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Mta? Had ***7 CarroH De?Ch*mp* ontwUin* with ? children's pnrty Wednesday aJrnoon, the occasion being to celthe 'sixth birthday of bar a Hehter, Carolyn. Many games were , ;LI and in the guessing contest t winner was Jane Thomas, ^or flesh men ts the guests were invited the dining room, where the table i centered with the (birthday cake r. in white and bearing .six pink iced 1,1 ?%; lighted candles. Th0 London l>aily Herald has been barred from the mails of Germany. n.i I S/. Charles. Libby's, or Deans Evaporated MILK 3 tall 41 C|! CANS JL\F*' jf B. C. Premium Vlaka Crackers pkq. 13? Clovcrbloom ; Butter LB 25c Post I*ran Flakes PKa 10o for Making Salad Dreaainga j Wesson Oil SET 17c r'T?'? no Catsup 8izk ||C ]'c<irtable Shortening S^SOWPUBFT 6hn* i can Laundry Sorip [ Octagon 5 cakes 11c* ll'usAi'"<7 I'owdcr Octagan 5 PKQS 11c For Quick Suds j Super Suds 2 pK?3 15c Toilet Soap Palmolive .3 cakes 17c Octagon Cleanser 2 cans 9c Stokely's TOMATO JUICE ? CANS 250 ilc<ii i in f?i:c Ivory Scap cake 5%c M'iiiff Snp'ha P&GSoap 3 cakes He Bulk Vinegar gal. 25c P.Otrn.<iry Grape Juice bot? 12 Jrrgrn's Toilet, \ Soap 6 cakes 25c Plain or Selj-Rising FLO ROSA FLOUR S? 95* n? ? VIZ Salad Spread ^ 16? -'if Potted Meat 3 CANS 100 rS Corned Beef Hash ncan* 50 Cherries bot.' Table Salt 3 pkgs. 10c A r 77t oars CB33NED BEEF "J 14-Vit PRODUCE Lemons, dozen 2(W|i Fancy Tomatoes, lb... 10c Potatoes, 5 lbs 15c I Iceberg Lettuce, head 10c Fresh Beans, lb. ...... 10c Tender Com, 3 for ....10c Canteloupes, 2 for .... 25c Oranges, dozen 20c llMiS SOCIETY NEWS 1 Telephone 100 * i n * Bride-To-He Honored iMma Mary Cureton, whoso marto DoLoache Sheffni will be an event of wide interest June 22, was honor^ guest At a beautiful jmrty Thursday ufteinoch when her aunt, M}Ss Drue Huxley, entertained for her at hor home on Hampton street. This was the first of u series of lovely parties for Miss Curoton and ussenVbled a dozen of her close friends for contract. An old-time nosegay tied on her chair marked the place of the bride-elect. Hunch was served during the afternoon and an ice course followed the bridge games. Misses Caroline Houser, Caroline Richardson, ' Willie llaile, Kit DeLoache and Pete Boykin called after cards. A lovely trousseau gift was presented the guest of honor. Miss Nancy Dempster receiVed the high score prjzg and Miss Willie llaile cut the consolation. Miss Gertrude Zemp entertained the members of the Spinsters' Club Monday evening and added two extra tables for Miss Cureton. A yellow and green color motif was used in the decorations of the home and was further emphasized in the ice course which followed the bridge games. A bouquet of yellow gladioli marked the place of the guest-of-honor. First prize for the club members was won by Miss Tommy Guthrie and Miss Caroline Iiouspr won the guest highscore prize.,. Following the card games a big Jack Horner pie made in a djshpau and filled with kitchen utensils was brought to the door for the bride-to-be. iMiss Cureton was honor guest again when on Tuesday morning Miss Virginia Lee Nettles entertained at a bridge party and towel shower. Miss Nettles was assisted in entertaining by her motlj^g', Mrs. W. F. Nettles, and by Misses'Olivtf Nettles and Nora Rhaone. Bowls of pink and yellow roses beautifully decorated the card rooms where four tables of contract were in play. A corsage of yellow rosebuds was used to mark the honor guest's place at the table. A basket filled with towels of various kinds, which were gifts of the guests, was presented Miss Cureton and the gift of the hostess was a very Jovely pink and lavender bath mat. A buffet lunch was served on the card tables after the bridge games. Another ,pre-nuptial honor for Miss Cureton was the bridge party Tuesi day afternoon given by Misses Caroline Houser, Willie Halle- and -Pete Boykin at 'Miss Houser's home on Fair street. There were four tables of contract in a pretty setting of yellow and green, a yellow gladiolus ^designating the placfc of the honor guest. Miss Caroline Richardson was winner of the high score prize and the bride-elect was presented an attractive gift. Punch, sandwiches, cakes and mints were served by the hostesses. Calling after cards were: Misses Susan Kennedy, Alice DePass, Phyllis Garrison, Dolly Singleton and Elizabeth Zemp. Another party Wednesday evening continued the series of lovely entertainments in compliment to Miss Cureton and Mr. Sheofn when Misses Nancy Dempster and Mary Goodale and Mrs. Jack Nettles entertained at Lake Shamokin. About thirty guests were invited to motor up to the lake at 6:30 for swimming. There