FAST MOLDING FUTURE COMMANDERS OF MEN OUT OF RAW MATERIAL Mm Training For Oflicar* to Land Armiaa in Franca Em bra ca Many Profauioni. Chattanooga, Tenn., June 2.—"Ad vknev and thruet! Front pan* and lung*!! Re-tire and thrust! Kent!" Company No. 118, Keserve Officer*' Training (.'amp, bring* ita rifle* to the ground, and wipe* Ita streaming brow*, lamenting. Bayonet euemae la something to teat the atamina of huxienxi regulars, to nay nothing of a collection of college boy*, clerk*, lawyer*, merchant*, newspaper men, et cetera, such aa compose th» mem bership of the Kort Oglethorpe train ing camp, and, for that matter, alt the other*. To »tick to the undiluted truth, there are only lift companies in the Georgia camp; but let this one be denominated No. 16, to avoid personalities. At the command, "Rest," an aver age of perhaps 145 of the 150 men composing company 16 roll hack their aleeve* and note with relief that their wrixt watches register 11:27. That mpuns that the next command will )w "Assemble," after which the company will be marched l>ack to barrack* to wash up for menu, which in this rase would be dinner, at noon. A para grapher on one of We Chattunooga pu|» rH recently pulled one to the ef fect that thin will he "no wrist-watch war." Obviously, he had not been to the officer*' training camp, or he' might have observed that that is pre- < finely what it will be in so far as the, equipment of the men in concerned.' The reason ta simple, trot nUfflclMlt'.' The wrixt ix the only convenient pluce; for a soldier to wear hix watch. With the cartridge belt on, the watch pocket just below the waist band of the trousers is extremely difficult to get at. To wear the watch in the shirt pocket means that it is almost certain to be smashed (he tirt-t time the compuny is orderrff to advance by rushing. which necessitates falling flat to the ground at the end of the rush, and falling extremely quick, at i that. Consequently, there are at least | 10 wrist-watches in the camp for ev ery one of the ordinary sort. It will' be a wrist-watch war by a huge ma- | jority. I The I>ay'* Routine Wbut th« puragrapher meant, uf course, was that it will b« no war for mollycoddle*, and in thut he has the hearty and unanimous indorsement of the officer* in charge of the training camp. The trainiitrf, especially for ■ the first five weeks, has been so de signed that there will not be a weak ling left among the future officers at; the end of that period. It speaks volumes for the discrimination of the examining officers that after the first two weeks of gruelling work only &0 men out of the 2,500 at the camp have succumbed. To understand whav that means, let j us return to the mythical company lt>, now back in the company street and dismissed. They turned out at { 5:15 in the morning, pnd nt 5:25 fell in for the first time. The occasion ^ was "setting-up" e.'»rcises lieforr breakfast—a strenous 35 minutes in itself, lireakfast came at 6, in the mess hall opposite the company bar racks, for each company is a s«p : urate entity, eating and sleeping to itself. After breakfast, the company street was "policad," that is to say. cleaned up from end to end. Beds I also were made up and the barracks1 swept out. At 7 the day's work start ed and it was a continuous drive from that moment on. The mornings are ( given over to drill ii, >.i|uads, platoons and companiea, to {.ayarict and sig nalling exercises and t Instruction in the use of small arm-. Not llercu les himself could go through the morn ing without feollng the strain, and, company 16 came in pretty well tag iMBIMflittMiMiii i n Ii ii iti/mHi gad that I" to say, averybody except the company commander, detailed from the regular army, who la al ways fresh as a daiay, although he goaa through work practically as *avara a* any man in tha rank*. For endurance a regular army man ha* Harcula* hacked off tha map. , At 10 Com** 'Taps." But after dinnar there will ha a blessed hour, an antira 00 minutaa, during which company IIS will not hava a thing to do, except laarn a faw pages uf the Infantry Drill Kagula turn*, tha Manual of Intarior (iuard Duty, tha Plattaburg Manual, may lie a bit of tha .Signalling Manual, and glanca at a faw other textbook* for out«ida raading. At 1:30 the com mander will take them off to noma shady spot where ha will proceed to find out how lamentably little thay have gathered from thi* course of study. After soma two hour* of cross-examination, No. lti will gather itself