Barnwell sentinel. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 185?-1925, October 31, 1918, Image 3
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BARNWELL SENTINEL, BARNWELL, BOUTS CAROLINA
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iwt vshow. tnrep, 2; "linaSSr - of poultry I NOTICE OF ELECTION.' awM»-F c it.iHch.-p
untiiiMiw. I flwk mmmKaww oHmAI— Win t | a t ^ . Martin k ftf. Wwr ^ w,,CD *" r ’
; full speeiF ut the tiqfe, but as
a# I took the jvlieel she cm <l<^vn
> EX-GUNNER AND CHIEF PETT^OFFICERrUrS^NAVY
MEMBER.* OF THE FOREIGN LEGION OF ,pRANCE
CAPTAIN GUN TURRET, FRENCH BATTLESHIP CASSAR.D
WINNER OF THE CROIX'DE GUERRE
Copyright. 1918. by Reilly »nd BnaonCo. Through Sptxnl Amngeroer* With the George Moohew Ad*mj Service
\
•\
CHAPTER XVII— Continued.
_ —15—
Also, by this time some of the men
had lost their heads completely; inf
fact, had gone violently crazy, and the
rest of us were afraid of them.* Wo
were all thinking' of the fight that
might occur any moment between the
Yarrow dale and some-other vessel and
we knew we were-in the likeliest place
for the vessel t<t be -struck. Even
though Wo were not hit amidships, If
the ship were siuking vve dhl mit think
the German's would give jis a chance to
escape. We figured from what they
had said that we would go down with
the ship. And going dow n on a ship in
which you are a prisoner is quite dif
ferent from .going down with one for
which you ha\vM»ei*n fighting. You
arrive a Lithe same place, hut the feel
ing is different. " ~-“ a =;
Some of. us thought of overpowering-
the crew ami taking the vessel into our
own hands, and we got the rest of
the sum* or nearly sane men together
and tried to get up a scheme for doing
It. 1 was strong for tin* plan and so
were several others, hqt the Limey of- ■ we could,, and we would not let the
Budewitz, who began mauling him be
fore the sentry even had ^told his
story. After a while Badewitz quit
pounding the cook, and listened to the
sentry. Then Badewitz-said the cook
had put a note in the dixie before he
dropped it, so they beat him up again
and put 1 iiml riIn>tYST'’ After- that they
sent the rest of the cooks back, and
would not Jet tliem oy deck again.
.They had Plenty of canned goods and
iSffat aboard, but they would not give
us any.
Five of the* men were buried at sea
that day. More qiert were going mad
every minute, and it was a terrible
place; pitch dark, grimy, loose coal,
underfoot, coal-dusty air to breathe,;
body-tilth everywhere. Some of.the
crazy men howled like dogs.. But we
were not as much afraid of these us.
w-e were of -tle*. others who tout still,
hut slipped around*in the dark with
lumps of coal in their hands'T We
got so we would not go near each
other for fear we were running into a
crazy man. 1 Those, of us'" wh'o w ere
sane collected as near the fiddley as
ficers who were with us advised
against it.' They said the Germans
were taking Tis to a neutral country,
where we wuSild be interned, which
\v«s just what the Germans bad told
us, but what fc't of .us believed.
Then some others said that if we
started anything the Germans would
tire the time TxifnTis. \\v reptted that
at least the Germans would go west
with us, hut Tln-y crmld not see that
there wits any glory in that. For my
self, I thought the Germans would not
Tttq th«* he»ei»>’ until the last minute.
others get near us, but shoved them
hack or shied lumps of coal at them.
And every once in a While some one
of its would begin to act queer. May
be he would let out a howl suddenly,
without any warning. Or he w'ould
with being a quartermaster I could
not see. * /
But' they drilled my up onto, the
bridge and told me to take the wheel.
What their idea was I do not know'.