followed a delightful supper served at the 4-iH Club House after which dancing was enjoyed. Camden Girl Takes High Honors ^ Misa Caroline P. Richardson, a talented young Camden girl, was a graduate of Winthrop College on Monday, June 5, when she was awarded the bachelor of science in music, currClaude, degree. Dr. John W. Corbett, her grandfather, and Bobby Marye, her brother, attended the graduation exercises. The degree she received was. next to the4 highest in awards. Met With Mrs. Hay The Thursday afternoon contract club met at the home of Mrs. W. O. Hay this week. Playing in the place of absent club members were: Mrs. R. B. Pitts. Mrs. W. L. Goodale and Miss Minetto Boykin. Top scores for the afternoon were made by Mrs. F. tjj/l. Zemp ami Miss Lillian Vates. Delightful refreshments consisting of sandwiches, cakes and fudge ^fcre served by ^he hoStess^^, The first load of 1933 tobacco has been received at a Mullins warehouse. This is the earliest date on record for South {iirolina tobacco. The quality is said to bo excellent. C O KOOHCCAY 3AIU0A DKCmCOAY -PROft- UkDY AjSlSfAMT fvORNEG47!r _FUNERAL HOME Junml Directors $& mbcfixer? PHONE 103# CAMDEN, S.C Personal Mention Mra, Willimn <J, Wallace and two daughters, Gladys and Gdrvais, who have been visiting relatives in Orangeburg, spent several days hero at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Wallace. J. Cantey Villopigue, of Fayetteville, spenG the past week end here, the guest ef his mother, Mrs./Emma C. Villepigue. . " Miss Km ma Villopigue had as her guest Sunday Miss Alpha Martin, of Kayettoville. K. M. Kennedy, Jr., attended the convention of South Carolina insurance agents held in Greenville last week. Ktnily Shannon and brother, Bill Shannon, of Griffin, Ga., are visiting their grandfather, C. J. Shannon, Jr., on Chesnut street. Katherine and John Hallett, of Charlotte, are here ut the home of their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John S. Lindsay, for a visit. Miss Frances Boykin has returned from a visit to Miss Kuth Richards in Shandaken, N. Y.f and New York City. ? ' Mr. und Mrs. W. L. Jackson and family and Mrs. Jackson's niece, Mablo Yates, spent Sunday af Folly Beagh and other points of interest. Misses Mary and Natalene Zeigler have returned home after a visit to relatives in Orangeburg. Mrs. E. It. Law, of Darlington, and Miss Ethel Smith, of Anderson, were the guests Monday and Tuesday of Mrs. H. S. Zeigler and daughters. Mrs. R. D. Ackerman and daughter, Ruth Roland, of Rockingham, N. C., were weok end guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Gladden. W. P. Thomas and daughter, Betty Thomas, are on a motoring trip with relatives. They are making a tour by the southern route to Hollywood, California. Aileen Belk is this week visiting her sisters, Mrs. M. L. McDonald and Mrs. H. J. Williams, in Columbia. Marion Williams, J. C. Gillis, C. G. Kornogay and Jim Gandy spent last week end as the guests of A. E. Miller in his home in the mountains near Hendersonville. Miss Virginia Lee Nettles left this past week for Boston to attend the graduation exercises at Boston University, from which she graduated last year. 'Mrs. Harold Birohmore and children have gone to Greer to join Mr. Birchmore, who returned several weeks ago to Greer to make his home. 'Shannon Blackwell leaves this week for Pawley's Island, where he will spend the summer. Miss Jacqueline Spann, of Lake City, is visiting her brother and sister-in-law, -Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mickle. They will accompany her to her home Sunday, for a visit. Mrs. Louise Rosich had as her guests last week, Mr. .and Mrs. H. L. Brown, from Charlotte. I>r. Cecil Wittkowsky, of Central Islip, N. Y., is the guest this week of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Wittkowsky. Mr. and Mrs. Newton C. Boykin leave today for Lake George where they will spend the summer. (Mr. and Mrs. Dick Gates, of Atlanta, are here visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Brown. Mrs. Gates will be pleasantly remembered here as Miss Blondell Brown. Mrs. J. G. Richards, Jr. left last week with her sister, Miss Mary Hayes, of Kershaw, for a two weeks stay in New York. 1 Mrs. G. E. Taylor has gone to Charlotte to spend several weeks with her daughter, Mrs. Mark Johnson. Rev. and Mrs. A. D. McArn are at Myrtle Beach this week chaperoning a house party. W. L. Goodale and Miss Mary Eleanor Goodale attended the gladioli show at the auditorium in Columbia last Friday. \V. L. Goodale and Abbott Goodale werrt to Newberry last week to attend a meeting of the Floral TeleL-raph Delivery Association, of which Mr. W. L. Goodale is state chairman. ! Friends of Jack Nettles are pleased t<? learn he is getling along nicely after an appendicitis operation performed at the Camden hospital on Thursday. Emily Martin, Banna Martin and Gary Martin, of Clinton, are guests of their aunt, Mrs. H. D. Niles, this week. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Alexander have returned from a convention of laundry and dry cleaners from the states of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida held in Atlanta. Mr. Alexander reports an unusually fine meeting. Met at Shamokin Mr. and Mrs. Jack Whitaker, Jr., were high score winners at the meeting of the Tuesday evening bridge club held at Lake Shamokin Wednesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Zcmp. . Mr&. R,-N.-McDewett piayed for Mrs. J. G. Richards, Jr. The contract games followed supper whioh was served at 8 o'clock. Held Tonsil Clinic Dr. Kibler, Socialist from Columbia, was at the t^amden hospital Wednesday when he performed sixteen tonsil it is operations on children who were unable to have the work done through the regular channels and the regular fees. This Work was sponsored by the Junior Welfare league, of Camden, ami it is only one of the many clinics which this worthy organisation has sponsored in recent years. When those young ladies call on you for a donation, this is an illustration of what your money is being used for. It is doing a gieat work for those who are unable to help themselves. Cam ping at Cake Shamokin Miss Cornelia A Id ret and Mrs. Harrington Yates are chaperoning a group of boys and girls who ure camping at Lake Shamokin this week. Among thoso in the party are Misses Mary I*ee Blakeney, Charlotte DuI Bo so and MaVgarot Boykin, Everett Montgomery, Joseph L4ing and Jack I Bo yd. ?> Mrs. Stevenson lloateaa Mrs. K. K. Stevenson added an extra table to the regular number when she entertained- the neighborhood bridge club Wednesday afternoon. I Those present besides club members were Mrs. John T. Ma dee y, Jr., Mrs. T. ix;e Little, Mrs. Joe McKain and Mrs. Henry Niles. High score prize was won by Miss Drue Baxley and Mrs. Mackoy cut the consolation, Mrs. T. Lee Little received the low prize. The hostess served sandwiches anil iced tea after the games. Mrs. McCann Entertains A lovely affair of the past was the bridge party of six tablwl.at which Mrs. M. McCann was hostess Friday evening at her home on Hampton avenue. The rooms thruout the home were attractive with vari-colored snapdragons. A most delightful chicken salad course was served <>n the card tables before the games. Mrs. F. D. Goodale held high score for ladies. Laurence Betsill high for men and the low scorers were Mrs. S.-AV. VanLandingham and James Gandjk $ach winner received an ^i^ive^;z<h> 'C - ' Mril CHewning ifonor Guest Mrs. George Ohewning was honor guest at a lovely party Friday afte?" noon when her mother, Mrs. R. E. Chewning entertained on the anniversary of her wedding day. Two tables were placed for contract in a pretty setting of summer flowers. The hostess was assisted in entertaiinng by Mrs. Horace Zeigler, Mrs. George Coleman received the high score prize and Miss Anne Rowland was awarded the low prize. *_ ? ? Rotary Club Notes The Rotary program on Thursday was in charge of John K. deLoach. He had as the guest speaker Dr. A. W.. Humphries, who is director of the health work in Kershaw County. Dr. Humphries gave an interesting account of this work in checking the spread of contageous diseases, .instructing mothers in the care of infants and enlightening everyone in the necessity of sanitation. G C. Epps, of Florence, was a guest .visitor and he was called upon for a few minutes talk. 'He is the field representative of a large cooperative agency that has charge of distributing most of the produce that is shipped out of South Carolina, such as potatoes, 1 beans, squash, peaches, pecans, etc.' His concern will handle about 1,600 car loads ?f produce this year, and six hundred o these cars will be peaches. Mr. Epps told of the prices obtained for the various products and said that the farmers were feeling better over conditions, and are feeling more hopeful as to the future. The program next week will be Hi charge of N. Roland Goodale, Jr. ??