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r: ~i—r r.\ i *■ ■1 , • ' I w - I* . . J. V/: • If iu / / SIXTY SEVENTH YEHR ESTABLISHED 1852 .i =7= SIXTY SEVENTH YEAR VOL. BARNWELL, S. C , THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 191s rr. THE WAR SUMMARY. /. / ' -■ ■■.• rU, y r » Germany 1 Skillful in Retreat. t . 4 - German Barbarieties-—Peace, Maneuvers. j fco; v ;st week has, like those . ■' * 4 • V L \ preceded it, been in fa- 1 :• o*' the aljied armies. The ■ ole battle front has been in motion with striking gain.«i in the northern---part of France and' Belgium. The~barbarities and inhumanities inflicted upon the inhabitants of the occupied territories have been so hor rible until the world rejoices whenever the German - grasp has been broken on the towns and villages. An instance will suffice to show their nature. In one of the French villages r.cld by the Germans was a ca pable blacksmith wbg had worked for the Germans dur ing their four years of occupa tion. He was too good to be left with his skill for the f iench. Just before the Ger mans left the village they came i t his shop and held his hands THE INFLUENZA SITUA- TION. Any emergency is always made up of two elements, the one without and the bne within ourselves. This is illustrated • * by the following incident in the early days of the automo bile : An old negro, and his wife met a car which occasion ed the occupants of the wagon some alarm. .The chauffer stopped the car and asked the negro if he could be of any as sistance. He was told “Boss, if you can hold the ole \yoman I think I can manage the mule.” Inthe same way there will not be v6ry much trouble, to han dle the influenza epidemic in Barnwell County if the panic can be controlled. Panic is al ways und everywhere a nuL sance. f ;■ • By the authority of the Gov ernor the sheriff's have ordered closed all public assemblages. This includes all schools and religious gatherings. R is now the duty of the people fo pro- BARNWELL COUNTY OFFICIAL RECORD FOURTH LIBERTY LOAN. Apportionment with 30 per cent Arbitrary Added October 12 WHEN ANGELS SING BABIES. TO /V Standing "« 1 Allendale 2 Blaekville 3 Barnwell 1 Williston 5—Fairfax 6 Kline Dunbarton ; - 77 ; ' . Subscribed ... Apportioned by State Central Committee. Quota' - $108,000 85,000 175,000 82,000 70,000 14,000 Subscribed $150,050 ‘ 102,000 194,000 85,050 77,000 9,200 Per cent. . 140 over the top 120 “7 ; HI- % “• lal 44 ** 4. $540,000 $(>18,400 $018,000 540,000 Excess .v... 78,400 - 15 per cent. ♦Note. — Dunbarton’s quota ($4,500). was apportioned through F. &. M. Hank, which has not opened. Its quota has been added to Barnwell through whose banks its subscriptions has e been reported. Dunbarton has largely oversubscribed its quota. v - p. M. BUCKINGHAM,; County Chairman. ; BARNWELL GIRL LANDS AT HAWAII UNIVERSITY SOLDIERS 5^ TO TRAINING CAMP. ,. „ . teCt themselves by a wise exer- on h! j anvil while with a sledcre n , ,. K cise of common sense. It will do no good if wfe allow the chil- ; ...i,,. >,., rp , , •- dren to congregate in 'the r , u ,, ♦ „ in V, a few months ago to teach in ,, , r v<M< n av were: hammer h:* ?icL- they t i n FT a a pulp. verv old crushed hi; In .St. Quen- Miss Maria Brunson . Writes Her Mother From Hawaii. The following letter will be i^jead with interest by the many ! friends of Miss Maria Brunson, j daughter of Mrs. John I. Brun- .Four Younf Men Lttve for Cimp Pike, Ar kansas— Room for Four Hcndrrd Bo>*- t t The University of South Car olina i> receiving orders almost daily to supple more men for officer"' training camp's. Four men left lately for tin- central officer- training camp at Uarmp h a very old cathedral where the p eh pie had wor shipped for generations. The allies found that every pillar had been mined to explode, but the Germans had been hurried ; Greets .and backyards in luge. Phnippine island*: . numoers. Nor will flfe ol an.v j - .., ionollilu> Hawaii. advantage to close churches it .• “Aug Gth 1918 the men congregate in the TA AT ’ . .. .. , rpn ,• My Darling Mama: ^usual loafing places. I he dis away before -they could finish their task. They have organ ized their thieveries to collect ease is--spread by coughing or ~ sneezing whereby the germ laden droplets are v sprayed , . , through the air. The ‘patient .