together for a hike, a pleasant little stroll of six to eight mile* in a couple of hour*; or if the lesson hour run* close to 4 o'clock, the cum puny will he tuken bacic to the parade grouml and put through more setting up exercises. After 4:30 there i» nothing to do but take a bath before supper; but as there is always a for midable waiting list at the bath hous es, it sometimes becomes an exciting race to get back before 6:30 when mess call sounds for supper. At 7 the whole regiment is gathered to gether and somebody makes a speech —"general conference," it is called, and often it is the most valuable part of the iluy's work. After the con ference, it is study more hooks until U:30, when tattoo sound*; and at 101 rimes tap*. Decidedly, it is no life for a -sybarite; an yet you might make u long day'* journey without finding u more cheerful place than company 1<> barracks. Thai U, you might, unless you had chanced to visit in on the day after the company hail lx»en given its second shot of the anti-typhoid serum. Then you would have found a con irregation of misanthropes of the deep est dye. All the world wa wrong that day. Company Hi's arms ached; its heads ached; its backs ached; its commander was tran formed from a pleasant, if unbending, gentlemen, into a monster of incredible viciousnes:.; and the kaiser was sure to win the war. Anti-typhoid serum is powerful stuff, especially the second dose, which is the worst of all. It is the essence of gloom, a distillation of des pair; and the man recently Inoculated is a man bereft of friends, a man with no joy in life. His last dog is dead. One Blue-eyed Doctor The reputation of the serum went before it, and many unci various as autumn leaves were the excuses that company It! had framed up before it* visit to the hospital. Few nuuilx-rs there were so lacking in ingenuity that they wera not provided with what was, in their own estimation, a perfectly legitimate excuse to pre sent to the doctor for not taking the dose. But company 16 did not know what it ia to go up against an army surgeon, especially a surgcan with a bright blue eyes, a merry, twinkling blue eye, but withal the moat in credulous, the most skeptical, the most sophisticated blue eye in tlie world. Alas for company 16! The blue eyed doctor had heard each and every one of its 160 excuses no often that he could have repeated them as easily as the multipieation table; and his answer to each was the same a jab of the handle and a dab of iodine. Company 16 went to the hospital with high hopes; it came back in a ruined community. Ilut fortunately 24 hour* sees the end of the worst of the anti-typhoid treatment, unless there ii something radically wrong with tlie man before he takes it. Company 1(! begins to take interest in life again the third «. day. Ita recuperation can be mea« urad by th« company cool' hattar than by anybody alaa. The ftrat day ha can count on ha vine parhapa 200 meala aatan. inataad of 450; but aftar that ha had bat tar count on at laaat MM to rtOO ordinary maala. Tha government haa baan generoua to ita futura officer* in tha matter of rationa, aa well aa in other thing*; hut ita greataat piece of generoaity ia in tha officer« it haa datailad »> in ■tructora. Company 16 may hava ita 'own opinion about that, for tha in •tructora ara aalaetad from among tha moat efficient man in tha aarvica, and having a particularly efficient man in command doaan't alwaya add to a company'* happinaaa in tha be ginning. Especially when it come* to that .moat obnoxioua duty of a aol dier'a Ufa, inapaction, ia thia apparent. Woe then to tha man who haa in voluntarily carriad the careleaa meth od* of easy-going civilian life into ramp with him. Varily hia *in ahall And him out, and not only that, but all the company nhall know of it, and comment thereon wi'h freedom and tarcaam. ■ - Fine Type of Men Neverthelejiv, the man in the rank* of No. 16 .standi* in no danger of any thing worse than good-natured rag ging, for hia~comradeii are gentlemen to a man. Here again the diacrim ination of the examining officer* in proved, for a finer type of man than' the average student ac the officer*' training camp America doc* not pro duce. Collegian* of the year* 11*15 16 and IT predominate, but every pro fe ion i* represented—every pro fex.non, that in, except medicine, for aLflti n n^rlfi t k., tfiv uuikn n nrofin no vro iti ill k w wn nort given at Fort Oglethorpe. One man discovered in the course of half an hour's investigation half a dozen | lawyers, a score of newspaper men I for ^om« unexplained reason the fourth estate has contributed, in pro-1 portion to numbers, perhaps more! than any other trade- three teachers, j an architect, a Noiogi^t recently en ' » in rc.