- ? - ' Building Annex To Race Stables. Work has already gotten under way on an annex to the stables at the Springdale race course. Four1 ecn stalls arc being added with a ! view to taking care of many mere horses to be here for the season of j 1933-34 than were here this past one. ; Many fine animals arc stabled in Camden during the fall and winter I months and every year more lovers of that animal bring down a string of polo mounts or. racers of the best stock. First Cotton Bloom. The first cotton bloom reported to us was that exhibited here on last Friday, June 9th, by Ben Jenkins, colored. The field from which this blpom was picked is south of the city L. B. Ogburn, of Camden, brought in a bloom, plucked from the Cureton place, near Camaden, on Tuesday, June 13, A. C. McAbce, 20 year* old, was exonerated by the coroner's jury for killing Frank Owens, aged 25, in self c defense, in MeAbee's father's store at Piedmont, in Anderson county. SI 1>DEN DEATH OF LADY ?- ?y M iss Mamic^ McCaskil) Expires in Local Drug 8tor? - - 1 " " 1 . The friends of Miss Mamie Moktas^i kill, 84 years of ago, were shocked and saddened to learn hf her sudden passing -Saturday afternoon. She was on the street with friends shop|yiiiK when feeling sick, went into a local drug store to rest, dying before I it was known how ill sho was. Miss McCaskill was from the Beu| lah section of this county and moved to Camden about twelve years ago to reside with her mother on Mill street. The deceased is survived by her mother, Mrs. Rc^Au MdCasklll; live brothers, C. B. McCaskill, R. L. McCaskill, L. F. McCaskill, of Camden; T. M. MoCaskill, of Lqcknow; Calvin McCaskill, of Oassatt; ono sister, Mrs. O. M. MoCreary, of Blaney; five half brothers, J, A. McCaskill, J. Jh McCaskill, of Bethune; J. C. McCaskill, W. M. MoCaskill, of CamdcYi. Funeral services were held at Mt. Olivet church on Sunday at 4 o'clock with Rev. John Jnttlojohn officiating an<i the burial was in the churchyard. Six brothers served as pallbearers. The Kornogay Funeral Home of this city had charge of the funeral arrangements. Book Club Held Meeting A small 'but interesting meeting of the Kirkwood Book Club was held on Thursday morning with Mrs. W. S. Burnet as hostess. The new president, Mrs. E. C. Zenvp, w-as in the chair. Mrs. J. B. Zemp and Mrs. W. R. DoLoache contributed to the program after which a social hour was enjoyed. Celebrated Birthday Charles Herbert Zemp, Jr., the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Zemp, celebrated the anniversary of his sixth birthday Saturday afternoon by inviting several friends to a moving picture party. I^ater the children re-! turned to his home, where the birthday cake was cut and delightful refreshments served the little guests. Miss Team Hostess The -meeting of the Friday contract club, which was held this week at the home of Miss Alberta Team, was a jnost enjoyable one. In addition to the members Mrs. Mortimer Boykin and Mrs. Alex Clnrkson were invited guests. Late in the afternoon tempting refreshments were served. Miss Bobbins Bridge Hostess Miss Etta Robbins was hostess at a pretty party Wednesday evening when she entertained at two tables of contract. A delightful dinner was served on the card tables upon the arrival of the guests and the bridge games followed. Winning (first and second high score prizes, respectively, were Mrs. Dan Murchison and "Mrs. James Gandy while the low prize was presented to Mrs. W. D. Trantham. 1%T Hey! Time to have your Summer Togs Cleaned i And when we say "clean** we ?mean CLEAN. That suit or dress will be back to you looking lijce it had just been made-brand new, spotless! To put it another way you'll like our work. ! Use our cash and Ij carry prices: Dresses - - 50c 1 Linen Suits - 40c Woolen Suits - 50c Telephone 567 Des Champs, Inc. East Dekalb St. T * J Rain Here Sunday On last Sunday afternoon this community was visited with a nain very much needed at that time on gardens and fields alike, for it had been unusually dry and crops had been retarded in g-rowth, some even having to be replanted in spots. EESm?iia WW?W"" v:BCBie?iiww I p ? If you have corns, callouses, bunions, aching feet, fallen arches, any foot troublc.be suretovisitour storethlsweek ? Dr. Scholl's Foot Comfort Week, June 17to24. Let us make Pedo-graph prints of your stockinged feet which reveal the exact nature and extent of your foot trouble, and show you how simple and easy it is to get immediate and permanent ' ' relief. No charjfe for this service. W. Sheorn & Son SEE OUR FRONT WINDOW I I' Displaying the McKesson line of household remedies. I Come and enter the contest and win a cash prize and 1 I get one hundred per cent -value for every purchase j ( j you make. A'Jigg-Saw with each 39c purchase free. I De Pass' Drug Store I j Phone 10 The Rexall Store Prompt Delivery 1 ATTENTION! Vacation Wardrobes FW them with Cotton for they are Cool and Crisp Going places, doing things and looking smart wherever they go. Make your selection from The Fashion Shop