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>*QC TWO BARNWELL SENTINEL. BARNWELL. SOUTH CAROLINA HEALTH TALK ^Spanish Influenza or Grip BT DR. DEE H. SMITH. An old enemy in with na. again, and whether we fight a German or a germ, we Bunt put up a good fight, and not be afraid. The influenza rune & very brief course - when the patient is careful, and if we keep the system in good condition and throw off the poisons whi6h tend to accumulate within our bodies, we can escape the di* •a**. Remember these three C’a—a clean mouth, a clean skin, and clean bowels. To carry off poisons from the system and > keep the bowels loose, daily doses of a pleasant laxative should be taken. /Such a one is made of May-apple, leaves of aloe, root of jalap, and called.Dr. Pierce’s Pleas ant Pellets. Hot lemonade should be used freely if attacked by a cold, and the pa tient should be put to bed after a hot mustard foot-bath. , To prevent the attack of bronchitis or pneumonia and to control the pain, ■Anuric tablets should be obtained at the drug store, and one given every two hours, with lemonade. The Anuric • tablets were fiist discovered by Dr. Pierce, and, as they flush the bladder and cleanse the kidneys, they carry away mitTi of the poi sons and the uric acid. It is important that broths, milk, but termilk, ice-cream and simple diet be given regularly to strengthen the system and in crease the vital resistance. The fever is diminished by the use of the Anuric tab lets, but in addition, the forehead, arms .. . and hands may bs bathed with water - t “ e crazy men ’ «L they called us. Most were certainly a miserable looking or the people were Women, arid as soon bunch. They spent most of their time EX-GUNNER AND CHIEF PETTV^OFFfCERrU.'^NAVY ^ “ MEMBER. OF THE FOREIGN LEGION OF FRANCE CAPTAIN GUN TURRET. FRENCH BATTLESHIP CASSAPJ) WINNER OF THE CROIX DE GUERRE ITII, by Italy and Booon Co., Though Special Arrangement Weh the George MenSew Adam Service 1_ CHAPTER XXI. * —18— A Vlait From Mr. Gerard. Late that night we arrived at Dul- men, Westphalia. We were rousted out of the carriages, mustered on the platform, counted, then drilled through the streets. In spite of the latenessrT the streets were pretty well filled with people, and they zig-zagged us through all the streets they could, so that all the people would have a chance to see days. They thought nothing of pick ing a fight, with a sentry and giving him a good battle, even though he was armed with rifle and bayonet. We soon learned that unless his pals are around a German will not stand by his arguments with his fists. Ift other f-he outtalk you, he will beat you up, but if he cannot, it is a case of comes Heinle going back. The Russian prisoners at Dulraen (tepid) in which a tablespoc nful of sal- amtus has been dissolved in a quart. After an attack of ' grip _or pneumonia to build up and strengthen the system, obtain at the drag store a good iron tonic, called “Irontfc” Tablets, or that well known herbal tonic, Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical _. Discovery. — — Why He Didn’t Hjt Him. I heard some loud voices among the .children In front of the house, and In a moment Arthur mine in. I asked what was the trouble and he explained that u flew comer was picking a fight with the boys. “Whnt did you do?” I asked. “Well,” replied Arthur, “I’d have, hit him If It hadn’t been for his strength- fulness!”—Chicago Tribune. as they saw. us .coming, they begun singing the. “Watch on the Rhine” or some other Germnu song, and it .was funny to see window’s opening and fat fraus, with night-caps on, sticking their heads out of the windows. They would gtve us a quick once-ovor, and plpd up like a boatswain: “Scfiweln- hund—Vaterland—Wacht am Rhein” So we gave them “Tipperary’' and “Pack Up ^ Your Troubles,” and showed them how to sjng. Our guards wandering around the Russian bar racks, hunting for rotten potato peel ings and other garbage, which they would eat. When they saw Fritz throw out his swill, they would dive right through the barbed wire^ one After another, and their hands and face and clothes were always torn from it. It was unhealthy to stand other times trying to pick a fight. It was all one t> me: I fust