•verythirt ? of value to be Shipp--] shou|a ahvavs - use a towel or . to Germany, and to destroy handkerc p ef wKen sneezing what they couldn’t carry away. • or cough j n(r . Don’t show \ t hat “At .6 o’clock this morning such a gong as ther£ was going through the boat I never heard L..Grounded like a tin pan, amPl think it was. The men Teav- rU buries Bonaltl Fly; in charge of the s piad, Sineol Iv. Richimrg, Wil liam Koscoc Hunt and Donovan Cason. Twenty-six men have already gone to Camp Gordon, four to t:»mj) Hancock, two tb the College of the 4 it v New York and five to Camp Zachary Tay lor, Louisville, Kv. Besides fke-e the university has -up- (By Du Bo is.) A long time 5 ago, yes, it must bav'e been a long time ago, for I do not remember who told it, some one said in mv presence that when babies smile in their sleep they are seeing angels. If this be but a fairy story it seems to me that it-is too beau tiful a thought to scoff at. One can but know that all the sweet angels in God’s heaven must vie* with one another to watch over the sleep of a little bit of a sweet baby. And surely the singing angels will listen all | day to the tinkling of the water I in the great river of life in hopes that from the rythmic swing of the waters they can gather some new melody which they will take in their hearts down to earth and there hum a fresh lullaby to make baby smile. The great and good God in all His handiwork did not make any.thing so dear as little babies and surely it hap- pens t.hat God!s beautiful am Factories have been stripped of left,. are machinery. Farms without even a single tree orj agricultural, implement, even you an* a coward by refusing nearest sound to it I ever heard ptiedsa number of men as clerks was in the Egyptian Cabaret in to tlrt*\Ciiadel-. and Wofford, ‘The Garden of -Allah.’ It mcmbersH*f the 8. A. T. C. in sounded go weird and strange, j. 8mnh Caromka (’ »»»• an Four li I* 1 *? i The meaning was plain, how ever, and it only meant the ris- to the houses have, been de- such a way that a pocket is iag hour. We were approaching Hon olulu, and passing some of the Hawaiian Islands. We got dressed soon and went on deck to see the gorgeous scenery. That the unCyersity is con stantly being calleft mk>u*to fur-' ni.-h p~ri»pcctive officeis sj>eaks lighly Tor its staudiila with the government. Present^Ludi- • ■ stroved. Villages have been formed, when an attempt is strippeiieveo to here walls. In made to close the neck of it sbme villages the-curtains were anil capture the men and ene- taken from the windows and my stores* within it.Many packed for shipmenti The times during the past few wells have been poisoned by weeks it has seemed impossible Ob, such colors, and waters are them. In the homes of the bet- for the Germans to escape the the most brilliant in color I ter classes pictures have been traps laid for them, but skill ever saw—near at hand they cut into ribbons, pianos shot to in defeat must be conceded to are light and on looking far- pieces, every article of furni- them. In the most of cases tber out they change from dif- ture mutilated beyond repair, they have with small losses ex- ferent shades of green to blue As a matter of fact Prince Ei- tricated themselves. The and then deep indigo at the | <iu i e kly iadiu-tcH into th e ~ tel, the Kaiser’s son is under changed conditions of defeat horizon—this with the white a. T. C. has been extended to indictment in France for steal- and surrendered territory have caps make it a picture of unbe ing the furniture from a French impdiiced the nations allied lievable beauty. Almost house which he occupied and I with Germany the conviction abruptly from the water rises shipping itrto Berlin. In the that-she will be defeated,-and high hills, on which the light churches the Germans -have like rats ihfivjbad.better leave makes some light green and with their rifles shot the pipe the sinking ship, organs into Worthlessness, robbed the churches of com munion sendees and shipped them to Berlin for the silver in tals of our allies, the vessels. In violation of all t peace -discussion others dark from the shadows. President Wilson’s first note Clouds like smoke hover about to Germany created some un-’ their -crests, and every few easiness here and in the capi- minutes a shower pours down. lest by a “We arrived at seven, but Germany before./vye^ould go on land, a common decencies they when' should pull some of the allies medical inspector from land compelled to leave a village apart.