The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, May 23, 1907, Image 5
Personal Mention.
?Mr. W. L. Mitchum, of Ehrhardt,
was in the city Monday.
?Miss Helen Hammond, of Augusta,
is visiting Mrs. E. T. LaFitte.
?W. Gilmore Simms, Esq., of
Barnwell, was in the city Monday.
?Mr. C. D. C. Adams, of Walterboro,
visited relatives here this week.
?Mr. H. N. Bellinger has gone to
Beaufort to act as court stenographer
this week.
?Mrs. C. R. Brabham, Jr., is at
home from a visit to her mother in
Charleston.
?Editor A. B. Jordan, of the Dillon
Herald, spent Sunday in the city
on a visit to his mother.
?Mrs. M. W. Brabham has returned
from Charleston, where she has
. been on a visit to relatives.
?Miss Clara Riley, who has been
teaching at North Augusta, returned
home Monday afternoon for the summer
vacation.
?Messrs. W. T. Johns, of Baldoc,
and J. W. Brom, of Columbia, were
in the city to attend the funeral of
, Mrs S. G. Brown.
* . Patient.?A criminal whose dread
day of hanging had arrived was asked
by the jailor if he had any last request
to make.
"I have" said the condemned man,
"and it is a very slight favor indeed."
"Well, if it is a slight favor I can
grant it. What is it?"
"I want a few peaches to eat."
"Peaches!" exclaimed the jailor.
"Why, they won't be ripe for several
months yet."
"Well," said the condemned man,
"that doesn't matter. I'll wait."?
New York World.
Slow Travel.
On one of the American railways
4-hrm oHo/ilt o nocspnffpr par t.n ft
%U\^J UbVUVii ? ?
freight train and call it "mixed,"
* says Tit Bits. It isn't in the order
?f things that such trains should
travel very rapidly, and sometimes
there is considerable growling among
the "traffic."
"Are we most there, conductor? "
asked a nervous man for the hundreth
time. Remember my wife is
iH, and I am anxious." *
'We'll get there on time," replied
- the conductor, stolidly.
Half an hour later the nervous man
approached him again.!
I guess she's dead now," said he,
mournfully, "but I'd give you a little
something extra if you could manage
to catch up with the funeral.
Maybe she won't be so altered but
what I could recognize her."
The conductor growled at him, and
the man subsided.
"fVmHurtnr" said he. after an
hour's silence, "conductor, if the
wind isn't dead ahead, I wish you
A / would put on some steam. I'd like
to see where my wife is buried be,
fore the tombstone crumbles to
pieces! Put yourself in my place for
a moment!"
The conductor shook him off, and
the man relapsed into profound
melancholy.
"I say, conductor," said he, after
along pause, "I'vegot a note com
ing due in three months. Can't you
fix it so as to rattle along a little."
"If you come near me again I'll
knock you down!" shouted the conductor,
savagely.
The nervous man regarded him
sadly, and went to his seat. Two
hours later the conductor saw him
chatting gaily and laughing heartily
with a brother victim, and approached
him. *
"Don't feel so badly about your
wife's death?"
"Time heals all wounds," sighed
the nervous man.
"And you are not so particular
about the note?" sneered the conductor.
"Not now. That's all right. Don't
worry. I've been figuring up, and I
/ find that the note has become statue
barred since I spoke to you last."
flad With Doctors.
There is a coolness between the
Woodmen of the World and the doctors,
growing out of an alleged discourtesy
to representatives of the
former.
At the meeting of the Wood camps
of jurisdiction 1, Woodmen of the
World, held in Columbia in March, a
committee, consisting of Col. E. R.
Cox, of Darlington; S. O'Anian, of
Marion; W. E. Lea, of Florence, and
Col. T. C. Hamer, of Bennettsville,
was appointed to confer with the
state medical association at its meeting
in Bennettsville during April, and
to present to that body a memorial
concerning the examination fees being
charged fraternal orders.
In execution of its instructions, the
/ ' committee went to Bennettsville and
made known its presence and the
purpose thereof to several members
of the association's house of delegates.
