The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, May 16, 1907, Image 5
*
Personal Mention.
?Mr. W. D. Ingram, of Columbia,
spent Sunday in the city.
?Mr. T. D. Beard, of the Colston
section, was in the city Monday.
?Capt. J. K. Risher attended the
reunion of Confederate veterans in
Columbia last week.
?Mr. J. A. Spann, Mrs. M. L.
Counts, and Miss Bernie Counts have
gone on a visit to Texas.
?Mrs. C. E. Garvin, of Lancaster,
arrived Tuesday night to join her
husband, who is now with The
Herald.
?Pmr T P TVinrnQQ nastor of the
? A?V/ ? U V. JL. UViAiMV)
Mill chapel, attended the Orangeburg
district conference at Rowesr
ville last week.
?Rev. Peter Stokes, W. D. Rhoad
and A. W. Knight attended the
Orangeburg district conference at
Rowesville last week.
?Rev. A. J. Foster left Tuesday
to attend the Southern Baptist Convention
at Richmond, Va. He will
visit the Jamestown Exposition at
Norfolk while away.
\ Caused by Whiskey.
W. L. Fleming, the white photographer
who shot marshal Holloway
and a Mr. Cooper in Springfield last
winter, was tried in Orangeburg
last week. He plead guilty and asked
for the mercy of the court, saying
he was drunk at the time and had no
recollection of the affair. Judge
Hydrick told him being drunk was
no excuse, and sentenced him to
seven years in the penitentiary.
Fleming was drunk and was
worrying some horses in a lot when
Holloway and Cooper went to arrest
him and a man named Corbett who
was with him. Holloway arrested
Fleming and turned him over to
Cooper, then turned to arrest Cor
bett. As soon as Holloway turned
v his back Fleming pulled his pistol
and shot Cooper twice, both balls
U taking effect in the thigh. Fleming
then shot Holloway in the thigh and
he fell, but pulled his pistol as he lay
on the ground and shot Fleming in
the thigh. All three men were shot
in the thigh, which is strange coincidence,
and all are maimed for life.
It is feared that Cooper will yet lose
his leg, Holloway is still on crutches,
and Fleming walks with a limp.
Fleming's health is badly broken by
his wound and confinement, and
although 38 years old, he appears to
be an old man. His drunk was certainly
an expensive one to him. .
What's the Use.
It is little use for the local editor
to waste his lungs and sprain his
Ee in trying to boom a town when
citizens all stand around with
r hands in their pockets and
v wait for something to turn up. If
the capitalists or business men do
not put their shoulders to the wheel
and do a little boosting it is useless
for the editor to try to boom things,
i He can write "boom" articles until
he gets baldheaded, but if the citir
zens themselves do not take hold
. and push, the town will forever
stick in the mud.' Of what use is it
for the local paper to suggest im-V
provements ana new enterprises if
"* ?-r
i we suggestions ore ucvci wicu u^r
* on?
One man cannot boom a town.
It requires the concerted actionlof
the citizens. When one man Attempts
to shoulder a town and carry
it there are always a tot of cranky
kickers who are always ready to
jump on top of the load. Unity of
action is what counts.?Fort Mill
Times. '
Real Test of Love.
The eloping couple were in quest
of a magistrate.
"Will you always protect me?"
>V: , asked the girl.
"Always," he replied fervently.
"And if we are caught," she added,
looking fearfully about her, "will
you keep mamma from spanking
me?"
. Then he realized that the real test
of love was still to come.
Old Soldier's Tragic Death.
Cheraw, May 9.?When the northbound
train stopped at the crossing
near the oil mill on Wednesday night,
Mr. Jesse Pittman, a veteran 60
years of age, wno was returning
from the reunion in Columbia, met
a tragic death. Mr. Pittman, think.
I'm ing it was the Cheraw station, started
to leave the train and as the cars
v moved off he stepped or fell off on
his head, crushing in his skull and
' killing him instantly. He lived near
Ruby in this county.
The jury's verdict was that he
came to his death by stepping or
falling off the train.