^ IIis> last reply show§cF;-came-in--his,boat and lined us have defiled the beds and bed-, that Germany . can hope for on deck and examined our ding and the best rooms in the cations are that men in the S. T. C. will hi4ve excellent oppor tunities to enter training camps throughout t!:e year. Onlers received by. (’apt. A, \V. Chairsell, commanding offi- cer of the University of South Carolina, give an extension of time for men to enter the S. A. T. Ce until October JO. The or ders under which students can include October 30. > Tliegovermiieiit lpts i-hed a survey of the gels delight to bring smiles to God’s choice.. Sometimes babies go back to pla^ with- the angels and up there lit Heaven they will just smile anuH*oo all the time with no remembrance of earth save a fleeting, shadowy dream rtf that dear friotheKwho will fin-r ally Come on up to glory and hold the child again irr her cud dling arms. ■ Heaven must be a more won derful place than even the pro phets tell us of. Of course it is more wonderful to we poor mortals who have said goodbye to loved ones here below and know that beyond the “great unknown” they await within the jasper walls to welcome us to the wonderful land of prom ise. Mortal mind cannot grasp the idea of infinity and it often happens that some make a stumbling block of things not understandable to finite minds. And now it comes that reason ing about Heaven,, GoiR-Infi nity and such things must be _ taken with the knowledge that THE FOURTH LIBERTY LOAN ' 1 - • ■' Ha# Gone Into History a Wonderful Success - Barnwell’s Fart in It is Mo#t Creditable/ l . . -■ ‘ 1 T--~ * The meeting* held n the Cir cle on Saturday afternoon wa* something to be remembered. We had with us several sol- diers, five of whom are men from overseas; They have-seen service in the true" sense of tho-word. Sergeant Millett, ttill a sufferer from gas poisoning, told us of his experience in a few 5 manly words, I;1 is lungs are still so sore that /loud talking was im possible ; but those hear enough' to hear his story were brought face to face with what our men " are suffering in their effort to defeat Germany to save civiliza tion. JSergeant Gordon had his leg tembly % injured. ,His talk \yar~9tirring indeed, illustrated as it was. by his weak, aickly Ap pearance. He wag* on his way to Camp Hancock to enter the hos pital -for treatment. The other three soldiers, who entertained us wi h music, are »gifted in their ability to sing and play the type of music so popular to day, all over the wprliL They were all hack in Amend 1 to re- g»Hi—health, injured in—hnttto umver- sity and finds that there is room for approximately 400 students of the S. A. T. C. The enroll ment at the university is about- 5‘>0 and the government survey shows that 1.000 studentsean l>e “over, there,” \et they were al ways eager to respond tocallsof the crowd,for more innsjc. Live men, putting vim and file in all they did, tiie same spirit that they put into going “over the top' in Fctmccv - = —— ..At••■fir*t the respou'sc to buy Fourth Liberty bonds vasweak and ftlbw jh i*oming, causing rnu.h au.xioU’ le>t Barnwell fful tor make up her quota. Oue ' card anxious remarks on all side*), but as the sun sank low iu, I lie west and the time ran on to six o’clock the speakers, County^ Chairman Perry* Buckingham, Local Chairman Edgar Brown, J Entile Harley, HmGMr. N. B. Gamble, aided by' Sergt., Maj. (4 inn of New York, seemed to become inspired and received & wild nsponse from tlte crowd to the slogan of the hour, “Buy Fourth Liberty Bonds,” and be lieve me, they bought them, $20,000 in twenty imputes, thereby putting the city of Barn- Well twenty thousand -dollam over her allotment*;this included - the 30% added at the last mo- metit. ■Barnwell county is $78/000 “ever the top.” SPECIAL TERM OF COURT CBM- \ 1 enrol ed at the university.—The soriability Stale, • ’ H * WAR BRINGS BROTHER TOGETHER Suppose you had a brother. ! uppbi*e, too, that you hadn’t one who made all things surely did not figure with a finite mind/ The application is self evident. The digression here could not be helped, for the YENES AT BARNWELL N0Y.4^ y The October term of Court of General Sessions was dis- misstd by an order of Judge Townsend on accbuut -S e , , . . .’ ... of *the Spanish iufluenzaeDi- wntcrfound his mmd rambling (leniic> ai ‘ (l by S{lid order into the reafm of “human-rea- 1 will only an ’unconditional surren- hands to see if we had small- seen that brother for years and homes by making them public i der. /The allies are determined ;pox, etc ; ^T suppose. 