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IIETY NEWS el?pho(Hi 100 b Met At I toy kin ,bors of the Friday Conmotored to Boykin this the guests of Mrs. Willis rSl J. Thorn well llay and Hill were invited to play nembers. Mrs, Hill was igh score prize. The hoadelightful re f reshment s were laid aside. at Lake Shamokin Hose and Eugene DuBosel ning a party of young nke Shamokin this week, group are Desritt Wool.oaehe, Jack Khtlme, Bil>uglas Wooten and Billy fates Was Hostess bers of the Wednesday Igo club were guests this , Yates. Additionere Mrs. J. H. Guthrie, .Shanpoi^ Mrs. John W. j. P, T.' Villepigue and fillopigue. In the series mes Mrs. T. J. Kirkland ore winner. After two itract a delicious lun<?h yn Burnet and Mr. and ill Moore and young t Monday for a weeks o Beach. MDEN EATRE GRAMME(ginning July 7th J FRIDAY is Cagney in OR OF HELL' lomedies?News j lTURDAY I m Mix in j IS' ROUND-UP" medy and New "Devil Horse and TUESDAY G. Robinson in LE GIANT" medies?News DNESDAY ^NATURAL" dected Shorts . II llll Club Met Friday t ^r8, Mortimer Boykin was hostess to the member* of her bridge club Friday afternoon. Miss Alberta It am and Miss Charlotte Boykin played for absent club member*. A tempting menu of sandwiches, Iced tea and cakes was aervod by the hostess. Mrs. Dan Murfhison scored high for the afternoon,. Met With Mrs. Guthrie Mrs. J. H. Guthrie entertained the members of her card club Friday afternoon and added an extra table for1 I I ho following guests: Mrs. C. H. Yates, Miss Leila Shannon, Mrs. R. { B, Fills, Mrs. Henry Board, Miss Charlotte Shannon and Mrs. B. 0. j lioykin. Delightful sandwiches, iced j tea and cookies were served after the contract games, Mrs. B. O. Boykin was winner of tho high score prisso and Mrs. 1). A, Boykin cut the consolation. * ) Camdcu Rotary Notes A report <^f the Rotary International Convention held at Boston lust week was madp u,t Thursday's meeting by John K. deLoach, the official club representative. Other members attending the convention were: Stanley Llewellyn, Vardell Walsh and John Wilson and they will be called upon at the next meeting of the club [for the high 'spots of their trip. These Rotarians were the guests of Rotarian Karl Abbott at the Vendome Hotel in Boston. Mr. Abbott invited all of the local Rotarians to bo his guosts during the convention at one of the meetings last spring. The visitors were: R. L. Bailey, of Atlanta: Mr. Goodyear, of Blshopvillo. The visiting Rotarian was Victor Goodyear, of Bishopville. Vardell Walsh, who has been president of tho local club for the past year turned the . gavel over to tho new president, Hughey Tindal, and President Tindal announced the appointments of various committees to work with him this year. John Wilson, on behalf of the club, presented Vardell Walsh with a past president's Rotarian pin and made a happy speech in making the present-! ation. The meeting next week will be in I charge of R. M. Kennedy, Jr., andthe following week in charge of W.'L. Jackson. Former Camden Citizen Dead Chester, June 29.?Eli Burdette Cornwell, 53, former business nian of Columbia and Camden, died at his home at Cornwell near here today. Mr. Cornwell was iborn in the Cornwell section of Chester county. | He attended the University of SouUl Carolina. He was never married. 1^1 to approximately a year ago he was! manager ^>f the Thomas and Howard wholesale grocery company branch at Camden when he retired from this' work because of ill health. He is survived by one brother, Fitz' William Cornwell, of Cornwell. w^???ram II ! II GRANDMOTHER'S j i kfgl square rolls J'11 O BEANS m.'I" 6 ? 25c V' Ml I If Whitehouse A tall 4 Tf ^ I Li IV Evaporated O cans | f v Delicious Refreshing j J ICED TEA India?Ceylon?Java ! Our Own TEA 2 V -lb. pkgs. 2 5 C 11 j ?????? ???? | I Orange Pekoe?India C^eylon Nectar TEA 1 rlb. pkg. 10c i I I Kraft's Cream C H EES E 3 25c i Creamed Cup CHEESE! ' "1 15c Peanut BUTTER it," 13c jli; V NEGAR Rajah qt. bottle 15c I; ftlason JARS oz. quarts 85c I Old Dutch CLEANSER 3 20c j MARKET J Pot Roast Bhef, lb 15c Neck Bones, 4 lbs. for 25c Veal Chops, lb 15c Pig Tails, 3 lbs. for 25c Pork Chops, lb 15c Pig Liver,lbs. for 25c pRopuce * Cooking Apples, 5 lbs. 25c Ripe Tomatoes, lb 10c Pipe Bananas, 4 lbs. 25c Green Lima Beans, lb. 5c c Cantaloupes, each .... 