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About The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.) 1909-1920 | View This Issue
The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.), 05 Dec. 1918, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053199/1918-12-05/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• THE STANFORD WORLD Alberill:Depe N I j ob .Pe7 -4 V . W A 3- 1 -- 'V • 411° IlWir r_„ ‘.....,....• VC -GUNNER AND CHIEF PETT •FF CE , - U.'17 -1 --NAV_____, _Y -\---- .4 , MEMBER. OF THE FOREIGN LEGION OF FRANCE CAPTAIN GUN GUN TURRET. FRENCH BATTLESHIP CASSAKD WINNER OF THE CROIX DE GUERRE ir.,:pyright,1911, by RelY and Brine C. Throosh Senni A,Tholltreass Wits du Gawp Mahe., Adore Ssniaa CHAPTER XVI I—Continued. —15 -- Attie, by this time some of the men lad 4ost their heads completely; in fact, lind gone violently crazy, and the rest of us were afraid of them. We were all thinking of the fight that night occur any moment between the Yarroweinie and some other vessel and ,ve knew we were in the likeliest place for tbe vessel to be struck. Even though we were not hit amidships. if lie ship were sinking we did not think .he Germans would give us n chance to --stain.. We figured from what they ald 'mid that we would go down with Ate ship. Anti going down on a ship In ,vitich you are a prisoner is quite dif- ferent from going down with one for which you have been fighting. You trriVi• at the same place, but the feel- .ng is different. . Some of us thought of overpowering :he crew and taking the vessel into our ▪ on -n , hands, and we got the rest of the sane or nearly sane men together • and tried to get up a scheme for doing it. I was strong for the plan and so were several others, but the Lliney of- ficers who were with us advised • egainst It. They said the Germans were taking us to a neutral country, where we would be interned, which was:just what the Germans had told us, but what few of us believed. Then some others said that if we started anything the Germans would fire the time bombs. We replied that at least the Germans would go west witn us, but they could not see that there`was any glory In that. For my- self;,I thought the Germans would not tire -the bombs until the last reinute, an(lthat 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 cominnader. .This . last .Hun was named Badewitz. So -the' pacifists !ruled..hecause we coutti not do anything unless we were all together,and there was no mutiny, They said we Were hothead. the rest of Us, but I still think we could have made a dash for it and overpowered our - sentries, and 'either gone over the .with the lifeboats, or taken over the whole ship. It would have been betteh for us if we had tried, and if the - pacifists had known what was eeming to us they would have fired the time betide, themselves rather than go on into that future. How- ever, that is spilt milk. W,e were not allowed to open the portholes while we were In the bunk- ers, under penalty of death, and there in the dark, In that stinking air, it is no wonder many of us went crazy. Among Us Was a fellow named Har- rington, about six feet tall and weigh- ing 250 pounds. Ile seemed to be all right mentally, hut some of 4 us thought afterwards he was crazy. % Anyway, I do not blame him for what he did. Harrington rushed up the fithiley and opened the door. There -- --was a German sentry there, and Her-. rington made a swing at him anti then grabbed his baydnet. The sentry yelled and some others came down front . the bridge and shot Harrington through the band. After they had beaten Harrington pretty badly, the bull of the bunch, Badewitz himself; tame over and hammered Harringtoh all around the deck. Then they put him in irons ahd took him to the chart mom. . The next day we were sitting in the fiddley getting warm when the door \petted rind there was Badewitz. He felled \Ileraus!