5Yhen this toilets for German soldiers, j that neither Germany rtor any wasyltfne another inspector ex-f+^^^^k The'story will never be'toldvAf °t her nation can ever disturb amfned the passprfrts -and iden- What suffering* they have .he world’s peace again. Humification cards that were given brorght to wohyen and chil-, yet too early to count chickons; us yesterday. This card vvas a dren; -The- (Lerman policy but when''the"'allies ap^ictori-'Tpermit to leave today and re seems to be to frighten the peo- *ous we’mall probably see Ger-! turn—we showed it at the cus- pledntorsxrbmission by a policy many much /mailer in area, her of terribleness. -j subject peoples\liberated and On the military side it must formed^ into sovereign states, be. remembered that railroads [her rtwn . toms gate. " “Mrs. Brown, Miss Loshe, Miss Keenkle, ( Young) * Mr. people will, have a Cotcher- an<J I took- a taxU are absolutely 1 necessary ~fo large^haru-iiHhe goyermpent ($3.00 an hour) for a sightsee ing trip. We went to Pali, one. -pf the high mountains, a. scenic attraction—not a volcano! Here the wind is sastiff one can •sage O supply the armies in any terpi^ tory. When these lines of'sup- ply are cut the arrpl^s must move out or be starved.* The allies have been pinching out the towns through are railway junctions; and thus forcing and her kings become or mental figureheads. Germany will surely have to pay the bill for the damages she has cost. The news now is that she will-j scarcely curb her submarine warfare and instruct her armies to re- he > ihK stand.' From this -the Germans.- This ac- Train from needless damage. >unts for .the large-territories .Jthat we have won. Another . way is ta drive into the terri tory- heUT by the Germans at two points on tRe same line in The best military "authorities do not regard Germany as a defeated nation, but she is daily getting nearer to that end. .' • ’ a great height we looked down .on Waikiki Beach, which we visited minded me of‘They are w’ear ing them higher in Hawaii’^— Mamie Nell’s favorite son have not seen years, since your hoy hood in ust iningi' e' then,, Mow .joyous you would be it* after wn have beeiPjsent i<> camp, a map whom you' had ue^ r known before had located that long ab-ent brother for. }ou. You can than appreciate the gratitude that was convoyed in a most ungramatical m< to the Jewish Welfare “1 wiite- you. I am a Jewish soldier. I am bv this camp. Here is by us. in niin|i, ; the lent of the Jewish Welfare Board with two representatives who do very good work for the Jewish soldiers. I Write*, you what t iey do' for me, They find for me a brother 1—have not* heard from fer !('• years- convene a special term on the i first Mqnday,in November with ' It is in an infinite realm that Judge W. H/Townsend presid- our loved ones - rest with the ing. The following are the petit Lamb; and over there all is se- jurors for the first week: rene and we MUST rejoice Allendale—A. B. Appleby, (). again "and again that the furv^'- ^ oddward^Ji. W. WilsowK-O.—^<* rows of pain and anguish are ( *Hammond, J B. Brunson. Barnwed-—J.*M. Brabham, T„ ■ all smoothed out by the pierced , ‘ . , ' " hands of the Redeemer and nlackville — where there was a sigh or cry there' is now..a smile and song. i J. II. S a Boaid ENCACEMENT ANNOUNCED. Williston. Oct, 1'.).—Special s eyniour Owens' etigragenmnt of Continued *>n If you want a |?>iir of - closely „ , , tnated young mult a* weighing i^the shre triedL rOTind l> 2 d o lbs., caU < n O. F. loirthl* g\ ' Rizer at Olar. - !-l T Mrs. Samuol announces tin her daughter, Nancy, to Mr. Urai Clark l’artbnv. The''Wed- ■ ding will take place on Novem ber “2, from the Vesideuce of Mrs. William Montague .loin*. No cards. RED OROSS MEETING POSTPONED meeting txi The'Red Cross meeting flo he afterwards.' .yit re- 4 appreciaie it very mtuh '. lield at the Bank «# NVcaiem (’arolina on Oclonfr 24th at 4 oY’lock p. m , has been called oft indefinitely ,on account of the epidemic of Spanish intiuenza Notice will be gyven later as to I the date of the meetjji'g. a inters, Elias Hartzog, W. H. Dpden- a hoJf, Eli*ha Martin, Jacob Delk ' s: h. ytin. 4 Baliioc—F. M. Walker. Bennett Spring*—G. I). Kirk land. . Great CypiVs*—G. W. Hulto* Georges Creek—M. L. Hutto, .1. 11. Nix, Starling Grubbs, F.,Hutto, Geo. Ray. W. II. Fail, M. C. Diamond. Richland—Cl M. Rantall, , E. II. Williams, Red Oak—J. M. Easterling. Rosemary—W. R. MitchtIL Jr., J. N. Folk: MSvcamore*^J. Baynes, B. L. Beard. ' '****-.-- \\ illistan—W k. Kennedy, ILvMfc 1 homp-on, L M.Sorawli, J. J. L. Hair, F. W. DuBose, Z« ke Mattbewivr r 4 Mr. M. H, Holly, of Kline, was in Ahe iaty Tuesday. < % L -