The shortest street in Rockingham
is Long; the biggest man in Gaffney is
Little; the oldest man in Jacksonville
is Young, and the slowest man in
Chesterfield is Quick. But Bennettsville
has them all beat. The blackest
woman in this town is Lily White.?
Pee Dee Advocate.
What Our Reporter Saw in New York.
A recent visit to one of the lareest
paint factories in the world, disclosed
machinery that was producing 10,000
gallons of paint, and doing it better and
m less time than 100 gallons could be
made by hand mixing. This was the
celebrated L. & M. paint. The L. & M.
zinc hardens L. & M. white lead and
mak^s L. & M. paint wear like iron for
10 or 15 years. . 4 gallons L. & M. mixed
with 3 gallons linseed oil makes 7 gallons
of paint at a cost of less than $1.20 per
gallon. If any defect exists in L. & M.
paint, will repaint house for nothing.
Donations of L. &' M. made to
churches. Sold by H. F. Hoover, Bamberg,
S. C.
I y
CRUCIFIED GIRL MAD.
Crying That She Is a Martyr, She Goes
to Insane Asylum.
Crying loudly that she was to die a
martyr by crucifixion for the sins of
the world, Miss Jean Mitchell, nineteen
years old, who on Nov. 3 last was
found in her home in Pittsburg with
nails driven through her hands, was
taken hopelessly insane to the Claremont
asylum.
Miss Mitchell grew in the hallucination
that every person she met was
plotting to crucify her. She was a
cause of much excitement wherever
she went. Frequently in the streets
she would raise her hands and call attention
to the scars of the nails in her
palms as proof of her mission.
Physicians who have observed the
young woman say that her mental con
HSB HANDS WEKE NAILED TO THE SINK.
ditlon grew steadily worse from the
day she was discovered nailed to the
wooden sink. It was in the kitchen of
the Mitchell family apartment, 2704
Forbes street Tenants were attracted
by a woman's shrieks, and a man entering
through a window was horrified
to see long wire nails partly driven
into the top of the wooden sink and
the ends protruding above the backs
of the woman's hands.
A short time ago Miss Mitchell went
to live with her sister, Mrs. Edward
Worley, in 2341 Center avenue. Then
she began to cry frequently in the
night that she was a second Christ &nd
that she was to be crucified not once,
but many times. Three days ago a
watch was set on her, three detectives
from police headquarters being detailed
for the work.
Miss Mitchell has only the one delusion.
She left her home, followed by
two of the sleuths, and, boarding a
street car, began to charge passengers'
with a plot to nail her to a cross. The
detectives escorted her back to the
house, and there she spoke as follows:
"I got on the car, and a man on the
m ?u
piaiiorm lmmeuiaieiy t?aiu, v^i uuaj
her!' It was the same with all the
others In the ear. It has been the
same for many days. Every place I
have gone the same man has appeared
before me and said, 'Crucify her!' I
cannot escape htm, but I am not alarmed,
because I feel I came Into the
world to die on the cross."
Mystery still surrounds the nailing
of the young woman to the sink. At
that time Miss Mitchell said she had
been knocked down by a blunt Instrument
In the hands of a man, who then
drove the nails through her hands.
But no evidence tending either to establish
or disprove her statement has
.ever been uncovered, and for this reason
the police attach more interest to
the present plight of the girl.
SAVES HER MOTHER.
+
Child Flag* a Train on a Bridg* With a
Rod MufRor.
Mrs William Johnson, while walking
across a Pennsylvania railroad
bridge near the Mount Holly (N. J.)
station, fell between the ties of the
bridge and, besides breaking her leg,
narrowly escaped death from an approaching
passenger train.
Mrs. Johnson was accompanied by
her young daughter, Sadie. Not being
able to lift her mother, who was supporting
herself with her arms extended,
the child sped across the bridge
and, snatching from her neck a red
silken muffler, stood in front of the
oncoming train and frantically waved
it. The engineer brought the train to
a sudden stop at the approach to the
bridge.