Possibly, they wanted a noncoirfbataut-
at the wheel in case they were over*
hauled by a neutral" vessel. - We were
going full
soon
to half speed, and stayed that way for
half an hour. Then up to fulf speed
again. '
Pretty soon 'there .was a tramp
steamer on the star boar 4 boW, aud al
most before I saw it, there were two
more sentries on each side of me,
prodding me* with their revolvers and
warning me-.tO keep ,on the course*.
They had civilian clothes mi. ^
Then We'went through th^{ Sk'nger
Itgck and CattegatTwhich are narrow
strips of water leading to the Baltic,
aqd w;e were only a mile from^ shore
with vessels all about ns. It would
have . beeu an easy thing for me to
signal wha't our ship was and who
were aboard, but they had six sentries
on my neck'all the time to keep me
from it. 1 never wanted to do any
thing, worse in my life -Than jump
overboard or signal. But I would
have been shot vrfown before 1 liad
ntyre than started to do either, so' I
just stayed with tlBTw beet.
We wore nearing ‘one of the Dan
ish islands in tin* Baltic when we
sighted a fug. She began to smoke
tip and blow her siren. The sailors got
very excited and rim arouiid in crazy
style, and Badewitz began shouting
more orders than they could get a way
with.- The. sentries left "life and ran
with the rest of the FritV.ies to the
boat deck and started to brwer one of j
the lifeboats. But Badewitz was right *
on llielr heels and kicked the whole
bunch around in‘great shape, roaring
like a hull all the time.
Ttcft ttiewRenl ami ran to the etqi f
of tin* bridge, to jump overboard. But [
tlie minute I let go of tin* wheel the
vessel (ell off of the course, and they j
noticed it, amj Badewitz sent five of,/
; them up; on the by^
j -others to the side wTrh their revolvers*
j tw shoot me if 1 should reach the w;km
I ter. I think if I laid hail any rope to
j lash the wheel with 1. could have got
| away and they wimbl not have known
t
Wheu the five sailors -reached the
r
■/
German^ patrol boat heafd him and
flashed a searchlight. They picked up
Joyce.,Tight away, hut Barney was
making g(*r>d headway and was althost*
free when they dragged him in. They
heat them up on thenatrol, boat, and
wlien they put them back oh the
Yarrowdale Badewitz beat them ’ up
sonic more and put them in lrofis.
Theny l/y hTgaiTTO shoo^ trt^bccrftteL ||| g^ eUry
with bis revolver,^nnd he had a sHilor Moo^
stand by to hand him another reyol ; j
ver, when the first one was empty.
Then he woqld gash their face's with
the barr.eLof tlie revolver and sliout,
“I’m Badewitz. I’m the man who
fooled the English,” and shoot at them
Nome more.
All the while the satlTTO Were cele
brating. drinkihg and eating, aftd yell
ing, as usual, and the whistles on all
the German ships were blowing, 'and
they were., having a great fest. After
a,bout thirty hours we left; being es
corted by a mine-layer and a mine
sweeper. I asked a German garby’ if
that was the whole German navy, and
he looked Surprised and did not- knbw
I w;as kidding him, and said no. Then
I said, ‘de,) the English got all the rest,
did they?”'and he handed me one'in
the mouth with his bayonet hilt, so I
quit kidding him.
\Ve saw..rows and rows of mines,
and the German sailors pointed out
what they, said were II. M. SS. Lion
and Nomad, but I do hot know whyth-
The Wreck
of Faith
-1
By REV. J. H. RALSTON, D. D. /
SecreUry ot CorTWpondence Department,
Moody Bible In*tltat«. Chicago ;
LOOK iif CHILD'S
'TONGUE IF SICK, :
CROSS, FEVERISH
HURRY, MOTHER! REMOVE POI*
^Oks FROM LITTLE STOMACH*
LIVER, BOWELBr-
TKXT- When the son of man conhth,
- ihall he>-ftnd fulth on the earth?—Luke,
18:8.
These words have been interpreted
as meaning that when Jesus Christ-re-.
• ; , turns to This
world that lie will
fi n d n o fait h.
