Trench and camp. (Augusta, Ga.) 1917-1919, October 31, 1917, Page Page 8, Image 8

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- w lip] i®: /KJ/ 1L Y It \ Li fi! Pi H II ' Page 8 AMERICA COMES OVER TOP 4'4 Z -P. A ffi?A.- . : :... x"' *Q*"*fr*p 4>»Hf J r~'x 5 wB s JSE' . MWWIK - . ~ ■ : : |Mk <■ JMK^g&- ■ ! aw®mWWlSwl^s i iKlß^^HwP^w*V AhS ~ JyRI —— U. S. Marine, of the “first-to-fight” boys, as he’ll look to the Germans when he comes over the top with the cold steel. He’ll have a keen-edged answer to the Kaiser’s sneer that America’s part in the war is inconsequential. Get Hell Fire In Eyes Is Order To Sammies “Get hell-fire in your eyes when you go over the top” is the order to the Sammies in training in this country. Maj. Barlow, U. S. A., chief bayonet instructor in one of the Eastern camps sounded the cry, which is being passed from camp to camp in the West. Here’s what he said: “We are here to learn to kill. This is war. It is no lark. We’ve got to fight, fight like devils when we get over there. We’ve got to have hell fire in our eyes and carry that battle right hand-to-hand struggle with the enemy. “Don’t try to drive the bayonet right through your adversary. Just a little jab will do. That will send it far enough to kill if you hit him on the'right spot, and getting your bayonet out of his body is the trouble. “Don’t plunge the blade into the bony parts of the chest. Jab your man in the stomach or the throat. The blades come out easy then and your man doesn’t go to a hospital. He just crumples up dead. “You officers have got to instill in your men the fighting spirit. They’ve got to be full of fight all the time. They must be a fighting division. Get boxing gloves for your men if you don’t get anything else. I’d like to see this camp full of black eyes and bloody noses.” TRENCH AND CAMP Oct. 31, 1917.