wanted some thing to do. I found what I wanted, all right I had quite a talk with a sentry in front' of a barracks. It must bare lasted three-quarters of an hour, file did not know what I was calling him, and I did not know what he was call ing me. I could have handled him all right, but another sentry carfie up on my blind side and'grabbed me and the talk was over. They dragged me to the commander of the camp and he instructed them to give me a bath. So they took me to the bathhouse, where I was, stripped, and lushed. All the time they were whipping me I was thinking what a joke it was on me, because I had been looking for excitement and had got more than I wanted, so I laughed and the Huns thought I was crazy sure. I was dumped into a vat of hot water nnrrvjit the same time ray clothes were given a boiling, which was good for them. Then I was forced into ' my wet clothes and marched back to the bar-, racks. This bath and the stroll through the snow In wet clothes Just about did for me. Nowadays, when I sit iniA draft for a aecqnd and catch cold, I wonder that I am still alive to catch It. Having gone through Dir- mude and the Dardanelles and the sinking of the Georgic and four Ger- maa-ppisen camps and a few other things—I shall probably trip over a hole ip a church carpet and break my afterward was to talk about his visit and what he had said to (hem. We knew Mr. Gerard had got the Germans To moke conditions better in some of the worst hell-holes IS” Germany ana the men were always glad when he came around. They ft It they had some thing better to look forward to and 7 some relief from the awful misery. Mr. Gerard was passing through the French barracks and a man I knew there told him there was an American there. The Germans did not want him to see me, but he put up an argument with the commanding dffleer and they finally said he could interview me. I never was so glad to see anyone as I was to see him. The picture Is still with me of him-coming, in the door. We talked for about an hour and a half, I guess, and thejn he got up to I would lit Look out for Span ish Influenza. go and he said I would Hear from him In about three weeks. Juslt Think what good news that was to me! They let me out of the guardhouse and« I celebrated by doing all the dam age to German sentries that I could do. The men in the camps went wild when they learned that Ambassador Gerard was there, for they said lie was the only man In Germany they could tell their troubles to. - -Theuceason was that he was strodg for the men, no matter what nationality, and put his heart into the work. I am one of those who gannot say enough good things about him. Like many others, if It Imd not been. for Mr. Gerard I would be kaput by now. - :: . At the first sign of a cold take - CASCARAE? QUININE . ' , . 9 ■ K. ■' . - . : w Standard cold remedy for SO yew* la tablet form—ufe, sure, no opiate*—break* up a cold la 24 hour*—relieve* grip in 3 day*. 1 Money back if it fail*. The genuine box baa a Red top with Mr. HUT* picture. At All Drag Store*. Remarkable Danger. ___ /- 1 • 1 Lieutenant Barclay (at gas defense drill)—Now be^ure to get those masks on right, because if you don’t, at the front you’ll get a whiff of gas, say, this afternoon, and you won’t know any thing about It until the next afternonn about four o’clock; then you’ll drop dead suddenly—and wonder why!— Treat ’Em Rough. * ‘ "i> A* few days after this I again as we ■ was slow the A CHILD GETS SICK CROSS, FEVERISH IF CONSTIPATED 11 kinds of things and all mixed up. ' between the Russians and their garb age prey—they were so speedy that nothing stopped them One morning, just after barley-cof had no ear for music and tried to stop fee time, I came out of the barracks STOMACH ACIDITY, INDIGESTION, CAS — QUICK! EAT JUST ONE TABLET OF PAPE’S DIAPEPSIN FOR INSTANT RELIEF. When meals don’t fit and you belch fas, nclds and undigested food. Wlieq you feel lumps of distress In stomach, pain, flatulence, heart bum or headache. Here Is Instant relief—No waiting I Just as soon as you eat a tablet of Pape’s DIapepsin all the dyspepsia. In digestion and stomach distress ends. These pleasant, harmless tablets of Pope’s fr 1 "pepsin never fail, to make sick, upst. stomachs feel fine ut once, snd they cost so little at drug stores, ▲dv. Modest Joyrider. “You might let me have your car for the afternoon, uncle." "All right, my boy, you can take It” "And, say, uncle, ckn you let me have the price of a couple of fines, or so?”