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In All The Tires tinwlo there Isn't one that won't meet It* Waterloo Hornet The lurklliK tack or I ho sparkling k'?hh will reach It.s ortatM and then hrlng It hero, we'll execute REPAIRS promptly ami union* tin* tiro has rolled off too man)' centurion, re store It to lis original condition, llleyele sundries n specialty. Wf weld broken purl* of biryrleH. H. E. BEARD r W. O. HAY'S Automobile and Machine Shop Camden, South Carolina Kquipped the Kqual to any iu the Houtl). We mulct1 any kind and mIzo of spring, best vanadium stool used, h ml guaranteed. Storage Batteries charged with the vor.v latest motor generating sot at a saving of time and money. Axlo and propeller shafts made and guaranteed to equal the factory product in every particular. . Casings anil Tubes vulcanized ? all work guaranteed. Presto-Lite Kxehango ? Styles H and 10 cylinders always on hand. Flsk Tires and tubes always iu stock. We will personally see that you are satisfied with our service or we d? not want your money. Oxy-Acetylene Welding ? Castings of all kinds of metals a specialty. Thanking you all for the hand some support given me since going In business for myself, 1 am, Yours rcHpeetfulIy, W. O. HAY City Meat Market One do?r north of Smith's Garage. Choice Fresh MEATS Choice Cuts 10c, 12 V2 and 15c per pound. Cash Only. Nothing will be charged. Your orders so licited. Telephone 31. City Meat Market MONKY TO IA>AN. On Improved farma. Easy terms Apply to B. 13. Clarke. Camden. S C. 60. CASH Green Grocery ? Telephone 24 We have opened a meat market and green grocery in the stand formerly oc cupied by Campbell Bros., where we will carry at all times a choice line of Fresh Beefj Pork, Veal, Lamb. Mutton and all meats us ually found in an up-to date market. We will make deliveries promptly and there will be no long awits. L. B. Campbell ; Manager BBITIHH CAMPAIGN HlimiW '? <0 V"'*; ' . ;:A A. #v * ? ^ v- ? ' u* 1 . Ijm<K^ Korto Surrender* to Turk* in Mnwpol??la ^ A not tier phase of the HI fa ted Brit ImH <*h m pa Igu It) Mesopotamia has clos ed with t Ii4* surrender of (Jen. Town shend and the garrison at Kut-el-Ama ra, <in (ho Tigris It Ivor, about 130 miles below Bagdad. Homo 10,000 men In nil laid down their arms to the 'links, it ft ?>r having destroyed all their gun* mid iiiuiiUIoiin. .The British MoNO|KitaiulH campaign was waged along the Tigris from the Persian (lulf northward almost to the gales of Bagdad, having as Its ehlef ii I in the rapture of that aneieiit rlty. To divert Turkish forces from <?alli |h.|| wax another object. (Jen. Tow tinhorn! held out for lift days, his supplies steadily growing low er as he waited tin" relief army, which hattlcd It* wiiv up the Tigris towards htm This army encountered strong posit Ions of the Turks below Kut-el Amara, on both aides of the river, and, alt hough several of thOMr wen* carried, It has not heei i able to work much closer to the beleaguered garrison than a score of miles because of the stubborn Turkish resistance and Hood conditions on the Tigris. ? ?n the Russian front the Hermans have captured Russian |s?sitinns south of Nil roc/ hake and taken 5, (MX) prls oners, Including four staff otflcers. London. April i!f>. ? Major (>eneral Charles Townshend, eommnnder of the British for<vs beslege<l at Kut-ol-Ama ra, .Mesopotamia, by Turkish forces since lust I>eceml>er, has surrendered. This information was contained in a Hrltl-sh official statement Issued this afternoon. The following olllcial announcement was made : "After a resistance protracted for II." days and conducted with a gal lantry and fortitude that will be for ever memorable, <?en. Townshend has been coni|M'lled. by the Una I exhaus tion of his supplies, to surrender. "Before doing so lie destroyed Ills guns ami munitions. "The force under him consists of 'J.UTu British tn?ops. of all ranks and services, and sonic six thounsand In dian troops and their followers." The eventual surrender of (General Townshend had been ex|H?cted since! the failure of Mm* forces under Lieut, (Jen. (torringe and <!en. Keary to break through the Turkish position at. San ilayaat, just below Kut-el-Amara, on the Tigris River, and the unsuccessful attempt to send the blockaded army provisions by steamers. It had been touch ami k o with the simill British force for many days. The position of Kut-el-Amara, which is on ,i peninsula extending into the Tigris ltiver, made it impossible to send supplies by air, as there was no Jandiuu place for aeroplanes. The forces which attempted to re lleve lien. Townshend met with a 1 most continual misfortunes. <>n several oe casioiis. jus! when it was believed they were on the point of success, rising waters made further progress ini|M>s slble Th?