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I 25 Per Cent. Discount! I El For a limited time -we are going to give a 25 pqr cent. discount on all permanent waves. $12.50 Wave . . . $9.25 II $10.00 Wave . 7.50 $7.50 War? . ? , $5.50 $5.00 Wave . . . 3.75 I Bobbed Hair Curled on ends for $?.00 or $2.50 I 11 Realistic Croquignole I Frederick Eugene j Oil Wave ? , ! j LFour Operators.'Evening by Appointment. Camden Beauty Parlor Telephone 149 Camden, S. C. . SOCIETY NEWS 1 Telephone J 00 w i i ir ' ' i X Many Holiday Parties Many interesting: affairs assembling the younger contingent of Camden society were held during the last week of the old year. A lovely, event of the week was tho dance that Mrs. G. R. Cook gave Friday evening at her home on Green street in compliment to her two nieces, Misses Mary Louise an^Betty Hutchinson, who have been spending the holidays with her. Pretty and appropriate decorations were used in , the hall 'room and music was fur' nished by the Carolinians. Delighti ful refreshments were served during s intermissi'oiK*" On the same evening Mr. and Mrs. Harry D. Kirkover were hdst and hostess at a delightful dinner dance which assembled about fifty guests. An interesting feature of this party was the movie of different sports shown during the intermission. A most enjoyable " holiday "affair was the dinner dance given New Year's Eve at Cool Spring by Mrs. Charles G. ICnight. This beautiful old home with its spacious rooms decorated in' Southern smilax, phie tops and holly furnished a fitting background for the many dancers. ... . ^ I V. Dinne^ was- served atv midnight. Preceding the xlance at Cool Spring on New Year's Eve Miss Edna Mabee delightfully entertained a number of guests at a dinner party, at her mother's home on Lyttleton streeti Miss Elizabeth Zemp was hostess at a tea dance Monday afternoon, entertaining a number of her friends at the Camden Country Club. Sandwiches, cakes and punch were served and dancing was enjoyed from b to 7. Miss Tobin Entertains Miss Mary Lucia Tobin entertained a group of forty high school friends Saturday evening at her . mother's home on Chesnut street. Christmas greens of various kinds were used attractively about the living and dining rooms which were thrown ensuite for dancing.. A large punch bowl filled with punch was placed on a table in the dining room w,here tho guests were served during the evening. After dancing the party attended the midnight show at the Majestic Theater. / . . ? Hostess at Dinner Party Preceding the dance at the Tobin's Saturday evening Miss Ruth DeLoache was hostess to a few friends at a dinner party at her mother's home. Covers were laid for eight and dinner was served at 7:30 from an attractively appointed table which had as a center decoration a bowl of yellow Christmas jessamine. Imoh I T T M "J I ^IIHH Lna fflflWrtiRRWnS^HP'Pi I ;. ROSEDALE . Pineapple Sliced M NO. 21/2 Olc l )| Hawaiian>' T^ . CAN /' V r ' * '~r *7 J ' ' ;.' FANCY NORWAY MACKEREL 3 for 25* HEINZ BAKED BEANS 25 OZ." CAN j PONCY SLICED BREAD LOAF - " I TELLAM'S PEANUT BUTTER lb. lOt j BROOKFIELD BUTTER lb. , 27# LUX TOILET SOAP 2 CAKES , STOKELYS KIDNEY BEANS ' can 5# PHILLIPS TOMATO SOUP U CAN I I HEINZ COOKEP SPAGHETTI 2 cams 15# I GOLD LABEL COFFEE lb. 25# ! ROSE RICE '' 3 lbs- 10c Apr, ** ^ Fancy Evaporated v Peaches lb 71c Lippincott*s _ ' Chili Sauced 12ic Keep That $choolgirl Qort\p>\exion . ... Palmolive 2"ofllc 2^^2^S3B8HBBi^^3B555S55^B5iS26S8l@BE^Sl8BB5ai3B ? - . / r' . > .-xv- v '<-* ' . ' * - . - \ I I Beef Rout, lb. f lBc Beef St?wr Ik. - ? 10? I J Pork JObs, lb. -10? Pork Taijs, 3 lbs 25c I | Pure Pork Sausage, lb 15c I II1 Weenies, 2 lbs. 25c I f ; I Froth Fish and Oysters ; I PRODUCE Jumbo C&mry 2 for 25c B>iwMt 4 lb$. for 28c. Freih Tomaioti p?rlV 10c ^H Hi Li' . 1^Z- - - ?"f b /ss^yfiaflMHMMK - Lettuce, Iceberg, hd. 10c ^ Personal Mention Matthew Ferguson arid Karl Kldrodge, of Fisher's Island, N. Y., are here for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. Walton Ferguson are expected this week to spend some time in Camden. Dr. A. B. Whitaker, of Nassau Hospital, Mineola, New York, is the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Whitaker. John Porter, who has been the gue?t of his mother, Mrs. L. S. Proctor, has returned to New York. Miss Tomiriv Guthrie has returned home from Charlotte where she visited Miss Jean Marion. Miss Catherine Huckabee is the guest of Mrs. Fay Russell. Mr. and Mrs. Kugene Welling returned Saturday to their home in Brooklyn, after a delightful visit to Mr. and Mrs. F. Doss Goodale. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Wilson and daughter, who have been spending the Holidays in Union with relatives, returned hpme this week. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Queen returned to Camden this week from a visit to relatives in Sistersville, West Virginia. The man^iriends of Mr. and Mtb. Garwood Jayne9 will regret to learn that they leave here soon to make their home in Columbia. Miss Sadie Craig, the county home demonstration agent, who went to her home in Pickens to spend"* the Christmas holidays, has been unable to return 01* account of a case of inj fluen/.a. _ Miss Ruth -Shaw, of Columbia, spent last week end here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. 'Shaw, on Hampton avenue. Miss Helen Bryant, of Orangeburg, is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Garwood Jaynes. Miss Fiances Bissell, of Charleston, was a visitor here during the Christmas week. DuBose Blakeney, of Atlanta, spent the holidays in Camden with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Blakeney. Henry Lee Clyburn, a student at The Citadel, visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Clyburn,, during tho Chritsmas vacation period. Mr. hnd Mrs. J. H. Clyburn had as guests last week Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Lewis Clyburn and children, of Hartsville. ? John Richardson, of Newburgh, N. Y., spent last week wi|h his mother, Mrs. Robert Marye. Mrs. Frances M. Ba Wooten, of Charleston, visited friends in Camden recently. Ernest L. Woodward, of Leroy, New York, is spending several days at his beautiful estate, "Holly Hedge" in Kirkwood. f. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Smith, Jr., have returned from .Brooklyn, New York, where they went to visit Mrs. Smith's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Campbell Steward, of Goshen, N. Y., have returned to Camden for the winter and are occupying their home on Green street. / Mrs. Robinson Entertains Saint Mary's Hall was a scene of gaiety Tuesday evening when Mrs., Woods Robinson entertained a group of high school friends of her daughter, Alice, at a dance. Music was furnished by a local colored orchestra. Cakes, sandwiches and punch were served during intermission. , ^ In Honor of Miss Rosen Complimenting s her niece, Miss Beatrice Rosen, of Cleveland, Ohio, Mrs. Sam Karesh invited a group of young people in for dancing Thursday evening. A charming setting, in keeping with the holiday season, was used for this affair. Fruit punch and sandwiches we^e served during the evening. I' ! Dance by Cotillion Club <, fie Camden Cotillion club had its ad ball of the season New Year's at the Camden Country Club. ,,phaded; lights, pine tops ana other greens were used in tne ball rbom. Music was fyrnished by the Carolinians. _ I* i i Garden Club To Meet, On next Monday afternoon, January &th, at 3:30 o'clock, the Garden Club of this city will meet at the home of Mrs. Robert W. Pomeroy, 1 "Cedar Knoll." Mr. U T. Mills will make a talk on azaleas, which no doubt will be most interesting as well as instructive, as ho has been very successful in raising these plants to perfection. A full attendantce is desired. " Card of Thanks We now have found the beautiful , meaning of friendship, and are using this method to express our deepest appr^ iation for the- many deeds of kindness shown us by so i great a number of friends for their/ untiring efforts in the lingering illpess and death of our husband arid iattoffr> R. Harvey Truesdale. The many expressions of aympathy have done j much to help us bear the great burden of grief that we are now under- ; R. H. Truesdale and Family ' W. D. Byrd Die*. Laurens, Dee. 07.~WiIIfaan D. ^ Byrd, 37, farmer and former legie- j la tor, died at his home near here to* a day. ia survived h? ftia widow and, ? She son. A brother Ih-r &. C. Byrd, te president emeritus of Queens-Chicora College at CharIott?^^Sil?r*r"~ifr* -! rangemente haya^net been completed. \ . * - - - v-?