-.carch work if govern mei.t laboratory, several Associated I' . «■ telegraph operators, a college professor entitled to wear half the al-l phabet behind his name, and an eth nologist, just returned from a six \ears' tour of the world, made in an; endeavor to prove tha? Egyptian civ- i ili/.ation has! declined before a mulatto Pharaoh ascended the throne. He claims to have proved it. But the college buys predominate. It is the youth of America that is go ing out to try conclusions with the kaiser, a* U proved by the innumer able meeting* of alumni of every col lege in the three states, and the sing ing of college songs every time morel than two or three are gathered to gether. Some body garnered tre mendous applause on the first night by perverting one of the college dit ties to such effect that the last lines ran: "Oh. well twist th« kaiser's tail And we'll ride him on a rail, Carolina, C'aroli-i-i-ina." No Cliques and Caste*. I'.ut it is to b« doubted whether the promised mayhem and indignities visit ed on his imperial majesty were re sponsible for the ear-splitting yell that went up as much as the single word, "Carolina." More than two thirds of the camp is ready to cheer at the word—rin fact, just aching for an opportunity. At a general conference the other night a speaker made refer ence to the fact that the medical rec ord* of the Confederacy show that 3U per cent of the casualties suffered dur ing the war between the sections by the south were borne ny the one state <«f North aCrolina, and the shout that came up must have been heard in poosdville. Headquarters, however, is not par ticularly anxious to emphasize any sort of local pride. Great j«in< has been taken to distribute the m«n from ' wh atate ml in fact from ea.-h of the principal cittea, throughout the ramp. If a croup oT nutn came in together it waa • certainty that each of tham would land in a different com pany. Under Mich a ayatem there ia ■email danger of the format.on of ,clique* and raataa. Greenaboro'a 40-odd men eonta ■juently are Mattered all down tha Una and it ia only by chance that they en counter each other at all. How it farea with your neighbor thara i* no way of knowing, unleaa ha doaa aome thing ao conapicuoua aa to attract the attention of hia whole company, and ao to furniah food for ramp goaaip. It ia commonly reported, however, that Cireermboro ia conapicuoua, even in the North Carolina group of giant*, for the bigneaa of ita men. There are 10 who together tip the acale* at 1,750 pound*. The Tar Heela are by far the biggeat men in the camp, take them a* a whole. That statement perhaps demand* a little modification. The 10 Greena boro men weighed 1,750 pound* when they arrived in camp. It in perfectly safe to nay that they do not weigh that now, nor anything like it. The whole command grow* lean and lank, an the day* go by; hut where fat en i.rtrcred 'he ir.en be'ore, m;i«cle in taking itH place. They are growing hard. Drill on Hiwtorie Snodgrasn Hill The regular* come over from Fort Oglethorpe and lo..k with u humorous, not to say »yical, eve ci the ' Coy Scouta" an they call the cadet* on account of the red, white and blue hatcord. It is not to be wondered at that the army enlisted men, in spite of their uniform courtesy to individual*, are not greatly impis«twcre--e made ready and can be spared from the ranks of those or-j ganizations which must be kept in this country as a nucleus for the train- I ing of the selective draft conscription army. The nntional guard organizations, it is understood)'! will probably be ru in the order in which they perfect themselves. As the national guard of New York is acknow ledged to be among the best trained of the militia organizations of the country, it is not improbable that they will be among, the first to go. The re-organization of the training' camp plans, are necessary by the re duction in the number of canton ments to be built, will not interfere, it was said at 'he war department, with the training of the national guard units. There has been no countermanding of the orders to these organizations to assemble at their state mobilization camps July 15, July 25. and August 5, as their respective increments have been order ed to respond. Under