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[{society news I T?lephon? 100 * *"" 1 ??ty I San Souci Club Met I gfnvbert of the iSan Souci Club re guests Friday evening of Mr. ,ntj Mrs. Floyd Beaver, when they I en^rtained at three tables of contract. Flaying for ubsent members I were Mr. and Mrs. Leon Schlosburg. Delightful refreshments were served I before the bridge gai?es. Top scar* I- for ladies was won by Mrs. 1>eon Schlosburg and for men by J. B. l^jueen. . , Mr. and Mrs. Nicholson Hosts I Amid a colorful setting of midsummer flowers Mr. and Mrs. George wjehoLon entertained at eight tables r"0f contract Wednesday evening at I their hod# on Lyttleton street. Prizes I for high scores were won by Mrs. Floyd Beaver find Hughey Tindal and I for low scores by Mrs. J^mes Gandy and Leon Schlosburg. Floating priz| es went to Mrs. A. C., McKain and F, 1). Goodale. Punch was served I throughout the evening and an ice J course followed the card games. I Entertains For Nephews | Mr. and Mrs. A. D. McArn have as their guests their nephews, Albert I Sullivan, of Nashville, Tenn., and ; Hugh McArn, of Laurinburg, N. C. On Tuesday evening at their home on | Lyttleton street Mr. and Mrs. McArn I entertained at a weiner roast in honj or of their visitors. Tire little guests if were received on the lawn, where I games were played. Later in the I evening welners were served, folI lowed by ice cold watermelons. Those present besides the guests of honor I were: Margaret -Osborne, Betty MulI ler, Carolyn DeSChamps, Cary GuthI rie, Yates Villepigue, Jack Richards, j Lewis Bradford and Leonard Schenk. Mrs. L. P. Tobin, Miss Lucia Tobin and Joe Tobin are in Conway visiting. Bridge Club Meetings 1 he meeting of the Neighborhood Bridge Club whigh was held at the home of Miss Minette Boykin Wednesday afternoon of last week was a most enjoyable one. In addition to ' the club members the following Invited guests were present: Mrs, A. G. Claikson, Mrs. J. B. Cureton and Mrs. M. M. Keasonover. Prises were i awarded Mrs. J. L. Williford, Mrs.. K. K. Stevenson and Mrs. John *T. Mackey, Jr. 1 i Mrs. J. L, Williford was hostess to ,the members of the Neighborhood i Club Wednesday of this week. Other guests were: Mrs. Carroll DesChamps,1 I Mrs. C. H. Zemp, Mrs. Arthur Olm-1 sted, Mrs, Withers Trotter and Mrs. I Mortimer Muller. Top-score prizes were won by Mrs. C. H. Zemp andi Mrs. Hughey Tindal. Mrs. Carroll DesChamps . received the floating prize. Compliments Daughters In complintent to her two daughters, Mrs. K. W. Crook, of Yazoo City, Miss., and Mrs. H. 0. Strohecker, of Charleston, who fc?e*visiting her, Mrs. J. Bl Wallace entertained at five tables of contract Wednesday evening at her home on Broad street. Zinnias and other garden flowers'were used in the card rooms. Prize for high score was won by Mrs. E. N. McDowell and for low score by Mrs. Mortimer Mul- j ler. Floating prize went to Mrs.' K. B. Mobley and to each of the honor guests the hostess presented a gift. Mfs. John Stanley Watkins, of Sav-, annah, Gn., who is visiting her father,' R. B. DeLoache, and Mrs. H. K. Hallett, of Charlotte, who is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Lindsay, were out-of-town guests at the party. i To Preach At Malvern Hill Rev. B. J. Mclver, of Columbia, will preach at Malvern Hill Sunday, July 15, at 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. The public is cordially invited to come and worship with us. Troy Godwin, Clerk. Personal Mention if D. V. Dixon is visiting1 relative* in Hock Hill. H. L. Schlosburg spent several days last week in Hendersonville. ^ Miss Celeste Mum ford has gone to Asheville to spend the summer. Miss Olive Nettles had as her guest Miss Hetty Blanton, of Columbia, recently. James M. Gandy, of Newberry, spent last week end here With his, family. Mrs. F. M. Zemp has gono to visit her sister, Mrs. F. H. Harding, at Milledgeville, Ga. Mrs. C. F. Wimberly and Mrs. Jack Moore have returned from a visit to friends in Charleston. Horn to Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Barnes on July 6, a son. He has been named George Ralph Barnes. Miss Cornelia Nelson, of Hock Hill, is spending some time here with Her aunt, Mjss Cornelia Mickle. Mr. and Sirs. Mortimer Muller and two children have returned from a week's yisit to Folly Beach. Miss Gerry Lee, of Greenville, is the guest of Mr, and Mrs. D. D. la?e at their home on Fair street. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McArn and son, of Laurinburg, N. C., were the guests of Rev. and Mrs. McArn last week. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Smyrl and George Knudsen have returned from a fishing and camping trip at Georgetown. Miss Mary, Jane Mackey, of Philadelphia, is on a visit to her mother, Mrs. John T. Mackey, for several weeks. Mrs. John Borini left this week for Stockbridge, Mass,, to spend several months, where her husband has a position. Miss Peggy Holland of the Antioch section, arrived home Friday after an extended visit with relatives in Clarendon county. Mrs. Hubert Wilson and children, who have been spending several weeks with her parents in' Union, have returned home. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Cole and Mrs. Nancy Evans and daughter, of Washington. D. C., are visiting at the home of Mrs. R. L. Stokes. J. B. Wallace motored to Charleston for the Fourth and fifth and was accompanied home by his daughter, Mrs. 11. O. Strohecker. Albert Sullivan, who has been spending a month here with Rev. and Mrs. A. D. McArn, has returned to his hofne in Nashville. Tenn. Misses Inez Gardner. Lorene Strak, Edna Strak, Ellen Strak, Margaret Billings and Edith Webster have ieturned from a trip to Fftlly Beach. Mrs. Lee Little and Mrs. Henry Niles accompanied by friends have gone to the World's fair. They expect to return by way of Buffalo, New York and Washington. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Whitaker left last week for Detroit, where they will attend the Rainbow Division convention and from there will go to the World's Fair in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Gladden spent July 4th on the Isle of Palms. Misses Dennie. Smith and Mary Ella Moore, Elmer Nolan and M. H. Bianham accompanied them on the trip. Miss Mollie Anderson, who has been the guest of her sister, Mrs. A. S. Llewellyn, for several months has returned to her home in Richmond. Mrs. Llewellyn accompanied her home for a visit. | Week end visitors at Bettyneck, the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. I). Kennedy, were: Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Cureton and Miss Josephine Cureton, of Chester; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Brown, of Barn- j well; and Miss Eunice Keel, of Allen-, iale. Friends in Camden will regret to , learn of Mrs. Bright Anderson's being in an automobile accident in Rich- I mond recently, but upon last reports [ >he is not seriously hurt. The James j Leroy Belk Post of the American Legion drew up resolutions, which were sent to her. She will be pleasantly remembered by Camden peoplo as the lady who so successfully put on a minstrel show with Legionnaiies several years ago. Marriage Announced An announcement of interest to friends here will Jfe that of the marriage of Miss Marian Estelle Hfnson to Eithel L. Daniels, which took placein Columbia Thursday, July 12th, th>treremony being performed by Rev. John C. Wells, pastor of the First Baptist church, of that city. The bride is the attractive daughter %>f Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Hinson, of Branchviile, former citizens of Cam- , den. Mr. Daniels is a son of Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Daniels, of Camden. He I with his family moved to this city] about six years ago, being a native ! of Yenida. Oklahoma. He is riow | manager of the Quality Sea Food Market on Broad street. The young couple will make their home in Camden on Highland avenue, j Governor Murray, of Oklahoma, in j pardoning a teacher fined $26 for whipping a pupil, added that the teacher "should have received the thank* of the school community." X ' _ Presbyterian Church Services .Services at Bothesda Pry*byteriun chui\ h Sunday, July l.*>, us announced by A. Ikuiglas McArn, pastor, are: Church school 10 u. m.; morning worship with Minion on "How Clod Guides" at 11:1IV; .vesper services at eight o'clock. Junior Club Saturday morning at ten. The public is cordially invited to these services. Sunday Evening Vesper Service A vesper service showing pictures of the life of Christ will be held on' the lawh of the Presbyterian church Sunday evening at live minutes past eight o'clock. The public is cordially invited, Attending State Short Course The following home demonstration club members and 4-H girls are attending the (State Short -Course which is being held at Winthrop College this week: Mrs. L, W. Fletcher of Three C's club, Mrs. J. A. Bell and Mrs. J. J. Hell of the Lugotf club, Peggy Holland of the Antioch 4-H club, Lena Sinclair of the Malvern Hill 4-H club, Dorothy West, Mary l^aney, Mary McCoy and Blanche Threatt of the Midway 4-If club and Floridc Vincent of the Thorn Hill 4-H club. A young negro knocked out Sam C. Moore, a tilling station operator 711 years old, with an automobile jack, eight miles from Columbia, and plundered the station. Not far away in