Newspapers / Trench and camp. / Nov. 20, 1918, edition 1 / Page 2
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vv . " 1 ** * ' TRENCl ?\J$FofcTt?hed lit the National Cj Watted Rtatee. 'V'? ^ :.oum nil. 1 M if \ JOHN 8T A i l of JLdvlaory B V (?w Wrl^ost!t>? ?M B??ur*#*r4, klnuarli. !. N< * *?> Bowie,. Port'Wtorth. T?ai Fc Cnrlatt-om AvUtion fl?ld. Arcadia. FU.Ta f'awp Obdy. Derainr. N. Me* Kt Camp '?*wter. Battle CreaU. Mich Bi Camp L>?ven*. Ajref. Man.- Bi Camp D?x Wrtghtattvrn. N. .1 ,Tr I'amp Doniphan. Kort Sill. Okla ol Camp Foiroat. ChlcKantauga. Oa Of, ramp Froinoat. r*u Alt#, Gal 8a Cankp Funiton. Foil F.Uey. Kan To Caatp Qorddn, At'hnt*. Oa At Camp Orant. Rnckhird. Ill Tf C?mp Greene. CfctriqUe. X. C. Of v fathp Hancock. AtiRuata. Oa At Camp Jaekaon. Columbia. 3. C Co riiw jonn#ton, Jacksonville. Da Jr\ Ca*ft> Kearny. Linda Vista. Cal Lo , Ctmr Lae. Petersburg. Va Hi Camp Lewis. Tacotna, Wssh. T? ramp Lotah. Houston. TS* Hi Camp Me Arthur, Waco. Tex \v 4 Camp MaClellan. Annliton. Ala Bi Fort McPherson and Camp Jesiup. I Atlanta; Oa JA' Camp Meade. Admiral. Mu w , Camp Pike. Llttl. Rock. Ark Ai / Camp Saviar. OreenavllU, S. .O Or Camp Shelby. HattlMburg. Miss N? Camp Sheridan. MaatffOmery. Ala.'. ...Mi Camp Zachary Taylor. Louisville, Ky..i.o camp Travis. San Antonio. Taa (H. Kally Field and Camp Stanley I Ouap Upton. Yaphank. L I.. N. Y ...N< Camp Wheeler. Macon, '04... Mi Charleston Naval Station \:t Paris Island iB. C.) Marine Station .OS Buffalo Military District, embracing I M ton Camps ,....*> ) Published under tho auspices of the OMlted States, with the co-oporatlon of i GERMANY'S G "Suicidal ignorance" reigned in B Ke whan the Pruaaian junker, del erately forced the United States ii the world war. And American hum aBlted with cod cynicism, will be 1 deciding factor in tho inevitable i (traction of Pruaataniim which 1 junkers have brought upon the Pelves. Tfciu is the view of Captain Bn Bairnafather. Brltieh soldler-carto iat, who hai just concluded an int live six months' study of the dou boys. Bairn slather's drawing shetehed in the trenches of Prar hove made the British "Tommy" mom throughout the countries t border on the eevan seas. In rec months, he has confined the activil f Mi pencil to the doughboy. 1 method of cartooning soldiers lei hixa Ant of tU to analyse Ms subje > aa Intimately at a woman studies < face of the man she loves. "I alwi try M draw what people think, rati than what they look like." is Bair father's asp lanatiott of his almost canny skill in visualising the soldi of England, Franca and America, ia interna ting, therefore, to hear impre^ions of the Yankee fight "Your toldiets and oar soldiers," says, "don't for one instant think the Qemitn as an equal; he is jus nuisance that is going to have head smacked. It will only take tii They haven't a doubt of the victor) DI Army dltcMina has become a - yrW^- ^TliFkfh tV the straff, s has never seen its results, it ia lot thing oppressive. To the recruit it worse than that; it ia somcth tyrannical. Tfl fhn anlrliav Its. cu .?-? the soldier who has found discipl hie servant and who has not bi crushed by itt imperiousness, it is dispensible. _ One. cannot but think of the di in school when the rules of gramn and syntax were so difficult?and arbitrary. But if one's memory gi back to those days in school it a 'spans the intervening vears and calls the fact that very little attenti has been paid to those rules since 1 art of expression was achieved. 1 man Who Writes does not stop to th of nominatives and possessives. does not stop to reason whether ' past perfect or the present perf should be used. He knows. And cause be knows, his ability to say j what is in his mind is intensified. So it is with the army diacipii The rules and regulations of the ar service may seem arbitrary and i pressive at first. But the soldier s< learns that because the rules and r illations are obeyed the mobility of whole command is insured. If men in the ranks followed their o inclinations?well they just could do that, for there would not be ; ranksj It was Lieutenant Colonel Geo Applin, of the British Army, who gi DEMOUNT AND PH TPIM"! R1TTIP TH 1 i Lfiiuu u n i i l l i u i ? ? Each Team Scores Touchdo in Third Period?Crowd Wit nesses Gridiron Struggle. After nn hour of terrific struggle nnd clown the chalky linen on e field Saturday afternoon the Renin and Personnel football teams of Ca Greene were forced to ceas?? battl with the score even at '? to It was n tUantie . ttruKg!" hetw two well trained, alert elevens I the deadlock wa- a fair decision to the. com partitive strength of teams. Play was ?