The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, December 01, 1933, Page PAGE FIVE, Image 5
I fsOCIETY NEWS ]
Telephone 100
: L
I). A. H. To Moot
The Hobkirk Hill Chapter I). A. R.
frill meet Thursday, December 7th, at
[, 4 p. m., at the home, of Miss Minnie
A. Clyburn, on North Broad street.
All members urged to attend*
Honored With Many Parties
Miss Emily Pitts was hostess, at,
a lovely bridge tea Friday afternoon
in compliment to Miss Carolyn Bur*
net, bride-elect of Saturday. Autumn
leaves and deep red chrysanthemums
were used in the card rooms. The
r hostess was assisted 'in entertaining
by her inother, Mrs. R. B. Pitts, and
her sister, Miss Peggy Pitts, Score I
prices, a box of linen sports handkerchiefs
and an attractive novelty
box of assorted candies and nuts,
were won by Miss Caroline Richardson
and Miss Elizabeth Zemp, who
gracefully presented them to the
bride-to-be,. The hostess gave Miss
Burnet a lovely piece of cut glass as
a guest prize. I
A number of the honoree's friends
called after cards. Mrs. Alice Marye
presided at the oharmingly appointed
4 tea table which was covered with a
lace cloth.' The centerpiece was a1
bowl of yellow snapdragons and in
silver candlesticks were yellow lighted
tapers. Before
the rehearsal Friday even- ,
ing Mr. and Mrs. C. 0. Whitaker, Sr.,
entertained at a buffet supper for
Miss Carolyn Burnet and her fiance,
William G. Jeffords, Jr., of Walter-,
boro, the members of their bridal [
party and their out-of-town friends
here for the wedding. In the rooms .
, where the guests were received chrysanthemums
in fall tones were used.
A pink and white color scheme was
carried out in the dining room where '
the mahogany table was centered
with a lovely arrangement of pink
gladioli and fern. White tapers h
burned in* silver holders and fluffy ,
white tulle hung from the chandelier J
(it'o the four corners of the table. Mr.
and Mrs. Whitaker were assisted in
entertaining by their son-in-law and i
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Burchill <
Moore, of Rock Hill.
The last of many parties preceding '
the marriage of Miss Craolyn Burnet
" to W. G. Jeffords, Jr.,' which took 1
place Saturday afternoon was the in- '
formal luncheon at which Miss Eliza- (
beth Zemp was hostess Saturday at
12:30. A silver bowl of yellow snapdragons
and dainty white baby's
breath., centered the table. Low sil- j
ver candlesticks held green candles '
and the same color motif was used
in the other party appointments.
I Guests included members of the ]
Burnet-Jeffords wedding party and
^out-of-town visitors.
( clebralt* Wedding Anniversary
Mr, and Mrs. Jack Nettles, were
hosts to members of their wedding
party at a buffet supper and bridge
party Saturday evening at their home
on l^aurdfts -fflreet celebrating their
first wedding anniversary. The home
was beautifully decorated in pink and
fuchsia red chrysanthemums carrying
out their wedding color scheme. The
dining room table was covered with
a lovely lace cloth, pink snapdragons
and baby s breath in a silver bpwL*
four silver candlesticks with green
tapers were used as the centerpiece.
High score ,at bridge for ladies was
won by Mipi Dolly Singleton and for
men by Moultrie Hums. Mrs. Nettles
was assisted by Mrs. John T. Nettles
and Misses Primrose Johnston, of Columbia,
and Mildred McCallum, of
Charlotte,
I^aiXo Elects Officers
At the meeting of the Junior Welfare
league Monday afternoon at the
home of Mrs. William Goqdale, Mrs.
DeLoache Sheorn was elected a new
member. Other new members elected
this yepr are: Mrs. Donald Morrison
and Mrs. Francis H. Craighill. Officers
for the coming year are Mrs.
Thorn well liny, president; Mrs, C. H.
Zemp, treasurer and Mrs. John de
Loach, secretary.
Miss Shannon Entertains
Miss Leila Shannon entertained at
bridge Wednesday morning at hexhome
on Chesnut street. The guests
included mexxxbers of her bridge club
and Mrs. C. P. DuBose, Mrs. Henry
Savage and Mrs. R. W. Pomeroy.
