember me, the way he used to
lambast me around!”
e et
KAN THE KAISER TO KINGDOM
EKUM. 1
D GENERAL ORDERS
' By LIEUT. WM. R. SHIELDS
r Camp Upton
: l.Toutketlnehnmotthhmy
; pos
J And guard It well at any cost.
\
y| 3 To walk it as & soldier should,
‘With bearing miiitary, good,
Observing well and hearing, too,
; All things in earshot or in view.
| 8. To make report if rules that I
) Am to enforce be broken by
‘ No matter whom; I represent
' Axpulca‘r great Government.
| 4. To koeYl:lert while on m 3 beat,
: And calls from distant posts re
: peat. :
i 5. To c!t:ck to this my post—aot
qu
! Till I'm relieved in manner fit.
| 6. To hear, receive, obey, pass on
: To him who takes, when I have
| gone,
. The post I held, all orders that
' From my superiors I gat.
: % Tot‘l}:ld my tongue—no useless
: Will I indulge in while I walk.
'| 8. In case of fire or strife, lest harm
: Result, to give at once alarm.
'| 9. To let no one commit or be
'| * A nuisance on the post I see.
110. Should something new and
' strange befall,
f The Corporal I'll promptly call.
| 11. All officers I must salute,
; And colors cased not; no recruit
: gfll I resemble—full of “pep”
all be my movements and my
= step. . A
} .
'll2. To be, especially at night,
: Both keen of ear and sharp of
: sight, .
i And don my post with watchful
care, A
L To keep a ceaseless vigN there,
' Allowing none to pass unless
‘ I know he ought to—l'll not
: guess,
, But be assured before I let
The challenged one advance, you
; bet.
e
l .
} . SAY, TELL US IS THIS LAD ALL THERE?
: PERHAPS HE BLAMES IT ON “THE . IR!" 2
My ma’s too proud to say a word since I left-home and turned '3 :
|| bird—l picked the Army Signal Corps the instant that they started
|| —My pals are in that section too and all 6f us were feeling blue, untjl
|| 8 week or so today I overheard our C. Q. say: “Within another month,
|| it’s France”—Ye gods, but now we get our chance! Just watch us a8
we take the air in La Lorraine far Over There. Come, Zeps!' Com
|| Gothas! come on, Huns! We'll teach you all, you sons of guns! B:{
shucks! It’s no use gloating now until we get into the row. A week of
|| so, Paree—one week! Oh, Boy! I've got to learn to speak that J’aime
|| stuff they talk about when those Frenth wrens go walking out. Then
|| on! then on! you heroes all, to where Jack Pershing’s got the ball—oyt
|| from the hangar, give me room to sweep the skies with my new brooq
—You pop-eyed, baby-killing boob, I'll show you who’s a Yankee rube!
Helas!-helas! I'm not thére yet, and here lam all in a sweat. Anothep
|] week until we start? Sgy, Mister Baker, have a heart!
ARES M
~ FOR “CRUCIAL MOMENT"
An lntere&:hg account of the methy
{od used in t ing boxing to the m
of the Eighth Division at Camp
mont, Palo Alto, California, as a
for their bayonet training is rela
by H. Wilfred Maloney, camp athl
d{‘rector, in a report to Dr. Joneah
Raycroft, chairman of the athletic
vision of the War Department Co
mission on Training Camp Activitiesy
The report follows:
A series of boxing lessons—l 6
all--was drawn up consisting p
cipally of blows and parries and
tailing footwork that would coincid
with bayonet drill. Emphasis
placed on the control of the lo
limbs and the co-ordination of
eye, hand and foot, which are vi
essential in the development of
good bayonet fighter.
“A school for boxing was inaug
gurated and given the same place
the military routine as the bayon
and grenade work. The instru
covered a mflo’d of two weeks, at
end of which-the members of
classes” were returned to their
as instructors. These men started g
at once to teach the men of their co
mands to box by arranging comp:s
tournaments in which every one :
to take part. :
‘“The company tournaments weg
followed by regimental,” battall
brigade and finally-division champi
ship bouts. It is estimated that m
than 15,000 persons saw the fin
in which' between five and six thou
sand soldiers participated.
‘No one will ever know, except
probably the enemy, to what extent
boxing has developed the efficiency of
the Eighth Division,” the report cogn
cludes. “When these men are asked
to give their all in another fight the{'
will not be found wanting. Th
have léarned many—things in th
friendly bouts with their comrades
that will serve them in good stead
when the crucial moment.arrives.”
: YOU WILL FIND 3
Trench and Camp ‘“‘mighty interests
ing reading’” when you get back frm
‘“Over There.” The best way to
sure the safety of all your copies i 3
to send them home regularly. Youf
mother and other relatives will be
delighted to receive the news of yout
camp.

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