—Boston Transcript. WHY WOMEN DREAD OLD AGE Don’t worry about old age. Don’t worry about being in other people’s way when vou are getting on in yeara- Keep your Body in good condition and you can be as hale and hearty in your old days as you. Were when a kid, and every one will be glad to see you. s The kidneys and bladder are the causes ullI •l seniie afflictions. Keep them clean and • —^‘ “ 1 It’V in proper working eondTUon Drive-the ['\T I,ere flponi? 1 y e,Ied - ' 1 — Where’re you from. 2”.^ us, but though they knocked several men down, we did not stop until we had finished the song. Then, after we had admitted to each other that we were not downhearted, we shut up. We would have done so, anyway, be cause by this time we were on the out skirts of the town, and we needed all the breath we had. The road we were on was Just one long sheet of Ice, and we could hurdly walk more than four steps without slipping and falliug. My shoes had wooden soles, and It was Just one bang after another, with the ice and myself trying, to see which tould hit the hardest. Every time we fell—smash! came a rifle over the back. I was getting pretty tired, so I said to some of the fellows that I was go ing to sit down and rest, and they said they would also. So we dropped out and waited until the guards behind had just about caught up with us, and then we would go on. We did this several times until they got on to us, and we could not do it any more. Up the roud a piece I fell again, and tills time I did not care what>-hap- pened, so I Just sat there in the middle of the road until Fritz came up. Instead of giving me the bayonet, he tnude me take off my shoes—thAt is, he took them off Of me with a knife through the strings—and I had to walk the /est of the way In my bare feet. It was about four miles altogether from the station to the camp. When we got near the camp, all the boys came out of the barracks and lined up along the barbed wire, and yelled us a welcome. We asked them if they Mere downhearted, and they said no, and we said we were not eith er. We could hardly see them, but they began yelling again when we got nearer, and asked us, “Is there anyone there from Queenstown?" arid then Hull, and Portsmouth, and Dover, and Toronto and a lot of other places. I did not pay much attention until I heard, “Any Americans there?" and I yelled back^—i^Yes, where are you?” “Barracks 6-B, Gruppe 3." and saw an Australian arguing with the sentry. I was not only curious, but anxious to be* a good citizen, as they say, so I went up and slung an ear at them. The Australian had asked Fritz what had been done with the flag that the Huns were going to fly ffom the Eiffel tower In Paris. That was too deep for Fritz, so the Australian answered it himself. “Don’t you know, Fritz? Well, we have no blankets, you kn<Av.” Still the sentry did not get it. So poisonous wastes from the system and •void uric acid accumulations. Take GOLD S EDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules periodical- and you will find that the system will ways be in perfect work ng order. Your spirits wifi be enlivened, your muscles made strong and your face have once •ncre the look of youth and health. New life, fresh strength and health will BQme as you continue this treatment. When your first vigor has been restored continue for awhile taking a capsule or two each day. They will keep you in condition and prevent a return of your troubles. There' is opiv one guaranteed brand of JHaark in Oil Capsules, GOLD MEDAL. There are inaiiv takes on the market. Be •ure you get the Original GOLD MEDAL Imported Haarlem Oil Capsules.-. They are the only reliable. For sale by all first-class druggists.