-v n practically the way. although the rival ele\ 4 played an absolut'-lv different s of football. The hmky Rennun If dealer can't tipplry>c Con'ttnWr ?v irtleute. Order direct from ? i. I- older Taylor-made Compasses on roe-j* ;t. Thkr Instrument Can pontes Rochester N. Y. 1 ' - .. ? ' W ; lp 15o|;'S:|' x_& CAMP km pa ana Cantonment* foe the soldiers at the | Hrwdqwarter* ' M7 MadUoa ArMUf Tw^CHy KWAKT DRY AN o?ml at Co-operatlnc Publishers N>wap*per Jfr V, * ] Publisher it* OH**Jl0*Ylme? Plea*unV .. 1>. 1>. Moored irt Worth Star Telegram Anion (!. Carter mpb Timet . t>. B. M? *?/ t'aeo Herald U. D. Siat-r kUlo CreoX Bntulror .N"*.h. ...... .A. L. 54151 " >?4on Globe ?Curl?? M. Taylor, J ehton TtffiM. Jamas Kern * tlahorca City Oklnhi.nmti E. K. (toylord lattandogn (Tenn i Times.a II. C. Adler n Francisco Bulletin . . . . ? R. A. Crothers ipelcn State Journal ..Frank P. MncLennan lanta Constitution .('lark Howell ke Chicago Dally New* Victor F. !?mnoo i*rlotte Observer.. W. B. 3ulllvan ' Igusta llerald i Bowdre Phlnlry lumblt state., W W. Ball| ckaonvllle TtRtes-l'nion W. A. Elliott ? Angela* Ttmee . ..... Harry Chandler I chmond News Leader ...John Stewart Bryant noma Tribune F. 9. Baker >u*ton Poal hot q. Watson aco Morning News .Charles E. Marsh rmIngham (Ala) News ..a...Victor II Hansen] ash. (D. C.1 Evening Htnr Fleming Vewbold hana&i Democrat Klruer K. Clarke ecnbvlllo Dally Newt . B. If. l'eace w Orleans Item. James M. Themaon antgomery Advertiser O. H. Allen lulsvllle Courier Journal ... Hubert W. Bingham n Antonio I.lfht Charles ft. Dlehl w fork World . Don C. SsIIr toon Telegraph. . W. T. Anderson mrleeton Neita and Courier m. C. 8l?g1lng larleatnn Poet ... T. R. Waring iff&lo Evening New* Edward W. Butler National War Work Council. T. M. C. A. of the the above named publishers and paper* REATEST BLUNDER er- the end?it doesn't ever occur to them ib_ to trouble about that. All that ever . does bother them it the amount o? time it may take to get rid of this dis0,,? agreeable and objectionable person the who has run amuck all over Europe, i []?? Aa I say, they've got ft kind of coolj cynicism that is all one with thpir, humor and their optimism and their i doggedness to make thent the splendid fighters they are." ice Captain Bairnsfather has hit the nail | squarely on the head. He has pointed out the biggest blunder that can en" be charged against Germany's stupid |h- diplomacy. The blind men of Berlin r a , were convinced that the United States, ice Pfotected *rom thc hotrora of War by ' the broad Atlantic, would swallow * - Prussian insults, close its eyes to hat Prussian atrocities and remain meekly ent neutral while American' women and ies children were drowtied by Prussian rlis submarines, rather than plunge into ids the filth, the degradation ind the dancts gers of a world-conflict made unprecthe edentedly "frightful" by poison gas. lys liquid fire and all the other diabolical her resources of German "Kultur." And! ns- now the Prussians are hopelessly bean | wildered ,when they see the "soft." ers "money-gtubbing" American "bluffIt ers." not only smashing Prussia's his much press-arented "shock troops," ing but doing it with a smile. America's fighting men in France he I are submitting to every hardship and of I danger with imperturbable good hut a mor and "cool cynicism." These are his American characteristics which the ue. Germans do not understand and decid' in I edly do not like. SCIPLINE & 7 by- this fine defin&oA of cfiaf ?Je: ^It is jfs iMiht/wfiiing 4ira intJLigAnt obvdi li ence to the trill of trtoba placed in authority." * ,s It is no less an authority than Maring shal Poch who has