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BARNWELL SENTINEL ■-ww^Piffrmr (lifts, received hKj ►rijs, the sjnjfpn, ske distribute* iMfrs(uiuHjc, I’p-.pfei.rfy ottering -hfts t>r klTidljf) ad* \ i(V ^nd .\vhefi, finally the men fire ready to {take their places in tin* Ametbaa luifile Ib-of, ea< li seem* ob xl sej nv Itli 11 i-e. i < h •/[ that.he, personally. must make s\\ *• j11 11 ffrI>«t* «>f Luke ttiii'llfgnn,'helhjfr thr*' v.-nrrftr'rt bill f - ■ tli I ■ rt)&t'r\y rtl *11 are Ijritod States n:iv> Warships labonrd* whbji .the amen net some <>l tlieTr Jriiinfnjf. Fot -the- IdDufe' hotir> 4>e>-aiUo^4-U^-\< nlrrx ,pf the lake In Vvl-tgs the more lui'nly to bathe. .. Tien Vhcre nje organized athletics ‘under tiie supervision of a naval- offi cer. ..Regular track meets, boxlun bouts hirfl lut>Vha 11 1 games itre held MISS HELEN KELLER ftlt Ayyzc.y. Vi&Xi mm she 1ms dircctlon of the earing for the needy families In the middle West of officers, uml: enlisted men-uX tlie nnyy Miss Helen Keller —«4i4- her -great darn? “T-hora,” under lier favorite t John iSijeu. nunnery sergeant of mn rlnes, who has jif^t been the service nf/er .'to years. Six readduf” j)f ea served Sin battles In Nicaragua, In the Spanish war ynd in the Vera Crnz Incident. His comrades f> resell ted him with a gold j watch and chain, Rending Autlof the i service consists In .publicly rending n- mnn’S record from The time he enlisted j until.the time he‘leaves.",. Shea’s home ROYALTY GREETS AMERICAN NURSES “Denken sit* sjch. Ileher Knmmid?” he exclaimed. “Ich! Von S. Enter ejnem Kaufnmnn aus I’.erlln !” He felt i disgraced. Hut officers are beginning to p't Scarce In Germtmy, so the r»*- , wene-otheors wjnvliaV.' nemitted them- selves creditably have to he promoted |ptd po»Hiot>sl they would .pet or hnv»v-ftt- tnlned in peace times.., One Good Turn Deserves Another, "The late tail of Cork was a ve pious person I \tt i in.ii .of Id Longs for Mother's Pies. ; < ,'b’vehmd.: • ^ >h!o.—Cookina fn the Marine corps isn’t like the stuff that > mother used to-hake. Art I.lppert.ba, ,* Cleveland youth, wlxv-joined the fight- inn brnnMf of the service, writes home* to mother: ' , i . ‘Thr fo"'!. 'pTes- Would retail at about $20 or $25* and would taste like a-million dollars "mynPT About 8,200 Men Being Fitted for the Navy at the Great Lakes/ 1 Station. Keen Determination to Make Good l( the Prevailing Sp'rit of the Canip ' —Plan to Make Station Larg est of Kind in World. iniit 0*«^ -Lakes. IIG-Ahoht men are betfig lifted'for. fighting, in the-na tion’s'first Hue of defense «»t the l’lilt ed States naval tr.ajning station here. Not unlike, tlm.t In a big college football cutup Is the routine g.f their training. Chief petty officers are the conches wTfo drlIT down The fields hi .T prv Every thing. (hr a fl]led \\ itlr tin mi i) final the hi" game Is made to mcaiiivpjne-- dozen fiMds the ttir is a ti l hoi ttitlive' cotifHpiinds . of the officers and the pomidTngsof thousjunly; of heavily, s'hod feet on th turf. <'oTmningling is the blare of the hamIs, whichare directed by I,I,cut. John Philip Soiixi, fiitmui-t bandmas ter, w ho .now has L’ lL’-* musicians in fn dC-elop the trill HI tt'iX. ttuy (>xpcc ■ tlnes-f militnry band tfi the World. dint the spirit of the cnuip Is as s<*rl- jnjH usjlmt Ijuii foothalLciimp. A.fttl.^ 'M evinced hv Ur? Inst days of Nnvem- her Ih un> C-odciru, the statement, l* not -mennWlWftitly: Every w here about - the station, the sentiment seems to be fo stick to tlie team aifrTrnake a K"od showing in tlie eyi*s of tin- coaches ttiat ii/urnmnent place may be ob?; tallied In tlib'Crejifest uanic of all. C. (J. Smith,icnptaln (if tills year’s foot 'bad eleven at the Vntversitv of Mlchi- ' *T ’ " ‘ , gati, expressed tills wdieir ly»> said: “We urc going In with everything we have. We are going to win and make the commandant, ('apt. —Wc A. MofTet t. proyd of uh wheri we go to g4>» or l*e groutnl 4o pieces tryingd’ To Train x 20,000 Men. Plans are under way to make the, station the largest of 11kind in the, world. Preparations have been made to train upward of “h.ikhi men during the summer. Tin* navy department, upon tin* suggestion of Captain Mof fett, has asked