Passengers and crew rushed from
the train and dragged Mrs. Johnson
from her dangerous position. She was
taken to the station and thence to her
home in a carriage.
Bulldog "Talk#" Over Phone.
Sport, an intelligent bull pup owned
by Dr. Charles F. Chandler, a Columbia
university instructor, who has a
summer home in New Hartford, held
a conversation with his master over
the telephone between New Hartford
and New York city, a distance of 100
miles. John Fox Smith, at whose
home in New Hartford Sport is kept
in the winter, and Dr. Chandler first
conversed over the wire, after which
the doctor asked how Sport was. Sport
was placed so he could hear his master's
voice and went into antics of Joy,
barking and whining. Mrs. Chandler
also spoke to the dog, and he received
her voice and rent the room with his
barks.
/
* . v - - . - :". .
. v:; . ' * '"
%
1 How He Put Her 1
( Under an Obligation. (
[Original.]
Didn't I never tell y' how 1 got
Sairy? No? Well, I tuk a heap o' pride
in it at first, but after awhile somehow
it didn't seem that I was as cute
as I thought I was. and as the years
have gone by sometimes I think I tuk
a lot o' onnecessary trouble.
Sairy was popular with everybody.
The women liked her better 'n the
men, and that's sayin' a good deal for
a gal. She had a way o' humorin' people.
uever runnin' up agin' their preju
dices and all that sort o' thing. She
never looked sour. On the contrary,
her face wore a perpetual smile. They
said she was cute.
There was young men that was fine
lookin' who was ambitious to git Sairy,
but somehow she didn't seem to fancy
none on 'em, and so I argyed that if
they wasn't fine enough for her what
was the use of a redheaded, freckled
feller like me puttin' in a claim. We
was all about alike so far as worldly
goods was concerned, none of us havin'*
anything to speak of. In fact, we
was all at an age when we was lookin'
out for good looks. That bein' the case,
I hadn't no show at all, for I was the
homeliest young man In the town.
But I got Sairy, all the same, and
I'm a-goin' to tell you how I did it 1
wasn't nobody's fool, you see, if I was
homely. The way I did it was by puttin'
her under an obligation. One day
I said to her, "Miss Baker"?hA name
was Baker before I married her?"Miss
Baker, why don't y' git married?"
"Mr. Tucker," she said, "there hain't
no one for me to marry."
"What's the matter with these fellers
that's goin' with you?" I asked,
"Oh, none o' these young men ud
marry me," she said. "We've growed
up together. People that grow up together
don't do much marryin'. They're
too used to each other. The men all go
off and marry girls from somewnere
else. None of 'em here ud look at me."
Now, I knowed better than that.
There was two on 'em dyin' for her.
But I wasn't no sich fool as to tell her.
If I did, where'd I come in? So I
didn't say nothin' but that I thought
she'd ought to git married; that she'd
be happier married, and it would be
better for her to haw some one to
lean on when her father passed out ,
Then she said maybe I could find her
a husband. This staggered me a little,
considerin' I wanted her myself, but I
said I'd try. Then she told me she'd
like me to attend to the matter at onct,
seein' she was gittin' on, and if I succeeded
she'd consider me the dearest
friend she ever had in her life.
I saw the advantage o' puttin' her
under an obligation. But what good
would it do me to put her under that
kind of an obligation? It wobld be like
tryin' to lift myself up in a basket
Nevertheless I did it and I've always
considered it a case of real onselfishness.
I found a widower about fortyfive
years old who wanted some one to
take care of his seven motherless children.
I told him about Sairy?how
she'd like to get married Mid what a
good stepmother she'd make. After
awhile I succeeded in awakenin' an
interest in his breast and it ended in
my taking him to see Sairy. She was
as polite to him as a basket o' chips,
seem in' to take to him from the start
She cast a grateful glance at me, and
I bnft-wpd she aDDreciated what I'd
done for her.
I couldn't quite feel that I was actin'
honest by her, for, as I was sayln',
I knowed at least two fellers far better
matches than the widower that
wanted her, and I'd orter gone to one
on 'em and told him o' the chance.