They have been
interpreted As be-
lng-*simplw^H> in-
.4|uiry, becjih'se qf
the teacfiings of
tin* B i b 1 e and
present world
conditions us to
faith at t ha t
- liiiie. In either
case we have a
wreck in «vjew.
.-whether real ’ or
Imaginary, y—
GIVE CALIFORNI A SYRUP OF, FIGS
AT ONCE IF BtLIOUS OR
CONSTIPATED.
.... . bridge one of them jumped for tlu
just quit- talking and begin to sneak , , .
J , , , -! cord and gave our siren five Ion;
around. Or lu* would squat down ami
nnd that we would have a chance at
the boats before they got all of us
anyway. There were only thirteen
German sailors on board, besides their
commander. This last IIuu was
named Badewitz.
So tin*, pacifists ruled, because we
could Dot do anything unless we were
all together, nnd there was no mutiny.
They said we were hotheads, the rest
of us. but I ?till think we could have
made a da sit for it< and . overpowered
bur’ sentTtes. rmrt e+t-bee v,er .Uu!
side with theJlfehoats, or taJien over
the whole ship. It would have been
ftetter for us if we had tried, and if
the pacifists had known njvat was
coming to us tho>\wmild have fired
thr* time bombs tlhMnsciv»‘s rather
than go on into thaPfuture. How
ever, that is spilt milk.
We wVre n<>r~ allowed to pp*Mt the
portholes while we were in tint bunk
ers, milder penalty of death, and there
in the dark, in that blinking air, it is
no wonder many of us \m*ul crazjv
Among us was a fellow ’named Har
rington, about six feet tall and weigh
ing 250 pounds. He seemed tq be all
right mentally, but some of us
thought afterwards he was crazy.
Anyway, I do not blame him for what
he did. Harrington rushed up the
' fiddley nnd opened tl** door. There
was a German sentry there, and Har
rington made a sw ing at hint and then
grabbed his bayonet. The sentry
yelled nnd some others came down
,froin the bridge nnd shot Harrington
through the hand,.) After they had
beaten Harrington pretty ^ftdly, the
hull'.of the bunch, Badewitz himself,
came over aud hammered Harrington
all around the deck. Then they put
him 1n irons and took hint to the chart
room. 1
The next day we were sitting in the
fiddley getting warm w r hen the door
opened find -there was Badewitz. He
felled “Ileraus!” and began firing at,
us with a revolver, sp we beat it back
onto the coal. Pretty soon the (lpor
opened again. But it was only a Cer-
- ntan sentry. He threw down a note.
It was Written In English and read.
‘‘Pick out eight men for cooks.” So.,
we picked out eight men from the va
rious vessels and they went on deck
and rigged up a'gnllpy aft.
But we did not receive any knives,
forks, spoons or pjatys. The first
melt we gat was nothing but macaro
ni, piled up on pieces of cardboard I
boxes. Then we appointed four men
to serve the macaroni, and they got
--four pieces of wood. <he cleanest we
could find, which was not very clean
at that, and they dug around in the
macaroni and divided it up find put
It in our hands. We had to eat It
- after that front our grimy fingers.
Those who were helped first had to go
farthest back on the coaL_to eat it,
and 'those who were helped'last got
less, ^because the dividers got more
ri\r( r ftn~ r TQ\vard this end ~ and gave
smaller portions.
But we'dld hoj get luacarprrMrcry
-bmg. A cook front the Vlqltaire was
cleaning a copper dixie that the mac-
L hH+*m--bafi- been cooked lu, aud he was
begin to mumble. We could not tell
just when- a ntan had begun to lose
his mind. He would seeiu—jqst like
the rest of us, because none of us was
much better than a beast.