congress to appropri ate funds for this purpose. Constructed originally, fur WO men. the war and the resultant fnflux of re cruits has necessitated the springing up of a white, tented etfy on the reser vation and adjoining leased land. Ciiiiip Paul Jones, lying ininiedi.at.ei.v..dw tlie north of tin 1 station properhehn. fully equipped arid shelters'r»,(Mmi men, among them the naval militia from the states of Michigan and Missouri. It is believed that the station will train tivo-ctght-bs of the men who go to the nuvy during the war. Recruits from practically every community In the middle West are expected, men from Illinois | several barbers are kept busy .scraping tin- jfaces of their *rT>mra(tes. Along side is a shm*-s+dning “parlor” «>ind nearby Ispt cleaning and pressing es- taldi'-hinent ; .nil of them do good busi ness for among tlie llrsL tliiiigs a re- (•ruit .is tnmrlit- arc neatness anil per tfonal' cleanliness. Nor do the men.want for y woman’s Interest. Mrs. Moffett, wife of the commapdant, herself tlie mother of 1 ill e.L„.^m;ill fi-ied (II lull' a lllotb- ♦^ky--bd-ee^*s.t-dtr-ererr.ninn tir tlie Sfft'- tlon. As president of the Great l,nkes auxiliary of the Navy RuRpf socletvp I 1,1 the latest type o: a ■ cb h arwy ilirlglbles tm, her maiden tyjp ‘d^<»me\yh«*Tt‘ in the Knit'd States* " .-ttcii'-h bomb uf -new- type, called the-“i!> nm-pi;,"' being pr< pared for .flight i r. f «• the enemy’s lines, (b .an-, on ,;h>,;r, w.a> to l'jin'"pj—-syr^/fesrsf^verlores oirT' etreK tfn'iT'qiorts, - ph'OTbgrfrphod nr 1 lenotulil. -1—Prltlll hers filling their water cams’ at a dillin/Kfatem .durin an advance.' 1 ' BWLtffNG COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY WAR H0SPtTAt Story From Holland Says Uhlans 1. | Were Sent to Shoot Them . ... Down. ' ' * ■ can.never he redact'd l»v liliiiger. "They will eat grass'or ttn* dust from itre street rather than s-irrrender on the allies’ perms,’’ he s.ibT He told how bad tile trcnjmeiit and the food was in the Herman prison cnnips; be bad been Weary of War and Depressed by Hun ger They No Longer Believe in German Victory, but Are *' Eager for Peace. ,1, Indiana, (diio, Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota. North Dakota. By W. J. L. KIEHL. (Special L oircSp«-inletK'e of the OhfCHKO . i Lilly News.) I The Hague, Holland. On the soutli- I era border of Hodntid desertions from tlui-( lerniati army occur.'on a large scale -nowadays. A.’ first It was only a -rsingle sohjicr lu re and there, 'then they ; came by threes and fives, later In groups of ten add twerityr.but now as many as seventy and eighty come In. at 1 a time. A few days ago a little army i ( tried to desert—some^nOO to tKHJ men. mostly fusileers, marines and land- | sturmers. TTie Dutcli reporfTiays tlmt they at tempted to cross near Cadsand, hut the , (jb'rman military authorities got wind South Dakota. ^Nebraska, Kansas, Mis- i ( ,{ p, ami ‘Jimi Ulilans with two tnnehim .souri, Iowa, Kentucky and parts of other states being sent here to learn the business of a inan.-o’ nnrsmftn. Men of .Every Station. Virile young Americans, from the colleges, offices, farms anil factories of the middle West, the men. at the station seem to be trained for-almost anything. Here one may see a .civil engineer, enlisted as an apprentice seaman, using his transit to make bench marks, while over there on the corner of tlie reservation are the two many, and degression among the slender, •100-foot wireless towers from i liters,, .who.’ dr*ad -being sent to ■ *— fc • ^ ’ . W ' which a man is sending a wireless mes sage to the government station;JLn-.AiT HngtonrVn. In the heterogeneous per-■-j.Only sonnel there is a representative of al most every trade, |VrdfessTou and btisl ness. , guns w ere. dispat+'lied from Rruges to : bead them hack. A formal battle raged between the two forces; it was viewed from Holland. The.nmebine gnus got ! in their deadly work, and almost all tlie would-be deserters were either I killed or captured; only Tight "Wounded men succeeded In reaching Dutch soil and safety. *“* Every fresh arrival, deserter or es- i enped prisoner, tells the samp story of famine conditions in Relgluni and (jer- srd- the front. They no longer believe In Her man victory, Imt are enge^ for jieacp, a Home-sickness Is u disease that .has" man “flight, lieutenants little place at the station.; There is not time for It. Lying in the sun- one escaped prisoner had a dif ferent story to te-lb iiml limb man was a . Russian general, who arrived tn accompanied by two Her-, who bad es- Maastricht enped with hltn.