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A HOAKI) CATTLK CARS Members of 1. W. W. Are Shipped Vnmu ArUuu*. ?? - liUlW, Ari*., July 12.?More than 1,100 industrial Workurtf ?f the World deported from HWiw today art' aboard two *p?ciul trains of nit tie car* tonight, speeding toward Now Mexico. Their announced de?tillation is ('oluinbus. The special train carry ing theui left Warren at noon. The men were driven from the city by deputy sheriffs, alsiut l',000 armed men, iucmi?ers of an org#nidation known as the "citizens' protective league." Two men were killed during the work of deportation. A strike wan tolled here |?> {t-he metal fwukeiv' branch of the I W. W. about two week* ago. Since t?en, a?x*<*r?llnic to officials, KKDre*. of strange men have Imh'H in Hlsl.ee These men are al leged t<> have prevented miners from returning to wurk. Plans for the "rotiud up" of alleged undesirable* were made at midnight l?y Harry <\ WlMH'ler. sheriff of (AnIiUc county. Within two hours, the sheriff had deputized men an<l ordered them to rejKirt at various points at six o'clock this morning. When the hands of citizens assembled. those who were not already armed wore given rifles and revolvers with in structions to use them only in self defense. "I'ntll the )j?1 I W. W. i.s run out." wus the watchword passed to the wait ing men. Httin tin man \iaiine insurance. Washington. July l I ?-President Wil son today Issued a proclamation pro hibiting (Senium Insurance companies from doing further business In the l ulled States and forbidding American insurance companies from reinsuring with them. Payment on existing con tracts is suspended during the war ex cept in cases of vessels now at sea. The President's proclamation con tains the tlrst official acknowledgment that valuaj/le iii^orhtutiou may he get ting fo dermany through (icrnuin In surance companies. "The nature of marine and war risk insurance is such." It says, "that those conducting it must or necessity he In loijch with the movement of shljw and cargoes, and it has been considered by the government of gr?mt importance that this information should not be obtained by alien enemies." Took His Bride to France. An Atlantic Port. July 1 T?.?"Some where in France" Is a sergeant in the American army who was married Just before he left the 1'nited States and ventured to take his bride with him on the transport which carried his regiment overseas. She was with him a^> a soldier, dressed in regulation khaki and with her hair cut short. Today the young woman returned from France, iter efforts to pose as a "Sammy" having failed. Her hus band. it was said aboard the steam ship. was a member of a regiment formerly stationed in Arizona. A. A MH'urry, of Hartwdl, ({?.. a member of the Georgia legislature, died Snndav from injuries received by being run over bv an automobile in Atlanta. fl 99 For A Made-To Ordei' Hat "Clarke Special" THIS "CLARKE SPECIAL" HAT MADE TO YOUR ORDER FOR 11.99 (It Vm Riturn Thlt Ad With torn Order) ANT SlU OK COLOR RCOUIAR 14 00 VALUt Citvot 4 to V/t IncM*. Brian 2 to 3 locfcn Stud Joi Slusl/Alsd THE H. W. CLARKE HAT COMPANY JACKSONVILLE FLORIDA CITY BARBER SHOP Adopts this method of thanking tin* public for the patronage they received since 'o|>euini! up business in Camden. Their patronage has .steadily in or?'mwd and every effort will be put forth to Please Our Customers We are gratified with the jmtro nage bestowed upon us, and re spectfully solicit the i>atronnge of those who have not as yet become regular customer*. We are here to stay and we want your busi ness. We employ only white bar bers. W. J. Hopkins, Proprietor One Door Above Baruch-Nettle* TIIK KOYAL Ml HI>KHKH Should Be I'unUhcd A# Kully An Mur derer of Low lk?w, The Statist of lAiiuUtii, one of tlw foremost tlnanelal paper# of the jworld. itltfcusshig WHiir phases of llo* war *11 Dii tIon, says : Here wr shall content ourwh-ea with saying i tin I the war ban forced uikh) human Intelligence that our inutility Ik nearly as barbarous a* everything else eoiinccthm with the existing State systems of the world. A few men In great positions, such as the Km jierors of the two Central Kuropean States deiil?erately In cold hhaid man ufactun'il a malignant, an lucredlh^n and an unproved charge against a small uclghltorlng State to fdrnish thiHiiHclven with an excuse f?>r destroy ing that State and eitYrylng out their own (Milley of con<|ue?t. And. forsooth, we are told hy men who profess to Ih? representatives of the very moat advanced denna-racy that these men ?