They were told to wait on
' the outside until informed of the association's
pleasure regarding them.
Aftjar thpv had lincrprpH natientlv on
the outside for a considerable time,
V they were informed that the house
of delegates did not care to hear
them. The committee then left in
considerable indignation, feeling that
it had not been treated with courtesy
and that in snubbing it the as>
sociation had gratitously insulted the
12,000 odd Woodmen in the state.
Some newspapers are endeavoring
'to start a United States senatorial
boom forex-governor D. C. Heyward.
Artists have no trouble in securing
models. The famous beauties have
discarded corsets and have become models
in face and form since taking Hollister's
Rocky Mountain tea. 35 cents,
tea or tablets. H. F. Hoover.
"jf* i
"NO WIFEJNTED,"
Man Who Advertised For Spouse
Has to Hang Out This Sign.
BESIEGED BY APPLICANTS.
Every Train Brings to Derby, Conn.,
Women, Old and Young, Pretty and
Otherwise, Who Would Share the
Lot of George Moon, Esq.
Derby, Conn., is in the throes of a
matrimonial bargaiu rush. From the
four corners of the state women, youns
ana oia, are arriving, mey sees. u>
wed George Moon, the widower, who
advertised for a wife. Mr. Moon told
the public that he wanted a young woman
between the ages of twenty-five
and thirty-five, but the "ad." has
brought to his door every day for the
past week widows of fifty, maids of
sixteen and spinsters of uncertain age.
Every incoming train has some aspirant
for the heart of the lonely Moon,
who admits forty-one years of age.
His mail has been something enormous.
Nearly every letter has contain
IT WAS OXOOIJNO OOUVTBT LASS.
d a photograph. The latter were
promising, and, not finding his ideal
among the army of personal applicants,
Moon has traced the photographs
from one end of the state to
the other In hopes of locating his affinity.
But the trip failed. In one place
he found a woman of sixty or so shyly
admitting she had sent him a picture
taken when she was thirty. In another
place it was a giggling country lass
who saw visions of the gay life of
Derby.
Moon is now back home announcing
that his first list of applicants is not
satisfactory. He says he has cleaned
the slate and will start anew upon his
hunt for Mrs. Moon. All ,former applicants
are barred. Upon the door of his
home he has printed this sign, "No
Wife Wanted." When he returned he
said:
"I am\ still heart whole and fancy
free. Some of the applicants wanted a
cash payment in advance as an evidence
of good faith. Some were dl
vorcees. I wouldn't have that sort I
want no grass widows. The lot I divided
Into two classes, the shallow
pa ted and the mercenary. I don't want
either.
"I called upon one woman at Wallingford
who seemed to fill the bill,
but when I got there, expecting to find
a woman of perhaps thirty, I met a
woman over fifty. She said, 'Well,
that was my picture when I was thirty,
and If you would like me at thirty,
why not like me now?'" Moon fled.
Here are some of the letters that
Moon has received:
Bridgeport, Conn.
Dear Sir?1 hear you are In need of a
wife. Well. I am just the one you want,
for I am looking for a bubble. I feel
sure we can make life one long dream.
When oan you come to see me? I will
be home every night this week. I Inclose
my photo, which will speak tor itself.
Hoping to see you soon, I am yours,
Naugatuck. Conn.
Dear Mr. M.?Having seen your advertisement.
I am anxious to be your wits.
If we can make the necessary arrange*
mente. I am good looking and a good
housekeeper and have a little money. Let
me know when and where I can see you.
Tours truly, ??.
Wlnsted, Conn.
My Dear Mr. Moon?Tour ad. has just
been brought to my notice, and I hasten
to answer It before it Is too late. I am a
widow, but have no children; am twentynine
years old, fair and of a happy disposition.
I feel sure I could make a nice
home for you. Let me know about it as
soon as possible. Sincerely, .
Wallingford, Conn.