*-. g 1 - - jjj CITES CAMDEN'S STREETS A gentleman who detests seeing dirt or disorder remarked to us on tho commonness of orange peels, paper and other trash on the streets. One unfortunate consequence, and one that is entirely unnecessary, of the cheapness and abundance of or? anges is the littering of the streets with their peelings. People buy a few oranges and eat one as thoy walk! along, throwing the peels down as they go. Each person feels, if he thinks at all, that -his little litter amounts to nothing. Rut when manydo the Rattle way it amounts to the difference between neat, clean streets and a well kept town and ono that makes a very bad impression von Strangers and pains citizens Pf refined taste. ' , -There is nothing that so readily makes a good impression as clean, neat yards and streets. Such care costs little. Much of it need coat nothing. Wo have occasionally remarked on tlie well-kept streets in Charleston and Camden. *Oh yes, they are tourist towns, Is the reply. Rut do not all towns owe something to their own citizens as well as to tourists? The desire to attract tourists for the sake of the money they will leave should not bo the only motive in keeping a town well groomed. The mayor of Charleston once publicly said about a year ago that the reason Charleston formerly failed to attract, tourists was that she was so dirty they would not come, and when she cleaned up she got them. ' Children can*- be taught to keep streets clean by refraining from throwing litter upon them. It is a good praeticnl lesson in elementary civics that every teacher might well impress. Leading children to realize thejr part in civic uplift is a good lesson that may bear' fruit later in much more important aspects of public. life. 'We recaJJ an ex-soldier's remarking on a man's throwing down the end of an envelope that he had torn open that he always put the scraps in hijS pocket, for even yet if he threw a bit of paper on the ground he could hear the sergeant shout, "Pick that up." ?Let's have the cleanest, neatest town in the state. < A town naturally as pretty as Newberry has a right to be kept in" the neatest style.?Newberry Observer. - .* i Farm I>oan Information. The following letter from U. S. Senator James F. Byrnes has . just been received by County Agent Green and is published for the information of farmers of Kershaw county: "Replying to your letter of the 24th, the Agricultural Committee of the iSenate reported a bill which eliminated all of Senator Smith's bill, and inserted in lieu thereof the languago of the Crop Production Loan Bill of fast year. This bill makes no provision as to the acreage of production gain, but gives to the Secretary of Agriculture the power to adopt such regulations as he ses fit. " "l*he 'Senate having passed the bill, th^'matter.is now with the Douse, and1 I am unable to express any opinion as to when it will be passed by that (Body." v , Mr. GrCen, through official channels,'*has had called to the attention of the Secretary of Agriculture -the importance of 1933 crop Viprfeduction loan- being baa?d or. the farmers' previous average production, rather than his 1932 production since most of, the farmers of (Kershaw county had Very small crop productions. 'In 1932; due to the drought. ?/- ? , Fire destroys about!509,000,000 worth of property ;in< - the .United States every yearr' . i. A. u . ..? ??rr. Majestic Program ' Friday, January Efth A dramatic romance that portrayB the length which a woman will go for the man she loves?"FAITHLE88," with ,Tallulah Bankhead and Robert Montgomery. Also selected sl^rts."' Saturday, January 7th r Victor McLaglen, Greta Nissen, Nell O'Day, Arthur Pierson and Allan Rinehart in "RACKETY RAX." The blackjack and hijack boys 'muscling in on college football?the gang from the gas house and gals from the night clubs?all going collegiate?can you imagine?its uproarious comedy. Also Charlie Qh^plin in "Eaay~Str?et" and Mickey Mouse. Monday and Tuesday January 9th and 10th Now! Fannie Hurst's "BACK STREET," with Irene Dunne and John Boles and a big surrounding cast. For every woman . who has loved unwisely?and for every man who lpved too well! The love thrill i>f a life-time. Wednesday, January 11th 'Sensational! Because the'1 screen Mis for the first time the romance dear to every woman! "MADAME BUTTERFLY." with Sylvia Sidney, Cary Grant and Charles RuggleC Thursday, January 12th Unarms jl* ugh ton, Maureen OoBilivan, Dorothy Feterson, Veree Teaswealth insure happineae? : . - ' ^ ' 1 Mrs. Rodgers Honored In compliment to Mrs, William Rodgers, of Virginia, who is the house guest of Mrs. E. J. McLeod, Mrs. T. V. Walsh entertained at four tables of bridge Friday afternoon. The rooms were most attractive with potted poinsettias, red berri^.and tall, v&d candles in silver holdersP A bril-_ liantly lighted Christmas tree added to the festive appearance. Miss Virginia Lee Nettles and Mrs. J. H. Osborne received lovely prizes as winners of high and low score. The honor guest was also presented an attractive gift. A sweet course with coffee was served by the hostess when cards were laid aside. * Mrs. Rodgers