amplified that idea ! that discipline is not mere blind obe i dience, but is INTELLIGENT. This 'lis what the Marshal says: inei "To be disciplined does not mean een to keep silence, to abstain from action, in- It is not the act of avoiding responsiI bilities. . Discipline equals aciyS tivity of mind. Idleness of mind leads iar to indiscipline just as does inaubordi9o nation. Discipline is activity of mind ocs to understand the views of a superior Iso officer, and to enter into those views. rc_ and activity of mind to find the mateion rial means to realize those views." the A long time ago one of the "cheer."he UP" writers for a daily newspaper had ink this line. "The man above you is not He unfeeling, is not unsympathetic. HE the IS BUSY." ect The army is nol unfeeling, is not be- unsympathetic. It is busy, ust It delegates certain duties to the i men that, after all, are the backbone ne | of the army. Out of years of experi my j ence, dating from the time of the arop.Jmies of Moaes, it has laid down cer,on tain rules and regulations, eg- The recruit has no wealth of exneri-| the ence. He has certain vague ideas. To the attempt to carry them out would be wn to put the army back in an cxperi-. not mental stage. Modern armies are not' iny experiments. They are very highly ! organised products of experience, rge | Which shall it be? Experiment or ave experience? ri | depended almost entirely oil bull rl (strength and superior physical condiLL lion. Their chief gains, in fact prac; ticallv all . of then-, were made by IT straight old faHhiom-d line bwvkimr. If I the kind made famous by H?-su?n. .it j Michigan, and D?witt. it Princeton, in ; the good Old days .?f tin gridiron pastime before the forward pass nr..; wn ' excuse me. sir did I step t n your toe." style of footba! line i:I .-> exisience. On the of hand ;h?- 5'? r sonnel crowd showed t far greater knowledge of the ; n,. and had .? '.whole bundle -?f tM-v.'llderlng .trick I plays in their- old lilt hag and cleverlv I outwitted their opponents on many up occasions, arn * Th? touchdown. by thf unt i Wearers of the blue. the lb mounters nip | was due :<> a bud pass In ' ntei ling j Thompson. < t!?e personnel team I Aft": 1-clnir held for thr.e downs ee.u while bait ing well down in the lane and ' ' * * * * 1,1 Maroon?. elected to j?u- ?. i hi? yf>*nn ,IH ! civ -n I?tjt ThOiin-..:* ! \?**1 th? the 1 ball far over his cay tin's h'M'l. fi ali blue j?Ts.-\>(! speed ir ri h itr potinec<! 'fns (*n hall like, a howl; ri a > !i.< ker tyle hiv? pi :i j fron IVtsonne tors pi.n: postThex i ill wen ten- !: iol e* will tho.r hai k t:? the w h id matrnlll cent v fm* ttireo sure- downs hai the stu-'iRth of t! VM?.?ran mounters proved tog a<h on tin , ' iMMsh. Ula.'nr was lib? I ov-:* Jim i by irirhes only. On krk out foi try a* con! the rerc!\ fal'r-1 hee the .ii'-h and lost :1. hanr-- for th' J : ey: r.| point, j This tally was :tia to the thin qua i ter, as was also ore hookc nv tin- IVrsannel ac .* I'.itlan A [ rles of cleverly ? \ uted for wan passes bewildered ?!> Ip-mo.unter? looming so noon after :h"ir almost su in. ! perhuman efforts In n. ikinc their owi on I toifhdown. Pront the;- own 40-yan 'I line th?% red sweatere'l u'tdiatorn ear I t inl the ball Into ere \ territory It; 1 a series of mystifying forward passe? i cross bucks and a disconcerting 'Is ' l;i\ imI pass, until An y.. wa ! [ %A CHEAP 1 ? When Valenciennes was first threat%Md in the German retreat, observers saw soldiers withdrawing from the city with great loads of loot. Whan - German officers occupied French chateaux they liked their surrounding* so well that they ordered everything sent into Germany that could be removed. To go even further back, the German forces that took part in the Boxer caiapMg* liked to do tome star-gaxing through the wonderfully wrought telescopes of the Forbidden City. 3o while they were engaged In enforcing rl^htssuaness. ao they atid, they hipped the astronomical instruments to the Fatherland. The Prussian mind does not change. Now that the evacuation of all the occupied territory in Prance and Belgium seems to be in order the Germans are following the