>n?rlit not to la* punished simply ta> caoxe they were born In the purple. There was a time when all the churches all over the world were coin hi ins 1 in preaching that crowned heads were so holy that they must not he touched hy hostile hands, and there arc unai who rail themselves Social Ists who iiiive taken up the eant. and expect people who. if not either very wise or very well Informed, at least are not absolute idiots, to believe that no human jxivver has the right to call a criminal wearing a crown to ac count for his evil deeds. It Is very .chMtr that our morality wants refur nishing. In this clear statement the Statist expresses the views which the Man ufacturers Record has held from the beginning of the wnr. The men in (icruiany and Austria who have been responsible for the war. regardless of the fact that some of then) sit on royal Thrones, should he treated exactly as any other crim inals guilty of murder. If the war should end without every great leader, it matters not how high may he his standing, being held to a strict jiersonal accountabil ity for the crimes committed. and punished accordingly, civilization would have failed of Its duty to the future. To Kaiser Wllhclin and all the mil itary autocracy which has been re sponsible for the unspeakable hor rors of the last three years the se verest punishment |>osslble should be meted out. Death Ik*fore the tiring squad, or even death on the gallows, would he almost too good for them. Hut that every one of them should pay the full penalty of their crimes must inevitably be true. unless all civilization is to condone murders and rapists and every other form of vlle ness against humanity, and deal len iently with men merely liecause they have held exalted positions. He who sjfs on. a royal throne and Is guilty of murder deserves death oven more than the poor, despised criminal in the lowly walks of life who destroys his fellow-man. Indeed, it ought to he possible to find some form of punishment more cxcrutiating ly severe than that of death itself. Connected with such punishment should be every possible iguomity to which these people can be subjected by any decent civilization. The civilization that would permit Kaiser Wllhclin. the Crown Prince, or jiiin <'f the military leaders respon sible for these murders, to continue to live after the close of the war Would he an utter failure. It would merely be inviting another war. Those who sit on thrones must he made to realize that in this world. a< well as in the next, punishment is sure and certain if they violate the laws of morality and humanity. lie who would preach auv other doctrine at such an hour as this is an enemy to all civilization. He who under any conditions would seek t-> bring about |ieaoe not based on the death penalty to be inflicted on the rulers of fter lnany. X\kTTTjT and Turkey would he false to humanity, and would he con doning th*? blackest sins which have ever stained the history of the hu man race.?Manufacturer's Kccord. Logoff News Note#-. T.uuoll. S. July IT.?The \VillihK Workers held their regular monthly meeting ni th?* home nf (ho president Mrs, Ton in last Wednesday eveuinj: at I nVI.H-k. Tho minutes wort* road jiim! accepted. Not muoh business lioinu' on hand for this moot ing only tho discussion of 1 in^r ioo civam at I.njrofT ovory Saturday even ing for the t?enefit of tho Presby terian church that is being built hero. Quito a nice Fittlo sum of money was handed in by tho different members of this society. Tho members of this society and detachment No. HI have declili'd for the convenience of the Indies to hold both meetings on the same day. but at different hours. Mr. and Mrs. Rollus of Charles ton who have been on a visit to their sister Mrs. N. 1*. C.ettvs returned to their home last Thursday. Messrs. .Rimes Ros<fl?oro. S. I.. (My bum and John Roseboro motored to Charlotte last Sunday where they went to see Mr. K. T. Roseboro who is in h hospital nt that place. Mr. and Mrs. Low is (Tyburn of Camden ure visiting af the home of Mrs. .Tamos Team. Mrs. Menninjr and Miss Mabel Hen nlng sj^nt Monday In Columbia. Mr. Charlie Thomas of Ridjrewny visiting his cousin Mrs. R. R. Clark son. ffarvoy Norrls. eighteen years of ago. of (Ireenwood. was killed wlien his automobile was struck by a Pied mont and Northern trolley car Mon day* morning. I <>KKNK C?OOl> OKAZBHH. i, J.. <ioodc Kahilis No4 Affiled by llifh Priced Undu?