The morning's high scores were made
by Mrs. R. B. Pitts and Mrs. C. P.
DuBose. At the conclusion of the
games a delicious lunch was served.
San Souci Club Entertained
The/members of thy^San Souci club
were entertained Friday afternoon by
Mrs. L. P. Tobin at her home on Chesnut
street. Fall flowers brightened
the rooms for the party guests.
Prizes were awarded Mrs. Floyd
Beaver and Mrs. S. W. VanLandingham
fox* high and low scores, respectively.
.A salad course with coffee
was served late in the afternoon.
Mrs. Boykin Entertains Club
Members of the Friday afternoon
contract club were guests this week
Df Mrs. Willis Boykin at her country
home near Camden. All club members
were present. Prizes for high
scores were awai'ded Mrs. C. H. Zemp
and Mrs. Kirby Tupper. Sandwiches,
coffee and cakes were served after
cards, t
Giving Wings to Art
A gentleman wishing to settle a
point or two on art approached the
information desk of -a certain public
library.
"Where," he asked, "shall I find
something on Corieggio and his
Flight Into Egypt?'"
"Everything about aviation in Room
121," responded the clerk.
Personal Mehtiqn
Miss Mury Goodalc^ is spending
nmnksgiving with- frteiuis in Chester..
Mr. it ml Mrs. (\ Kornegtiy irrTii
little sup spent Sunday in Wilmington.
N. C.
Miss Annie Belle Thompson is
^ponding the holidays with relatives
iii Aberdeen, N. (',
Miss Margaret Jenkins, of Atlanta,
is the. guest; of her parents, Mr. and
Mi's, J. Fi Jenkins. ,
William Young, of Rock Hill, spent
Sunday here with his sisters, Misses
Bessie and Sue Young.
Miss Lena Stevenson has as her
guest for Thanksgiving Miss Elizabeth
Culp, of Fort Mill.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Reaver have
as their guests Mr. und Mrs. George
Jarvis and little^son, of Charlotte.
[ Elmer Watts, who is teaching in
| RenuottsviUa, spent Sunday with his
l parents, Mr. and Mrs. 0. E, Watts,
i Mr. and Mrs. Oscar See ley, of
Raoli, Pa., are here for a few days
stopping with Miss Olive Whittredgo,
Mt\ and Mrs. (Jarw'ood Jaynes,' of
.Columbia, were the guests Thanksgiving
of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Clark.
G. C. Bruce returned home Saturday
from the Camden hospital,
much improved after a very serious
operation.
Mrs. William Ancrum, of Balboa,
Panama Canal .Zone, is here for a
month's visit to her father, H. G.
Garrison, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. W, M. Alexander had
as their guests last week end Miss
.Myrtle Alexander and Mrs. Sam
Beard, of Charlotte.
Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Kirkland, of
New York, and son, Billie Shannon,!
of Griffin, Ga., are visiting Mr. and i
Mrs. T. J. Kirkland.
Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Hallett, of
Charlotte, were guests last week end
of Mrs. Hallett's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. John S. Lindsay.
Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Wright, of
Hempstead, L, I., N. Y., have returned
to Camden and are:, occupying their
lovely home on" Chesnut street.
Mr. and Mrs. F. L). Rodgers, Jr., and
John 1). Rogers, of Bennettsville, wero
the week end guests of Mrs. Rodgers'
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. II. Haile.
Harold McNinch, Arthur Harris
DeLoacho and George A. Jenkins,
from ('amp Scarborough, Conway,
are home for a few days vacation.
Algernon S. Craven, of Greenwood,
Va., steward of the National steeplechase
and hunt association of the
South, was a guest last week of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry D. Kirkover.
Mf. and Mrs. Sherbourne Yardley
and three chuldren, of Greensboro,
N. C., are spending the Thanksgiving
holidays with JVIrs. Yardley's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Kirkland.
Simon W. .Eichel, Mrs. Eichel and
two children, of St. Louis, will arrive
in Camden today where Mr. Eichel
will be associated with his father,
Henry Eichel, in the mercantile business.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest L. Woodward,
of Leroy, New York, were guests last
week for a few days of Mr. and Mrs.
