The Camden chronicle. (Camden, S.C.) 1888-1981, September 27, 1946, Image 5
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THi PIMDAY, ULPTMUBEn V,
K-pfAR OVER WAVES
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lUdlo Gttstloa WIS.
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Mia. Oaorta
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g.1, Camden.
W^MAirS AUXlUARY MEETS
The October aeetiac cl thf
Woniui** Avtmvy oC OnM dimitdi
wffl be held at the home oi Mrs.
Qrancer Gaither on Tneeday. Oc
tober 1, at 4 m. All members
are nrged to be present The gneet
of the afternoon will be our
Diocesan President Mrs. Shafton,
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14anef him...! iseoe her
• faM Cerroie Kingl Thdtt Ibe see
ttiey fci jWu<fasieasie«..bs*f if o mpoHit*?’
^ - Aeolber Cerele Kieg ifo|PS ripM oef el
h$liion'$ pag$$ fa win many a yamg
man'$ heart. Oieei for fhe man is YOU!
Me in a Corelo fOng.
feararert ref alarly la...
JUNIOR lAZAAR MADIMOISfUl tfVtNTEEN
CHARM PHOTOMAY OlAMOUR
VOOUE
s o ( u n
J. B. Canter sprat Tneeday in
TiinmonsTllle.
Jack Karesh left on Satnrdsy for
Vanderbilt nnlTerslty.
Miss Mary Pitts is on an extend
ed Tisit to New York.
Miss Edna Team, student at Wln-
throp, was at home for the week
end.
Mr. and Mrs. Reaben Pitts hare
returned from a trip to the West
Coast
Tommy Little, student at Fur
man unlTersity, spent the weekend
at home.
A. D. Duggan from Washington,
D. C., spent the weekend with M.
J. Cullen.
Joe Mills of Charlotte was a
weekend guest of Mr. and Mrs.
John Mullen.
T, O. Boykin. Jr., will leawe on
Thursday for Clemson to enroll for
farther study. —^ .—
Miss Charlotte Boykin of Char
leston spent the weekend with Mrs.
Henry Beard, Sr.
Miss Elixabeth Bunce of New
York is the guest for sereral days
of Mrs. Lois Coxe.
Mrs. J. H. Guthrie is rlsiting her
daughter, Mrs. Thomasia Guthrie
Tyler, in Washington. .
Mrs. Carrie Burnet of Washing
ton was the guest for sereral days
of Mrs. T..J. Kirkland.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Sheheen, an
nounce the birth of a son, Septem
ber 23, at the Camden hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Taller hare
returned to Camden after spending
the summer at Marthas Vineyard.
Ben Team. Jr., left on Monday
for Delonega, Ga., where he is at
tending the North Georgia college.
Mrs. Alfred Boykin and son spent
the week with the formra’s mother,
Mrs. J. W. Donnan, in Columbia.
Mr. and Mrs. McGowan Holmes
of Bdlsto Island were guesm last
week of Mr. and Mrs. Bolirar Boy
kin. ,
Joe Jackson has returned to
Clemson for the fall session after a
short Tisit following the summer
term.
Pr^ Mullen and Joe Mills l^ft
on Tuesday for Chapel Hill to re
sume their studies gt the Unirersl-
ty of N, C. Dargan Jennings will
leare on Thursday for the Unirersl-
ty of N. C.
Announdng
The (Hieniiuf Of
THE CLOTHES TREE
WOMANS EXCHANGE BUnJ)ING
Tuesday, October 1st
OPEN DAILY 9:30 a. m. to 5:00 p. m.
f
Except Saturday whan hours wrill ha 9:30 a. m. to 1 p. m.
FEATURINQ
aDRESSES ^SVITS aBLOVSES
— and —
Henri Bendels Caemetics
V. HARRISON — AGNES UNDSAY —? KITTY LOWNDES
Mr. and Mrs. C.* L. Mono and
boys of Rock HIU spent Sunday
with Mr. Mann's mother on Hamp
ton arenue.
Dr. Irrine Boykin of Philadelphia
is the guest for two weeks of Mr.
and Mrs. W. R. Cnpehart at Carter
Hill plantation.
Bill Smith and Donald Crolley
are learlng today for Coral Gables,
Fla., where they win enroU at the
UnlTersity of Miami.
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Oldham of
Cincinnati, Ohio, were the past
ereekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
William a Nicholson.
Mr. and Mrs. Hiett of Toledo,
Ohio, are Tisiting their daughter^
Mrs Dixie Boykin, and Mr. Boykin
at dhancefleld plantation.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Mullen hsTe
taken an apartment in Columbia.
Mr. Mullen Is a student at the Uni-
Tersity of South Carolina.
Mrs. John DaTidGk)n ahd son,
Douglas of Kershaw, were guests
of the former’s mother, Mrs. Elisa
beth Haile on Wednesday.
Friends of Miss Joan Schlosbnrg
will be glad to know she is now
home after an operation at the
Camden hospital and is getOng
.along nicely.
Rot. Theodore B. Anderson re
turned home after a- 17-day illness
at Memorial hospital in Charlotte.
He hopes to be out again among
his many friends.
Mr. and Mrs; Edward B. Beard
(Meta Alexander), announce the
birth of a son, Edward Boykin
Beard, Jr., September 24, at the
(^mden hospitsl.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Jackson and
sons haTe returned to Charleston
after spending some time in Cam
den with the former’s mother, Mrs.