~ Little Can Hetdtd. IKHW can lH> raised ill Mumll UikVk uu seuerirt faring on RWture or uon f productive land, and do not require I any material amount of grain. t*>w( rough pasture laud, used for pastur ing other Ht?Kk and containing u ,,at' uraI supply of water offer* tin* best I condition*. Many geese aw kept h> titv South to kill ? weed*, especially l? the cotton tlelds. ami their use could well Ih? greatly Increased for this pur* po*c. They art* good grazers and will do well on Krass and forage crops ! alone, except during the winter launt-h*, when they may tie fed largely 'on available rqUghage, such aa clover, alfalfa hay. ullage, cabbage, wAugel wurKolH. or any waste vegetables. If the KritHM or forage Is limited It may he supplemented by light feeds of common or home-grown grains. <?eese do not need shelter except | during cold winter weather, Vhen open sheds may t>e provided. Gos lings are not usually hatched until good pasture Ik available and need additional feed only for a few weeks. The raime of pasture used either for goslings or for ueesc should lie large enough so that the grass will re main clean, or the stock should Is moved frequently to fresh land. <%s.ps, barrels, or .some other dry sheltei should be provided for the young gos lings. <ieese are very hardy and free from diseases and Insect pests. Kvolution of War. During the past, three years the ?science of war has undergone radical j changes, rendering obselete much which ! past effort and study had establish ed as standard. <*avalry has large ly given way to infantry, which now I moves farther and faster In motor cars than was ever jvosslble with anl I ma Is. Machine guns have changed | the conditions of Infantry attacks. Heavy artillery at long range now ac I compilshes much of what formerly was assigned to an Infantry charge. The difficult and always jjerllous work I of the field spy and scout has been left behind by the airman who gi>es forth openly and noisily, sweeping l over enemy lines at a mile a minute. On sea. it Is no longer the ship which can shoot the farthest, or the fast cruiser which can not be overtaken, that sinks the most enemy ships, but the submarine whose underwater mis siles arc often unseen and never heard. Trench warfare as practiced today Is an evolution of the old earthwork idea, but so changed and expanded as to have little resemblance. It was a German invention, worked out to in clude streets and alleys with main ar terlcs of communication from the rear, and complete underground habitations i cepable of housing men by thousands. ; These underground rooms are not only ! one but often two storied deefS, the ! lower level being reached by concealed i trapdoors. In the Japanese-Kussian war the Japanese made use of zigzag I open trenches as a means of approach ! to a fortress, bnt to nothing like the '?extent employed now. The development of both the subrna ! ritie and aeroplane has requisitioned i abilities, training and qualities which ! are largely new. and uncalled for in ; the past. Kspeclally is this true as regards the aviation corps, which de mands the best in the superman. So 1 essential and rigid are these require ; ments that our public, unacquainted with modern warfare has little eon : epptinn of the qualifications. One would naturally suppose the ability to successfully loop the loop time on time would indicate an airman abund antly able to leave the fair grounds, report himself at headquarters, be 1 assigned to a machine-and go aloft 4.m a military mission. As a matter of fact, such a one is merely an air -?hauflfer and nothing more. It is not only a question of undaunted courage ?there are plenty such?nor ability ! to guide a plane through all manner of pyrotechnic, maneuvers. though these two things are required. The army airman must be. and know, and ! do. ever so much more. Indeed the ' operating of a plane under normal conditions is only the tirst reader in the aviation corps.? II. II. Windsor in the August Popular Mechanics Maga zine. Notes From Stockton. Hoykin, July 1(5.? Mr. and Mrs. Fu gene Owens nnd little daughter, Hattle Wells, of Sumter, were vMtor* at the home of Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Penree Snndaj'. Mr. and Mrs. Henry (iwi-ns, of near Camden, were visitors in (his eommu nity Sunday. Miss Ithane Galloway was the guest <?f Miss Jchezel Shirley, of Camden, last week. M rs. J. H. Irhy and children, Eva and Henrietta, of the State Farm, spent a few days this week at the home j of Mrs. (i. W. Amnions. Messrs. Sam Iirltton and Obapman I Pearee are spending a while at the t home of their uncle. Mr. J. C. Hum phries. of Sumter. Mr. and Mrs. C. V. fialloway and little son, lien Raymond, visited rela tives in Hartsville last Thursday and Friday. Mr. and Mrs Henry Pea roe, from Camden. sjM*nt Sunday at the home of the formers parents, Mr. awl Mrs. B. M. Pearce here. Master Hugh Humphries, who has Ih'oii visiting relatives here, has re turned to his home-hi Sumter. Mrs-. Hetswa Workman left Friday I for DeKalh, where she will Tislt her | v<>n, Mr. N. R. Workman and attend the protracted meeting at I>eKa\b church t.his week. MsKicr Fred Pearce s]>ent last week at the home of his grand-prenta, Mr. and Mrs. Helton Owens, of UeKalb. PRISONER IR ENGLAND TELLS OF THE HORRIBlJtiiUTCHERY . ? I'M# Heche tvally understood the whole (Jtiirii) H* was unlike any other Bun I have seen. I suppose you must call hlui a Boche because he was Uirn In Munich and was aervlng in the German army. Hut ?o?t of bis native B??chery inuxt have been purged out of him by living among etvMxed jieople. lit* sjsike Kngltsh, not a hit like a foreigner, ami altogether It wan illtllcult to real!