\ and began firing at its with a revolver, so we beat it back on the coal. Pretty soon the door °jetted again. But it was only a Ger- man sentry, lie 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 galley aft. But we did not receive any knives, forks, spoons or plates. The first meal we got was nothing but macaro- ni, piled up on pieces of cardboard boxes. Then we appointed four men to serve the macaroni, and they got tons pieces - Of wood, the cleanest we could find, which was not very clean A that, and they dug around In the innenroni and divided It up and 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 these who were helped last got less, because the dividers got more careful toward the end and gave smaller portions. But we did not get macaroni very long. A cook from the Voltaire was Cleaning a copper dirt° that the mac- aroni had been cooked In, and he was bolding It over the side when the yes - eel roiled heavily, and, dropped the ilitte Into the briny. A senfry who !iew kin drop it forced him up to Budewitz, who beam' 'hauling him be- fore the sentry even had told his story. ' After a while Badeseitz quit pounding the cook, and listened to the sentry. Then Badewitz said the cook had put a note In the (hale before he dropped it, so they beat hint 'up again and 'put him In icons. After that they sent the rest of the cooks back, and would not let them on deck again. They had plenty of canned goods'nnd meat nboard, but they would not give us F a is t • l e y. of the men were buried at sea that tiny. More men were going mad every minute, and it was a terrible place; pitch dark, grimy, loose coal underfoot, coal -dusty air to breathe, body -filth everywhere. Some of the crazy men howled like dogs. But we were not - as much afraid of these as we were of the others who kept still, but slipped around in the dark with lumps of coal in their hands. We got so we would n t go near each other for fear we we m running into a ) crazy an. Those ( us who were sane collected as near the fiddley as we could, and we would not let the others get near us, but shoved them back or shied lumps of coal at them. And every once in a while some one of us would begin to act queer. May! be he would let out a howl suddenly, without any warning. Or he would .just quit talking and begin to sneak around. Or he would squat down and begin to mumble. We could not tell just when a man had begun to lose his mind. He would seem just like the rest of us, because none of us was much better than a beast. We could not take turns sleeping and standing watch against the crazy men, because when we talked about -It, we agreed that none of ua could tell whether or not the sentries would go crazy while on watch and have the rest of us at their mercy. It was aw- ful .to talk about going crazy in this way. aid tif - II - Mre - that you yourself .might he the next, and that It was al- most sure to happen if you did not get some sleep soon. But it was worse to find a man nein - you going, and have to' boot him oulirwith the other insane men. • The days passed like that, with nothing to do but suffer, and starve and freeze. It got colder anti colder. and all we could wrap ourselves in was the coal We began to speculate on where we were, It was not till later than an old skipper In our bunch told us that we had rounded the north- ern coast of Iceland. ' • \ . ' Finally, one day, a Ind yelled down \Land!\ and we all dove for the fid- diey like wild men, and those \ who could get near enough looked euti and sure enough! there was the coust of Norway, very rugged and reeky and covered with snow. We thought it was all over then, and that we would be landed at Bergen'sure: Then there was the usual running around and yelling on deck, and we were not so sure we would be landed, and very 'suddenly it pit colder than ever. I was In the fiddiey, aching to get out, and ready for anything that taught happen, whet' the door opened None of Us Was Much Better Than a Beast. suddenly and Badewitz grabbed me, and asked nte in Englitth if I was n quartermaster. I said yes, nod he pulled me by the arm to a cabin. I did not know what was going to hap- pen, hut he took tin oilskin from the wall and told me to put It on. There were two sailors there also, and they put life hefts on, and then I was more puzzled than ever, and seared, too, because•I thought mnyhe they were going to throw me over- benrd, though what that had to do with oeing a quartermaster I could not see. But they drilled me up onto - th\ bridge and told me to take the wheel. What their idea was I do net know. Possibly they wanted a noncombatant at the wheel in case they were oven hauled by a neutral vessel. We were going full speed at the time, but as soon as I took the wheel she cut down to half speed, and stayed that way for half an hour. Then up to full speed again. Pretty soon there