> surrender <4' < Tow ushend Is ??ri?* of tin* few instances in the war in which an entire liirlitiiiK unit of importaut numbers lias laid down Its arms. M is otic of the largest bodies "I' troops of the Kntcnte allies which ha\e surrendered anil laruer than any other captured French or British force. The .Mesopotamia campaign has heen one ..f the most ditllenlt the British ann> has undertaken during the war. T4+e ? t"i rid elHnate and lack of fresh water, together with the ditlicnlties of transport, made yreat calls on the en durance of the troops. Moreover. the| posit ioii.s heli I by the Turks tvelow Kut ol-Ainara. ?-nt penciled and strongly for- | tilled. w \ | | \ formidable The original e\|?edjt U>n was cotn|>osed in part of Indian troops, hut the relief force, for the most part, was made up of men from Filmland and the colonies. < iovcrnor Manninc last week par ? loiied Will Revels, who ser\ed three jears for larceny on the Spartanburg comity chalmxan^' in order that Revels mi-ht lie aide to testify against \\* i 1 1 Ihiiihes. who was tried for murder. St oho Raile\. a negro, from Laurens county, was electrocuted at the state IH/nitentiary Friday morning for mur der of a negro woman. John Barrymorp In ''Nearly A King," at Thf> Majentit Today. * , KUN8IAN8 IN FKANCK. 7 ... . ?? M , , Arrived m "Herb Refugee*" And W1U . Be Equipped By Franci I . f. ?" Information reaching The New York World from an aUthorltai.ve source !ti Franc* In close touch wlf h the luue.' dixie* of the French goVernmeut sh .wh tliwt I lie recent detachment of Hum. slan troop*; whoue arrival a It Ma feel I lee was made the Hubjeet of a considerable public demonstration, wan by no 1114 the first Russian contingent to land 011 French noil. It appear*, -moreover, that the 0 rat consignment of ItuHMlaiiH, amounting to IMMMXI iu all, Is only the vanguard of an army of .'NX), (MX) for at leant 250,<>OO of whom complete nnlforniH and <ij 11 ijr inent already are waiting In France. Some are coining, .like those already arrived, from l?alny and Vladivontok, from concentration ramp* in Mauchu rla, hy way of the Muck canal. - The lirst thouHands of Russians ar r I v??*i at Toulon from Ualny In. the lirst week of April. Klahorate precau t Ions were taken to prevent the leant inkling of their coming reaching the outside world. All of them were dress ed in civilian clothes and were with out uniforms or equipment of any kind. It was explained to such civilian residents oi Toulon as caught sight of them that they were Serbian refuge brought form Durazzo and Soufarl, A? hunia. Altogether, this first allotment oi the Russian expeditionary force numbered two brigade* ? about 10,000 or 12,000 men. They were taken by rnll to Camp de Ma Illy, a big military train ing ground in the Aube department, near Arcus-sur-Auhe, about 100 miles east of Paris and about the same dbv tance from the Verdun front. There they were met by those of their otliccrs who had not traveled with them, and also by several hundred Ser bian officers, who. have been assigned to commands in the Russian expedl* tlouary force. (The Serb and Russian languages are almost blent leal. \ Russian uniforms, made In France, rifles ami accoutrements were dealt out to them, and within a few hours of their arrival the 'Serbian refugees" had been transformed Into full-fledged sol diers of the Czar. The greater part of them are reservists and consequently trainerTsohHers. There are many young men among them, however, who have never done military service, and sev eral months will be required to get these latter in slmi>e for the front. 1 hiring the past three weeks a cor don of French sentries has surrounded 1 tnelr camp, i>errnltting no Russian to leave and no stranger to enter. Why the French government, with the arri val at Marseilles of the second |>ortion, or 20.