** he wan a Hup at mII. For yearn, he said, he hail beeu dealing In land ami mines and thlngM In America. He happened to he visit ing l.ondon when the war threatened. He'd never taken out pa|>ers In the States, ami he was afraid of Isdng ln terned pr something, so he sklma'd out the day before war was declared and got to Germany. For a long tliue lie was employed there on si>eelal work, hut when the Sotiume push was on last year and men were needed, he 11it41 lo J<?ln up. He had served on different parts of the front. This Is what he told, quivering now and atfalu as he thought of It: "This war Is the greatest crime the world has ever seen. The crimes that made the French Revolutions are noth ing If you compare them with the crimes of the beasts who are run ning (Jermany today, and keeping this war going. They were only fcldeves and brigands when they began it, and thought they'd bring it off, but now they're the bloodiest murderers by wholesale that the world ever pro duced. There never was anything Ilk? It before. They know perfectly well they've lost the war; they've known for months that the last chances they ever had have gone. But they are too frightened for their own skins to ad mit it and call a halt, and because they are frightened of what the i>eo ple might do when they learned the truth, they keep the thing going and sacrifice many thousands of Germans every single day and millions of mon ey?what for? To shield the repu tations of a handful of princes and politicians, It's the greatest crime the world has ever known. Here on this front our people are being killed like flies. Your artillery kills them in bunches. There ^Isn't a minute of the day but legs and arms are being blown off. Our men would gladly give themselves up to end it, but you know they cannot. When there seems to be a chance, there is always an officer or non-commissioned officers about. It Is not your guns that kill. Many (Jernians fall every day with German bullets in them. They are driven like dogs to the fighting. And to what end? Because our cursed Kaiser and (lie creatures we call statesmen are afraid of their lives for what will hapjK'ii t<> them when the people know it'< a 11 up. ?"But plenty of them know it now. Many knew before ever I was forced to join up. And perhaps I never should have been made to join if I had known less, and never said a word of what I know. I talked a little of what I knew. And that is enough. In Germany today the man who will tell the truth must be hus tled out of the way. That Is why I soo ii<> hope for (Jermany. because those who are left in the country have no spirit, can do nothing. All the strength of the country, such as it is. is in the fighting lines?helpless as slaves. Tin* others, there in Germany they are slaves; starving, starving quietly, never daring to say a word. The few who s|>eak soon find them selves 'hustled into the front line? and ii<> more is heard of them. They >ro on paying the price; thousands of lives every day. every single day. The Central Powers casualties now must l>e 100.000 a week?all for what? The crazy dreams of a few bankers and merchants, and the cowardly ^ears of a few politicians and of?of the Ho henzollerns. They say the Hapsburgs, 'too: but the A list Flans would l>e thankful to make ]>eaee tomorrow, but they cannot. They are as much sacri ficed by J^rlln as we i>oor devils her< on the front. All the bloody slaugh ter of this war, with its milliards of money and thousands of lives lost? ??very single <l?y?what keeiw It go lug lcuiK after It ban been finally de elded, i* not the will of nations. No, It Is the murderous criminality ami cowardice of a HJtle haudful of rneu In iu-1 lid. who never have been any thing hut ii jH'?t In Kurope. "Is not that rhe greatest crime the world li.i' ever known? And la It not atrletly true J>oe? any san? Ger man kiiihmmo the appointed end can he altered when the whole New World is ranged ugaliiMt Germany, an well hh tin Old? They know all about the hundred