- This gtmeral bellpved the (ietmans INSIGNIA OF U. S. FLYING SQUADRONS -^. ^ -V.---, j.e. Aftnr LY cry a ftempt' yo“VSVTif>0 he had be. n transferred—to a dilTervtit camp, but everywhere the prisoners were^trented brutally, the officers as well as tlm » men. How lie bad at last succeeded i ln.gi'Ltlng awav witli. Iiis two compan ions he preferred-not to say because lie -feared that Would make escape inTiri>~rtl(Iicujt f..r his eomratles still In captivity. He did, however, say that what made escape very difficult was that If caused great surprise to people 1 n~Hcnnnn towns and, vllhige* tn jii>« 1 tbree TTIde bodied Mien’ wnlT’ng abmit, and be and his com|ianiofis ’had been obliged to Invent all' sorts of tales -about having been wounded and being now on leave to account for their ab sence frotn “the front.” (icniinri soldb-F-s frankTy beg for food on the Dutch border. Thu officers don’t [ go quite its far ns that. Thtuv ls a sort of neutral zone along the frontier where Hermans and Hollanders can meet. There the German officers often T j eongregat*yind make overtures of corm I ra/leshlp to their colleagues on the other side. 'Friendly relations exist, and when, the luncheon hour conies, *^tnd the Netherlnmlers see what poor provisions the Germans have, they In vite the Germur/to Tuneh. A picnic Is held and the Germans consume In credible qumitlUes of rolls, sausages or bam sandwiches, and loudly praise "the coffee tli*- orderlies of their Dutch comrades serve. They say they never get good eofl'ce any more. Although the Dutch officer often ; meets his German colleugues, Jt must not be supposed he a I, way a agrees with their methods b'f dlscipune low ard; [ their ow n int’u.- Roth, officers and sol diers In Holland, by far the greater number pf them at. lenwM strongly <lis- rfttpprove of the brutal and heartless way Ins which most .German officers treat fhetr men. Tdip younger offiVers sTtow this by diaHing the Germans about it.. . 4 . „ Merchant-flanks Over tloble. . • -j How tlie sjiirit of caste still rules In ; the German . rauks^-ls .instifftioed "by a i little anecdote tohl viiie by a Dutch i ^officer. He-had come on friendly “cof- fee” terms with a (ierman officer. Von S., the’ personification, to the veFy n Kn Lading the work on tpe l'ohnub:a Him- -- W.-: ’ ’T’-. The hospital will cun tain beds ami will *•<-'- ,p ' based on fhos»> drawn by plndcbins and other exjierts wjo have had experience In hosf.it al planning w i?h the llsh and French abroad, and provides forum entirely portable building which In case of etnergenev can be overseas or to any pyrt of the United ’Stntes. -.T * THIRTY,',YEARS IN MARINES American atrplanes over tlie European battlefroM will be diatlagulshed by a white itar with a red center on a circular flirfd of blue. Airplanes will bear [the star, on the wlng^Vf fh^machlne.^whlle It will it* on the top and bottom of tha gas bag of each dirigible. < * r - ■ -Fiiised Up “Her Hair. Elyria, O.—Kritie F'qs^, iff her di vorce petition, aay8 Stevq Fuss fussed up her hair and exhibited a bunch of. It to friends to |>roTa he waa victor lfr tha broil, -v got out .<m the platform" he turned round and, leaning * through the Lar- rhige door, A>ald: ’ “‘Thank you-, sir. One jjood turn deserves auother.' . You’ve put me up, u wrinkle in yeuv^professlon; now let At the JnVltatfon of King George, the officers and nurses of ba^e hospftal me give you one in return. I'm u hat- unit No. 4~U. S. A., were received af Buckingham palace. The photoip'aph shows their majesties shaking hands with the nurses aa they passed by. Behind them stands Dr. Walter Hines Page. American ambassador. > -j "1Z. • ' - * . , .. ' • V * >' , ' *- '' v. " ‘ ” v a -1 , . ' ' \ ter. Put a piece (of-blottiBg paper in side the lining of your hat; and.lt wUI last twice as long. Good-dey r. „