10c Fancy Com, doz 20c ^ Personal Mention Mr?. John S. Lindsay is visiting- relatives in Winnaboro this week. Joe Jenkin? has returned from Savannah where he spent Monday. Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Davis and daughter, Lestu, spent the Fourth at Myrtle Beach. .... . Miss Margaret Burnet has gone to York for a visit with her sister, Mrs. John A. Marion. Mr. and Mrs. L. II. Schenk have 10turned .from a Uip through Tennessee. Miss Helen Tindal has been the guest of her grandparents' in Manning. Benton Burns and Gordon Guthrie! spent the week-end of the Fourth at .Myrtle Beach. Dr. 1). C. ilinsoa returned this week from Chicago where he attended the World's Fair. Mrs. C. W. Birehmore and daughter, Miss Ethel Birehmore, are at Tybee Beach this week visiting. Miss Etta Zemp and Miss ^lary I^ee Blakeney left Saturday for an extended visit in New York City. Mr. and Mrs. Walton Ferguson and Mr, and Mrs. Boliver Boykin were visitors at Myrtle Beack01ast week. Douglas Mabee, of Saratoga, N. Y., and William Farish, of Houston, [ Texas, were week end visitors here. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Harris and rMr. and Mrs. W. L. Goodalo left Saturday for a visit at Blowing Rock. Mrs. Carroll DesChamps and two daughters have just returned from Mrs. DesChamps old home in Laurens. Misses Phyllis 'Garrison, Pete Boykin, Frank Wooten and Walton Ferguson, Jr., spent Tuesday at Myrtle Beach. Beck Russell and Charlie Salmond from the C. C. C. camp at Conway spent the Fourth here with their relatives. Harold McNinch, who is a member of the C. C. C. camp at Cohway, spent last week end bene with his parents. Mrs. Jack Whitaker, Jr. has returned from the Charlotte Sanatorium, where she went to have her tonsils removed. Mrs. Henry Brown, Mrs. C. J. Shannon, 3rd and Miss Katie 'Shannon. of Savannah, are visiting relatives and friends in Camden. Mrs. Lura Evans, Miss Biddie Evans and Albert Evans, of Monroe, spent the Fourth here as the guests of I>r. and Mrs. S. F. Brasington. Miss Mary Eleanor Goodale has returned from Chester where she was the guests of Miss Frarrcine Abell. M iss Abell accompanied her home for a visit. ~~ I M rs. Arthur/'Clark and Mrs. Lawrence Graham spent Sunday .in Savannah, where they visited Mr. Clark who is a patient in the Marine hospital. M iss May C. Boykin, of Boykin, left last week for Ogunquit, off thej beautiful coast of Maine, where she j wHl spend the summer months at the ClifT House. Mrs. V. W. Clark, Miss Elizabeth Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Herbert Zemp and son, Charlie, attended the Turner-Jennings wedding in Winnsboro on Monday. Mrs. J. M. Villepigue, Miss Emma Villepigue and Charlie Villepigue motored to Kanuga Lake Saturday to take Betty Whitaker and Jack Villepigue for the Y. P. S. L. conference. Thomas Wooten, a student at North 'Carolina iState college, spent the week end here with his mother, Mrs. F. M. Wooten, and had as his house guest Elmer Dowdy, of Elizabeth City, N. C. Rev. and Mrs. F. H. Craighill have returned from a two weeks visit to Kanuga Lake. They left Wednesday for another visit of two weeks?Mrs. Craighill to Savannah and Mr. Craighill to Denver, Colorado. Mrs. W. E. Presson, who has been visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Stanley, on Walnut street, leaves this week for Miami, from which city she will take a plane to Haiti, to join her husband, Lieut. Presson, of the Marines. Mr. and Mrs. Willis Boykin, Mr.! *nd Mrs. Deas Boykin were in Aiken' Thursday of last week attending thej riark-Norman wedding. Miss Mayj Stockton Clark, the bride, is a i laughter of Mr. and Mrs. Buck Boydn, who formerly lived here. Mrs. B. A. Hornsby and brother, \aron Thompson, left Thursday to pend several weeks visiting Mrs. dornsby's mother and other relatives n Virginia. Miss Mary Ellen Mc^askill accompanied them as far as hirham where she will visit her tbroher, Sam McGaskill, and other read ves. Bethesda Church Services Presbyterian church services for >unday, July 0, are announced as folows by A. Douglas McArn, pastor: Church school, 10 a. m.; morning vorship, 11:15. Midweek service Vednesday evening, 8:30. Intermedate Club Friday evening, 7:30. unior Boys Saturday morning, 10 /clock. The public is cordially inited to the services in this church. Four White Men Slay Clinton Negro Driver X U!