millions ttye 8<ft?e?, $ud the millions of milll^iiii of raoii^y; the Innumerahle factorlea and ship yards. They know that Atnerlea ean put*Miuudrcds of thousands of fresh troops on this front next spring, and that the exhaustion of Germany long lwfore then . will he frightful?Ih frightful now, has been frightful for a year and more. They know It all, and, brute devils they are, they chose to keep the awful slaughter going, not because they hope It can alter the end, hut for what you call "wait ami aee*1^?because they fear to' face to day what they can put ofjr till tomor row at the cost of another few thou sand deeeut lives, another few mil liards of money. "Never lwfore shy^e the wo.rld be gan has a twentieth part of such suf fering been allowed to continue day after day and month after month to protect a handful of exalted criminals from general recognition of their crimes.. The Russian people rose and smashed the bonds that bound them. But not our jpeople. Our tyrants have been mueh cleverer. It was only ^Uie bodies of the Russian people that were fettered. Their minds were free. No Gcrmau mind in Germany has been free since 1870. The Berlin criminals have seen too well for that. Our peo ple think they have been well edu cated. So they have; very well, very carefully, for just what they are do ing now?for the blindest and most damnable kind of slavery the world has ever seen, for a slavery in which the will of the masters must be paid for daily by steadily running streams of the hlood of their victims?victims taught to bare, their own thro&ts to the knife on the word uf "If your armlc? eoukl many itself the Hlnvery ud*ktW< ttciily. Hut Genuauy todaJy VttHt priMtii full of Ht?rviu. Tj who ?U?Ot* lift a iii. mi to welvew, ai)d that it will rrumb 2 William the Murderer uiu go ing a daily reprieve for hl? own! erable family in return fur ^ J <>t 10,000 of 1.1m Klave* Th.uk i I a 111 out of Itl" Where Guard* (i?, ?> Washington, July IN.?"v^ W4r pirtment announced today imtini of national guard troop* to traU campH aa foil own: Fifth division, oomprislug from Maine, New ltyaimhlrv, j xachOsetts, Connecticut?; Khodt1* and Verm out* to Charlotte, N. cj Sixth division, couiprlalag tji, from New York State, Spartauk ? a hW Seventh division, 1'unnaylvauU gusta, Ga. Bightli division, Virginia, Dei|? Maryland, Plstrht ??f Columbia Now Jersey,* Anulaton, Ala. Ninth division, North and i Carolina and Tennessee, llrwm 8. C. Tenth division, Alalmma, tfeg and Florida, Macon, Ga. Sixteenth dlvlalon, Ohio, Wwt ginla troops to Montgomery, All Seventeenth division, Kentucky Indiana troopa, to Hattleaborg, Eighteenth division, Arkansas slsslppl and i/oulslana troops to andrla, La. Pay Day With The Flat Columbia, July 12.?ThU w??! day for the First Regiment, Bou olina Infantry, a considerable^ of Which lg stationed at the stiti grounds, and It wan the first ,under the Increased pay national defense act. Private have heretofore been receM per month, today received Just twice as much for ttieir during this month of June, class privates received $33 to $18, as heretofore; corporals $26 instead of the old $21; i $38, as aglnst $30 heretofore, sergeants $51 instead of $45. Another big loan of $5,000,(1 the Allies is expected to be ari Congress In the near future. YOU NEED YOUR EYES NOW AS NEVER BEFORE Strenous times are crowding upon us. Your are the steering wheels o f your brain and body, aa you cannot afford to neglect any means of pr^servi? them. WELL ADJUSTED GLASSES will equip your eyes for the task before them. Oa glasses are scientifically ground to meet and remed] all eye defects. See us at once and put your eyes 1 perfect woring condition. You'll need them as neve before. * : a L. BLACKWELL Jeweler and Optician Camden, S. ? - ? > .. -mm ARE YOU GETTING THE WORTtl OF MONEY IN FIRE INSURANCE? In buying the necessities of life as well as luxuries, the wise man s^jjjj best his money can command. Some cannot afford the most expens:ive _ ? changing cash for chattels the desire for the best quality for an equal q an instinctive trait of mankind Why not exercise the same careful scrutiny and judgement in company to protect your home and your proyerty fl*om loss by fire. We represent companies of large resources, with business already companies that have been tested by time and tried by auch staggering ^ ^ they received at Chicago, Baltimore, San Francisco, and the recent great lanta. . Don't forget that the best insurance can be had for the same mon j ferior article. , m ? .' j. ' . , f J . ^ ? * ?? f " ? ? C. P. DuBOSE & CO ' ? * 5?"T f ? ? ~ - gawpi ' 1 REAL ESTATE INSURANCE CROCKER BUILDING - . . v' .* ?' ??