But somehow I couldn't I've never
been able to tell' jist why I put up the
widower instead. I leave it to them
fellers in colleges who study psychology
and that sort o' thing.
Well, the widower called regular
once a month on Sairy. He was
watchin' her to see if she'd make a
good wife for himself and a good
mother to his children. Them widowers,
havin' had a lot o' experience,
now jist what's required. From ob.'Tvutiou
and what people said he
oou learned that Sairy was one of a
thousand and just the one he wanted.
One evening I went to see Sairy to
find out how she was gittin' along with
the widower. She told me she had a
letter from him that day proposin'
marriage. He said owin' to his family
it must be a sort o' business affair.
Sairy was the grateful est girl you
ever saw in your life. She tuk hold o'
my bony hand with freckles spottin'
the back?hers was small and white
and soft?and looked up into my eyes
wild sicd an expression as x ucvci see
there before, and she said, said she:
"This Is the beautlfulest thing you've
done for me I ever heard of. You've
put me under an everlastin' obligation.
Here was 1 with no one to marry me,
and you come along and Jist lifted me
out o' the slough o' despond. I'm so
grateful that I want to*do somethin'
real nice to show you how grateful I
am. Now, I want you to tell me somethin'
you want me to do most of anything.
Speak right out and don't be !
afraid, no matter how onreasonable it j
I seems."
"There's nothin' you can do for me,"
I said kind o' melancholy-like.
"Nothin' I can do for you? Isn't
there somethin' you want me to do for
you?'
"Yes, there's somethin' I'd like you
to do for me a heap, but that's out o*
the question."
"Tell me what it is," she said, still
holdin' on to my hand and givin' it a
soft squeeze. %
"Well, I'd ruther have you marry me !
than the widower."
She Jist sprung into my arms. After
all, I'm rather proud o' the way I man- !
aged it * F. A. MITCHEL. |
'
^JThe^E^
[Original.]
At the Dilworth-Faircliild wedding 1
met my old college clium Disbrow. We
hadn't met since we left college, twenty-five
years before, and would not
have known each other had we not
been introduced. Disbrow was known
to me by reputation, for he had become
eminent in physics. I also followed
science and have achieved some repu- I
tation in bacteriology. When the bride
and groom entered the drawing room
for the ceremony, Disbrow and I fol- I
lowed.
- * I
"What a perrect picture oi youiuiuj
beauty!" I whispered to Disbrow, referring
to the bride.
"How old would you take her to be?"
he asked.
"Twenty-two or twenty-three."
A singular expression passed over
his face.
"Do you think her older than that?"
"Suppose I should tell you she is
over forty."
"I would doubt your sanity."
At this point the marriage service
commenced, and our remarks ceased.
When it was over and we had offered
our congratulations, Disbrow and I
went to the supper room to partake of
the delicacies displayed there. Help-!
ing ourselves, we found a cozy corner j
and sat down to chat and eat.
"Estwick," said Disbrow to me, "I'm
going to celebrate our meeting after so
many years by letting you into a secret.
We are brother scientists; therefore
I don't consider what.I am about
to tell you a breach of confidence, or,
rather, I consider the professional confidence
superior to, the individual obligation.
Do you understand?" ?
"Perfectly." * . J
"Well, the girl we have just seen
married is forty-two years old."
I gave a gasp of astonishment.
"But I must go back to the beginning.
You know when I left college
something was expected of me."
"You were considered a prodigy," I
interrupted.
"It wasn't the prodigy; it was luck,
just as it was with Roentgen, only my
luck came long before his. I made a
similar discovery years ago. I have
applied it as no one else has applied
it Now, you know that from the moment
we begin to live we are attacked
by microbes. Cancel the microbe, and
you cancel old age. From experiments
on insects I found that by exposing the
larvae to a ray since called radium I
arrested decay. But at the same time
I arrested growth. From insects I experimented
on frogs, kittens, dogd and
other animals. I have a pet collie fifteen
years old as lively as a puppy." <
"Disbrow, has your learning made
you mad?"