Lexington' county, another negro I beat and choked Mrs. Ella C. Sharpo into unconsciousness and stole her gold watch. .Sheriffs, deputies and state constables with posses began at once a hectic search for the negroes. B. L. McFarland, Ji) years old,, enough to know better, and a former Baptist preacher, signed a written statement that he and two other men had held up the bus between Columbia and Heathwood and robbed it of $.'50., He also confessed that he held up o? Jacksonville, Fla., laundry and got $81)0 the middle of June. iHe said he had one drink too many which caused him to help in the bus robbery. He. was instrumental in building the Riverside Baptist church at Columbia a few years ago. President Roosevelt made a formal call on the president of Haiti at Cape llatien last week as he journeyed toward Panama. Among other things he promised that' the U. S. Marines would be withdrawn from Haiti within the next few weeks. A Chicago child, aged S, was gasping for breath with an infected throat. The father called a doctor, who had no instruments with him. He quickly .heated a kitchen knife and used that, and then inserted a rubber tube in the child's throat. She will recover. The city of Key West, Fla., is now in the hands of a receiver, and more than half of the population of the city is on charity. General News Notes Mollis. McGuire, 32, Seymour, Ttx.v llrst killed hi* wife and two children and then himself. Ill health and unemployed. Five bandits, armed with machine guns, robbed a jewelry store at Gloucester. Mass., of $500,tHK) in gems and jewelry, Kobert J. Fasten, til, and his daughter, were found dead in his garage at Norwalk, Conn. Police say it was a suicide pact. A monument to the memory of the negro soldiers of Pennsylvania in tho World War, was unveiled in Fairmont j>ark, Philadelphia, Sunday. Three members of one family were killed and a fourth member seriously injured in the crash of an airplane near Lexington, Ky., Saturday. A sleepy tire truck driver at South Groveland, Massi, answering an alarm drove his truck through the door of the station without opening the portals. ^ Mrs. Samuel Insull has arrived in Chicugo, after being in Furope for two years, to be with her husband in his coming trial for embezzlement and so forth. John Frcheeson, an escapee from a Florida prison camp, has been sentenced to serve tive years in prison at Winnipeg, Canada, following conviction for a bank robbery. Humors at Oslo, Norway, say that j former Crown Prince Wilholm of Germany, will make his permanent home in Norway because of disturbed conditions in Germany. Merman Charles Shoekley, janitor of the Oklahoma state house, was a candidate for lieutenant governor in the recent primary. He was defeated and will lose his job as janitor. Secretary of State Hull sent his , compliments to the government of Finland, as being tho only European country to pay her wartime obliga-' tions to the United States. John A. Woods, 53, who on Sunday of last week, murdered a sheriff and three others at Fast Tnwas, Mich, j has already begun serving a sentence for life in the Michigan state prison. William McCuo, 18, rescued three persons in a single day from the Delaware river near Philadelphia, and then lost his own life when atacked by cramps and out of reach of aid for himself. In the direct rays of the sun in i New h'ork on Saturday the thermom-j eter.-cforegisterod 137 degrees. Five. New \York Heaths were attributed to the high temperatures. Benjamin Franklin in 1752 in hisf^ newspaper, the Pennsylvania Gazette, told in a humorous way of a nudist wedding that occurred in New Jersey.; Ho headed the story, "A Naked Truth." The coast guard cutter Nemesis was launched at Poiht Pleasant, W. ' Va., on. the Ohio river on Saturday! and christened by Mrs. C. P. Kendall, wife of Commander Kendall of tho' coast guard. ? A report from Hhrbin tolls of tho massacre of 100 Mancluikuoan farmers at Nantientisu, near the ^Korean border, by bandits. The slaughter occurred as the bandits attacked and ransacked the village. Wind and rainstorms in Detroit, Mich., on Friday took a toll of seven lives. Three persons lost their lives in capsized boats, two were electrocuted by dangling1 wires, and two vere killed by crashing trees. Uov. Howard Smith, American missionary of Washington, l'a., captured by Chinese bandits last May, lues been released. Strategy by the United States consul at Hankow, China, brought about his release. A four weeks' strike of longshoremen at Mobile, Ala,, has been ended by the steamship lines acceding to the demands of the strikers >-to increase pay. the strikers agreeing to withdraw their demand for a closed shop. Herbert H. N an Loan, film