The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, July 18, 1907, Image 5
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Personal Mention.
?Miss Kate Blue, of Montgomery,
Ala., is visiting friends in the city.
?Mrs. H. F. Bamberg will leave
to-day for a stay at Glenn Springs.
?Mr. C. R. Brabham, Jr., spent a
few days in Charleston this week.
?Mr. J. H. A. Carter, of the Ehrhardt
section, was in the city last Saturday.
?Mr. J. W. Stokes returned last
r J. ...?
rriaay irom a amy ui iwu wccws ai
Glenn Springs.
?Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Folk, Jr.,
spent last week in Orangeburg county
on a visit to relatives.
?Mrs. W. J. Faulkner, of Augusta, |
arrived Tuesday morning for an extended
visit to relatives.
?Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Brabham,
of Cope, spent Sunday and Monday in
the city with with relatives.
?Misses Kate Feider and Annie
Lou Byrd returned Tuesday night
from a visit to friends in Summerville.
?Mrs. C. R. Brabham and little
daughter left Tuesday for Augusta.
From there they will go to Glenn
Springs.
?E. T. LaFitte, Esq., returned
? ? " - -i_- xt?e_n_
Monday irom a trip to lxunum,
where his family is spending the
summer.
?Miss Hattie Gates left Saturday
morning for an extended visit in
Orangeburg county among relatives
and friends.
?Mr. R. H. Young, of Charlotte,
who was formerly with The Herald,
spent a few days here this week on a
visit to friends.
?Rev. Peter Stokes and family left
Monday for a week's visit down in
theSmoaks section, where Mr. Stokes
will assist in a meeting.
?Mrs. K. M. Cummings and Misses
C. S. Cummings and Annie Inabinett,
< /-v 1 4. nr?j?
oi urangeuurg, spent luunuay m mc
city on a visit to Mrs. Jas. E. Salley.
?Mrs. J. R. Owens,Sr., of Charleston,
arrived Saturday night for a
visit to relatives here. Mrs. Owens
has been very ill recently, but she is
improving now.
Didn't Run up Lanterns.
Attorney General Jackson, of New
York, was criticising in Albany a
certain excuse that had been offered
him. *
"It was a slim excuse," he said.
"It reminds me of the excuse of the
lightning rod agent.
"In the days when all the world
swore by lightning rods, a farmer
had two costly ones put on a new
barn. But only a week or two later
there ramp a violent thunder storm.
the barn was struck, and in a few
i hours all that remained of it was a
heap of charred black refuse.
"Next day the farmer sought out
the lightning rod agent.
" 'Fine lightning rods you sold me!'
he shouted. "Here's my new barn
been struck and burned to ashes!'
"'What?' said the agent. 'Struck
by lightning?'
" 'Yes, sir; by lightning.'
" 'In the day time?'
" 'No; at night. Last night.'
The agent's puzzled frown relaxed
a little.
" 'Ah,' he said 'it was a dark night,
wasn't it?'
" 'Of course, it was,' said the farmer.
'It was pitch dark.'
- " 'Were the lanterns burning.
" 'What lanterns?'
"The agent looked amazed, incredulous.
" 'Why,' he said, 'you don't mean
to tell me that you didn't run up
lanterns on the rods on dark nights?'
1111 man Talks in Augusta.
Hon. B. R. Tillman, United States
senator from South Carolina, was in
Augusta yesterday. He is on his
way west and again on a lecturing
tour. Mrs. Tillman is wijth him. Mr.
Tillman is looking very well?better
i 1 j_T
tnan ior years. cut ne is me same
old democratic Tillman, plain of
speech, free of manner, with a sharp
word and a pleasant word.
"Senator," a reporter asked him,
"what will be the effect of Georgia
prohibition on South Carolina. Does
it follow that Carolina will put on
State prohibition ? "
"You know what it means when
Georgia puts on State prohibition.
Blind tigers, my boy; blind tigers."