>M I. | ? Clinton, July 5.- -Four unidentified white men dragged Morris Dendy, 8t>year-old Negro, from the small Clinton juil early today and a few hours later his bcgtou and strangled body was found in a churchyard near here. Dendy was placed in the jail, a small town building with no regular jailer, late " 'yesterday for striking. Marvin Lolli white Clinton truck driver, and resisting arresK About midnight, the jail's Necrb janitor said, men came to the. building, knocked the lock olf with a wrench and forced Dendy into their automgjjile. They disappeared before an alarm could be spread. Thud Moore, one of the deputies of SheriiV Columbus Owens, of laiurcn* county, sent out to search for the Negro and his captors, found the body in the old iSardis churchyard, seven miles from here, shortly before 1 p, m. It bore marks of a severe .beating and a found the Negro's neck was a rope. The body, hqwever, was lying at the gateway to the church's cemetery and iSherifT Owens said Dendy had apparently been hanged somewhere else and the body romovod there. Ono of the Negro's wounds was first mistaken for a billet wound but George Holland, Clinton police chief, who examined the body, said Dendy had not been shot. Lollis and Dendy each drove a truck load of picnickers to lako Mur1 ray, in the lower part of Laurens county, for u Fourth of July celebration yesterday. The Negro and white man became involved in an argument, witnesses said, and Dendy struck Lollis with u stick, indicting a gash on his cheek. When white men at the picnic attempted to. apprehend him, the Nogro fied in his truck, but officers at Goldvillo, between the lake and Clinton, were advised to watch for him and when , he arrived there he was arrested. Goldville officers brought him here where he was placed in jail. There had been no known threats against Dendy and as the charge against him was not considered serious, no extra precautions were taken to guard him. Solicitor Homer S. Blackwell announced an inquest would not be held until next week, pending the gather-1 ing of evidence. Sheriff Owens said he had no clues on which to work and that he had I "no idea" who to look for. He said ho was unable to track the lynchers with bloodhounds as they traveled by automobile. Petty Thievery Going On Reports lately have been coming! into the police department that' thieves are busy mostly in the morning hours molesting automobiles. Several have had thfeir gas tanks robbed?one lady had the handle chisselled off her car, while another had the carburetor off her car stolen and all gas gone. It is thought they work mostly after the street lights have been cut off in the early mornings. : Ladies Hurt in Wreck While coming to Camden Wednes-J day morning from their home, "The Pines," the automobile driven by Mrs. B.: R. Truesdale/ collided with a county truck driven Jby^a -Mr. -Napper. Mrs. Truesdale suffered bad 'bruises to her face and other parts of the body, while her daughter, Miss Thelma Truesdale, had an arm broken. The other occupants were unhurt. The injured folks were carried to the Camden hospital for surgical treatment. Their many friends will be glad to learn that they were so improved yesterday as to be able to return to their homes. Famous Aviator Dies. Indianapolis, July 3.?The adventurous career of Russell Boardman, Jo-year old Boston and Springfield, Mass., aviator and sportsman, was J terminated today by death. Injuries suffered last Saturday | while streaking down the runway of the municipal airport here caused his death. He had landed to refuel while racing across country in the New York to Los Angeles air derby. During the take off in resumption of his westward flight a cross wind caught his tiny ship and sent it spinning out of control. Boardman, who had