habit of their minds, and looking about them for loot. The Belgian mind has Its peculiarities, too. In a measure it is just as thorough as the German. The Bel gian nas a genius tor accounting, and | it is known that a record has been! kept of all that the Germans have! stolen from the little kingdom. IT NEV~ Should someone In camp or outside call you aside and tell you that Captain So and So, a medical officer, and Miss So and 80. an army nurse, were shot at sunrise yesterday or the day before, after having been found guilty of infecting soldiers under tpelr care with influenza or pneumonia germs, take hold of him by the collar and gently, but with flrmnesfe, impress upon him that either unwittingly or de-< signedly he is furthering the cause of Hun propaganda, which is trying to destroy not only the Army's but the civil population's confidence as well in the Army Medical Department. This is the Implied advice in a recent official statement Issued by acting Surgeon General Richard to stop a fast-growing crop of rumors, which had sprung up in and around fcampa to the effect that influenza was' being spread by German spies, parading as medical officers. The statement folI lows: "There have been no more insidiously false reports come to my attention than those, recently widely Ispread, to the effect that nurses or I medical officers have been executed at the 'stage hour' of sunrise, for spreading influenza or pneumonia germs among soldiers. "There have been no medical officers. nurses or anyone else executed at any camp in the United States or abroad for any such cause. "The reports are ridiculous and I ?v > ?? ? ?" fact. They have taken many forms, | but through them all has run such a i significant likeness of texture that it is not unlikely that they all orlginaj ted from the same source, the GerIman propagandist. Unfortunately, as is so frequently the case, those behind I the baseless reports have been and I | are being aided in the nefarious disI semination of theiii by many thoughtless persons whe/nave not taken the! itlay^to investigate before passing the I rtTST.*^ F r \?e least thought, on the part of i those to whom these groundless reports were retailed, would in most in- ! I stances have been sufficient to kill ;them. The influenza germ only recently has bedn isolated and. according to published accounts, still is dodging the eyes of scientists even when investigated under the most .powerful microscopes. It is hardly possible that the Germans learned all about the influenza germ, especially its control, while the rest of the world was at its mercy, and through underground channels 'communicated this information to spies in order to cause death and suffering. In support of this it is only necessary to take Into account that the armies of the Central Powers have, and in all Drobabilitv still are losing, hun dreda of men through this disease-in ! |epidemic; form. The first task of any j general staff Is to maintain highest [ efficiency and man-power among-its own forces. This the German general staff surely would have done in stop-i ping the spread of influenza at home, j had it possessed the means or the knowledge. A BRIEF STOK'-OVKR "Goihg to France?" asked a traveling man at the station of a negro soldier. "No. sab! I's not going to France," replied the dusky warrior. "I'se goin' to Berlin, but 1 may stop In France for a showt time, on de way."? , , , . ?, . . r ! pushed over the final mark and the { score tied. ( Captain Davis failed miserably hi his attempt at the goal, which If successful would have drought victory to his plucky team. Over 1.000 spectators took ndvantage of the balmy weather to wltnesi ilie struggle. Colonel A. C\ Macomt and staff were interested spectator? j ihioughout thft contest. The fourtl i ecruit hand entertained with patriotic .-elections. A bevy of Personnel rooters betoolh'-rnselvcm to the right field bleached early in the game and cheered lustily for their favorites. They gave th< > mule laugh to the Remount sectioj i whenever conditions warranted. \ ri?l. halfback. was injured in th> ! last period of th^ jraue- and was lei ,1 fron. the held by tenia mates In i I j half dinted condition ti The work of lt!aine. *'.