"Will Carolina follow Georgia with
State prohibition ? " "Carolina
is bent towards prohibition
of her own motion. Independently
of Georgia action, the people
are planning prohibition. They are
disgusted with county local option
and the dispensary. Not because of
the want of the dispensary plan. But
the State could not successfully
watch one board of control. Then
thirty boards of control can not be
watched. They have scattered the
stealing, and the people are not going
to stand for either centralized or
scattering stealing. They are going
to put on prohibition."
"The Dolliver incident, Senator.
What was there in it ? "
"Space rates of some of your
newspaper fellows. I lectured in
Jackson one night. The third night
after Senator Dolliver lectured there.
Some say he ripped me up the back
J ? I -1 J X.
ana piCKeu out jan as my piupci
habitat. Others say he differed from
me, firmly and respectfully. All my
information is from the newspapers,
since the date of Senator Dolliver's
speech I have not seen him. Nor
have I had communication with him.''
?Augusta Chronicle.
m
Your brain goes on a strike when you
overload your stomach; both need blood
to do business. Nutrition is what you
want, and it comes by taking Hollister's
Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents, Tea or
Tablets. H. F. Hoover.
' ' '
YE OLDEN TIMES.
Col. T.J. Counts Writes of the Old Days
"Before th^ War."
In last week's Barnwell People Col.
T. J. Counts, of this city, had the following
letter, which we take the
liberty of reproducing:
I Dear Holmes:?Today brings my
180th birthday (4th of July, 1907.)
I T i-T/\ i r? o tirnr? inrp Vm + vacfov.
LiUC lO a HUllUtllUl UllU^, , UUL J VOWl
, day it seems that I was in my teens
! going to school to old man Suares at
I dear old Barnwell C. H. I say dear
| old Barnwell, for the reason that
I was born and raised in the county
and naturally have a fondness for it.
True I voted for the new county of
Bamberg, not but I love Barnwell
the more, but as a matter of con[
venience for the people of Bamberg.
Now I am old, though well preserved.
I write and read without glasses,
have not used them for several years,
can run up figures and make calculations
as accurately as I could in
! my youngest and best days. I have
always enjoyed good health up to the
time of the loss of my dear wife who
was taken from me near two years
ago, the 15th of October, 1905. About
that time I took grip and that coupled
with the mental suffering which
naturally followed the loss of a wife,
has rendered me unnt lor active me
especially in business, although I am
most of the time able to take a buggy
ride and en)'oy it.
As I said before?life is a wonderful
thing. At the age of twenty-four I
married me a wife, for fifty-four
years we lived together and raised a
family of children, and for the fiftyfour
years no man and wife ever
lived more happily together than she
and I. Now comes some of the wonders
of life. She has been taken
with three of the children who had
attained the age of maturity and
who had families. The surviving ones
live now respectively at Laurens and
Florence 150 miles away. I am living
at Bamberg but five miles from the
place I began the married life with
but one (a grand-son) and myself
^ Tin... ?
constituting" my J.euiiii.y. tt uy U1C3C
younger ones of a family, a wife and
three grown children should have
been taken and I left is one of the
wonders of providence that we can't
understand. Apparently I have nothing
to live for, but that is not for
me to say. Providence directs all
these things and not man.
The mind is a strange thing. If I
don't differ materially from mankind
I find as a man grows older
his mind don't go down with the
body but to the contrary it becomes
more searching and carries him
back to his boy days and all through
the panorama of his life. I spend
much of my time in recurring to
the past which gives employment to
the mind and helps to while away
the monotonies which we almost daily
encounter.
I often think of the changes that
have taken place in the manner of
worship. The first church that I ever
attended was a log house located on
the south side of Priester's mills,
then Abstance's mills. The people
came from every direction, some on
foot (men and women) and others on
horseback, the man in the saddle and
the wife riding behind him, both on
the same horse, she perhaps with an
infant in her lap and he with an
older child in his front riding on a
pillow made for that express purpose.
Persons living within two or three
miles of the church would invariably
walk, preferring to let the horses
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rest ior lviunuay s wuir.. mac w<?
no buggy to be seen at the church at
that day and' time. I have no recorlection
of but two vehicles in that
section, they were on two wheels
and called gigs, one owned by a
wealthy man by the name of Goode
and the other by a man by the name
of Abstance, and these two were the
men that put up the Goode's and Abstance
mills or more recently Deer's
and Priester's mills. Now back to
the point.