the plans being worked out these organizations will be given a certain amount of training at their state camps before going to the divis ional training camps. At these camps, it is understood, the militia units will lie classified according to their degre* of fitness and the extent to which their ranks are filled up to the required strength. Disregard Divisional linen Those liest fitted, it is indicated, will j he subjected to special training, oc-1 rupying probably not more than a month, after which they will lie sent abroad as transport facilities are available. The others will have to undergp longer training, and will lie used in large part as training units for the selective draft conscripts. After the arrixul of the various units in France—guardsmen as well as regulars—they will probably be given further training behind the lines be fore being sent to the front. So anxious is the department that the militia organisations sent over will be the best trained of the lot, ^ th. t it is not unlikely that in picking those to go the department will dU regard the divisional line* act up for training ptirpowi and make up the expeditionary divisions out of (ha units selected from various training can pa. If poasibla tha ibptitmnt hopaa to ba abla to land over tiafora win tar thraa full divisions of guarHnmen, or from 75,000 U> HO,000 although, aa explained, tha maximum numhar will largaly depend upon tha spend with which tha training goad on, and tha success which tha government maata in solving the problem of transports. If tha plans of tha department work out 'monthly tha first units of tha na tional army, as the troop* of tha selective draft are to he known, will he available for transportation to Europe by *arlj£^jj|jiVijc<< if tha war lasts that long. British and French military experts here estimate that the war probably will go another thraa years. Free Insurance and No Pensions. Washington, June 1.—Plana for issuing $4,000 free guvimmiint in surance on the life of every Ameri can soldier and sailor during the war in lieu of penaion, arrangements will be taken up next week by the council uf national defense. A report pre pared by Assistant Secretary Sweet, of the commerce department, ready to be submitted, urge* that the insurance be provided through legislation before American troops are 'ent to France. The iiefen.se council took up the question some weeks ago and turned the whole subject over to the depart ment of commerce for investigation. The report now ready offers a long liat of arguments showing the advan tage of waiting out a compensation system l>efore American lives are lost in the war. The plan.i as prepared provides for a flat insurance of $4,000 on the life of every officer and privaie in the military and naval service, to be paid to hi.- beneficiark'< without premiums. A government insurance bureau would handle the whole subject, and there would be provision for a system of in surance by which officers and men de siring to do so could take out amounts higher than $4,000 free policy by pay ing premium . at peace rates. The plan would provide also insur ance for partial or total d'sability, the case of death the insurance would be paid in installments, wnose amount would be determined by a government board. Government officials are convinced the best way to dispose of the pen sio problem is to meet it before-hand. The history of the pension system since the Civil War b«s .-town many abuses which it is hoped to avoid by providing insurance before the men are killed. WOMEN GIVE OUT Housework is Hard Enough When Healthy. Every Mount Airy woman who is having backache, blue and nervous spells, dizzy headaches and kidney or bladder troubles, should be glad to heed this Mount Airy woman's ex perience: Mrs. C. P. James, 257 S. Main St.. Mount Airy, says: "My back often felt as though some one had driven a knife into it and after stooping, sometimes I couldn't •iralgtitcn up. My kidneys were weak and caused me a great deal of misery. My nerves »er« in a very bad way and I couldn't ■itand the least excitment. I was run ilown ii health and ouk) hardly dp my housework and often t had to stay in tied for several day • at a time. A rouple of boxes of Doan's Kidney Piiu removed the pain in my back and made my kidneys act more regularly." Price 50c at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kitlMy rcroady—get Doan's Kidney Plila- the same that Mrs. James had. FesUr—MUbura Co., Prop*, Buffalo, N. Y.