University of South Carolina Libraries
I A CHOICE LINE t I Norris' Exquisite E..,.r c.?die.. aUo> . n<jw I J .h.pmentof Elizabeth Arden. Coty. and ?ou. I bigant . Cosmetic* all suitable for gift,. I TK. DRIff STORE I DciivtJ P?nney'? I PCIETY NEWS Telephone 100 DR EN NAN-?WILL JAMS -j'lje Kev. and Mrs. Frank Allen Dreuuati, of Liberty Hill, uuuouuce tbe engagement of their daughter, Louisa Mi Fadden, and Marlon Brooks Williams, of Camden. The wedding will take placeoin June. Miss Drennaii was graduated from Queens-Chlcora college In 1935 and has been teaching in the Ulaney school.?Sunday's State. * Mrs. Dempster Was Hostess Mrs. J. M. Dempster was hostess at a pretty party which she gave Monday evening at her home On Fair street. Bridge was played at three tables after which delightful refreshments were served. * High score prize was won by Miss Ada Montgomery and the low prize was won by Miss Margaret Blanding. Additional guests were Mrs. Annie Davidson and Mrs. Louise Cantey. Guests of Miss Goodale Members of the Spinster's Club were guests of Miss Mary Goodale Monday evening. Other guests were Mrs. F. I). Itogers of Bennettsville, Miss Barbara Hickox, and Mrs. Hugh Billups Prize for top score went to Miss Willie Halle. 8T RANGE?BOHELER Aiken, March 13.?A marriage of in'terebt to their friends throughout South Carolina was that of Sunday afternoon, February 28, in North Augusta, of Miss Sophie Catherine Strange and Clyde H. lloheler. Mr?. Boheler is the daughter of N. S. Strange, of Sumter. Mr. Boheler is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. lloheler, of Camden. The bride has been employed for the past four yearH with the Aiken county temporary department of pub-, lie welfare. The bridegroom is em-1 ployed with Woatherford's Heating and Plumbing Company, Dance at Sarsfield Club On Saturday evening a dance will be held at Sarsfield Club to be known as the Horse Show Ball. An excellent orchestra has been engaged und good music promised, Announcements have been mailed out and a large attendance is expected us many I visitors will be in town for the Camden horse show hold today and tomorrow. <'i * Engagement Announced The following announcement has been made from New York City: "Mrs. William Calvin Steele announces the engagement of her daughter, Kay Wilhelmina, to Clisby Blakeney DuBose, the wedding to take place on Saturday, March 27, at 6 o'clock in the afternoon at Broadway Presyterian church, New York City." Miss Steele, who is the daughter of Mrs. Kate Southerland Steele and the late Dr. W. C. Steele of Mount Olive, N. C., was graduated from Grace College, Italeigh, and afterwlard from Barnard College, Columbia University, New York. Since graduation she ,hus lived in New York. ! Mr. DuBose, who is the son of Rev. and Mrs. Palmer Clisby DuBose, of Camden, S. C., received his education at Davidson College and the University of North Carolina. He is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity and now holds a position with the Union Carbide Company, of New York City. WILLIAMS?HOOD Announcement is made of the approaching marriage of Miss Minnie Dawhorn Williams, daughter of Mrs. R. Reed Williams and the late R. Reed Williams, of Kershaw, to Harry Ware Hood, Jr., of Charleston, which will take place Tuesday, March 30, I at 10 o'clock a. m., in the the First Baptist church of Kershaw. Miss Williams received her education at Greenville Womans College, Greenville, 8. C., and Draughons Business College, Columbia. For the past three years she has been connected with the Coordinated Unit of the Production Credit Association and National Farm Loan Association in Kershaw and Lancaster counties, as assistant secretary and treasurer, and is now living in Camden. Mr. Hpod is a graduate of Clemson Agricultural College, class of 1922, and, is now associated with Hood-Mysrs Electric Company, of Charleston He, is the son of Mrs. Harry W. Hood and, the late Harry W. Hood, Sr., of Charleston. Her Mother Was Honor Guest At Mrs. Henry Brothers' party on Wednesday afternoon her mother, Mrs. Ely, of Greensboro, was an honor I guest. Mrs. Joe MoKain was winner I of the high score prize. I Personal Mention Mrs. IluHil Bruce haw gone to Gads den, Ala., to visit relatives. Mrs. Lillian Bruce, of (Columbia, Is the guest of her son, Basil Bruce. Miss Martha Snyder, of Sumter, Is the bouaeguest of Mr. and Mrs. U P. Tobln. Mrs A A Wilson, of Elliotts. Is the guest of her sister, Mrs. F. i>. Goodale. Miss Mat tie Belle Mondelhall, of Qreer, is the guest of Misses Gertrude and Iaila Gillie. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Williams and children, of Columbia, visited relatives In Camden last Sunday. Mrs. Hubert Wilson has as her guests this week her nieces, Misses Hazel and Kathleen Arthur, of Union. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Graham, of Columbia, were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Julian Graham last week. Mrs. W. B. Dempsey, who has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A, A. Ilea[sonover, returned this week to her home in Rock Hill. Mr. and Mrs. J. |. Peurce-Jiad as their visitors Sunday, W. I). fTludden, Mi. and Mrs. K. H. Gladden and children, of Rich burg; Mrs. W. M. aAgiihoii and son and Miss Eva Glalhen, of Chester. Parties For Bride and Groom To Bo. Miss Willie Halle and Zander Clarkson, whoso marriage Is to bo solemnized in Bothesda Presbyterian church 011 April 17, huve been the recipients of a number of social attentions thruout this month. In tlioir honor, Mrs. B. G. Sanders entertained on Thursday evening, giving a linen shower und bridge party at her home on Fair street. A shower bouquet tied with tulle in the hostess' chosen colors of yellow and white designated the place of the bride-to-be at the card tables. Before the bridge games began little Katherlne Sheorn, dressed as a miniature bride, presented a tray of linen gifts to the honorees from the guests present. High score prize was awarded Miss Virginia Halle and Mrs. DeLoache bheorn won the low prize. The floating prize went to the bride-elect and Mrs. Joe McKain cut the consolation. Easter covers and napkins were used on the six bridge tables for the refresh nients and an attractive salad plate in the Easter motif was served. Assisting the hostess in serving were Miss Ann Clarkson and Miss Charlotte DuBose, sister and cousin, respectively, of the bridegroom-elect. An Interesting out of town guest was Mrs. b. I). Rogers, of Hennettsvllle, sister of tlie bride-elect. Celebrates Birthday Miss Molly Ruth Redfearn oelebrated her tenth birthday with a lovely party given by her mother, Mrs. W. T. Hedfearn. at her home on North Broad street Tuesday afternoon. A color motif of pink and green was carried out in the arrangement of the flowers and also in the refreshments Several amusing games and contests were enjoyed,. Betty Zoe Rhame and Billy Moore winning the prizes. Later the guests were served punch and cake in the dining room. The party favors were green baskets of candy and the centerpiece for the table was candle birthday cake topped with Mrs. Blakeney Hostess i w!?' ^A' K> Blakeney's party on h?r? f8 vBy w,as glven for the memhers of her afternoon club. Interesting out of town guests at the party were Mrs Clark Floyd of New York City and Mrs. James Allen, of Darien Conn., who are visiting their respective parents. Mrs. Jack Whitaker, w?nWn? was a guest of the clu*>, Tnd vi'rL iP Bctore prize at one table K rhv Lambert UePass and Mrs. other two.PPer W6re winnera at lhe Mrs. VanLandlngham Hostess 'them'st ,VanLandln?ham used ;be St- 1 atrick s day motif In tallies ert ^ent8 when 8he entertainhHH^f m*mbera of the Neighborhood High Vnr* Wednesday afternoon. High score prize was won by Miss lnette Boykin. The second high agues'! of8fhA' ?i' firadham' who wa? Mra F .D Qoodale. ttn" thc low t0 Birthday For Little"Girl Little Botty Pearce was given a party by her mother, Mrs Irving Pearce, last -fuesday afternoon in ce1ebiatlon of her fourth birthday The SiST ra?T'ifnwa8 "ttrac.lvely'u.ed m sam", ??,h?y?unK Played w lawn and afterwards were served Ice cream and cake frnm attractlveJy decorated tables placed under the trees. Each guest was glrel! ? miniature basket ofWter'e'sS S wr B?ard Ente7tete7 beri of hflr^ f6ard entertalned mem. of her contract club Thursdav nf ternoon at her home Ml** Vo#k i W. VanI^dmghamaanCrifra Brevard Boykin were additional guests The* "tJT^ Mr*' Ooodsls c|ub was enter'alneTttlf weT'by Lr Prizes V' high scores for adle'Is""1 8ecoad awarded Mr. and Mm i men were Tallest Human Being (.10b?Cham ' ??^>cmbeof A.,on 1 11.J Chapter, Order of DeMniov holds the distinction of being not om 0 !j,T DcM0lay according lo medical records. Is perhaps ,he mi,. oat human being ever to have Hvod. 1 w g raan measures 8 feet 5 inches and Is still growing He recently attended a Founders Conference of the DeMolay, serving as elegato, and entered wholeheartedly nto an discussion. and activities of Wad low to devote hla life to th- gtsOs ^w pniotice of law. GREATEST EXODUS IN HI8TORY THREATENING MODERN J?W8 New York, Feb. 27.?The greatest exodus In all their ages of wandering threatens the Jewish people to-1 day. A full third of their number?5,000,000 or more?would have to move to new lands If the nations of eastern Europe carry out the anti-Semitic programs they have started. Some of Poland's politicians