> iRer. I'ain> I j ami Dnv!" were the oir.^an linn fen ' ' Kit es of t h*? name, i . Tr.e lineup : I i REMOrNTKKS I'i'.FtHONXKl I i Vetor, le le . ( IpIrp I i Scott, It It.. Ityor ! Miehallk. in m . Muhone i .Johnson. c i-.. Thompao . I King, rn . nr.. Hummt t | McNabb, rt rt.. i'aln ' Cannon, re re.. Smit ? i Cowglll. <tb !* .. Hpphee ? , llava, Cloud, :'t ... lh Musterso i Nero, rh t h... Davl I , Blaine, fb Cllnto ? From Kundav'a Ubywer. . S. r. HOIiDlF.ilfl CiO IIOMF. SpartanhurR. Nov. 1*. The mot | than 1,000 South Caroline-im who ai j rived In Camp Wadawortli two weeli i ; ago under the last draft ?-;i 11 are bf J ' ingr discharged rrorn the service an n numbers of them left yes-erday aftei 1 I noon for their home* In v.irious par - ; of th?- state. Their discluiigea rea? v'4' however, that If the terns nf the hi i. inintic-p should not be hinting. the me - | tnay be recalled and again indut'tf * into ^lio service I I ' TRENCH AND CA! "HlEVES' The day of reckoning la coming. It it to be noped thtt the French mind hu turned, at hat the Belgian, to that day when the boekd are to be opened for the final balance. In that day, the Pruaaian Crown Prince may be.aakbd to reatofe that which he atole from the fine homee he defiled by hit occupancy. But there are than thoee with fine homea who will have jutt bills to preaant. There art the hundreds of tnull manufacturers whoae machinery waa stripped and stolen. Wiu wiiust wncrcwnnii was transported to Oermahy and made to serve the industrial lift of the Empire. The record WbaMkAot ba complete if it did not catalogile the fact that where these cheap thieves were unable to remove tne objects of their desire, they worked havoc and destruction. In Franca and Belgium today there art hundreds of factories whose equipment has been scrapped because it could not be stolen. Neither would the record be complete if it did not etate that this theft and this petty spoliation were continuing in the face of protestations of a desire for a peace of jus ice and righteousness. HAPPENED The outpouring of lies regardiD.: medical officers and nurses infecting soldiers is merely tha Old stunt in a new guise, of trying to break down the morale of the forces in training and the home folks by magnifying the powers and agendas at the command of the enemy. In addition in this case, It had the advantage of besmirching the Army Medical Department, the backbone of our Army from the point of view of health and fighting spirit. Of course, as inevitably once started. the infiuensa-shot-atrsunrise rumor was picked up and relayed by hundreds, both soldiers and civilians. Within walking distance of Army Medical Department headquarters in Washington an liikantry regiment is encamped. Almost to a man. that group believed that three officers and six nurses had been shot' at Camp Meade, Md. No one knew Just how the report started, except perhaps that one of the men, formerly with the regiment and now at Camp Meade nuu oviu riaudu hid miiner puis eacu Sunday, might hare told about it. A visit to a different part of this city was rewarded by the "news" that traitorous medical officers were forced to dig their own graves at Camp Humphreys, Va., and then were shot inevitable while facing in such a way that they would tumble into them. Follows a piece from the Baraboo, j Wis , "Dally Newt" along the same I general line: "Over at Camp Grant they are Just dying by the hundreds. Three of our undertakers and one Ifrom Beloit worked with all the Rockford undertakers all one night last week getting bodiea ready to be sent away. Mr. Wllbeck said the bodies were piled sixteen deep waiting to be cared for. 1'hey found one old villain guilty over there'this week? a doctor. Evdfy soldier In his camp died. They became suspicious of him, examined his medicine and found poison in it, so they took him out, made him dig hia own grave, atad shot him right down. Even that was too good, though." Quite a while ago, the Hun propagandist tried to put across another dose of demoraliing poiaon. That time the story was that hundreds of American