was a tramp steamer on the starboard bow, timid 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 on. Then we went through the Skager Rack and Ctittegat, which are narrow strips of water leading to the Baltic. anti we were only a mile from shore with vessels all about us. It would have been an easy , Meg for me to signal what our :ship was and sync' were aboard, but they had six sentries On my neck all the time tit .keep inc (Mtn it. I never wanted to do any- thing worse in my life than jump overboard or signal: But I would hieve been shot thiwn before I had more than started to do either, so I just stayed with the wheel. We Mere nearing one of the Dan- ish islands In the Baltic when we sighted a Mg. She began, to smoke up and blow her siren. The sailors got very excited and ran 'ironed in t•ratzy . style, and BadewItz begun shouting more orders than they could get away with. Tlit sentries left me and rall will, the. rest of the Fritzies to the boat deck and started to lower tine of the lifeboats. But liadewitz was right on their heels and kicked the whole bunch around in great shape, roaring like it bull all time time. I left the wheel and ran to the end of the bridge, to jump overboard, But the minute let go of the wheel the vessel- fell off of the course, and they noticed it, and Badewitz sent live of them up on the bridge and three others to the side with their revolvers to shoot Li4 if I should reach the wa- ter. I think if Iliad had any ropo to lash the wheel with I could have got zanily and they would not have known it. When the five sailors reached the bridge one of them jumped for the cord and gave our siren five long blinds in answer to the tug. The tug was about to launch a torpedo, and we whistled just in time. One of our men was looking from the fiddiey, and he saw the Huns making for the life- beats. so he got two or three others and they all yelled together,:\Dbn't let them get away!\ thluking that they would get the boat over ucal leave the ship, and tryejtg to yell loud enough for the tug to hear them, Badewltz took this nein and two or three other!, whether they were th ones who yelled or not; and•beatAbeln up and put them in trous. I thought there was going ,.to be e Mutiny aboard, but it did not Come Ott. tumid I atu twit sure witat - the Buns welt so excited about. . • ; •••• The other four sailors who came up on the bridge did nut touch me,. but just kept me covered with their re- volvers. That was the way with then) --they would net, tette!' ue . unless Badewitz was there Or they had bayo- nets. The old bull )1fitutielf cattle -tip on the bridge after he had beaten up a few men, threw me around quite a bit and kicked me down • front- the bridge and slammed me into the coal 'hunkers. I felt pretty sore, as you can imagine, and disappointed and pretty low generally. After a while we heard the anchor chains rattling through on their way to get wet, and 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 liun garbles anti gold -stripes came aboard - and looked down at us, and Spit all they, could on us, and called us all the different kinds of swine in creation. They had them lined up and filing past the hateltwayee—all of them giving us the once over in -turn. Maybe they sold tickets for this show —it would be like the Huns. At first we were milling around try- ing to get out from under the hatch openings and the shower of spit, but some Limey officer sang out, \Brit - Niters all! Don't give way!\ and we stood still and let them spit their damned German lungs out before we would move for them, and stone Cor- nishmen began singing their song about Trelawney. So we made out that we did not know such a thing as a German ever We got better acquainted with Get - nom spitting later on, and believe me, they are great little spitters, not much bn distance or accuracy, but quick in action anti well supplied with ammu- nition. Spitting on prisoners is the favorite indoor and outdoor sport for Germans, men and women alike. When the show was over, they rousted us up on deck and put us to work throwing the snit 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 118, and some of her officers came aboard and saw us. They knew we were prisoners•lof-war, and they knew that a vessel carrying prisoners -of - war must not remain In neutral wa- ters for over twenty-four hours, but they did not say anything