.... ' ^ "Over There" [?Br 1M ft*-"' l*ri*a?e C1IE* SHAKER AnwicaB K\prdit ionary Force, Sorrc \li~re in Frame On this s 4 ?' O0m//7// # Ever year il^V /nrfr^rnrfrrn.'T. Vft *p\ And j?*1 1 ?my ?oa liiqi|?cu to 1 J J ' I J liarc a tnenl.r-franrjfotc, don't think III I ii you're the object of popularity. 1^1 You're merely a victim of notoriety. THE LOWLIEST PRIVATE WILL 1 1 KKSI-WT A SEItGKAXT AKD EVEN GO SO FAR AS TO SPEAK TO HIM fraHTfLH? IK UK THINKS THK fv4fcfltNT HAS A FEW CENTIMES fTO flTWAY IN HIS OLD PANTA And an officer with An oversew cap ai*gli?g down over his forehead and a set of bars clinch!* iaunijjr to (he rap is just iuVr as O.Vt OFFICER WHO ABIDED izr\T v i\; a HIV 1 i H UC.'V ; cuzum icoiv r - coming along later it might be well m to state that the American bngle calls are used exclusively. ** idain as ever. iflfWii THK FRENCH LAXGl'AdE MAY UK DIFFERENT, BL'T THKKK ARK *4>?7f xo PRIVATE SOLDIERS RKOORD AS YKT WHO failed to VS. HKRSTWn AN INVITATION'OUT K> DINNER. mmmp Only 70,000 prisoners this week. fl WITH 50 TOWNS AND 2,000 IIIPRISONERS. SffiCII'l Oh' Hum! Hun! TiSwfSK^ /r /V SO MOK'OTOKOUS. ? " mWMKMl \ JVST me. Unn.ii ?iv with great enjoyment and keep th< TlA^ \ u?/ papers for you to read when, yon rel*\v? $J turn to your home. flA ?Pll HEROES ALL! \^tfgte"OT Scrgt. BERNARD J. F1NXKRTY I infantry, "lie bravely attacked i group of the enemy without assist I ance in a bayou near Auberire ; J \vSSR France. July 16. 1918. and drov? them out, inereoy saving ?*s am f from surprise attack. While engage* i^V ' *n courageous enterprise he wa j/\\. killed." r 'V VVV Srcoml Lieut. JAMKS 8. TIM pZfiZBOEKA OTHY, V. 8. M. C. "Although weak * ^ enod by gas poisoning. Inflicted wrhil? I y serving with the French in the Ver ^ dun sector, he declined medical as \ sistance and served with heroic forti I J tude with the marines. In the opera tions of Jane 15, 1918, near Cha ! i ?n tean Thiery. he inspired the of I (v w^S,: hccrs and men with whom he was ii I Vi >^3?^ ?ciion by his fearlessness and forti sC* tude until instantly killed by a higl 9^4 j\ explosive shell." nAr JA CorpL KOBKKT H.\\K(iA\, In Afc fantry. "On May 27-28. 1S18, a V My Cantigny, France, although mortal! I wounded, he concealed that faet. en fee A. eouraged his men by his example o fortitudr iaued to fire hi ./ ' TRENCH A American Corpora^ Ba This 8torr, printed in "Stars I and Stripa." ofik-Ul newspaper of ihe American Expeditionary forces, shows how one'real American of German bfrtfa wap. alive to the true situation when Germany started the war. It shows how he is turning: his knowledge of German to a good use. ?Editor. " This is the story of Corporal Kaler. of Company M. There may have been some suspicion of him at first because he was born and raised in Germany. Some doubts may have lurked in certain minds in the company even after he was made a corporal for his excellent work under actaal battle conditions. But ail doubts were dispelled forever when he jumped into the .fight south of Vesle and came out of it accredited with six Germans?two killed and four taken prisoner. And his folks, had named him after tho Kaiser. He was named Wilhelm when he first saw the light of day in Munich 25 years ago. But he grew up a Socialist, distrusting the German government in general and the Crown Prince in particular. That is why, smelling the battle I from afar, he cried ."Ha! Ha!" and . from the German army shortly before the war broke out, at a time when hie ship happened to be in Hoboken. Therefore, while his three | brothers were serving in the German army, he was out or reach in Grand RapWs. Mich. Then came a time when America decided -to enter the war. So did Wilhelm?the very next day. His knowledge of German made him a very handy man about the reg ^?~ I ' lND camp J, Fo n In German} gs Huns By Giving iment whan It was ordered Into the line, but it wee not *? en iatcrpceler that this kio*M(? served him hi good stead during the savage free-forllt'GK SALVAGE What 7,000 men can do In reclamation and conservation Is shown In the last month's report from Kelly Field, Division Of Military Aeronautics. Some of the Items saved and reclaimed ate: Articles: - Value Old paper, baled and shipped $300 Oil barrels ^ . 400 , Straw- "... 200 | liags 600 Garbage ....... v . 500 Tin cans . ' SCO Metals ... tWO Total *3,300 Add to the above, (treat piles of old clothing, tents, paper bags, motorcycle parts, ah plane Mthf*, engine parts, rubber tires,, wood, hay and all mlarellaBeoaa articles that would be discarded far ordinary use in pence time, and this famishes the stock-in-trade of the Reclamation niTfcdea of the Arid. "DON'T THROW IT d WAT" is the watchnord which prompts the piling Bp ef these mamas of material, and than li i l(h( fmtlha to carry the war into Gerauny. The potentialities held by a pile of so-called "Junk" are tremendous. The fruit and milk cans, for instance, that the Kitchea Police smash every day, bring money to the Goremaieat. They mil for lit a ton. A. W. 0. L a 1 I <1 A 0* i nt. v.rm3c.-m - - - ^ ... ..it!s&nur''o *11. wide-open warfare which jgM^BKfl the passage of Company M from the f J Oarcq to the Vtrie. He baffle and bewilder the bndli^H more than one order roared out kmREJ turally In the dark. Once, when Kalor and part of a /I platoon were almost marooned as an J outpost that had overreached RMjHflf he could hear a column at OmaHJl tiling along the edge of their ahmdsjf with evident Intent to f urroanduj^HCKI The Sermon order was straight J ahead, and from where Kaler and his C pals lay quaking in the underbouh.l they coald nee an andlesa aaocdHdM; of gray leg* trotting by. vuarp sua smnDTmmeif, from the bushes ordered. 4HH sle ?,ur rechter Selte." ,-eered err obediently to tA rijht, before It could be steere#back ? Kaler and his bunch had mad* Rood I their escape. ARala, whoa, from his vmnfiflflKI poiat on the edge ol the woods, the I corporal saw fonr German fHHMHCT break away from an American who ( was trying to bring them in, MSBWf out across the field: "Kommen ale voruber." - The escaping fear stopped dead -W their tracks, wheeled end kiflHl docilely oyer to the spot whence tfm>, voice bad issued, and a moment later V Kaler had them covered and started1'-! \ for the rear. Those were his four A prisoners. . Another boche he killed with Idb iff rifle and another died at the ead of I Knler'a bayonet. In spare momenta, I between each tasks, he harangel?HH prisoners on their sin of working for fl the Kaiser But how could they help J themselves, they asked plaintively. "Why. that's easy; come and flgti^l with ns," said Wilhelm II. tT," I .^JmM ,-vl- V^yjA:);Vr' .; fi,,X v. _ Ir- -