When the people assembled at the
church and the hour arrived for
preaching, everybody, men, women
and children walked in and took their
seats on the benches with no backs.
When the preacher gave out the
hymn everybody stood and sung and
sung loud. At prayer the custom
was for everybody to kneel, which
they did. It was really a feast to attend
the meetings of that day and
time and see the earnestness of the
people. The women would return
to their homes and you could hear
them humming "Jesus my all to
heaven is gone," or "When I can
read my title clear to mansions in
the skies" all the week round and at
the same time card, spin and weave
cloth and make clothes for the whole
family. I am not prepared and neither
will I criticise the custom of that
day compared with the custom of the
present. It is a matter altogether
between the creature and the creator
for them and for them alone to
decide as to which custom is most
acceptable to the great head of the
church.
Another matter has frequently occurred
to my mind and given me some
concern, and that is whether or not
we are on the up or down grade,
morally and intellectually. For instance
take the members of the bar
at Barnwell when I lived there as a
school boy.
Messrs Bellinger & Hutson, Angus
and James Patterson, W. A. Owens,
Winchester Graham, Judge Alfred
and James Aldrich and Judge J. J.
Maher. Then we notice the leading
citizens of that day, old Squire Lewis
O'Bannon, Col. Geo. Duncan, Willis
Duncan, J. J. Ryan, old Col. Barnie
Brown, Maj. J. G. Brown, Dr. James
0. Hagood, William Mixson, Jesse
Rice, Frank and Sid Brown, Jennings
O'Bannon, J. C. Buckingham, 0. D.
I '*
and Joseph Allen, Col. Nat Walker
and W. G. Harley and perhaps many
others of a like type of gentlemen. I
do not mean in any particular what- J
ever to criticise either the present
bar or the citizens, for I have good
friends among both, neither do I
doubt the ability of the bar or the
moral standing of the citizens. But
all these things have been a matter
of thought with me and I hope in
speaking of them and calling names
that I will give offense to no' one.
T. J. Counts.
Religious Meetings.
J. H. Ralstin's band of religious
workers are in the city this week.
There are eight people in the party,
among them several women, all of
whom play on some musical instrument
or sing. They wear a uniform
like the Salvation army workers, and
carry a brass band. Meetings have
been held in the opera house and on
the streets. They request the publication
of the following:
"Revival meeting on street every
evening at seven o'clock, until next
Monday. All invited. For some reason
the people seem reluctant about
going to the opera house, so we will
continue our meeting on the street.,
We would rather have you comfortahlv
seated, but perhaps you prefer
! all the cool air you can get to a good
I seat. We do not like to talk to empty
benches and pay rent for a house
that is not filled, so come to the
open air. We had a grand revival at
Hampton in the open air, in front of
the dispensary and the dancing par
vilion. We can have one here. Come
out and help us. Several have been
converted, and more are seeking
something better."
They have the following endorsement,
dated at Hampton, S. C., July
3rd, 1907: "We believe that Capt.
Ralstin and his missionary band are
doing a good work in the State, and
that he has done a good work in this
community. His work has been highly
commented on by the most influential
people of this town." Signed
by G. B. Hoover, Rev. W. H. Dowling,
L. E. M. Freeman, J. C. Lightsey,
G. R. Shaffer, G. Geddes Dowling,
member of the legislature, W.
B. Causey, clerk of court.
Bev. Billings Denies Charges.
The following communication ap"i
j-i? A
pearea in trie Augusui ^mumuc ux
yesterday's date.
* 'On June 23 and 24 dispatches were
given to the press to the effect that I
had been expelled from the Blackville,
S. C., Baptist church on account
of letters containing expressions of
endearment for a house-maid who
had formerly served in our home. A
further statement to the affect that
I had forsaken my wife and child
and gone away with this servant was
made.