—Adv. Exactly. “King George gave a wagonload of frrlno to the Beil Crosfb^- “Now th?it uhnws the teal spirit." Boston. “The. U. S. A. and Atlantic ports. See you later.” So, the next morning, I went over to his barracks and asked for the Yank. They pointed him out to me, where-he was lying on the floor. I went over and laid down with him, anti we had quite a talk. T will not give his name here for certain reasons. He had received several wounds at the" time he was- taken prisoner. ;He had been in fhe Canadian service for two years. We used to talk about New York and Boston and the differ ent places we knew in both towns, and we also talked a lot about the gotten treatment we were receiving, and tided to cook up some plan of escape. But every one we could think of had been used by some one else, and either, had failed, or the Hans had fixed It so the plan could not be tried again. - Wd doped out some pretty wild schemas at that. Altogether, we became great pals, and were together as much ns me—so that Fritz could hear—that the Germans had no blankets and were using the flug to wrap their.cold feet In. This started a fight, of course—the German Idea of a fight, that is. The sentry, being a very brave man for a German, blew his whistle very loudly, and sentries came from all directions. So we beat It to the Australian’s bar racks, and there I found the second American in the camp. He was a bar ber named Stimson, from one of the Western states. He had heard I was there aswell as the Boston man in the Canadian -service, but he had been too sick to look us up, and in fact did not care what happened, he was so miserable. He had been wounded sev eral times, and died In a day or two. I never knew how he came to be in the Australian service. Those two and myself were the only Americans I knew of In this prison camp—whether in Canadian. Austra lian or French service. The other two had been captured in uniform, so there was no chance of their being released. 4 Dulmen was very near the Dutch border and as It was quite easy to get out of the camp attempts at escape were frequent. Most of those who ran away were brought back, though. The Germans-were so easy on those who tried to run away that I almost thought they were encouraging - them. One chap was doing his-ten days In the guardhouse for the sixth time -while l was there—that is. he had Just, about completed his period of detention. He claimed that the sixth time he had really got across the border and was arrested In a little town by the Dutch authorities and turned over to the Ger mans. That Is against the law In most countries, but he swore it was the truth. I am not so sure, myself. He got away for the seventh time while I was at Dulmen and was not returned. Ten days In the guardhouse is not such a light punishment after, all, be cause water three times a dayls all the prisoner received during that time, but it Is pretty mild compared to some of the things the Huns do. One morning I ..thought for sure I was going oafard.' I tins’just fed up on the whole business and sick of do ing nothing but suffer. So I strolled along, sticking my head into barracks doors, sometimes trying to have a talk. There were q]1 the diseases you can think of in .this camp, including black cholera and typhus and somebody ‘way always dying. We had to make coffins from any wood we could find. So It was not long before we were using the dividing boards from'OUT'hunks. pTeccs of flooring and. In fact, the Walls of the barracks. The officers were quar tered in corrugated iron barracks, so they had to borrow wood from us for their coffins. We would*make the box and put the body in It,-give it as much service as we could, In the way of prayers and hymns, and put it ftway hi a hole near the barracks. There was so much .of It that a single death pasted unnoticed. One morning the German sentries came to our barracks—they never came singly—and told us that an offi cer was going to review the prisoners and ordered us to muster up, which we did. I was the lust man out of the bar racks and on accdunt of ray wounds I was slower than the rest. You understand I had had no medical bread house and the guard at the door tripped - me. When i foil I hurt my LOOK wounds, which made me hot. .Now,- X : the best thing to do was to jpe.' good, since I was expecting to be released, and I thought it would be rough luck to be killed just before I'was to be released. But I had been in the Amer ican navy and any garb.v of the U. S. A. would have done