We could not take turns sleeping
hhTTslandlng watch agalust the c^azy-
men, because when we talked about
it, we agreed that none of us could
tell whether, or not the sentries would
go crazy while on watch and have the
blasts in answer to the tug. The tug
was about- to launch a torpedo, and
we whistled Just lu time. .One of our
men was looking front the fiddley, and
In* saw the lluns making for the life
boats, so he got two or three others
anil they all yelled together, “Don’t
them—get—away !,” thinking that *
Look at tliv tongue, mother! If
coated, it laTa sure sign thut your lit-
Knitji may he Tje one’s stomach, liver and bowels
understood .as the needs a gentle, thorough cleansiug at
body of Christian truth given, mee for once.
all in tlie first century* embracing the When peevish, cross, listless, pale,
fundamentals- of our Christian sys* ~ doesn't sleep,, doesn’t eat or 4act natu-
tem—the- infallibility of the Holy rally, or is feverish, stomqch sour.
Scriptures, the deity of .Christ, the lost breath had; has stomach-ache, /Nora
ttf-aiHM bv nature, the r ohly hope throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a
of recovery by the atonement of Clirist' .teaspoonful (if "California Syrup of
on the cross,'etc. This may be consid
ered front the standpoint of the church
in its visible form or that, of the Indi
vidual, personal interest in the sub
ject’ being emphasized with reference
iu the-latter rather than with the for-
ihit. 'The' aspect of the former, be
cause it determines tin' aspect of the
latter, shall have fuller treatment.
Faith Iris laid a varied experience.
. * ,
For some three- centuries it was held
with comparative fidelity. Then the
clouds of paganism and lust for em
bracing Christianity its an element of
political life-, began to gather. For
Figs,” and in a few hours all the foul,
constipated waste, undigested food
and sour bile gently moves out of the
little bowels without griping, and you
have a well, playful child again.
iYou needn’t coax sick children to
take this lin'rniTess "fruit laxative ;**-
Ifiey■"’hefg'TtY*'rtHrn-otl't-JftsPv-*tul it—
always makes them feel splendid. .
Ask your druggist for a bottle of
“California, Syrup of Figs,” which has
directions f«»r babies, children of all
ages and fyr grown-ups plainly on the
bottle. • Beware of counterfeits sold
here. To be sure you get the genuine,
soqte centuries there was great dqrfr- ask to see that ft Is made‘by the “Call-
ness. In the period of tlu* Crusades fornln Fig Syrup Company.” Refuse
there were - flickering lights. Thep. any (fther kind wirtr contempt.—Adv.
darkness came over Christian thought ;— " ~r:—
until the days of Husx in Bohemia and New Heat-Stroke Theory.
Wlekllffe In England. Persecution In So-called “heat stroke” proves to he
TVoherhla and Indifference tn England jnerely. R symptom of malignant mala-
Uu*y would get the Aput over and
leuve the ship, aud trying to yell loud
enough for the tug to hear them.
. _ . Badewitz took this man aud two or
rest of ys at their mercy. It was aw- | t i, ree (jtin.rs, whether they were the
ful to talk ahmiKgolnii crazy In this ^,, 3 wjK „ r „„ f: „ K . m
way, amd to figure that you yourself
tip and put them in irons,
was
I thought
roittht t.c the nest, amt that It tyns al- , „ wu8 g „ ing t0 tt lmlUny
m,;st sure to happen.If you did not ubo#r<| but „ dlJ „ ff _
\gt*t some sleep soon. But It was worse
to find a man near you going, and have
to .boot hint out with the other insane
men. *
The days passed like that, with
nothing to do but suffer, wl starve
and freeze. It got'Colder and colder,,
and all we could fcrnp ourselves in
was the coal. We began to speculate
on where we were. It was not till
I —. • *
later than an old skipper in our hunch
told us that we had rounded the north
ern coast of Iceland.