Dear Friend?I send you my picture, j
which I had taken in Boston. If you say J
the word, I will marry you at once. I
am sure mai neuner ul u? wm e?ci *?- .
gret. It must have been ordained that we
should meet and wed. Awaiting your answer.
Affectionately, ?. j
New Bedford. Mass.
Dear Sir?I should very much like to
make your acquaintance. I think we
could agree on first sight. Please send
me your picture. I can picture In my '
mind Just how you look, and I feel sure
that you would be a good husband to me.
Yours in respect, .
I
Tyler City, Conn, i
Dear Mr. Moon?I am a lonely girl living
In the country and want to get married,
but not to a farmer. I can do
housework and sew and tend children and
do all any woman could do for you. We
can be married at once, for pa is willing
If I get a good man. If you can come to |
Tyler City naxt Thursday night I **2!
meet you at the station and fix It up.
Elver yours, ?.
* . -)
. ' i.
o o
Four-Colored
.... ^/t p pie s.
O - 0
[Copyright. 190G, by E. C. Parcel Is.]
Colonel tircsham, stockbroker, turned
gentleman farmer to produce new
varieties of fruits.
Nature grows some two-colored apples,
but when you ask her to add two
additional colors sbe wants'ime to
think the matter over. Ever*"experiment
was a failure, but that only made
the colonel and his gardener the more
determined, especially the gardener.
It was his duty as an employee
to give his master all his ideas, but he
made au exception in this one case.
He citing to it with dogged obstinacy,
but he kept it as secret as the grave.
He might have clung to It a year or so
longer had not the colonel become impatient.
He said something one June
day about giving up the experiments,
and the gardener replied that he would
have some news for him next day. He
asked the broker to come home an
hour earlier than usual and to come
directly to the large farm barn.
At the hour named the colonel was
there. He' had scarcely entered the
barn when he received a crack on the
head that made him unconscious for
the next quarter of an hour. When he
came to he had been stripped of coat
vest and tie* and was bound hand and
foot He had not caught sight of hi3
assailant before being struck, but now
found the gardener hovering over him
with a murderous look on his face.
"Will you tell me what this means,
Henry ?" asked the victim.
"Yes, sir. I have finally found how
to grow four-colored apples. It has
been a long time, but I have struct
It at last. I hope to have fifty bushels
on the market this fall."
"Well, let's hear about It"
"All the apple trees are now In blossom.
The red ones are all right and
the yellow ones are all right, and I
have found a way to make the blue
and green ones all right I have simply
to sprinkle them with the blood of
a man wearing side whiskers. A drop
of blood to a blossom will do the trick,
and once the apples start to growing
that way they will continue."
Now, the colonel had a growth of
side whiskers that were the envy of
Wall street and a matter of joy to
himself. Whenever you saw the colonel
you saw his whiskers. He might
forget his commutation ticket now and
then, but never his whiskers. The
two (were one and inseparable. He
didn't like the gardener's reference to
those sacred objects. It smacked of
familiarity, and there was a covert
threat behind the words. He was at
first inclined to bluster, but another
look into the gardener's face satisfied
him that the man had become crazy.
He therefore changed his tactics and
quietly said:
"All right, Henry. We will go up to
the orchard and experiment. I am delighted
to find that you have achieved
success at last."
"But how can you go when I want
your blood?" asked the man. "You
see, you are the only man around here
with side whiskers. If the coachman
Knflflr haH 'am that vnnld rln
VI iUV UUUV4 UUU V4M) i i i if WV|
.but they haven't, you know. They are
fine ones, colonel?fine ones."
And Chapman bent down and tenderly
caressed the iron gray side
whiskers that floated away from each
cheek and were gently stirred now
and then by the June breezes blowing
into the open door. Never had another
man on this earth except the barber
dared to lay his sacrilegious hands on
those reverenced objects of the money
center of the world.
"But we will look up some one else,"
said the colonel as he felt a sinking of
the heart "I know of several men
with side whiskers, and I will coax one
of them home with me tomorrow."
"But I must have the blood today,
colonel Besides, for this first experiment
we must have the nicest sort of
whiskers. There is nothing In the state
of New York to compare with yours.