Har.y D. Kirkover. Mr. and Mrs.
Woodward expert to return to Camden
around December 10 fo occupy
Holly Hedge.
Mr. and Mrs. I?. Miller Boy kin were
here Sunday to witness the polo game.
Mrs. Boykin is the county home agent
at Kingstree for Williamsburg county.
Mr. Boykin is now manager of
a large estate in Berkeley county,
near Monck's Corner.
Miss Alice Robinson is spending
the Thanksgiving holidays with her
mother, Mrs. Woods Robinson. She
has as her guests Miss Dorothy Murvin,
of New York; Miss Marie Elinor
Redden, of New York, and Miss Mary
j Lindsay, of Greenwich, Conn., school
mates at Ashley Hall, Charleston.
M. H. Heyman and daughter, Miss
Carolyn Heyman, attended the wedding
of Miss Frances Marshall, to
Daniel LaFar, of Gastonia, which
tooK place at the home of the brides
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Marshall,
in Rock Hill, Wednesday, November
22. The bride is a niece of Mr. Heyman.
A Question of Heredity
During a Republican campaign*
speech an orator became quite exasperated
at the remarks of an old
farmer, who kept insisting as he interrupted
the speaker that he was a
Democrat.
"And why, sir, are you a Democrat,
may I ask?" thundered the orator.
"My father was a Democrat, as
was his father before him," replied
| the farmer.
| "Well, now," asked the orator,
"suppose your father was a fool and
your grandfather was a fool, what,
under your line of argument, would
you bo ?"
"I'd be a Republican," drawled the
farmer.
I Pete Shew, farmer of Wilkes counj
tv, N. C., aged Pf> years, has been
I married to Mrs. Carolina Shew, 77,
> the widow of Fete Show's father.
The legality of the repeal election
{in Vermont has been attacked and it
will be January before the supreme
| court will rule on the issue
Soviet Recognition
May Return "Reds"
Charlotte, N. C., Nov, 20. -Solicitor
John (I. Car pen tor announced here today
he was investigating the possibility
that Soviet recognition would
enable North Carolina to extradite six
men who tied to. Russia after jumping
their appeal bonds in the famous
0. F, Adorholt murder ease.
The solieitor said his last information
regarding the convicted men was
that Fred Krwin Real, leader of the
Communist agitators in the long
! strike at the Lor ay Mill of the
Manville-Jonckes Company, was, still
in Russia with five co-defendants.
K. Y, (Red) Hendricks, the seventh
I Convict, returned to Now York about
a year ago ar*l was promptly apprehended
and sent to Raleigh to serve
his 17- to 20-year sentence. His
| $2,000 bond had ah early been ordered
forfeited.
The men were convicted here in
November, 1020, of ambushing Police
I Chief AderhoR at CJastonia When he
answered a faked riot call to Com-1
munist headquarters.
Thirteen agitators were tried; but
M. V. Barnhill directed acquittal^ for
six of them. Resides Hendricks, those
convicted, their' sentences and the
amount of bail forfeited by each
wore:
Fred Edwin Beal, 17 to 20 years,
$5,000; Clarence Miller, 17 to 20
years, $5,000; George Carter, alias
William Duke, 17 to 20 years, $5,000;
Joseph Harrison, 17 to 20 years,
$5,000; W, M. McGinnis, 12 to 15
years, $2,500; Louis McGlothlin, 12 to
15 years, $2,500.
Honors Daughter oit Birthday
Honoring Ivor daughter, Miss Mary
Burnet, on her sixteenth birthday,
Mrs. VV. S. Burnet entertained at
bridge Tuesday afternoon at her home
on Fair street. Tables were placed
for contract in a lovely setting of
pink carnations and yellow snap*
dragons. High score prise, a dainty
handkerchief, was awarded Miss
Frances McLeod and a similar gift
was presented Miss Ruth DeLoaehe,
who made the low score. Those playing
besides the honor guest were:
MisAes Dorothy Van La.ndingham,
Mary Florence Little, Ellen Salmond,
Ruth DeLoaehe, Margaret Hay tyoy*
kin, Charlotte DuBose and Frances
1 MeLeod.
Mr. and Mrs. Whitaker Entertain
^ Mr. and Mrs. Jack Whitaker, Jr.,
entertained their night bridge club
Tuesday evening at their new home
on Laurens Court. High scores for
the evening wero made by Mr, and
Mrs. J. M. Villepigue. A very delightful
dinner was served before the
contract games.