"I want to say by way of explanation
for my silence that for the first
10 days after these dispatches appeared
I was not in a physical nor mental
condition to make the statement I
wish to make. Besides, friends as
well as myself, thought a statement
which would finally be made by a
body of brethren would be more satisfactory
to the general public. But
finding that many of my friends are
expecting a statement from me and
are waiting impatiently for it, I wish
to declare:
"First. That the letters in question
were not written by me; neither have
I been allowed the privilege of seeing
them.
"Second. The statement with
reference to the relations of endearment
existing between me and the
servant in question are libelous.
"Third. At the time that the dispatch
went out I had not only not
forsaken my family, but was at home
with them. This the author certainly
must have known.
"It is true upon the evidence contained
upon those letters .1 was excluded
from the church, but I had
' . ? j l ^ ? J
absolutely no opportunity to aeiena
myself or to deny the authorship of
them, since I was preaching for a
friend in Augusta and did not reach
home until 5 o'clock in the afternoon
of that day.
"This is my final statement until a
body of reputable brethren hear the
case and their findings made public.
"Rev. C. M. Billings."
Notice of Dispensary Election.
Notice is hereby given that an election
will be held at the various election precincts
in Bamberg County on Tuesday,
the 20th. day of August, 1907, to determine
the question whether alcoholic
liquors and beverages may be sold in
said county in accordance with the terms
of sections 2 and 3 of the Act No. 226 of
the General Assembly of this State, approved
February 16th, 1907, commonly
called "The Carev-Cothran Act," the
petition provided for by said Act having
been duly filed with me. The said election
shall be held and conducted by the
same officers and under the rules and
regulations provided by law for general
elections. The Election Commissioners
for said County shall at each voting precinct
therein provide two ballot boxes
in which the ballots must be cast. Every
voter in favor of the sale of liquors and
beverages in said County shall cast a
ballot in ,the box provided therefor, on
which shall be printed the words, "For
i Sale/' and every voter opposed shall
[ cast a ballot, upon which shall be printed
the words, "Against Sale." Every
voter who may be in favor of the application
of one-third of the Dispensary
profits to the County School Fund, shall
cast a ballot in the box provided therefor,
upon which shall be printed the
words, "For School Fund;" and every
voter opposed thereto, but in favor of
its application to roads and bridges,
shall cast a ballot, upon which shall be
printed the words, "For Roads and
Bridges." At said election any person
who is a qualified elector of said County
may vote. The Election Commissioners
of said County wil provide for said election.
J. B. KEARSE,
County Supervisor for Said County.
Bamberg, S. C., July 16, 1907.
/
\ ^
WHY LOVERS LOVE.
Census Shows That Eyes, Hair, Size.
Even Feet, Are Chief Attractions.
Precisely what it is?what attribute
or physical characteristic?iu the youth
or maiden, the man or woman, that
most attracts one of the opposite sex,
is a problem of which Dr. G. Stanley
j Hall, professor of psychology in and
i president of Clark university, Worcester,
Mass., has set out to find the soluticyi.
says a Boston special to the New
I York World. To this end he has taken
j a census of young lovers, with a view
I to lenraina what in each case has most
! endeared to him or her the particular
object of their affection.
! It was Dr. Hall who recently declared
50 per cent of college women
failed to marry, thus contributing to
race suicide. The complete result of
this census of lovers Dr. Hall has not
yet given to the public, but he has
made known an abstract of what he
has learned. With hundreds of lovers
heard from Dr. Hall states that the
characteristics specified by them are in
the order of their frequency as follows:
Eyes, hair, size or stature, feet,
brows, complexion, cheeks, form of
head, throat, ears, chin, hands, neck,
nose, finger nails and contour of face.
Which is to say that more of those
lovers interrogated fcave found the
loved one's eyes or hair the chief attraction
than anything else.
The women replying to Dr. Hairs
questions nave aiso specineu uiese
charms in the men they loved best:
Regular teeth, broad shoulders and
white teeth, and most popular among
the men have been long lashes and
arched brows.
According to some of those replying,
a retrousse nose, freckles and a long
neck have been the chief charms.
The voice cuts an important figure
among the charms. With some it is
a high voice, with others, a low voice.