soldiers Were being returned to this country with their tongues out. The yarn spread with remarkable rapidity. Mrs. Smith knew a woman who knew someone else whose cousin's son was at a general hospital tongueleas. wherp his mother had seen him. Again the Surgeon General s Office was compelled to make a direct denial. Investigation had revealed not a single case of mutilation of American prisoners, wounded or otherwise. There was no chance for error because the records from every military hospital here and overseas pass through that office. It was pointed out at the time that it is not America's policy to make war by stirring up blind hatred for the foe-?and that if 1t was the enemy's desire to weaken home morale by spreading tales of frightfulness, that plan was doomed to failure. MARK IT A POINT To send Trench and Camp to tho home folks every week. Thev want all the news they can get about your life and activities in camp. *knd putting Trench and Camp into their hands Is the best wny to give them til the news. MACOMB AWAITS ORDERS TO DEMOBOLIZE TROOPS ' ' While official communications have i been received front Washington ir i : reference to tho demobilization o > ' troops stationed at Camp Greene. Col ' ' A. C. Macomlv commanding, stntei ] last night that no definite orders t? ! undertake this were in his posses c Plon. The camp commander expressej x : deep Interest in press dispatches fron > | Washington in which the general or ? : dor of demobilization of units In thi i j country would be undertaken, espe dally in view of the fact that devdop I i ment battalions were designated a f, i the first to be disbanded and the mem .% j hers returned to civil life. Several de x velopment battalions are quartered a | Camp Greene. 0 ! Though Col. Macomb did not spe 1 | ciflcally so state, it was apparent fror ! run discussion or the .matter that th ! receipt without delay^f orders to he ^ Kin returning to civil life members o r development battalions here would nc a come unexpectedly. Col. Macomb dl y not disc use the contents of the com reduction of military fo-ce*. n ? V WHY WORRY? 'l While ! sit here thinking r In this wheel chair of mine. n Of mother and my slaters. iH Worrying all the time. 11 Here I am In the hospital. Am happy as can he. I Rut what makes them Worry. { Sure seems to get me. / ' j But I ruMMi mothers always worry p" ; When their sons are far from honu l? I Especially when in the hospital, j With .the thoughts that 'they'i d ! alone. p- But I'ncle Sam Is with them, hs I With the bflst doctors of the lam 1. Ho mothers you need not worry r- When your sons are f,?r from horn in I For they are well tAken rare of >U J While in the hands of Chcle Han I RA N L VI P Breaking Into i tm F88ST PCSACflCE^ nA^CW ??????? fl I HITS AND MISS KM ?i AT ('AMI' HKADQI AKTKKS I h ^ ) 1,1 Now that the stockade has been rei moved from the vicinity of camp tl j headquarters street, the great white ! rl I lights will be sorely missed by the New ! g York contingent ut headquarters area, j el With the illumination ^one and the I H nrtet lights out on every night but I tl the one the moon is full, the boys are * going to need Jimmy Valentine out- j fits in order to get around. ? ? I ti With all departments stroncly in- a jfencherl in new worlCng positions in A J the neyly enlarged building, the Per- P i "-'onnel office presents an appearance n ! of real business activity. All day and j a | even after the child labor law hours, i h i there is a buzz of work in the uh\ ? i vurylng in cadence from the 130- ? words a minute clatter of tvpewriters j oh stenographers' row to the 45 an : hour gait of the special order depart| ment. There Is an unusual amount I of work coining through and much credit has been extended to the enlist! ed personnel of the adjutant's deI tachment for "keeping everlastingly at it" until all was clear at night for j the orderly's hnndfnl In the morning. j Kield Clerk J. P.. Tally has succeedI ed Second Lieutenant J. I. Carroll as i head of the locations department. lieutenant Carroll being transferred I to recruit camp 4 for duty. Sergeant Major Hollenberg collected throe month's