W. L Stokes, Sr.
Mss’. Zander CHarkson and daugh
ter, BetU, and Mr. and Mrs. Stew
art Clarkson and children hare re
turned from Pawleys Island where
they spent a week.
Friends of Mrs. Harold McCas-
kill of 1407 North Broad street,
will be glad to hear that she is do
ing nicely after an operation at fhe
Camden hospital, and if expected to
be home Thursday of this week.
Mrs. Edna Williams of Chartoe-
ton, Mr. and Mrs. M. .. C.' Queen.
Miu Elmer Quefn of Rock Hill and
Mr. and Mrs. Queen and Tony
Queen of Salisbury attended the
Team-Queen wedding on Sunday.
The Wednesday Morning. Bridge
Club was entertained last week by
Mrs Dan Murchison at the borne of
Mrs* A. C. McKain. High score was
won by Mrs. Lee Little. After cards,
the hostess senred a delightful
salad course.
Mrs. Marie Haile entertained a
group of relatiTes and friends from
Columbia at an Infofmal supper on
Sunday.night Thoni from Oolnm-
Ms who w«i%pre«eEt were Mr. and
Mrs. Lorett Thomas and Canning-
iuun Thomas.
Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Barron of
Rome, Ga., spent seTeruI days with
Dr. and Mrs. R. E. StereiMon. Mrs.
R.’E. Stereneon, Sr., and Mrs. R.
B. StSTenson. Jr., retarned to Rome
with Mr. and Mrs. Barron on Thurs
day for a week’s Tisit
Mrs. Beanor Manrin was hostess
to the Wednesday Morning Bridge
Club this week. Substitutes who
played for absent members were
Mrs. St Bright Anderson, Mrs. T.
Lee Little, Mrs. Bertie Zemp, Miss
Lillian Yates. The hostess srared
light refreshments.
TEAM—QUEEN
Miss Katherine Emily Team.
loTsly brunette daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Team of this city
and Robert Alton Queen, son. of
and Mrs. M. C. Queen of Rock Hill
were married at an impressiTe-and
beautiful ceremony at 12:30 o’clock
Sunday attemdon at the Bethesda
Presbyterian church. The officiat
ing clergyman. Rot. A. D. McArn,
used the double ring ceremony.
The bride was enchanting in a
light weight wool powder blue dress
with brown accessories and she
wore a corsage of pink rose buds
and tube roses.
Miss Edna Team, a sister of the
bride, was hm only attendant Her
dress was dusty rose in color and
her accessories were nary. She
wore a corsage of gardenias. The
groom was attended by Johnny M.
Brayer of Rock Hill, as best man.
Preceeding the ceremony the
candles were lighted by the ushers,
Ben Team, Jr., brother nf the
bride, and Bill Jennings. The bride
was glTen in marriage by hra
father, Ben T. Team.
The church was simply but eftec-
tlTsly decorated white with glad-
iolas and asters and candelabra en
twined with southern smllax and
ferns. During the ceremony tradi
tional nuptial music was giren by
Mrs. A. D. McAm, church organist.
Mrs. Ben Team, mother of (he
brid^ wore a grey suit with black
aeeenorlee and a corsage of red
roee buds. Mrs. Queen, mother of
the groom, wore a light blue dress
with brown accessories and her
corsage was of yellow roee bu^
Following the ceremony, Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Team ratertamed the
bridal party and guests, mcluding
members of the two families, at a
dinner party at the Thomas Tarm,
where a beautifully appointed table
had been set on
floor.
tha men
Ninety-four per cent of tha
tubes now sold in Brasil are
tlte United States.
When healthy chicks are ftnf;
well-balanced ration, tonict ai
medicines are of little Talus.
Subscribe to The CbroMidbi
Mrs. W. D. Nettles entertained
at a delightful children’s party In
hopor of the third birthday of her
little daughter, Mary. About fifteen
of the little girl’s friends were
present. Games were played in the
garden and later in the afternoon
the children enjoyed Ice cream and
cake
^ Across the street he darted
Looking neither right nor left; •
Of a kind hut careless husband
A wife is now bereft.
SEVEN PERSONS KILLED
SIXTY INJURED
In Highway Traffic Accidents in South Carolina LAST'
WEEK.
_ _ ^MEMBER
Our Accident Policies cover not only Automobile or
i^er Travel Accidents but virtually all types^ of. ac
cidents, even a dog’s bite or the sting of a bee.
Ask NOW about the Colonial NON-CANCELLABLB
’‘MASTER” Policy. Truly, "Tn All the World No
Finer Accident Contract.”
DAVID H. BAUM, AGENCY
1 .
) *
. 1
Camden’s Oldest Insurance Agency
Congratulates The Chronicle
4
.... upon its expansion to a 7-column paper. Camden
f
—is fortuDate4» have such a progressive newspaper.
KENNEDY INSURANCE A6ENCY
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V.- ■',»
jr-3r
i/-
■ -i
CONGRATIMTIONS TO
The Camden Chronicle
WHEN IN NEED OF
Bed Spreads
SEE US
J. Paul Ross
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S. C
■If'
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fte paper.
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Like The Chronicle, we too are Caniden's own, here to
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