Minute; ButtheHand- 

 to-Hand Struggle Still 

 Lives in Modern War 

 — and Our Boys Must 

 be Masters of the Art 



All's Fair in « * » » and War 



The deadly grip this man has ii[X)n liis 

 adversary may well prove the undoiriK of 

 a Boclie who is unversed in the gentle art of 

 self-defense as taught by the modern school 

 of Japan and adopted by our '•Sammies" 



© Phot 



A Strenuous Game 



A strangle hold calculated to break an adversary's 

 neck and prevent him from driving home that 

 deadly bayonet. There is earnestness in the face 

 of the unarmed fighter. You can see that his whole 

 soul is in his work, for success or failure may mean 

 all the difference between life and death to him 

 some day — and to the Boche who opposes him 



A Dash to the Dressing Station 



Picking up a man lying prone on the ground and 

 running with him on your back for fifty yards is 

 not as easy as it looks to these huskies. It is all 

 in the day's work for the training "Sammies." One 

 man picks up the "wounded comrade" and runs 

 with him for that distance, when he deposits him 

 on the ground. Another make, the return trip 



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