The papers bavp said so over and over
again. How soft they are! How luxuriantly
they grow! How the breeze
toys with them! Your blood la all
right, and the first bushel of four-colored
apples shall be deposited on your
grave."
' "But I want to see the trees you
have selected. I may decide to make
some changes."
"The trees are all right colonel.
Here is a knife to open an artery, and
here is a pan to catch the blood. What
shall I do with your whiskers after
you are dead? It seems a pity to bury
'em like so much horsehair."
"You blamed fool this has gone
far enough!" exclaimed the colbnel going
to the other extreme. "Unbind me
at once or I'll have you sent to prison
for lifer*
"It won't do," replied the gardener,
witn a snaxe or ms neau aiiu ummg up
a knife he had made ready for the purpose.
"Yon are as anxious for the fourcolored
apples as I am, and you mustn't
bring all our labors to naught. Here
goes for the blood."
The colonel began yelling for help,
and fortunately the coachman was at
hand to respond. He entered the barn
on a run and narrowly escaped being
stabbed, and the crazy gardener had to
be knocked down with a club before
he could be secured. He was found to
be clean daffy and was sent to an asylum
and is there yet, and should you
ever visit the institution he will beckon
you aside and whisper:
"Do you know that if it hadn't been
for Colonel Gresham we'd be having
four-colored apples in market today?
He had the blood, and he had the side
whiskers, but he backed out Just when
success was certain."
The colonel hated to part with them,
but he has had all those whiskers
shaved off. He doesn't want anything
around him to attract lunatics.
M. QUAD
an. A*
I
COCK DIES UKE ft HERO
Game Rooster Gjves His Life to
Save His Flock.
BLOODY BATTLE WITH HAWK.
'Brave Fowl StruggU s Valiantly
Against Great Odds?Woman Comes
to His Aid Too Late?Victor Looks
For Return Engagement.
While the wife of R. E. Bennefleld, a
farmer living seven miles northwest of
Paris, Tex., was at home alone one
day recently she heard a great commotion
among a lot of guineas out In the
yard and observed that all of the other
fowls were running about cackling
THE BO08TBB DUED IS HXB JlBMS.
and very much excited. On going to
investigate she discovered a chicken
hawk and a young game rooeter engaged
In mortal combat The hawk
had swooped down after a chicken,
and the game rooster had rushed forward
to fight It off.
The hawk abandoned its quarry, accepted
the challenge and squared Itself
for a fight When Mrs. Bennefleld arrived
they were engaged like two regular
gamecocks. The hkwk was using
Its beak and talons with telling effect
while the rooster was trying to make
good use of its spurs. They were tangled
up and^the feathers flying in every
direction.
The hawk was so intent on fighting
that It scarcely noticed the presence of
the farmer's wife, but finally withdrew
reluctantly at her approach and mounted
a stump a few feet away. Mrs.
Bennefleld picked up the rooster and
started to the house with It, but It
died In her arms.
The hawk's talons had cut its throat
and severed its windpipe. The hawk
subsequently made repeated trips at
brief Intervals to the premises, apparently
for no other purpose than to seek
a chance to renew the contest.
Caught Wolf by tha Tail.
Sixteen-year-old Louis Orosse has received
a check from the county auditor
In payment of tbe bounty for the scalp
of a big timber wolf which he killed
near his father's farm at Little Suamico,
Minn. v Grosse and his father
had been out hunting, and their dogs
struck the trail of a wolf. They followed
it all day. Toward evening
they came up to the wolf just as it was
about to crawl into a hole. It was
part way in, but the older Grosse ran
forward and seized the animal by the
tail. It tried to snap at him, but
Grosse, who is a strong man, hurled it
rapidly about until, losing his hold on
Its caudal appendage, tbe wolf shot
away for several yards and lay on the
ground apparently dead. Louis made
certain of his prey by putting a bullet
into Its head.
Wouldn't Kill Dovs.