Finally, one day, a lad yelled imvn
“Land!” nnd we all dove for the fid
dley, like wild men, and those who
j could get near enough looked out, nnd
sure ('nought there was the coast-of
I ant not sure what the IIuus ^ere so
excited about. "
The ulhcr fu.ur sailors who ennte up
x»n the bridge' did not touch- me, -hut
just kept me covered with their re
volvers. That was the way with them
-Mhey. would not touch us unless
BiUlewitz wa$ there or they had bayo
nets. The old bull himself came up
on the bridge after he had beaten up
a few men, threw me around quite a
bit and kicked me down from the
bridge und slammed me into the coal
bunkers. I felt pretty sore, as you
can Imagine, attd disappointed aud
pretty low generally.
After a while we Itedyd the anchor
A Cup of Water for Our New Year's
Dinner.
soon brought unother season of dark
ness, until In Germany, un(ler Martin
Luther, the light arose that has shone
er they were the same on^s that were f° r four hundred years, and accounts
In the. Jutland battle or not. Finally for what we have of the true -faith to-
welanded at Swttmmumb* just as the'; day. - - |
hells were ringing the old year out < Is the faith of the church, as such; a
nnd the new yeai\tp. We were a fine wreck'today? Do we find all sails set
hunch of blackbirds to hand the kaiser and drawing, hound confidently for aT
for a New Year’s present, believe me. distant port? Or do we see that church
They mustered us up on deck, and hesitating, staggering In the midst of
each of us got a cup of water for our changing teachings as to fundamentals
New Year’s spree. Then we saw we pjjg s lii(> with contrary winds ancF
were In,for it, and all hope gone, but laboring hard to avoid the rocks yn
we were glnd to be released from our which lt Inny 5e a total wree k7
nole, because we had been prisoners
since December 10—three days on the
Mi any e ami eighteen-on t he Yarrow-
da 1 e— a n (V the^coal was not tmy softer
than when we first sat on it.
So we begun singing, “Pack up your
troubles in your old kit bag nnd smile,
hoys, smile.. What’s the use (♦€ worry
rln, according to the late experience
In Mesopotamia of Dr. E. H. Milner,
a British physician. Tlu* malaria par
asite was found' In the blood of heat
stroke victims, nnd the use of quinine
reduced the mortality from more than
per cent to less than 12 per cent.—
Newark News. 1 Jf
When the brtfwg blows off a man’s
hat, he blames the hat, not the shape
of his Inetd. • - -
Money is always a satisfactory trav
eling companion.
—TT—W3 1
Is lt not true that some denomlna-
that
ns wl
tions of (’hristlank while still clinging
to orthodox creeds have abandoned
those creed's in tlTefr teachings? Faith
ful men in some denominations are
now crying to their brethren to sup
press* many of the church publications
ing? It’s never worth while,” niLl so as urt * distinctly infidel in their
forth. They made, us shut up, hut not teachings. f* s ^4t not trin^ that^ ntany
before we asked'ourselves If we were
downhearted, and everybody yelled
“No!”
And that is how we gave our re-
NoVyvay, very rugged and rocky and j chains rattling 'through on their wuy
covered with snow. We thought 1t
was all over then, and that we would
bo landeiLat Bergen sure. Then there
was the usual running' around and
yetting on deck, and \ye were not so
sure we would he landed, nnd very
suddenly ?t got colder than ever.
- I was in the fiddley, aching to get
out, and ready for anything that
might happen, when the door opened
None of Us Was Much Better Than a
Beast.
i
*
suddenly and Badewitz grabbed me,
and~asked me In English If I was a
quartermaster. I said yes, nnd he
pulled me by the arm to a cabin. I
did not know what was going to hap
pen, but he took an ollskitr-from the
wall nnd told me to putTt on.
There, were two sailors there also,
and they put life belts on,.and theo
and
4.*Ming ft over the side when the ves- | I was more puzzled than ever,
rnlh*1 heavily, aud dropped the ' seared, toor because I thought' maybe
dtxle, lato the briny. A sentry who , ; they going to throw me over
saw hiic drop it forced imu up to; board., though what that had* to do -auiiw the water wa> so c l'l. and
to get wet, and we pulled Up. Then
every German ship in the Baltic came
up to look us over, I guess. They
opened up the hatch covers, and the
Huh garfties and gobl-stripes came
aboard and looked down at us, mid
spit all. they could ou us, and called
us all. the different kinds of swine in
creation. They had them lined up
and filing past the hatchways—all of
them,giving us the once over in turn.