distinguished himself by n non-^Jop flight, from New York to Istanbul, Turkey, in 1931, in company with John Polando, was counted one of the country's leading pilots. Senator James Hamilton Lewis of Illinois, is confined to a Washington hospital, a victim of nervous exhaustion and an intestinal ailment. Boliver Edwards Kemp, congressman.from the sixth Louisiana district, aged GO years, died at Amite, La., shortly after returning from Washington. Saved By Quick Thinking. J. L. McLeod, .Sumter lumberman, is recovering in tho Kelley sanatorium in Kings tree from a compound fracture of his leg, sustained when ho | was thrown from a logging train near St. Stephens two weeks ago. But for his quick thinking McLeod would certainly have been killed. While riding on the empty logging train McLeod's leg became entangled in a heavy chain and he was thrown from the car. He held to the chain with onp hand to keep from falling beneath the wheels of the train, which was travelling at about 2,0 miles per hour. Wh?n he reached a trestle, McLeod put his foot against a wheel and pushed himself clear. The wheel, however rolled over his leg, crushing it severely. He fell into the water and managed to swim to 9hore. Two hours later he was picked up and taken to Kingstree.?Thursday's .Sumter Item., Methodist Church, Next Sunday. There are just two more Sundays before we begin the internal decorating of our church auditoriuth, nnd the Sunday school auditorium. Let | us have two full Sundays. Sunday j school will meet at 10:00, promptly. Sunday school assembly at 10:50, for the Pastor's chalk talk, nnd the Junior Church message. Preaching at 11:15. Theme: "Mystery of the Treasure and the Pearl." Preaching at 8:30. Theme: "Life's Crossroads." C. F. Wimborly, Pastor. Hand Badly Hurt Howard Hinson, young white man, wbo is a helper at the Electrik Maid Bake Shop in this city, had his left hand badly lacerated Thursday morning. It is said that young ,_Hinson, while cleaning up around the bakery, uninstructed threw the switch to a brake machine, which he started cleaning and by accident his hand became entangled. The machine was instantly stopped by others and reversed releasing the trapped ^iand only after very painful lacerftions had been made. He was carried to the Camden hospital for treatment where it required thirty-five stitches to close up the wound. It is not thought, however, that he will lose his hand. 1 | Senators and representatives asking for jobs for constituents in tho Tennessee river development, have been frankly told that it is not how a man voted or for whom that fits him for a job, but what he can do that will be the measure of employment. The Mystery of The Treasure. This is the fifth message on tho "Mysteries of the Kingdom" now being delivered toy Dr. Winvberly at tho Methodist church. This series will cover tho entire 13th chapter of ' Matthew, portraying tho "Program of the Kingdom," both insido and outside', Any one interested in the "Signs of the Times," and the prophetic fulfillment of things going on all around us>?things recorded centuries ago, should not fail to hear these ,, discourses. They will close Sunday, July lt>t"h. Hea^ the "Mystery of tho Hidden Treasure," and tho mystery of "The Pearl of Great Price," Sunday morning. C. F. Winvberly, Pastor. Going on a Vacation? Well! GET A PERMANENT And enjoy looking your best and knowing that your hair is curled and cut in jhe latest style. " Call Telephone 149 For An Appointment FINGER WAVES PERMANENT WAVES WATER WAVES Given by Expert Operator* Camden Beauty Parlor JCORNEGAV FUNERAL HOME Juneral Directors ^t&nba/mers PHONE 103# CAMDEN, S.C ^r? - ^ 4 The Fashion Shop Friday and Saturday Ores* Clearance Street, Afternoon and Sport Values up to $12.50 $5.00 Special Rack of Cottons $1.39 and $1.89 . . .... . .. ft See Our Window Display The Fashion Shop Cor. Broad and DeKalb Opposite Post Office f? ____ - ? ^ MISS M. E. GERALD Friday and Saturday HAT CLEARANCE Values to $6.00 I Two Groups " 50c & $1.00 See our new line of White Hats at $2.00 MISS M. E. GERALD Cor. Broad and DeKalb ? -Opposite Post Office ? 11 ? "Wi ? f~W ?M?Wfl??????????B?Mil??i