Even a lisp has been stated as a
charm. Laughter, carriage, gait, gesture,
movements of the eye, pose of
head and shoulders have also been
specified in the replies.
TELEPHONING FROM THE SUN
Electrician Believes He Can Hear Solar
Storms Over the Wire.
Dr. John A. Bra shear, the astronomer,
said the other evening, according
to a special dispatch from Pittsburg to
the Philadelphia Press, that Sir William
H. Preece, the great English electrician,
recently told him that he be"
" ?
lieved he had neara more uiau uuc
solar storm in the telephone. He said
he knew there was some unusual jnagnetic
disturbances causing the trouble
when he was testing some telephones
in his laboratory.
"And why not?''asks Dr. Brashear.
"We all know what difficulty we have
in sending or securing messages when
there is much induction, and in the case
of magnetic storms, induced by solar
disturbances, they certainly would affect
the telephone service.
"During the disturbances following
the last great sun spot I received letters
from all over the country giving
accounts of the difficulties In transmitting
messages.
"With all this evidence, may it not be
quite within the range of possibility?
nay, probability ? that Sir William
"""" 1J -? "^1"* KAmKoi?^.
Jtreece couiu ueai uic bvi<u uvmuuiu
i ment in the receiver of his telephone,
though the message was sent 93,000,000
miles by wireless?"
j Voices In Cold Storage.
The Congressional library at Washington
will install a department where
phonographic records of speeches of
statesmen and distinguished persons
from all parts of the world may be preserved
for the benefit of future generations,
says the Rochester (N. Y.) Democrat
and Chronicle. The government
recently received a record containing
an address made by the emperor of
Germany, and this led to the suggestion
that the utterances of other statesmen
might be preserved in the same
way. It is said that the French and
Australian governments have for some
time been filing away records of the
famous voices of the stage for the benefit
of posterity, and the Smithsonian
Ka a cAmo rowirrlo Cif Tflllifln
1U91UUUVU uao OVLUV, 4VVV4UW V* ?? .. - ?
speech. If such records prove permanent
they will undoubtedly be highly
prized two or three hundred years from
I now and will have a linguistic value
besides, as showing the changes in
spoken language that are constantly
taking place.
Most Expensive Auto Track.
The new private automobile race
track which has been in course of construction
at Weybridge in Surrey will
soon be thrown open, says a London
dispatch to the New Tork World. It is
a hundred feet wide, but because it has
been built on a limited private estate
many sharp turns had to be construct? >
Hm11+ In nrnrviT
CU auu au cmuanmicui uuuv
Hon. In some places the embankment
Is more than thirty feet high. The
track is said to be the most expensive
in the world owing to the fact that an
iron bridge had to be built over the
river Wey to make a continuous route.
Onions as Irrigators.
A farmer has made a discovery that
will be of vast Importance to farmers
during a dry season, says the Reed
City (Minn.) Clarion. He has found
that by planting onions and potatoes
In the same field in alternate rows the
onions, being so strong, bring tears to
the eyes of the potatoes In such vol-!
nmes that the roots of the vines are j
kept moist, and a big crop Is raised In
spite of the drought It is time to
commence putting out your onion sets
now.
July 4 Italian National Holiday.
The seuate of Rome, according to the
New York World, has passed a bill
making the centenary of the birth of
Garibaldi (July 4) a national holiday.
^HHHmBOBBBDB
Be Busir
The Check System is the i
like method of paying youi
And one of the best ways
keep from spending a lot o
all you get in the bank anc
little while you'll be surpris
Bring Your Mon<
BAMBERG BAN
Bamberg : s : : :
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i Something Ne
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li
I have installed a first-clas
f f on the shortest kind of notic<
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eus, cuiuxnxi pusus, axiu uuxer
prices are lower than city
W freight as well. Give me a
1 H VEHICLE Rl
f ?
I am prepared to do all sort
?a* pair buggies, wagons, log i
? norses, sharpen plows, andd
1*1 in wood ana iron. Have
V? horse shoer. Don't forget
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||m. m. .