I Wftddy Thompson Suffers Stroke
It was with much sorrow that the
news was learned Sunday night that
Waddy Thompson, Sr, had suffered
a paralytic stroke at his Homo in this
city. His condition is said to bo critical
but that ho stands a chance to
pull through. On Sunday night ho
suffered a severe stroke on his left
side and his children were notified
immediately. His son,?Waddy Thomson,
Jr., of Cr'/eonville, and his daughters,
Mrs. Chapman of Inman, and
| Mrs. Morrill, of Greenville, arrived
Sunday night and arc at**his .bedside.
Ho is in a semi-conscious,^condition.
His many friends aro hoping that he
will survise this stroke.?.Lancaster
News.
Legion Auxiliary To lvtaet
Mrs. Leon Schlosburg and Mrs.
Sam I^aresh will bo hostesses to the
December meeting of tho American
Legion Auxiliary to be held at Ix'gion
Hall Friday, December Kth, at , 4
p. m. All members especially urged
to bo present.
|7!!Tbooksf^
I All Books at Publishers' Prices I
Place orders now at , V*H
THE CORNER BOOK STORE i
I Broad and DeKalb Telephone 335-J j I
J LENDING LIBRARY << OFFICE SUPPLIES I
I in ii wmmmrnmmmm . ? i n mm pg
jgggg EIGHT O'CLOCK l-^-l
COFFEE Srd ,b. 15c
All Flavors
SPARKLE
GELATIN DESSERT
Pfcg. 5c
Iona
FLOUR
PLAIN OR SELF-RISING
24 lb. bag 89c
| CSLICED SBREAD loaf 6c |
I CH1PS0 2 pkgs. 13c 1
IVORY SOAP 2 ? .. 11c ||
A. & P. SWEET
PEAS
2 No.~2 cans 35c
SUNNYFIELD
BUTTER |
^ lb- 27c | [
j QUAKER MAID BEANS - 41b.can 5c jj.
PRODUCE
Cooking Apples 10 lb 25c
Golden Bananas 21b. 15c
Egg Plant, lb 15c
String Beans, 21b 15c.
Yellow Squash, 21b ...15c
New Cabbage, lb 5c
MARKET I
Pot Roast Beef, lb 17c
Shoulder Lamb, lb 15c R
Pork Hams, lb 15c
Pick Hams, lb 12V2C
, Neck Bones, 4 lbs 25c R
Pig Tails, 3 lbs. ........ 25c
Tomorrow!!
Sports Suits .....
Swagger Suits ....
Three-Piece Suits . .
Two-Piece Suits ...
I ?
~ Tailored Suits . . . .
ALL SUITS
> /
at Fashion Shop greatly reduced fdr
C ' * '
Special Clearance Sale
This does not include our entire stock; only merchandise 'received prior
to November 15th.
It's a grand event because they are grand values-?these
suits. Now is the time to have them?now is the time to
wear them?now is the time to, buy them at the Fashion
Shop's extra low Clearance sale prices.
Suits and Coats formerly $9.95 to $28.95
Now Priced - - $7.95 to $19.95
Another shipment Rogulatio-n Nurses and Maids Dresses . . . $1.00
Kate Greenway Childrens' Dresses, ages 1 in 14. Special . . i.oo
Saturday Only:-69c and 79c Full Fashioned Silk Hose 2 pairs 1.25
OUR SHOE SALON offers 45 pairs Pumps and Oxfords for 1.39
And DRESSES Too !
22 DRESSES t
_ 1 -J r
Values $6.95 to $8.95
$3.95
Silk crepes ? wools ? prints.
Sizes 14 to 20.
35 DRESSES
Values $12.95 to $18.95
$8-95
Silks ? velvets ? sheers ?
knits ? street and dinner .
styles. Sizes 12 to 44.
The Fashion Shop, Inc.
Opposite Post> Office Saturday Store Hours
Broad and DeKalb Streets 8:30 A. M.?to 9:30 P. M.