ftheut its The(' night two men named Barney 11111 - 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 leading to the top of' the poop deck, nnd Joyce and Hill lifted it and get It over the side with a rope to it. The two of them got down into the water n11 right, but Joyce let out a yell be - erratic the water was so cold, 'Ind a German patreil boat henrd hlm elpRovez uNirnam Ha r iNATIoNAL 411§lied a sevfhlleln. They picked u Joyce rIght away, but Burney wa making good headway anti -was &WIWI fret- when they dragged him in. The.) beat them up on the Detred boat, am %live they put them back on tip Yarrow -dale liadewitz beat theta ul $ome more and put them in irons Tim, a he began to shoot at their feet with his revolver, and he had a sailor stand by to hand hint another revol- ver when the first one was empty. Tilt» he would gash their faces with the barrel of the revolver anti shout. \I'm Itittlewitz. I'm the man who tooled the hihglislt,” and shoot at them sOlne more. All the while the sailors were (vie- bramig, drinking and telling, and yell- ing as usual, and the whistles on all the German ships were blowing, aud they were having a great test. After about thirty hours we left, being es- corted by a mine -layer und it Mine- swis•per. I asked a German garby If thut was the whole German navy, and he iooked surprised mind did not know I nes kidding hint, and Said no. Then I sued, \So the _english got nil the rest, did time)- 't\ and he !umbel toe one 111 the moult) WW1 litH bayonet hilt, no I quit kidding 111111. Vt.- saw roWs nod rows of mines.' toei the German sailors pointed out what they atilt) were 11. M. SS. Lite) and Nomad, but I do ilia kiim% heili. A Cup of Water for Our New )(tees Dinner. er they were the same ones that wer( In the Jutland battle or not, Finally )ve landed at Swinemunde just. as (hi hells were ringing the old- year out told tire new -year in. , We were a fin( hunch of blatdrbirds to hand tbe.kalser for, a New -Year's present., believe ate They mustered us up on deck, ane each of us got a cup Of Wifter - for out New Year's spree. Then W saW Wt were in for it, and all hOpe goat!. but we ii - ere glad to be released from out beCnuite hild 'been prisoner' sineetikeertiber 10—three daYi on thr MoeWe and eighteen On the Yarrow- dale—and the coal was not any torte, than When we first slit on It. So we'begitn 'Peek imp you' troubfei in your old kit bag and matte boys, smile. What's the use of Worry- ing? It's net-er worth while,\ and sr forth. They made us shut up, but not before, we asked,rierseives if we Wert downhearted, and everybody yellee \No!\. And that is how • we ow our re- gards to Swineniunde. CHAPTER XVIII. \Pack Up Your Troubles.\ We arrived at Swiriemende, on tht east bank, and after We land had ow drink of water and had been roustet hack into the bunkers. Backe itz went across to the west side in a !nuclei with Joyce and Hill and a guard oh atillors. They were to be shot tin next morning, with some others, itt public shooting-fest. The rest of um is rapped ourselves in lumps of coal at best - we could and tried to sleep. In the morning crow& of Gentler)) came aboard us and were turnet loose on the boxes In the hold. I: was a sight to see them rip off tie .ovens and gobble the salami and oth (q- stuff that we carried. Table man ners are not needed when there is Fe table, I guess, but if you had sect there, you would say these. Genuine (1111 not even have trough manners. 1 have seen hogs thatovere more fin icky. While they were at it, hand to hand with the chow, giving and receivint terrible ptinishment, we prisoner, were mustered on deck, counted kicked. onto tugs and transferred tt the west batik, where the- mob we' welting for us. My wounds, as you can imagine, were in a pretty bad state by this time, and were gettinr more painful every minute, so that I found I was getting ugly anti liniloin for an argument. I knew that if I stayed this way I would prol l eply never come out alive, for there b every chance you could want te Mei a quarrel while you are a prisone: that will mean freedom for you—but only the freedom of going west, widel was not anxious to try. Wh a we got nettr the west,bank on the tugs, we could see that we wer. top rtgainet a battle with our Inns tied Over half the crowd was women ate ellikiren, I should say, anti the res were laborers and old civvies, and re seine soldiers, nod rongimecks gen madly. We could see the spit expert —the spit snipers, deployed to th treat, altnoet. • (TO BE CONTINUED.) YullY nine -tenths •6f our trouble . would vanish If we didn't talk so mur SU1001 LESSON ItEV. P. It. FITZWATER, I). 