have demanded evacuation of the whole of that country's 3,000,000 Jews, onetenth of the entire Polish population, although the government denies any intent at wholesale evacuation. The Nazi drive against Jews goes on in Germany. Jewish sources also assert that Romania, Lithuania, Austria, Hungary,1 Iraq and Syria are bringing tnore and more pressure to bear and the Jews 'have nowhere to go. In the nations to which they might flee, the gates of immigration are virtually closed against them. | Palestine, Israel's ancient home, remains their great hope, but there, too, the bars are slowly going up. Even with the Holy Land open, the situation is critical. Palestine cannot begin to absorb any great number of Jews. If the Polish threats should be car-' ried out, it would mean tearing up by the roots that go down for centuries, the world's largest body of Jews outside the United States. Jewish hopes that this will not happen are based on the fact that the Jews claim control of 80 to 65 per cent of the trade and commerce and 40 per cent of all small and medium sized businesses in Poland's cities and towns. They argue that if they go, the nation's economy will collapse. I Nevertheless, thousands have chosen to leave the country. Between 1929 and 1935, Jewish emigrants rose from 9.6 per cent to 66.7 per cent of Poland's total emigration. Last year 23.000 left the country, most of them for Palestine. The American Joint Jewish distri-' bution committee has appropriated $2,150,000 to relieve suffering in, the Polish area during 1937, almost twice as much as will be spent In Germany,' where the Nazi campaign has long overshadowed all other anti-Jewish1 movements. , In Romania, American Jewish organizations say, 1,000,000 persons are undergoing "the same demoralizing process as In Poland," but for different reasons, the Nazi influence of Oermany and the unpopularity of King Carol's friend, Mme. Lupescu, who is a Jewess. News reports have told of antiSemitic riots in Romania for the last four years. Fascist raids on Jewish stores occurred in 1933. the year Hitlor began "purging" the Germans of all that was not Aryan. In 1935, the feeling again&t the Jews was so strong thai eleven former members of the cabinet issued a manifesto demanding legislation that would force the Jews out of business and the professions. Mme. Lupescu entered the picture In 1935 and 1936. News dispatches said the powerful peasants party accused her of using her Influence with the king to place an undue number of Jewish in official positions. To the agitation against her was added the National Christian party's proclamation , that It Intended to "solve" the Jewish question the tame way mi had done. . Hors, 1,000 -Romanian ^ews ored to Palestine In 1934, and tJH left the next year. In Germany, the anti-Semitic drive i? more direct. The Hitler government makes no attempt to hide its hatred of the Jews and ita gradual "liquidation"of them. A hundred and1 sixty thousand of them have left, the ! country since 1933, but 400,000 re- j main. Ten thousand of these have been living undisturbed In Upper Silesia, protected by a pact between Germany and Poland. The pact "expires July 15. In Lithuania, the Jews blame German influence for recent laws, which require all artisans to take examinations before they can obtain employfhent. Sixty per cent of the artisans, I they say, are Jews. Three thousand of them moved to Palestine In the last two years. The American Jewish congress reports an Increase in "anti-Jewish presI sure" In Austria and Hungary, and , blame Nazi influence. Data compiled | by the congress also shows expulsion | of Jews from Iraq and Syria and Turj key as a result of national move| ments in those lands. I In Spain, anti-Semitism is feared j by Jewish leaders if the Fascist rebj els win the civil war. The present government is considered friendly.,. Fascist Italy, paradoxically, has no anti-Jewish drive. Mussolini even permits a high percentage of Jews in public office. But in the Italian city of Tripoli in North Africa, Jews report merchants have recently been imprisoned and flogged for refusing to keep their shops in the modem section of the city open Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath. In South America, where negotiations have been undef way in recent years for establishing of Jewish colonies, several governments have rea??? cently passed laws prohibiting uso of the Yiddish language. In South Africa, a boatload of several hundred Jews recently arrived in j Capetown to be greeted by a demonstration, OfflclalH explained the number of Jews there had increased to the point where It had "begun to cuubo anxiety." A United States congressman's