pay, according to I Dame Humor, only last Thursday, i Laat reports have It that he wants to j spend It all before a second quaran- j tine can be Imposed. Applications are now being received from those I willing to aid him. Second Lieutenant Banning of Headquarters company, is at present 1 at the hospital, undergoing treatment j for appendicitis. His outfit are hop| lng for his early return, particularly those football enthusiasts who were never tired of watching his drop kicks and forward passes. , j Kergeaiit Nichdlaon has promised to behave while up north. acting as guard to n prisoner whom he was dei tailed to conduct to Camp Merrltt, N. ! } J. Nobody, we understand, has ta 1 i ken him seriously on the promise. I . | Pvt. James Munson. of the Person- : I nel office, who has been Horlously 111 : With pneumonia at the Base hospital ! o j POWDER IN SHOES AS WELL AS GUNS t Foot=Ea8? to Bo Added to Equip- ! ment of Hospital Corps at Fort Wayne. n i Under tlio nl>ove heading the Detroit j * j Fret /'? ?*, among other things says: ! ' "The theory is that soldiers Whose feet j ,t f are in good condition can walk further ( d | and faster than Soldier* who have corns ! - j and bunion* incased in rawhide.'* The Plattshurg Camto Manual advises j ' men in training to slinke Foot?Ease in I heir shoes earn morning. One war relief Cf>mmittee reports, of oil | the things sent out in their Comfort Kit*, ! | Allen's Foot?Ease rewired the meat j I praise from the soldiers and sailors. It is . i j used by American, French and British j troops hecnuse it takes the Friction from | I the Shoe and freshens the feet. There | is no foot comforter equal to Allen'* . j Foot-Ease, thoantiseptic.uoalltig powder \ B* to he shaken into tlie slices and sprinkled ' ,m I in the foot-bath, the standard remedy I for over 25 years for hot, tired, aching | { perspiring, smarting, swollen, tender j 1. xeet, corns, bunions, blisters or callouses. "Why not order a do.-a'n or m<>re 25o. i e. boxes to-day from your Dru/gist or ! Dep't. store to mail io rmr fi lends in I 11 training camps and in tli" y r ud nat" I / the Big League J s / y JHIIi k f ?r the past two weeks is recovering | nd his friends are hoping to see ; lin hack on the company street in 1 uuble quick time. i. Among the trials and tribulations of ' 1 te Flghtin* Personnel aro the wor- | ! les: How many years later do we ; i et out? When do we get time to i 1 have. chop wood, and write letters? J lut paramount is the question, will j | ne oia norao town np wei or ary i i hen I get home? Among tece^t signs of the limes 1 TBI seem to have been gaily painted . re those on the desks of Sergeant j tajor Schaffer and Corporal David, tut we understand they won't hirve tuch on some that are shortly to ! dorn the deaks of the officers at | eadquarters. "The A the Al The war has oumc gi <ca\ inn is that Wrlgley1 delicious, refre sweet is a migf enduring the rough work. r< long marches comfort. IliHMl ' PERFECT Gl KE^szzasgyy: Kars* i ifff! mam SEALED Tl KEPT RH Chew It Afte The Flat - ? i 4 - * '.-V"1' ' ByCHAPINf i j : ' !':sh!^=" ; ^ y '^j|5 >r - jl^l ': \ '*Sv'T.:i:H:! if i i! iiLlBliS lilllR'ttiilWil' ^ ^K^+'ll.I H L|1 !tjiffij|gH Vv * ly^i; jJ^|iij;!jjj;jjijliy^^S '^XTlpllMI .\ i^r1. ts^, D^? ri ^feii GO TO Ql'EIiL IUOTS. Just to show how quick the army / icts on short notice, the instance of ,he call Sunday night from WinstonSalem for soldiers to quell the riot theie. proves beyond a doubt that things are moving pretty smoothly when 175 men from the provost guard. Korty-ilrst battalion, and other organisations were fully enttiPT>ed-*?d, ready to move within pne hour from ? J t )i?? t Itn o thi? nntli'O wnn rprpivflfl hv Colonel Macomb. Not only did they carry tho regular men for line duty * but they had a medical staff and supplies to take care of the "en?my" In case of casualties being Inflicted or sustained. * lly of lies" brought out e truths. One s-the lasting, shine, chewine ity aid to men hardships of aueh weather, and lack of ILEYS. I jiiiil'v :ght j^j|^ r Every Meal /or Lasts |
Nov. 20, 1918, edition 1
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