scenario and short story writer, is to spend the next year in jail because of hi* failure at Los Angeles, Cal.gto post bond of $800 to guarantee payment of $25 jht month for the support of his former wife. Apparently crazed by the heat, Buddy, a police dog that had been tho friend of Charles Zvonick, 17 months, lashed at the child and literally tore him to pieces in New York. The dog was not mad, just vicious from tho heat. f The Chicago Council of the Legion of Decency, a Catholic organization, in its tight against indecent moving pictures, has made up a list of twenty or more pictures defined a^ "indecent and immoral, ami'-entirely' unlit for Catholic patronage," Car loadings of revenue freight for the week ending June JO totaled G44,57 cars, an increase of 22,700 cars over the previous week, and 2,842 cars abuvi? the same week of last year, and 150,201 cars above the loadings of the same week in 1082. Persistent rumors in Washington are to the effect that the NliA will soon be placed under control 0 of a board of five members while tlenoral Johnson goi'S on an extended tour"0 over the country.. There will be no i material change in NBA policies. As the result of the repeal of prohibition federal prisoners serving time have been reduced about 75 per cent from the 1082 peak at some in- , stitutions. At the Atlanta prison there are now but 8f>2 violators of the liquor laws as compared with 1.:425 in 1082. "I'ticle" Henry Bird, negro ex-slave celebrated his 10 1th birthday anniversary at La Grange, (la., last week. Ambassador Josephus Daniels, in the United States for several weeks, left last week to return to his post as v,nmbassador to Mexico. The Try-me Bottling company has been lined $1,000 by a Washington court for its failure to lix tax stamps on lot-sales of liquor. The stamps would have cost $70. Prime Minister Ramsey MacDonald of England has been advised by h!? physicians to take at least ft months' rest for his health. s [LUCKY 13C SALE! SALAD DRESSING, Pint Jar 13c DILL PICKLES, 25-oz. Jar 13c swift's jewel j SALAD OIL, Pint Can ... 13c large boxes MATCHES, 3 Boxes for 13c MUSTARD, Quart Jar 13c VINEGAR, Quart Bottle 13c ARMOUR'S <VCORNED BEEFr ffo. 1 Can 13c quaker PUFFED RICE, Package 13c GRAPEFRUIT HEARTS, No. 2 Can 13c I'LL MONTE , FRESH PRUNES, No. 2*4 Can .... 13c GRAPE JUICE, Pint Bottle 17c ; AMERICAN , SARDINES, 3 Cans 13c ! ? i -M ACARONI or SPAGHETTI, 3 Pks. 13c SNOWDRIFT, 6-1 b. Can ..63c LUX TOILET SOAP, 3 Cakes 19c ; i'rongfteart DOG FOOD, 2 Cans 13c PINEAPPLE JUICE, No. 2 Can ... 13c ? < eton's COI) FISH CAKES, Can 13c jl'm & hammer SODA, 3 Packages 13c maxwell house COFFEE, Pound Can 29c i 11 ROGERS' PRODUCE 11| t Green Cabbage, 3 lbs. 10c Iceberg Lettuce, head 10c Fresh Okra, lb 10c Large Lemons, doz. .. 23c Calif. Oranges, doz. .. 23c Winesap Apples, doz. 25c Fresh Limes, doz 15c I Fresh Sweet Com, dz. 29c - Bananas, 4 lbs. 25c Yel. or Wh. Onions, lb. 5c I - . . 2. ' . - ' CAMERAORAPDS *.v ^ COME U>? 'N' SEE ME SOMETIMEt Luke, 10-foot man-eating E lizard brought to thi? country from .. the Dutch East Indies, is,doubling jx attendance at the Bronx Zoo, his P new address. HARRY RICHMAN, star of stage, screen and radio, who broadcasts every Wednesday niflht over a nationwide hook-up, thinks radio programs are intended primarily for listeners in their homes and not for I studio audiences. Consequently he has banned studio applause except >> at the close of the program. SPIRIT OF iW SPRING (no pun). IW Spring fever in it* KW molt virulent form t can fifip the nation, and golfer* can plow the *od in frantic earnest. but Spring '? not \ really here until the barefoot nymph* get into action. THE COME-HITHER eye# belong to Mary Lou (Rosaline Greene) who figure# in one of the great romance# of the air. She'# the radio iweetheart of Lanny Roti and both, you know, are stars of Captain Henry'# Show Boat. Do you wonder that Lanny came rushing back from Hollywood to rejoin the captain# entertainment crew ? - -v V." ' LOOKS LIKE the kind old qrandmother in Little P ed i hiJioq Hood, done t it? -r Out it's really the Middle i Sited Baer, who will meet : Primo Camera June 14, > New York, for the heavy. \ weight crown, taking a i re at during a lull at His ^ training quarters. eyCR DRINK "SHANDY-GAFF"?: Patricia Bowman, Prima Ballerina of tha New Zicgfeld Follies, brings into vogue an old-time drink called "Shandy-Qaff." She declares, "If you have never been able to enjoy bottled beer, here le a sure way to cultivate a taste for It. Mix equal parts of bottled beer with ginger ale, lemon or lime soda. You'll be pleasantly surprised with the distinctive and delicious flavor of the drink." ** A. ' 'A ' '