propoHal to relieve the situation by openj ing a Jewish Colony In Cuba resulted In Immediate demonstrations on that island. A suggestion that 1,000,000 j Jews could settle In Santo Domingo was soft-pedaled by Jewish groups in this country for fear -Of further repercussions. This leaves Palestine, which the Zionists are trying to develop as a Jewish national home. Between 1917 and 1935, 257,140 Semites came in. Even there immigration is restricted. It Is shut down completely at inter| vals by Jewish,-Arab riots. The Arabs, who make up the greater part of the I Holy land's population, resent the Jewish invasion under British protection. I The last riots, which lasted 25 | weeks and killed 314 persons In the spring of 1936, were investigated by a British royal commission. The commission now is holding hearings In London to decide whether Palestine should be closed permanently to the Jews. If the country remains open, it Is a debated question how soon Its saturation point will be reached. By that time, the Jews may hare worked out a solution to their problem, but what it will be can only be conjectured* Three WPA workers were crushed to death at -the Philadelphia navy yard, when a 50-foot beam of a traveling erane crashed to the ground, falling into a group of 20 worker*. inn n n n B Tffl | EXHIBITION I ?OF THE? c I CAMDEN PHOTOGRAPHS J OF BERT CLARK THAYER Tuesday, March 23 through Friday, March 26 j FROM 2 UNTIL 6 P. M. i The Stables of Mrs. Samuel Russell ! MILLBANK, CAMDEN, S. C. V v'1 ? > <* I MEDICAL BATHS KIRKWOOD HOTEL TELEPHONE CONNECTION ELECTRIC CABINET. MASSAGE AND MEDICAL GYMNASTICS, REDUCING MA88AGE AND EXERCI8E8 OIL AND SALT RUBS, HOT FOMENTATIONS, ETC. Scientifically done by I 'Swedish Masseuse and Medical Gymnast Treatments Given at Patients Home if Desired. Reasonable , Prices. The above treatments will regulate and restore bodily /unctions, iucrease energy of body and mind. [Wonderful in nervous disorders, relieve pains and aches of almost every kind, breaks up colds, cleans out waste matter, softens stiff joints, congested muscles. Pains and aches disappear as in rheumatism, gout, neuritis, neuralgia, lumbago, arthritis, etc. All bodily ills are due to poiskms, and no better method has yet jbeen found for elimination, than these baths, with massage and exfercisos, plenty of fresh air, and a jdiet consisting mostly of fruit and regetables. After a while you will Pnd the toxic poisons eliminated, the process of nutrition stimulatid, the blood enriched, and a happy. healthy state of mind follows. | If you suffer from over acidity P?"l catarral conditions, thesej treatments and baths will elimii^^ll^hese^ymptons^^ I CHANGING A VISION I INTO A REALITY If you are not in the telephone business, such factors in modern long distance telephone communication as vacuum tube repeaters, permalloy loading coils, echo suppressors, attenuation equalizers, CIJl loll operating method, and others, are terms from a language you may not understand. But, as a user of long distance telephone service, you do understand that many improvements in the servioe have been made. The greater speed with which you are connected with another city, the clearness with which your voice Is trans milted, the extension of service to countries all over the world, and seven rate reductions in the past decade, are all facts you are familiar with. ^ To make these .improvements possible, someone had to have the vision to know what had to be done. Someone had to I tinance the research. Someone had to successfully conclude tlie research. Someone had to standardize the new equipment and operating methods. Someone had to put the equipment and methods in effect on a nationwide basis.. The Bell System does it. Research, by the Bell Laboratories. Standardized manufacture, by the Western Electric Lompany. Standardized and nationwide operation, by the Bell regional operating companies. The result is the long distance telephone service you use, a service that grows better each year. Use "long distance to keep friendships alive?to save time and money in JJpJTf ^ I business. The cost is small wherever you call. Southern Bell Telephaife^ahd Telegraph CompanyT ___ i,^ i ----- , .^iinttwrTifnffri hr.-imm iimi.<Bia?wwB^w.wi n J'n anym n M 111 - ? Easter Sunday, March 28th Thousands of Lilies in Bloom V f v in Our Greenhouses Call and See Our Display of Cut Flowers and Plants * THE CAMDEN FLORAL COMPANY 1 211 East Laurens Street 'Phone 193 | ! ZV*" RUSH'S SERVICE STATION Dusty Bund See Our Sanitary Line of MEATS and GROCERIES Our Prices are Right While here fill up witih Sinclair HC GaJswline and the trip will coat you very little. Come up and see ., liable Csorx mm Tune ;