"No; I am as sane as you. But 1
knew that if I offered any such ideas
to the world I'd be put in limbo, and
as I dread lunatic asylums and value
my freedom I have kept my mouth
shut"
"For heaven's sake, go on."
"This is no place to give you anything
more than a preface to what I
Viaxrn nrAnnCO/1 tn tttll TH11 flhOllt thp
ua T V [/&V|/VUVV4 wv ^ WM www* I ?
bride. I did make my discoveries
known to one man, old Vollmar, our
professor of chemistry at college. That
was just as I had made up my mind to
try to arrest decay in human beings.
Not long after that Vollmar came to
me and told me that two multimillionaires
desired to join their vast fortunes
by the marriage of a son of the
one to a daughter of the other, but the
boy was but two years of age, while
the girl was twenty-four. If they waited
till the boy became of age, the
girl would be too old to produce an
heir. At least such an event would
not be likely. Besides, the difference of
age would be a great obstacle to their
marriage. The old man asked me if I
would make an effort to arrest decay
on the part of the girl."
"Come, come. Disbrow, what nonsense
is this?"
"Your incredulity demonstrates the
necessity of keeping my secret If you
tell it sooner or later they'll have me
i 'hind closed doors. You haven't the
> it'iitlfic head old Vollmar had. He
;?!iubled to the idea at once."
"Go on with your yarn."
"I'm not going to try amid this clatter
of dishes and voices to tell you my
process. I will only say that the stumbling
block in my way was the fact that
the electrons discharged from radium
?? fthofmin+oH In fholr nflBBflffP fhmtirh
Ui O WOU UViVU AAA VMV?* ?? qj ?
air. I was therefore obliged to j)Ut the
subject Id a receiver and exhaust the
air." . ?
"Which means death."
"Ah! There's where the wonderful
power of radium comes In. It Is sufficient
to keep life In the subject for
an Indefinite period."
"But where did you get your apparatus?
Sufficient radium for the purpose
would cost a fortune."
"The girl's father opened his bank
account to me."
"Well?"
"My subject was a bit frightened
and her father?the only one except
herself In the secret?was beside himself
with fear. But the desire to pile
up gold even for posterity was too
strong for him, and he did not interfere
with the experiment. Within
twenty-four hours I had rendered his
daughter Impervious to the destructive
influence of germs, and she has- remained
young from that day to this.
My subject was the bride we have just
seen married."
Our conversation was interrupted by
the announcement that the bride and
groom were about to leave, and, entering
the marble vestibule, Dlsbrow and
I went up with the rest to bid them
adieu. When the bride took leave of
Dlsbrow, she gave him a look indicating
the possession of a common secret
DOUGLAS SMYTHE.
?
VALUABLE REALJ
119 acre farm, five miles from Bambertr,
near Odom's bridge. Good bargain.
One acre lot, 7 room dwelling, good
orehard and outbuildings, near cburch
and school, East Denmark. Price on call.
60 acres laud one mile from Bamberg,
heavily timbered. Price $2,000.00.
One acre vacant lot in the heart of
Bamberg. Price $500.
3 one acre lots on New Bridge street
near Southern depot. Price $550 each.
105 acre farm, one mile South of Bamberg.
Good dwelling and outbuildings,
heavilv timbered. Price $2,500.
One dwelling and lot on South side of
Railroad Avenue. Lot runs from Railroad
Avenue to Broad Street. $900.00.
400 acre farm 5 miles of Bamberg, 12
horse farm open, high state of cultivation,
12 tenant houses in excellent condition.
Price on application.
Vacant corner lot on Main Street, near
graded school. Beautiful building site.
Price $1,000.00.
200 acres of land near Rev. Romeo
Govan?Well timbered and a bargain.
$1,500.00.
350 acres clay land, 5 miles South of
Bamberg, on Odom's bridge road. See
me for prices.
180 acres of land, Odom's place road,
well improved, will rent for $250. Price
$2,700.00.