(HX), of the first contingent of '50. <KM), abandon* d ? the policy of conceal ment and iKTinitted it to be known that Russians had arrived is not known to The World's informants. Meanwhile thousands upon thou sands of Russian trooj?s, drawn from Siberian contingents^, arc assembled in Manchuria and Silwria. awaiting the trans|>orts which will carry them to join their comrades in France. The World Is informed that French and Hritish manufacturers already have completed and delivered 250.(MH> ?<un plete sets of uniforms and equipment or their use when they arrive. Not ail, however, are cx|>cctcd to journey by the Suez canal route. Croat numbers will cross the Pacific and Canada?some of them possibly jour neying on American railroads as prl ?ate individuals ? and embark on trans* !>< rts being assembled or them in Cana dian |K?rts. Republicans For Wilson. Washington, May 1. ? Results of va rious polls and primary ehvtious throughout the United States were pub i I Isht'd today by he Democratic Na i timial Committee as an index to. the j j;reat strength which President Wilson j holds among the jieople. The most in ! foresting are results which show a i powerful trend among Republicans tQ | cast their support with rilm. The tirst information tells that a i |h'U l.y newxpaj>ers in Pennsylvania foiunl some 5,000 Republicans who ,in i tend to throw their weight for "Wilson, . although he is running on the Dcino | cratlc ticket. In New Jersey prima ! rics. as commented on by the New ; York Kvenlng Post, "all tho German i districts turned out In large nuuii?-r? ] to vote the hallot with Wilson's name nn if This was particularly so in the almost exclusive German colonies in the Hudson city section of Jersey City and in the North Hudson towns along the Palisades." Cccrne Allen Frierson, a negro, shot and killed brother. Charlie Frier son at Manning Thursday. The trou ble arose over the theft of a pair of pants and forty cents in one |>ockot. In seven minutes after the killing the negro was in jail charged with mur> der. Col. .Murk lleri-hanl liardln. agfcd 7S?- a prof er.ro r at tlraison College, died Wednesday nigbt after an illness j of five months. He v:ns a Virginian I by birth. Ot'K CiKKMAN POPULATION. . ,'V" > if j > Mjfunw JuU llSSS by Cewua Bureau ? - Are Intending. "* c " ? ? Figure* cooeemluir the German pop* u hit lot i <?f the ITikJt?Ml StMtw at tho prWiit rime which have Just been as seuil.led by the United States ceuauN liurcAU arc exceedingly Interesting him! timely, says The PhlladwlphlajJ Vruu*. T?he census bureau l?as combined its tlgiin^ Ktitlien1*! in t h?? 1010 census with the cejMirlH <>f tlu? immigration bureau for the years since then to show that there are a total of li, 003.770 persona of German hlrtli in t IiIh country. These figures arc surprising because they an> so small, but when one ex auilnea Into the immigration figures for the last few decadct) It Is elearly evi dent that the uumlHtr of iieraons t?f German hlrth could not he much ahove flint ti^u r??. In view of the proi>ortlon ately small German immigration since the beginning Germany's intensified Industrial development and her careful and wise provisions to make, life in the fatherland as attractive to her people as In the lands oversea. The figures for (ierman immigration during 1011, 1012, 101.1 and 1014 are significant They show '24.7N1 In 1011, 20, (Ml in 1012. 20.145 in 1013, and 28.40X in 1014. Mince August, 1011, there have been very few (Icrmnns admitted to this country ? not because they wouldn't In* admitted if they came, J)ut because they didn't come. The he ginning of the war ended immigration of course. The population in this country whose ancestors were of (ierman origin Is, of course, very much greater than thoee of German birth. The census bureau estimates the number at 8,282,018, and shows that these people are found largely In the states of New York, Illi nois, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Iowa, Michigan, New Jersey, Minnesota, Ohio and Missouri. The greatest pro] >ort ion ate population of those of (ierman an cestry is found In the Middle Atlantic States, where in 1010 they constituted ll.fi per cent of the total ]>opUlation. Throughout the whole country those of (ierman ancestry formed J) per cent of the