1 trencher of Ensfilsh Bible In the Mood) Bible Institute of Chicago.) Copyright, 1918, Western Newspaper Union.) LESSON FOR DECEMBER 8 JOSEPH MADE RULER OF EGYPT. LESSON TEXT -Genesis 41:33-44. GOLDEN TEXT -tie that Is fitithful In • very little is faithful also in touch. - Luke 16:10. DEVOTIONAL READING -Psalms 48. ADDITIONAL MATERIAL -Genesis 39: Tierteen long years have 'passed since his brethren sold him. They busy been yeurs of fiery testing for len his (nth is triumphant, there is a mighty contrast between Joseph lit the pit tit !helium and Jo- seph itg prime minister of EgyPt• I. Joseph Made Prime Minister of Egypt (vv. 88-44). 1. '1'111) °tension (vv. 1-1::1 - 2). It is the Interpretation of Pharaoh's (kismet. hi his dreams Pharaoh I4‘V wyen fat kine (aiming out of ihe riVer, followeil by seven lean Vies. which &- vowed the fat ones. l'his &vont nuts followed is) another in which lie situ seven ears of corn come up ott ()tie stalk, rank end good, only to be tie - veered by seven thin ones. These dreams produced uneasiness in Phara- oh's itilnil ;s , Being thus troubled over them he sent for the ningieinits and wise men of Egypt to Interpret them to him. Upon their failure to laterpret them. the chief butler calls to mind the prisoner Who lint) interpreted his dreams two years before. Pharaoh hastily brings Joseph from prison and places Itle . dreams before him.' Joseph dischtimod wisdom for himself, hut confidently miswrite! his Binh in the wisdom of God. God .18 pleased With those Who will thus- lean upon him in the crucial hour, and will never disap- point them (James -1:5). little did Joseph's brethren, the ishmaelites wii() nuried him into Egypt, or Potiphar ivtiose slave he became, realize what the future would bring to him. Ilia years of suffering anti waiting were part of God's plan for his discipline total education. . It is God's law for those who would reign, that they suf- fer. \If We suffer, we shall also reign with him\ (2 Timothy 2:12). Joseph's exultation from the state of humility Is n fine Illustration of Christ's humility atid exeltation ipplans' '2 :0, 10). II. ioseph's Naturaliaation (v. 45). As soon as l'hurahh thug exalted flim he changed his name to Eminent-pita- neali, an Egyptian word hum -log vary- uig as \Snlvathin - of the woritl,'-' -\The prince of life of the world,\ . \The revealer of ee(•rets,\ \The food of life,\ etc. No doubt it was Pharaoh's purpcise to designate him aim the preserver of life, the re - venter of secrets, the interpreter of dreams, and the nuthor of the plan by which Egypt was saved from the awful femine. He thus was naturalized. anti his civil status rendered ,competible with his official rank. Then Aseruillt. the datighter of the priest, was given Idol to wife. Intermarriage with this clone completed 1de naturalization by elevating Mtn to social position. Jo- 'neph'a elevation was to save the world from famine. • Christ's eleva- tion was to save the world from attic- itual death. All unknown to his breth- ren, ,the Jews, Christ Is now at the right hand of the Father, the Savior of the world from its famine of death. As Joseph received a Gentile bride lb the time of his rejection and extant- tion, so Christ is now receiving a Gen- tile brItle (Itonett's 11:25). III. Joseph's • Wise Administration (vv. 40-49). Ile first made a careful survey of the land, tlit•n orgunized his forces and lottked after the details of the 'work. He did not use his power and position for 111'11'10f, but to save others. Ile did , not idle his time away, for he knew that only Revell short year\; rentaltwd in Willett to work. The Loom of Life. It is a solemn thought that every one of us carries about with him a tnystical loom, and we are alweys weaving—weave, weave, weave—this robe which we wear, every thought e thread of the warp, every action u thread of the weft. We 'weave It, and we dye it, and we cut it, and we stitch it, and then we put It on end wear it ; and It sticks to us. Like a snail that crawls about your garden patches and makes its shell by n pro- cess of secretion from out of its own substunce, so you and I are 'nuking (het mysterious stiletto) thing, we call character, moment by moment. It is our own self modified by our actions. Character Is the precipitate from the stream of comiuct which, like -the NM delta, gradually rises solid and firm above the parent river, and confines Is flow—Alexauder Maclaren. Righteousness and Truth. lion - can God fill with his own that which Is already filled by nuin't First It must be emptied before it may he filled with the true good of righteous- ness and truth, of humility anti love, if peace and , joy.