was again honored on Saturday afternoon when Mrs. s. C. Zemp entertained a number of friends at bridge. Five tables for contract were arranged- in a lovely Christmas setting. At the conclusion of the gftmes the hostess served Charlotte Russe and devil's food cake with coffee. Mrs. Mortimer Muller received a lovely prize as Winner' of the highyscore. The honor guest was presented a dainty gift. ? " ' . U Mrs. J. M. Dempster entertained informally Saturday evening in honor of Mrs. Rodgers. A few intimate friends were invited in to watfch the old year' out. Contract bridge was enjoyed until midnight, when a most delightful turkey supper was served. Mrs. Rodgers was remembered with a gift. Top score prize went to Mrt; E. J. McLeod and low prize to Mrs. Frank W. Spencer. Among the delightful affairs given Mrs. Rodgers this week was the bridge luncheon at which Mrs. Alfred McLeod was hostess Wednesday. Her guest list included a small group oF the honor guest's intimate friends. Contract was played at two tables and high score was won by Mrs. Hughey Tindal. The floating prize was last held by Mrs.*Wiley Sheom. An attractive prize was presented to Mrs. Rodgers. Lunch was served on the card tables at noon. 7?? - __ Entertains Bridge Club Miss Barbara Zemtf was hostess to the members of her bridge club Saturday morning. Miss Dorothy Snyder and Miss Ruth DeLoache were invited to play with club members. Miss Dorothy Snydei* held high score and Miss Nancy Nelson, low. Each received appropriate gifts. Sandwiches, cakes and tea were Served after cards. Met With Mrs. Davidson The members of the Wednesday morning bridge club were delightfully entertained this week by Mrs. A. S. Davidson. Bowls of yellow Christmas jessamine were artistically used in the card rooms. Mrs. W. L. Wright and Miss Molly Anderson were guests of the club. ^Assisted by Mrs. E. C. DuBose the hostess served a delicious lunch at 1 o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. Robert -Pomeroy, Jr., and baby have returned for the win- j ter season. V ii : Bride-Elect Honored Miss Mary Boykin, bride-elect of this month, was guest of honor at an ^ informal bridgeparty given by Miss Elizabeth Zemp, Tuesday afternoon. A small group of the honor guest's, . close friends was inviteck Prizes were presented^ Miss Faith deLoach and Miss Dotty Zemp for high and low scores, *'Miss Boykin was remembered with a gift of linen for her trousseau. Sandwiches, tea and frpit cake wero served by the hostess after cards. $ 4 Entertains Card Club Mrs. W. A. Bdykin, Jr., entertained the members of her card club and a number of additional guests Wednesday afternoon. The rooms in which cards were played were bright with the season's flowers. At the conclusion of the games the hostess served a sweet course with coffee'. MrsNettle* Lindsay receive^the prize for top score. Playing witn club members were Mrs. George Brunson, Mrs. Rhetta McDowell, Mrs. Donald Morrison, Mrs. M. L. Smith, Jr., Mrs. L. L. Clyburn, Mrs. W. W. Bates and Mrs. Kirby Tupper. ?: ? Entertains at Bridge A lovely event of the week was >, the bridge party of four tables at which Mr. And Mrs. F. D. Goodale * were host and hostess Wednesdays' s. evening in compliment to their guests, , Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Wellen, of JJrooklyn, N. V. The rooms throughout the home were attractive with poinsettias and red carnations. A ; most delightful sweet cottrse was served on the card tables after ?ths games. Mrs. Cecil Brasington, of Paw Cfceek, N. C., held high score for ladies; George Potter, high' for men. Each received a pretty prize. To the honor guests appropriate gifts' were given. Mr. and Mrs* John H. Lafitte and small daughter, of Columbia, spent a , . few days this week with Mr., and. Mrs. T. V. Walsh, Jr. ?i-? SPECIAL PRICES m mi . II* M For Next Week ON SHOE REPAIRS Men'* Sot**-Heela ?,.$l .00 Men's Half Sales .... *75 * Men's Rubber Heels .40 Ladies' Soles-Heels .. .75 c|| Ladies' Soles .SO All Work Guaranteed % LOMANSKY'S SHOE SHOP . .?.VS? . ? - ? '~'J7V "n*nr????j?????I .;-V: <vr ? ~ ? ' ' ' 1 . Pre - Inventory Sale I In order lo make room for our New Stock and save j time when taking inventory, we ar? dividing our stock of hats ijrato two groups at prices to move them all. I j I One Group 50 cts. One Group $1.00 | | " l&BSB This meant our entire stock. ^ - Miss M ATTIE GERALD , N AT THE FASHION SHOP STEVENSON & WHITAKER ' . ^ ^r~: --? -7 Choice Timothy Hay PeavineHay flipped Oats Seed Oats * Corn and Other Feeds , NORTH BROAD STREET ' TELEPHONE ??M j " r r'~ ' 0