What I did. It must be the training we get. for w r hgn a dirty trick is pulled off on us we get very nervous around the hands and are not always able to control thenf. So I went for the sentry and wal loped him in the Jaw. Then I received his bayonet-through the fleshy part of the forearm. Most bayonet wounds that we e<>t were in the arm. But AT TONGUE! THEN GIVE FRUIT LAXATIVE FOR STOM ACH, LIVER, BOWELS. •CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIGS" -CAN’T HARM CHILDREN AND IT. * THEY LOVE f The Australian carefully explained To -treatment except crepe-paper— haa- dages and water; my wounds had.been opened by swimming from the Georgic to the Moewe and they had been put in terrible shape in the coal bunkers. On account of the poor food and lack of treatment they had not even started to Jipai. Incidentally, the only cloth bandaget that any of us had*were what we wou> 1 tear from our clothes and I have seei men pick up an old dirty rag that iomeone else had had around his wound for a long time und bandage his own wounds with It. So it was' all I could do to drag my self along. The officer noticed that I was out of fine and immediately asked my name and nationality. When he heard “American” he could not say enough thing*' about us and called me all the swlce names he could think of. I was pretty thin at this time and getting thinner, so I figured I might Just as w’ell have it out before I starved. Besides. I thought, he ought to know that we are not used to being bawled out by German swine in this country. So I told him so. And I said that he should n?t bawl Americans out, be cause America was neutral. He then said that as America supplied food and munitions to ilhe allies she was no bet ter than the r tst. Then I snidT “Do you remember the Deutschlard? When she entered Bal timore and Ne 1 1 London she got all the cargo sha uant ed, didn’t she?” > “Yes.” "Well, it you send over your mer chant marine tl ey will get the same.” For that answer he gave me ten days in the guardhouse. He did not like to be reminded thi.t their merchant ma rine had to dive under to keep away from the Llnseysr' . i ~~ - 1 admit I uas pretty flip to this of ficer. but who would not be when a slick German swine.officer bawled hirii out? It was whllc-T was in the guardhouse that Mr. Gerard, the American ambas sador, visited the camp. He came to this camp about every six months, as a rule. Even In the German prison camps the men Had somehow got infor mation about 10. Gerard’s efforts to improve the Terrible surroundings in which the then lived. "Someof the men at Dolmen had been confined, in vari ous other camps and they told~melKal * Most of Those Who Ran Away Were Brought Back. those arms were in front of our faces at the time. The sentries did not aim for our arms, you can bet on that. A wound Of the kind I got would be noth* Ing more than a white streak If prop erly attended to, but I received abso lutely no attention for it and it was a;long time in healing. At that, I was lucky; another bayonet stroke Just grazed my stomach. I had been at Dulmen for three weeks when we w r ere transferred to Brandenburg, Havel, which Is known i as" “the hell-hole of Germany” to the 1 prisoners. -It certainly is not too strong a name for It, either. On the way we changed trains at Osnnbruck and from the station plat- form I saw German soldiers open^up with machine guns on the women and children who were rioting for food. Mother! Your child isn't naturally cross and peevish. See if Tongue-is coated; this is a sure sign the little stomach, ncer anti bowels need i ^cleansing at once. — Wbea listless, pale, feverish, foil of cold, breath bad, throat sore, doesn’t eat, sleep or act nnttirally, has stom achache, diarrhoea, remember, a gen tle liver and bowel cleansing should always be- the first treatment given. Nothing equals "California- ftyrup of Figs" for children’s ills; give a tea spoonful, and in a few hours all the foul waste, sour bile and fermenting food which is clngg»>d in the bowels, passes out of the system, and yon huve a well aud playful child again. AH children love this harmless, rtcil- clous “fruit laxative,” and It never fails to effect a good “inside" cleans ing. Directions for babies, children of all ages .and grown-ups are plainly on the bottle. Keep it handy In your home. A little given todny - saves a sick child tomor row, but get the genuine. Ask your druggist for a bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” then see that it l» made by the “California Fig Syrup Company.’’