—Howard Pyle. The Law of Life. Pleasure, mere pleasure, IR anima jot) gives that to the butterfly, litt progress is the law of lifee to the hilt mortal. So Clod has arranged our life am progress, and its working principle Is evolution.—lienry Drummond. RECEIVING WAR CROSS The patriotio spirit and devotion with which Amen. can women have so far performed war -service work and made sacrifices has never been equalled in the history of any country. Mothem, WM'S and sister,' support this bunion with strength anti those fortitude. who hoseho ready miserable front the 00111- erases Which are so 2 1 :: il ta :o ta rt to ad eak n cwo w iien, should take the right tonic for the womanly IYI a te f In. woman is borne down by pain and sufferings at regular or irregular intervals, by nervoustwas or dizzy spells, by headache or backache, \Favorite Prescription* should be taken. If her existence is made . gloomy by the chronic weaknesses, delicate derangements, and painful disorders that afflict her sex, she will find relief and emancipation front her troubles in Or, Pierce's Favorite Prescrip- tion. If she's overworked, nervous, or \rtut-down she finds umew life and strength. It's mu mayerful, invigorating herbal tonic and nervitte which Wan dis- covered and used by an eminent phyitician for many years, in eases of \female com- plaints\ and weakneases. \FavOrite Pre. scription\ ran ism be had in tablet form as well as liquid at, most drug stores. Bend to Doctor Pierce' Invalids' Iletel, Buffalo, N. Y., for a ten -cent trial package of tablets. For fifty years Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets have lasen most tiatisfactory iu liver and bowel troubles. How They Conversed. An American liason talker who knew little French MO it Frond% artil- lery officer whit knew little English luimul initiorratit hilsinesS tintether dur- log the height (if the recent lighting. \Henri mild the to a young sergentit, \I hate seen you talk- ing tat Americans set eral tlineH. Can you epee!: i•htglish?\ \No nion etentutinetatit,\ utiewered Henri simply. For till that, Henri and the Ameri- can officer were soon engaged In viva- cious cenverstilion. At Its temclusion the commatithint turned to Henri. \But you speak Englialt sery well,\ be Ralik ''Ni,, mon commandant,\ ilemd stIll insieteil. \We were talking In Ger- man.' STOMACH UPSET? PAPE'S DIAPEPS1N AT ONCE ENDS DYSPEPSIA, ACIDITY, GAs, INDIGESTION. Your meals hit back I Your shunach is sour, richt, gassy and you feel blunt. ed after eating or you 'MVO heavy lumps of indigestion pain or headnelie, but never mind. Here is instant relief. Don't stay upset! Ent a tablet of Pape's Diapepsin and Immediately the indigestion, gases, acidity and all sterna ach distress ends. Pope's Diapepsin tablets nre the sur- est, quickest stomach rellevere In tho world. They cost very little at drug stores. Adv. .The Juvenile Mind. \lite itoteutts bunt 'is ell -paved roads leading from Rome to ail important points of the empire,\ fattier %lift say-. lag, in illuslratieg a point lie was mak- ing concerning 'indent history, which the eider daughter wam \studying \Thole roads were about 15 feet wide \Mercy me,\ interjected the seven- year -old tintighler, \if they ,wrre only 15 feet wide automobiles could not pass retell other unless they Intrely crept along!\ For Personal Reasons. \The kaiser knew when it was time to quit.\ \yes. But why should he tiny() kept it a secret so lengr -- — Don't wait until your col d develops Spanish Influenza or pneumonia. Kill it quick. CASCARA 2 QUININE .to m o Standard cold remedy for 20 yeto•-to tablet form—safe, sure, no opiates—breaks ups cold In 24 hours—relieves grip in 3 days. Money back if It falls. The genuine box has a Red top with Mr. ludi. picture. At All I3rug Stores. Cuticura Soap Best for Baby F4-,kz. , ,i:szirrszvrt,,tiTs.,;n7,,Thavt • :t