| |
| | Two German Prison Camps |
 | | Behind the barbed-wire fence at Zossen Zossen is one of the prisons near Berlin there are some fifteen thousand men. |
 | | The prisoners were housed in new, clean, one-story barracks; well fed, so far as one could tell from their appearance and that of the kitchens and storerooms; they could write and be written to, and they were compelled to take exercise. |
 | | The place was not as suited for a prison as the high land of Zossen, the stalls with their four bunks were dismal enough, and the lofts overhead, with little light and ventilation, still worse. |
| www.greatwardifferent.com /Great_War/Prison_Camps/Prison_Camps_01.htm (1775 words) |
|