Maybe'they sold tickets for this show
—it would be lik6 the Huns. *.
At first we were milling around try
ing to- get out front under the hatch
openings and the shower of spit, but
some Limey officer sang out, “Brit
ishers all! Don’t give way!'’ and we
stood still, and let them spit their
damned tier man dungs out before we
wquld rtiove for them, and some Cor-
nishmen began singiug their _.song
about Trelawney. So we made dut
„that we djid not know'such a thing as
a German ever lived. V
*We got better acquainted with Ger
man spitting later on, nnd believe n*?,
they are great little spitters, not much
on distance or accuracy, but quick In
action and well supplied with ammu
nition. Spitting on prisoners Is the
favorite indoor and outdoor sport for
Germans, tuetv and women alike.
When the show was over, they
rohsted us up on deck and put us to
work throwing the salt pork and can
ned goods into'two German mine-lay
ers. While we were^at it' a Danish
patrol boat came out and tied along
side us, and some of her officers came
aboard and saw us. They knew; we
were prisoners : of-war, and they knew
that a vessel carrying prlsoners-of-
wnr must not remain-in neutral wa
ters for ovLr twenty-four hours, but
they did not say anything about* it.
That night pro m* n n i ; d Barney
Hyll and Joyce, the latter a" gunner
from the Mount Temple, sneaked up
on - deck and aft to'the* poop deck.
There'was a pair of wooden stairs
leadtng to the tup pf tin* poop dock,
and Joyce and Hill lifted It; niftt got
It over tin* side with a rope t© it. Tlie
two of them got down fnfo the*uater
all right, but Joyce let out a yell b<r
hungry-souls go to church and come
away hungry because they have, not
heard the Gospel of Jesus Christ?
IlUw about the individual? Not long
ago 'a young man. who was a gradu
ate of one of America’s greatest uni
versities and was finishing his second
yetvr-ln alt orthodox theological semi
nary, said to the writer that he had
lost his faith, had no confidence in the
gards to fS\v|nemunde.
* CHAPTER XVIII. ^
“Pack Up Your Troubles."
We arrived'at SwinemUnde. on the
east bank, and after we had had our _, ,,, , , ,
drink of water and Tt ad d^eetL-r ousted, ®) bl , e ‘ d,d » ot acc *P} ,h, ‘ ^ of *^ SU8
hack into the bunkers. Badewitz went £ ,rlst> and was thoroughly unhappy,
across to the West side la a launch Thlsds an extreme ease, but the writer
with Joyce und Hill und a guard of haS ht,d mnn y P eo I >,e of Ubera1 '
sailors. They were to be shot the educat,on give substantially the same
next morning, with some others, at a t estimon y*
public sliooting-fest. The rest of us What is\the Somewhat remote rea-
wrapped ourselves in lumps of coal as son Mr this situation as to religious
best we could and tried to sleep. teaching? We must go to the land ot
In the morning crowds of Germans Martin Luther. The wqf1c~of corfupt-
cante aboard us and were turned ing the Bible had progressed- until
loose on the boxes in the hold. It nearly all German universities and
was a sight to see them rip off the theological schools had repudiated the
covers and gobble the salami and oth- faith of Luther, although clinging to
er stuff that we carried. Table man- fils name. Learned men said certain
ners^are not needed when there ik .fie results hail been attained nnd these
table, ^l^gUess, but If you had seen results discredited the Bible. With
them, you would say these Germans ,amazing rapidity this conclusion took
did not even have trough manners. I hold In England and Scotland and our
have seen hogs that were more fin- own country. .Destructive biblical
leky.; v 1 /'criticism aud /Darwinian evolution
WhileThey were at it, hand to hand swept over nearly all our great unl-
with the chow, giving and receiving versitles and our Bible was in the.
rlsone
Nervous and All Unstrung?