600 acres clay land, 7 miles from Bamberg,
well improved. Terms reasonable.
Price $8,000.00.
One 3 acre lot, with 4 room dwelling
in Bamberg, well built, easy terms.
Price $800.00.
25 shares Bamberg Cotton Mills Stock.
20 shares Bamberg Oil Mill Stock.
Fourteen acres with cabin 1 mile West
Bamberg?9 acres cleared. Price $420.00.
300 acre farm two miles North of Bamberg.
Good residence and fine farm.
Price $6,000.00.
600 acre farm 5 miles South of Bamberg,
a gilt edge farm. Price on application.
34 acre farm two miles South Bamberg.
Buildings worth $300. Price $600.
200 acre farm 4 miles from Bamberg.
Price $3,000.
Two story dwelling on New Bridge
street, lot 80 feet front and 255 feet deep,
good water and stables. Price $1,800.
One twd story brick building jn the
heart of business centre. Pays 10 per
cent, on investment.
100 acre farm near Howell's mill.
Rents for $125.00. Price $1,000.
1000 ar.re farm near the town of Bam
berg. Make no inquiries unless you are
able to buy something of rare value.
Timbered lands for sale on Edisto
river at rock bottom prices.
An excellent dwelling, good location,
at West Denmark. Write For particulars.
H. M. GRAHAM,
Bamberg, So
Winthrop College Scholarship and
Entrance Examination.
The examination for the award of
vacant scholarships in Winthrop College
and for the admission of new students
will be held at the County Court House
on Friday, July 5, at 9 a. m. Applicants
must be not less than fifteen years of
age. When scholarships are vacated
after July 5 they will De awarded to
those making the highest average at
this examination, provided they meet
the conditions governing the award.
Applicants for scholarships should write
to President Johnson before the examination
for scholarship examination blanks.
Scholarships are worth $100 and free tuition.
The next session will open September
18, 1907. For further information
and catalogue, address President D. B.
Johnson, Rock Hill, S. C.
TRESPASS NOTICE.
All persons are forbidden to enter
upon my land for the purpose of hunt
ing, nsning, trapping, or cuttuig uuiuci
of any kind. Those who trespass on my
place will be prosecuted.
ANNIE E. FOLK.
. Real Estate For Sate.
The residence in which I now live.
Lot contains 3f acres, seven-room house,
two large barns, artesian well, and
waterworks throughout dwelling. All
necessary outbuildings. All in fine repair
and situated on lower Main street
in Bamberg. Price $3,200 cash.
J. A. SPANN,
For Sale on Railroad Avenue.
One large, lot 6 room dwelling, good
tenant house, barn and stables, large
garden, fruit trees, good water, convenient
to house and lot, all under fence
and in good repair. This choice piece of
property will be put at a low figure to
an early applicant. ,
J. T. O'NEAL,
Real Estate Agent, Bamberg, S. C.
^========^===== I
Dr. 0. D. Faust
DEMIST
BAMBBRO, S. C.
OFFICE IN FOLK BUILDING
Real Estate iFor Sate.
One 4-room dwelling, $ acre lot, for $700.
Two 5-room houses, $ acre lot. Price
$750 each.
Three 8-room houses, J acre lot. Price
$1,200 each.
. These dwellings are all practically
new, nicely-finished, with artesian water
in each house. Conveniently located in
the town of Bamberg. Terms: onefourth
cash; balance in one, two, and
three years, interest at 8 per cent.
J. A. SPANN^
TITLES LOANS
I EXAMINED NEGOTIATED I
J. ALDRICH WYMAN I
ATTORN EY-AT-LAW
Civil and Office upstairs, over I
Criminal Practice Bamberg Banking Co. I
UOI I ICTFR'Q
Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets
A Busy Medicine for Busy People.
Brines Golden Health and Renewed Vigor.