: l ROU1S LOT RAILROAD J
S;I? -I : !? ilHlI
\/cdv i n
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(TO NORFOLK,
. ACCOUNT JAM
CENTENNIAL, I
VIA SOUTHE
Season, sixty day and fifteen d
April 19th, to and includin'g Noven
Very low rates will also be mac
uniform attending the Exposition
Stop Overs will be allowed on
tickets, same as on Summer toups
< > '
;j J For full and complete informati
; Railway, or write :
If R. W.
J J Division Passenger Agent .
VALUABLE REAL]
An excellent dwelling, good location,
at West Denmark. Write for particulars.
7 building lots on Palmetto Avenue
25x100,1 residence lot near union depot
100x281, one residence on Beach Avenue,
in Den mirk. Prices reasonable.
119 acre farm, five miles from Bamberg,
near Odom's bridge. Good bargain.
One acre lot, 7 room dwelling, good
orebard aud outbuildings, near church
and school, East Denmark. Price on call.
anraa lonrf rtitp milp from Ramber^.
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,
heavily 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
fraded school. Beautiful building site.
rice $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.
530 shares Bamberg Oil Mill Stock.
PYinrtfien 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 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 BamVioror
"Mat* nn inrmiries unless vou are
1 able to buy something of rare value,
j Good farm of 475 acres about three
miles from Olar. Price $2750.
H. M. GRAHAM,
Bamberg, Soi
: " ' ' t v .. v v.^jgj
_______________
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nost dignified and businessr
bills and other obligations,
to keep tab on yourself?to
f money uselessly?is to put
I check against it. In just a
ed at how much you do save.
ty Down Today to
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: : South Carolina
?<f??f??f??f?*f???f? ?t* iq* )
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AVENUE BAMBERG, S. C. j I M
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3XPOS1TIOIV J:'M
RN RAILWAY |
ay tickets on sale daily commencing
iber 30th, 1907. , : S
"M
le for Military and Brass Bands in ?: 1
ii
season, sixty day and fifteen day &
t tickets. * *
on call on Ticket Agents Southern * |
HUNT j| 1
.... Charleston, 5. C. It
r ri--i--i--x--x^S . f
STATE FOR SALE. 1
Good farm of 166 acres two miles East '3
of Bamberg. Price $2,600.
Timbered lands for sale on Edisto -'.'2
river at rock bottom prices.
One acre lot with 6 room cottage ok |
Railroad Avenue. Delightful location
Price $1,600.
H acre lot with cottage, situate on - ^
Midway street near Carlisle Fitting 3
School. This is an excellent bargain.- i??
Price $2,260.
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 town-- ;?8
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 residence with six rooms and
bath and two tenant houses, with lot of
one acre, on Railroad avenue. This issomething
to be desired.
An unimproved lot on Church streef< 4 ^
60x200, near colored graded school.
Price $150.
One lot with cottage, situated on east
prong of Main street. Rents $4.00 month- , ^
ly. Price $400.
An unoccupied lot adjoining residence '
occupied by H. M. Graham.
An unoccupied lot,42i feet, on Bamberg ||
or Main street, adjoining lot of W. P.
Riley. Suitable for business house er
warehouse. f
That business lot corner Bamberg and M
Elm streets adjoining G. Frank Bamberg's
stable lot. The most valuable m
business property in Bamberg.
Three unimproved lots on street in
rear of colored graded school, at remark- %
ably low figuresT
' 110 acre farm five miles south of Bam
berg. Good place. Price and terms easy. (
136-acre farm six miles from Bamberg.
The timber worth price of place.
An excellent farm between Bamberg
and Denmark. Don't write or see me
unless you have the money.
A good cottage with large lot on Car-f .
lisle street. Price $1,300.
Various building lots in all sections of < *
the town and other farm property for sale.
If you wish to buy anything, or if you
have any property for sale, let me sell it
for you.
Vacant lots for sale in desirable portion
of this growing town. Come and see me
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.
Two 2-story residences, near F. M.
Simmons.
One 1-story house near F. M. Simmons.
One 4-room residence on Orangeburg
street, with three acres of land.
Real Estate Agt., , J
ith Carolina.