—Adv. - A. First regions— Second Dlttc All in a Name. Boche-—About the Argonne -So they are. If Worms or Tapeworm peralat in yoor «y»tem. It hi because you have not yet tried the real Vermifuge, Dr. Peery’* "Dead-Shot." One dose does the work. Adv.i The true*measure of success'is eight quarts to the peck.—^— flSTHMADOR GUARANTEED " TO INSTANTLY RELIEVE ASTHMA OR MONEY REFUNDED—ASK ANY ORUGGIST when Mr. Gerard visited these camps i all that the men did for a week or so dll cure catarrh miy.Jl mi* el acta tiirpuirii tne camp, he gnve me a ring made RHMrmnvi.’ froni n shp11 ’ nnd tQ,d rne to get it safely Catarrh Cnnnot He Cured fry LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat' of the disease. Catarrh Is a iooal disease. f?reatlv infln- n is tafien internally and the Plnod on tl*«* Mucous P System. HALL’S CATARRH MKDTCINK . , . A S i composed of some of the he«t tonics uacK to the States, but. some one stole- n«WB. combined with some of the best It at r"niidehbnrtr •blond purifier*. Tbc perfect combination „ ' of tt>e ingredients. In HALL'S oatarkh Une day while I was In his hnrvacks *<W"" «»* " f door Dniegi-t* 7 r .c. Testimonials free. smne reason or other, and though F .T Phwnev * Co.. Props.. Toledo,’O. j he did not say a word to Fritz, ijt-two t ,, _ .. . minutes h« was dead, in cold Mood. If you would flatter fc whmaB keep ; We never knew'wbv thev killed him. llut A #*jrf Ilu. on v . 1 ' . . . ‘ * At Swinemunde and Neustrelitz, I must admit that the Germans had us pretty badly buffaloed, bbt Duljnen » the prisoners werrentlrely different Dolmen was the receiving .camp for the whole western front, and fhe pris oners thef§ £t>t to be pretty tough eggs, as far as Frits wag concerned, before they had been in camp many :-d w BRPHDEJIbURG . ; "THf H£U -//0L£ OfGFRttAHY'' HT ♦♦TtT.UTL *niet and lisien.-yi-; -- * r Cleansing, « |j|I P" fiel ding and fledlii.g “ * * Lslleo—Murine for Red- m / _ _ teas, Soreness, Granule- Of tion. Itching and Burning er_ of the Eyes or Eyelids; “Beaver Board’’ Use “BEAVER BOARD" for your walls and ceilings. It is air tight and wind-proof. Any carpen ter or workman cah put it on. It produces far more tasteful effects tfihn plaster and is more economical. STRATTON & BRAGG CO. Petersburg Virginia “Beaver Board” Distributor*. . . A Ol/ft e ,9RACKS 0 HOSPITAL QOtiVfiD RUMAtIBAtMCV tsrbmd Wit* Petrc* it Cr/tMAn BAMACKS • \ O crrrt'f*j'nfAi>QM4trfK)(A*H J m f*) t ctniTiAirs W> ff/MAfJ - a// *=/°*0£5 **lOOH£PS BAPAACKS I Sketch of Brandenburg Prison Camp Drawn From Memory by Gunner CHAPTER XXII. & “ ‘The Hell Hole of Germany." On arriving at Brandenburg we wefd marched the three’or four miles north* west to the camp. While we were be ing marched through the streets a woman walked alongside of us for quite a way, talking to the boys in English and asking them about the war. She said she did not believe anything the German papers printed. SheNsaid she was an Englishwoman from Liverpool and that at the out break of N <he war not being able to get out of Germapy, she and her chil dren had heen^ut in prison and that every day for over a week theyjiad put her through the third degree; thjit DRIVE MALARIA OUTTF THE SYSTEM her children, had "hegn separated from ~ her and that she did not know where they were. ^ She walked along with us for several blocks until a sentry h^ard her say something not. very complimentary To the Germans and chased her away. When we* arrived at fhe camp we were put into the receiving barracks and kept therfi sK days. Thc-rondition of these barracks, was npt such that you could describe it. The floors were ac tually nothing hut ’nlth. Very few of the bunks remained; the rest bad been torn down—for fuel, I oppose. (TO BE CONTINU ^ _ TED ) < . —- —■.* ■■ . . ‘ J Concrete bates to give longer life to worn-out fence posts are a NeW r- y.*r-:: Inventor’s Idea. 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