The passengers on a crowded cross
town car In Brooklyn one day recently
felt the brakes applied with such suddenness
that only a few of those who
were standing withstood the jar. Then
they saw the motorman jump from the
platform and kneel in front of the car.
Several of the passengers made their
way out and were surprised to see the
motorman stroking the feathers- of a
mother dove that sat on one of the rails
with a little one under her wing. "I've
never taken a life yet," he explained
as he placed them on the curb out of
harm's wav. "and I don't Dropose to
tart with a tame dove."
Wedding Oats Man Out of Jail.
As a result of a romantic courtship
between Charles MacKenzle In a cell
In the county jail at Omaha, Neb., and
Miss Margaret Noonan, daughter of
the owner of the house which MncKenzle
was arrested for forcibly entering,
the two were married, the girl obtaining
the marriage license and the
preacher and going to the jail, where
the ceremony was performed. Miss
Noonan could not under the Nebraska
Iav*3 ICOL11J a^aiuoi UC1 uuouauu, aiiU
as she was the principal witness
against him MacKenzie was released.
Th -ty-five-year-old Hens Still Lay.
At the public sale of the property of
William Stengel at Bailey, Pa., a pair
of chickens which Mr. Stengel says he
had owned for thirty-five years and
which had been laying all that time
were sold for $12.
' "'V'ji'-V.-Mv " V*-i '-i
?v V :/ Ls y -> V'* *& -tirte-l'
'' *>>>_ Y ' ' -YY /-Ti/.'
VALUABLE REAL_E
119 acre farm, five miles from Bamberg,
j near Odom's bridge. Good bargain,
j One acre lot, 7 room dwelling, good
! orehard and outbuildings, near cburcb
and school, East Denmark. Price on call.
60 acres land one mile from Bamberg,
heavily timbered. Price $2,000.00.
One acre vacant lot in the heart of
Bamberg. Price $500.
3 one acre lot9 on New Bridge street
near Southern depot. Price $550 each.
105 acre farm, one mile South of Bamberg.
Good dwelling and outbuildings/
heavily timbered. Price $2,500.
One dwelling and lot on South side of
Railroad Avenue. Lot runs from Rail
road 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.
850 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 8 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.
800 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 $800. 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 two story brick building in 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 acre farm near the town of Bam
oerg. aiamt no inquiries uuiess jruu bic
able to boy something of rare value.
Timbered lands for sale on Edisto
river at rock bottom prices.
Ikn excellent dwelling, good location,
at West Denmark. Write for particulars.
H. M. GRAHAM,
Bamberg, Soi
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 beforethe 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.
Seal Estate For Sale.
The residence in which I now live.
Lot contains 3} 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 $3,200 cash.
J. A. SPANN,
For Sale on Railroad Avenue.
One large, lot 6 room dwelling, good
' I -x.LI.. 1
tenant nouse, Dam ana siames, large
garden, fruit trees, good water, convenient
to house and lot, all under fence
and in good repair. This choice piece of
property will be put at a low figure to
an early applicant.
J. T. O'NEAL,
Real Estate Agent, Bamberg, S. C.
Dr., 0. D. Faust
%
DENTIST
BAMBERG, S. C.
OFFICE IN FOLK BUILDING
Real Estate For Sale.
One 4-room dwelling,$ acre lot, for $700.
Two 5-room houses, J acre lot. Price
$750 each.
Three fi-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: one- j
fourth cash; balance in one, two, and
three years, interest at 8 per cent.
J. A. SPANN.
I TITLES LOANS I
EXAMINED NEGOTIATED B
J. ALDRICH WYMAN I
ATTORN EY-AT-LAW |
II I
P Civil and Office upstairs, over
Criminal Practice Bamberg Banking Co. I
COLLEGE OF CHARLESTON
1785 CHARLESTON, S. C. . 1907
122d Year Begins September 27
Letters, science, engineering. One
scholarship to each county of South
Carolina, giving free tuition. Tuition
$40. Board and furnished room in dormitory,
$11 a month. All candidates
for admission are permitted to compete
for vacant Boyce scholarships which
pay $100 a year. Entrance examinations
will be held at the county court
house on Friday, July 5, at 9 a. m.