A specific for Constipation. Indigestion, Liver
and Kidney troubles. Pimples, Eczema, Impure
Blood, Bad Breath. Sluggish Bowels. Headache
and Backache. Its Rocky Mountain Tea in tablet
form, 35 cents a box. Genuine made by
Hollisteb Dbug Company. Madison, Wis.
tOLDEN NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PEOPLE
? . vi
STATE FOR SALE.
i
_
S'Avjl
One acre lot with 6 room cottage on
Railroad Avenue. Delightful location
Price $1,600.
1$ acre lot with cottage, situate on
Midway street near Carlisle Fitting
School. This is an excellent bargain.
Price $2,250.
117 acre farm one mile from Bamberg.
Well improved with barb wire fencing
all around. The timber is worth the price.
Price $4,000."
300 acre farm in Buford Bridge township,
well improved with new dwelling,
etc. Price $4,000.00.
400 acre farm, five miles from Bamberg.
Rare bargain. $6,000.00. *
A new residence with six rooms and : ^
bath and two tenant houses, with lot of
one acre, on Railroad avenue. This is
something to be desired.
An unimproved lot on Church street, ?|
60x200, near colored graded school. / V-'J
Price $150. .3
One lot with cottage, situated on east
prong of Main street. Rents $4.00 month- v |
ly. Price $400.
An unoccupied lot adjoining residence
occupied by H. M. Graham.
An unoccupied lot, 42^ feet, on Bamberg
or Main street, adjoining lot of W. P.
Riley. Suitable for business house or ^
warehouse.
That business lot corner Bamberg and |
Elm streets adjoining G. Frank Bam- ?3
berg's stable lot. The most valuable JJ1
business property in Bamberg.
Three unimproved lots on street in
rear of colored graded school, at remark- ' r j
ably low figures. ,
110 acre farm five miles south of Bam- ^8
berg. Good place. Price and terms easy. : j&g
136-acre farm six miles from Bamberg. \??
The timber worth price of place.
An excellent farm between Bamberg v and
Denmark. Don't write or see me $0
unless you have the money.
A good cottage with large lot on Car- "M
lisle street. Price $1,300.
Various building lots in all sections of
the town and other farm property for sale. .: 'SM
If you wish to buy anything, or if you \
have any property for sale, let me sell it . $|j
lor you.
Vacant lots for sale in desirable portion - hjSj
of this growing town. Come and see me %'J|
if you are really interested. I am very
busy but can talk to you on business.
TO RENT. Six
offices in heart of business district. <||S
Two 3-story residences, near P. M.
Simmons.
One 1-story house near F. M. Simmons. ...J?
One 4-room residence on Orangeburg
street, with three acres of land.
Real Estate Agt.,
uth Carolina. ^
D. J. DELE I
Has in stock a nice line of
Opea aid Top Baggies aad Harass
for sale cheap. He Is agent for J
Bicldord & Hoffman's Celebrated drain daM
Drill, the Woodruff Hay Press, and
Deering Harvesting Machinery.
Also Conducts a Firsf-claes
REPAIR ^HOP
and builds anything on wheels Mtt
to order. Now is the time to have ?f|9
your buggy repaired and painted
to look and last as good as new. .. 3gr
Horseshoeing a Specialty |
RUN8 A
Grist Mill on Saturdays :f|
I have also added a
FIRST-CLASS RICE MILL !
and will grind on Wednesdays
QatllwlaTTO ' ; '
auu vanutunjo* * ''TIU
I have also just put in a f.
j* Good Tear Tire Settaj Mackae >'-|i
and can now put on rubber tires '
and repair Bicycle Buggies in
Factory Style. " ~
1). J. PEL It;
fW. P. RILEY if 1
i > i
o FIRE, LIFE !!
ACCIDENT , -J til
31 INSURANCE'] I'M
] l B A MBERG, .... S. C. ] [ \ M
photograph! Ill
GALLERY
Open in Telephone Building 4
by Expert Artists. Come and
examine our pictures. Prices
from 60c to $6.00 per dozen.
Special attention to enlarging
and copying old pictures.
I J. POOSER & B80. 1
BAMBERG, - - - S. O.
IDR. G. W. STOKES I 1
DENTIST |
Will spend the first week in
every month in Ehrhardi