F!©el norvnui and T?rltable all ths
tlmrY ermttfHtarWy worry, qvar triflesT
Then there's somvthimr wrong. Back
of lt all may be weak kidneya. Juat
as nerve wear Is a cause of kidney
weakness, so Is kidney trouble a
cause of nervousness. If you have
backache, “blues," nervous apella,
headaches, dizzy spells, kidney lr-
regularitTeS and a tired, worn feel
ing, ,try Doan's Kidney Pills. They
are recommended by thousands.
A North Carolina Casa
*Be^f
/Sftuei
TtlU L
Story*
Mrs. S. W. Beat-
tie. 807 E. Ninth
St., .Charlotte, N.
C., says: "I used
Doan's Kidney
Pllla for a severe
backache fro m
which I had euf
fered for years atvd
couldn’t find any
thing that would
give me relief. . I
saw Doan’s Kidney
Pllts advertised anil
got some and used* i
them. They entlre-jv!
ly cured me, I am S3
In goo^ 1 health at the present time
give Doan’s Kidney Pills all the cr
for this.”
Gat Daaa's at Any Star*, 60c a Baa
DOAN’S VSSff-
FOSTEHMILBURN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y.
[Carters
.% [;-j
IflVER
| PILLS.
1
terrible punishment, .we prisoners scrap heap. 'Those of us who have
were mustered on deck,, counted, watched the trend of German theo-
klcked onto tugs and transferred to logical teaching have observed .a (tre-
the west bank, where the mob was * mendous advance since the days of
waiting for us. My wounds, as you Schlelermacher, Baur and Hoffman to
can imagine, were Iff a pretty bad the days of Kuenen, Graf and Cornlll.
state by this time, and were getting It was had enough with the former,
more painful every minute, so that-L worse with the latter and" the final
found I was getting ugly and anxious plunge was made by men like Neitsz-
for an argument. I knew that if I che, who utterly ignored the Bible
stayed this way I would probably o,nd defied God himself. Is It any won-
never come out alive, for there Is del* that Germany 1s suffering today,
every chance you could want to pick
a quarrel whileiypu are a' prisoner
that will mean freedom for you—but
only the freedom of going west, which
I was hot anxious to try.
__ \\h n we, got near thf nest bank,
on the lugs, we could see that we were
up a gat nst a battle with our arms tied.
Over half the crowd wus women afitt
children, I should say, and the rest
were laborers and oMTirades, and re- 1
nerir
ider
and Is it much les 8 s -wonder that the
Saxon world is suffering likewise? j,
When will men learn wisdom?
For the Individual, c?qvr*eially re
specting 'young people, the old-fash- i
ioned ^religion mpst come hack. The |
old religious home must he rest-oredvl
IIow tnanjvfirofe-vedly religious homes
are religions wrecks!- 1 j. - , ^
Rnok to God ’ Back th Jesus Ghrlst?
For Constipation
Carter’s Little -
Liver Pilk
will set you right
over night
Purely Vegetable
Small pai, Small Dom. Small Price
serve soldiers, and roughnecks, gen- ba< _' < ye must get hack to-
ecally. VYe could see the spit experts • ,b ‘‘ Thank <»qd it is being put>-
—the spir. snipers,—deployed to the 1 ;j | gfiyjj ls _ ri fi v ’ t ‘ r before arid the xlemhnd
front, almost.
CTO CONTINFED
T i-^r
I. Fully niqp^ettfhs
would vanish If wv di
for it i^ leyoud the supply. Thank
^ * God for this fact as.to the'hunger rrf
f the people fo* ~ '!■ -
Carter^ Iron Pills
Will restore color to the facwotf
those who laclt lronin ihe btood,
•B most pale-toced_
1
Children’s Cough*
but be checked end more oeriooe «onditioae
of the tlxrozt will be often avoided by
promptly giving the child, a does of sms
PISO
r *
I ^