Forty-third Infantry: Manila, P. I.; President, Colonel S. L. Faison; Secretary, Captain L. E. Toole. Forty-fourth Infantry: Honolulu, H. T.; President, Colonel Forty-fifth Infantry: Manila, P. I.; President, Major Harry A. Wells; Secretary, Captain J. B. Sweet. Forty-sixth Infantry: Eagle Pass, Tex.; President, The Commanding Officer; Secretary, The Adjutant. Forty-seventh Infantry: Camp Lewis, Wash.; President, Colonel Forty-eighth Infantry: Douglas, Ariz.; President, Colonel H. Forty-ninth Infantry: Fort Snelling, Minn.; President, Colonel Fifty-sixth Infantry: Camp Meade, Md.; President, The Regimental Commander; Secretary, Captain J. E. Copeland. Fifty-seventh Infantry: Manila, P. I.; President, Lieutenant Camp Lewis, Wash.; President, Major Fifty-ninth Infantry: Camp Lewis, Wash.; President, Lieutenant Colonel F. R. Waltz; Secretary, Captain K. B. Wise. Sixtieth Infantry: Camp Jackson, S. C.; President, Major E. A. Allworth; Secretary, Lieutenant R. C. Hamilton. Sixty-first Infantry: Camp Jackson, S. C.; President, Captain Sixty-second Infantry: Manila, P. I.; President, Colonel C. Barth; Secretary, Captain J. E. Wharton. Sixty-third Infantry: Madison Barracks, New York; President, Colonel R. Alexander; Secretary, Captain W. S. Paul. Sixty-fourth Infantry: Camp Meade, Md.; President, Colonel E. A. Lewis; Secretary, Captain Bine Plunkett. Sixty-fifth Infantry: San Juan, Porto Rico; President, Colonel M. S. Jarvis; Secretary, Notice It is requested that Regimental Commanders check up the above list of Branch Associations, make such corrections as may be necessary and forward same to the Secretary of the Infantry Association. Let's keep these Branch Association organizations up to date. “Knowledge is of two kinds; we know a subject ourselves, or we know Hints to Newly Appointed Officers By Colonel Fred H. Sargent If you would follow Dr. Johnson's hint you will procure a copy of Colonel Sargent's book. It contains hints on: How to make a good first impression. What you require in the way of uniforms and equipment. How to report for duty-what to do and what not to do. The performance of duty-individual responsibility, promptness. Observance of the regulations and customs of the service. Discipline with respect to yourself and the men you are to command. Preparation-home study and reading. The art and science of leadership. The meaning of esprit de corps. Money matters-insurance, banking, meeting obligations, investments. Miscellaneous-Factors that make for success; responsibility; finding a way to get The Riggs National Bank Capital $1,000,000 OF WASHINGTON, D. C. Assets $26,589,744 A BANK WITH A WAR RECORD. Distinguished OPEN AN ACCOUNT with $1 or more. 3% interest. By MAIL. Deposits and withdrawals can be made WE WE DO more Army and Navy business than any Please say you saw the advertisement in the INFANTRY JOURNAL INFANTRY JOURNAL VOL. XVIII S Guarding Our Trust OMETHING like a century and a half ago the people of this country decided that liberty was a thing worth fighting for. Accordingly they fought for it and won it. It was no short or easy task. On the contrary, it was one that taxed them to the utmost. Thousands of them laid down their lives; other thousands suffered untold hardships; all were impoverished in the winning. In the end they emerged, weakened in the flesh but triumphant and strong of spirit. They had that for which they had fought, and it was worth to them all that it had cost. Having won it, they were not content. Because they knew its worth, they set about preparing it as a heritage for the generations to follow. In turn, each succeeding generation has taken up the task and has labored unceasingly and unselfishly to increase that heritage and enhance it for its sons and daughters. In the doing, each has suffered its |