population. On account of the great war, and because of our many troubles with Germany since its Inception the matter has been a subject of grave and some what overponderous discussion in au gust and learned bodies, which have failed mostly to reckin with the fact that the imputation of German ancestry in tills country is so large it consti tutes nearly one-tenth of the entire population. It also has failed to recklu with the fact, am) fftct it la, that the larger |?art of thla population of tier many ancestry in removed from the fatherland by two or even three or four generation that some of the oldeat families In thla country are Herman In their origin aiul have l>eeu enrtdled In the records of the nation for hou- * orahle service during all the years of' Ita existence. At The Majeatlc ? "The Soul Market." "The Hon! Market," a sensational live part Metro feature picture, pro durcd by Popular Plays and PlayerH, with Mine. Petrova, the gifted Polish act rens, in the stellar role, will be stseu on the screen here at The Majentlo Theatre tomorrow. Saturday, May Oth. Mine. Petrova is surrounded by an exeelleut supi>ortlng cast Including (Jvpsy O'Brien, Arthur IIooim, Wilmuth Merkyl, Evelyn It rent, Fraunle Fran hol/, A I TliouiaH, Fritz do Mnt and other well known stage and screen artists. "The Soul Market" Is an absorbing story of life behind the scenes In a Broadway theatre, and the attending gay life aloug the Great White Way. It la a true i?icHur? j lu_Nsw Xork^ and tto ^ earrlcti a moral of no uncertain qg, Ity anil Htrength. promlne* to | one of the moat interesting r,.uluri of the mjaaoii.? adv. Mih. Jauiea T. Carroll, the wlft, 0j prominent cltUen of Bennett* viiie, dv Thursday night at a hospital Iq q Innihia from the effect* of a burn ? tjeived at her home on April 19. n, drea* caught from a burning truHh ptj ill the yard and waa burning n, llv. in the back wtoen ?he discovered ^ Hainea, She and u colored Hervu tried In vain to extinguish the bin, and when other help reaehwi had Ihh?h serloutity burned. Guilty of murder In the ilmt u*gr* was the verdict of the jury tu tfc case Of Will Hughes, charged with kin ing Hohert Stephens, a chain guard on the outskirts of ftpartygfl On October 90, 1014. ? William Ixvgan, Epworth OrpbinijL Columbia, S. CM for saving < hark?^ MturneH, a farmer, from an outr*|e| bull, at Columbia, June 11, 1014, h* l>een awarded a Carnegie hero m?i?r Camden Milling Company MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS IN J - Ala Home Ground Meal, Grits, Cow Feed,] Cracked Corn, Graham Flolir, Etc. | Wo soil Hay, .Shucks, Pea Hulls, Ground Cobs, etc., and will have It stock the first of March a supply of Lintle&s Hulls and Feed Cotton 8eed Meal, these Hulls are gotten out by The Buckeye Cotton Oil Co. Th?e people having put in machinery which reworks the Hulls, taking off"" tieally every particle of lint, leaving nothing but the hull* itself, every one knows there can be no food value in the lint, and as f 2C? per cent, lint taken from the Hulls, you can readily see the in the feeding of the LINTLESS HULL in preference to the pld hull the lint on them, we ask you give us a call, and any time that you I anything in the way of Grain, Hay, Shucks or Fodder, to sell, as we buy and sell these products. Several tons of cotton seed fertilizer meal for sale at the right J ?* -C * iV'.-' Respectfully, Camden Milling Company City Property For Sale DWELLINGS: Lang property on Fair Street; size of lot 160x265 feet; two story building* twelve rooms, all modern conveniences. No. 1206 East side Fair Street, seven rooms, all conveniences, size of lot 72x265 No. 1211 Mill Street, two story eight room dwelling with all modern conveniences. Size of lot 90x265 feet. BUILDING LOTS One lot 60x360 feet on North side of Chestnut Street. This lot adjoins lot recent ly sold to E. B. Buddin. k . *? ? -M Two lots 75x250 feet on the South side of Chestnut Street and known as the Trant' ham property. ' l||| One lot 73x250 feet on the South side of Laurens Street near Court Inn. One lot 114x264 feet on West side Fair Street adjoining property of W. O. Money to Loan on improved farm property at 6 per cent ? minimum loan $2,500. -commission charged. For further information apply to REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE