Theodore Roosevelt; an Autobiography by Theodore Roosevelt
page 56 of 659 (08%)
page 56 of 659 (08%)
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subsequently reduced to 25 miles in two days in each
quarter. "2. This was further reduced to 10 miles each month, which is the present 'test,' and there is danger lest even this utterly insufficient test be abolished. "I enclose a copy of a recent letter to the Surgeon General which will show our present deplorable condition and the worse condition into which we are slipping back. "The original test of 50 miles in three days did a very great deal of good. It decreased by thousands of dollars the money expended on street car fare, and by a much greater sum the amount expended over the bar. It eliminated a number of the wholly unfit; it taught officers to walk; it forced them to learn the care of their feet and that of their men; and it improved their general health and was rapidly forming a taste for physical exercise." The enclosed letter ran in part as follows:-- "I am returning under separate cover 'The Soldiers' Foot and the Military Shoe.' "The book contains knowledge of a practical character that is valuable for the men who HAVE TO MARCH, WHO HAVE SUFFERED FROM FOOT TROUBLES, AND WHO MUST AVOID THEM IN ORDER TO ATTAIN EFFICIENCY. |
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