For catalogue, address
HARR150N RANDOLPH, President.
1 rlf
\M
STATE FOR SALE. 1
M
One acre lot with 6 room cottage on
Railroad Avenue. Delightful location.
Price $1,600.
1} acre lot with cottage, situate on ." 'x
Midway street near Carlisle Fitting ^
School. This is an excellent bargainPrice
$2,250.
117 acre farm one mile from Bamberg.
Well improved with-barb wire fencing '
all aroqnd. The timber is worth the price. ^
Price $4,000.
( 300 acre farm in Buford Bridge town- . ' ??
ship, well improved with new dwelling" ^
etc. Price $4,000.00.
400 acre farm, five miles from Bamberg. ?
Rare bargain. $6,000.00.
a new resilience witii six rouois wu v.,
bath and two tenant houses, with lot of - [
one acre, on Railroad avenue. T^s is '
something to be desired.
An unimproved lot on Church street, >|
60x200, near colored graded school.
Price $150. ;1,J
One lot with cottage, situated on east . *2*
prong of Main street. Rents $4.00 month* Jj?|
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 . jf
Elm streets adjoining G. Frank Bam- %
berg's stable lot. The most valuable -3
business property in Bamberg. ;
'lira?
Three unimproved lots on street in '^gS
rear of colored graded school, at remark- $j>
ably low figures.
110 acre farm five miles south of Bam- .;%
berg. Good place. Price and terms easy. .Ojg
186-acre farm six miles from Bamberg. 1
The timber worth price of place.,
An excellent farm between Bamberg
and Denmark. Don't write or see me
nnlpAQ vnn havp t.hp mnnpv i&ifl
A good cottage with large lot on Car- - iJH
lisle street. Price $1,300.
Various building lots in all sections of '* -J
the town and other farm property for sale. ' If
yothwish to hoy anything, or if yob / ;'W;
have any property for sale, let me sell it
for you.
Vacant lots for sale in desirable portion : :^?|S
of this growing town. Come and see me .?$jS
if yon are really interested I am very 'ja
busy but can talk to you on business. : ffill
TO RENT.
Six offices in heart of business district. ;iJJj
Two 2-story residences, near F.M. .
Simmons.
One 1-story house near F. M. Simmons. cj
.One 4-room residence on Orangeburg
street, with three acres of land. .N
Real Estate Agt., ^
nth Carolina. I
?. J. DELE 1
Has in stock a nice line of \ J
Opea aid Tap Baggies and Uammk
for sale cheap. He is agent for
Bickford & Hoffman's Celebrated Qrnin \ !,Wm
Drill, the Woodruff Hav Press, and '^3
Deering Harvesting Machinery. ;
Alan C!nnHnMfi a V
REPAIR SHOP I
and builds anything on wheels
to order. Now i8 the time to have. j $|j
your buggy repaired and pairited M1
to look and last as good as new. :pM
Horseshoeing a Specialty ..Mr,
RUNS A?? |
Grist HiU on Saturdays il ;
I have also added a
FIRST-CLASS RICE HILL ' |
and will grind on Wednesdays' 2|
and 8atnrdays. / '" >;
I have also just put in a
j. Good Year Tire Setting Machine j* |
and can now put on rubber tires
and repair Bicycle Buggies in MM
Factory Style.
D. J. DDLK.
;i
::W. P. RILEVifcS
i * i Y . ;.|3i
o FIRE, UIFE !;
- accident : r
i: insurance i: '
<[ BAMBERO C. j
PHOTOGRAPH I
GALLERY
Open in Telephone Building
by Expert Artists. Come and . %
examine our pictures. Prices
from 60c to $6.00 per dozen. v -^3
Special attention to enlarging. #
and copying old pictures.
T. J. POOSER & BRO. 1
BAMBERG, > S. G.
DR. G. W. STOKES I 1
DENTIST
Will spend the first week In
every month in Ehrhardt"