The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, July 25, 1907, Image 5
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Personal Mention.
?Mr. G. C. Chandler has gone to
Glenn Springs.
?Mr. H. H. Hill, ofSanford, Fla.,
is on a visit to relatives here.
i ?Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Brabham, Jr.,
of Cope, spent Sunday in the city.'
?Mr. and Mrs. Emory A. Hooton
spent Sunday at the Isle'of Palms.
?Miss Leita Rice, of Columbia,
visited Miss Florence Dickinson this J
week.
; ?Clerk of Court C. B. Free return- j
ed last Saturday from a stay at Glenn \
Springs.
?Mr. H. Z. McMillan, of the Colston
section, was in the city last
Saturday.
?Mr. John F. Brickie, of Augusta,
spent Sunday in the city on a visit to
relatives.
?Mrs. D. F. Hooton and little
daughters are visiting relatives in
Hampton county.
?Miss Bryan, of Allendale, has
been on a visit to Misses Ottawa and
Xania Easterling.
?Mr. J. D. Copeland, Jr., left last
* Thursday morning for a stay at Hendersonville,
N. C,
?Mrs. R. C. Jones and little son
have gone on a visit to relatives at
Appomattox, Va.
?Mr. G. C. Chandler has been on
a visit to the family of Mr. S. H.
Saunders in Florence.
?Mr. H. G. Sheridan left last
Thursday for a visit to relatives at
Vances, Orangeburg county. i
?Mr. and Mrs. C. J. S. Brooker
left Tuesday morning for a trip to
. ' the Jamestown Exposition.
<
?Miss Birdie Gill left Monday for '
an extended visit to relatives and
friends at Hampton and Beaufort.
?Mrs. H. J. Brabham, Jr., of Cope, J
1 .lnn4- ttt/wIt frAm on ovfonr?. 1
r^lUni^U ldOl VVCCIi 11 VlU UJ.1 VAwtm
ed trip to Baltimore on a visit to rel- <
M: atives.
?Mrs. F. M. Dunbar and Mrs. W.
J. Faulkner, of Augusta, are on a '
visit to the family of Jno. R. Bellinger,
Esq. J
?Mrs. J. H. Dixon and children :
left last Saturday morning for an ex- .
? tended visit to relatives in Washing- j
ton, D. C.
?Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Brabham,
and daughter, Miss GeDelle, left last *
Thurday for a month's stay at Ashe- 1
ville, N. C.
<
?Mrs. Julia Porter, and children,
* of Williston, spent several day in the
city this week with her mother, Mrs.
M. R. Brickie.
?Miss Pearlie Sandifer returned
to her home in Bamberg Sunday,
after a month's stay in Gastonia, N.
C., and Columbia.
?Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Spann, Mrs.
0. A. Simmons, and Mrs. W. M.
I ' Brabham left last Friday for an extended
stay at Glenn Springs.
?Mr. S. L. Oxner and daughter,
Miss Gertrude, are visiting their
daughter and sister, Mrs. W. H.
Varn, of Bamberg.?Lees ville News.
?Mrs. C. E. Garvin left last Sunday
for a vist to relatives in Newberry.
She was accompanied by Master
Willie Oxner, who has been visiting
here.
?Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Copeland
and daughter, Mozelle, have gone to
their summer home at Hendersonville,
N. C., to spend the balance of
the summer.
V ' *<
?Mr. H. B. Grimes, of Lees, was
> >; f in the city Monday. He is one of the
commissioners of election, and was
here at a meeting to arrange for the '
dispensary election,
?Miss Mayme Pearson, of Newberry,
who has been visiting her
sister, Mrs. C. E. Garvin, left last
Sunday for a visit to Lancaster, S. C., ;
and Gastonia, N. C.
?Mr. W. H. Morris, of Danforth, 1
Ga,, arrived in the city Tuesday. He 1
came over to attend the reunion of
his old command, Co. G., which is to
be held to-day at Bethesda church.
Mr. Morris says he lost a house and
bar* by fire in May, with no insurance
on either.
^
Rather Remain Single.
An athletic young man, who was
on the way to get his marriage
license, found himself at last in a
room where, as a matter of fact,
candidates for the police force were
being examined.
The moment he entered the room
the surgeon said, "Strip!"
"What's that?" said the astonished
young fellow.
"Get your clothes off," replied the
surgeon.
He did so and his chest measure.
ment was taken.
Next the surgeon said, "Jump
k over this horizontal bar."
He tried the leap, but fell to the
ground.
"Double up your knees," commanded
the surgeon, "and touch the
floor with your hands."
Again he tried and failed.
"Now run around the room ten
times."
The young man replied. "That
I'll not. I'd rather remain single."
"Single?" said the doctor.
"Yes single. I'd like to know what I
all this has to do with my getting
my marriage license."
And then the mistake as to the
room was solved.?Rochester Herald.
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.
gk ,
INJURED BY LIGHTNING.
Young Lady in Greenwood Knocked
Unconscious While Driving.
Greenwood, July 19.?While drivwith
her grandfather, Mr. Rhodes, on
a trip to his home out in the county,
Miss Addie Canfield, daughter of a
well-known insurance man of this
place, was badly injured by lightning
this afternoon. The bolt struck the
horse, killing it instantly, did considerable
damage to the buggy and rendered
Miss Canfield unconscious.
Miss Canfield and her grandfather
were about five miles from here in
the neighborhood of Lace.
Our New York Letter.
It is not what a New York writer
of items of interest should write
* * > '1 !- l-.i?
about, out wnere mere is so mucn 01
interest the question is what to leave
out.
Other communities eager for improvements,
particularly industrial
enterprises, this city already has a
profusion and is surfeited. There
never is any general rejoicing at the
inauguration of new industries.
Few people outside and not all inside
this great city realize its magnitude.
Five million souls crowded to-1
gether as here are calculated to make
and keep things lively on a 2 by 10
mile tract of land.
Every nationality is represented;
all tongues are spoken, the various
customs of the globe are practiced
and no need to go abroad, for there
is very little to be seen on the other
side that cannot be seen here and
much more from an enlightening,
education, standpoint, a visit to the
metropolis is invaluable. This does
not mean the little hasty hurried
trips for business or pleasure, but a
stay of some weeks and a wise putting
in of days of those weeks.
The "skyscrapers," public buildings,
churches, colleges, theatres,
hotels, parks, mansions, business
houses, factories, railways, tunnels,
ate., are as a rule, ahead of the
world. The museums of the city,
risited by millions of people, offer
objects of study unsurpassed in th?~
old world. After the good things*
the bright, side, then the bad things,
the darker side offers interest, food
for thought to any human, especially
students of human nature and poitical
economists.
It is to New York the good and
bad of the world wends its way,
once here much good becomes bad,
some bad becomes good.
The natives of the city study the
city but little, it all strikes them as
a natural course of events and they
look neither to the right nor the left,
bothering not their minds about these
things. It is the visitor an^d the man
raised elsewhere who is impressed
and who delves into things here.
It is amazing how little the average
New Yorker knows of the rest
of the world, surprising how much
the outsider does know. The makeup
of the men of the city is below
the average, the country over, intellectually
and otherwise, they as a
rule run in a groove, get in it early
and stay there. Exceptions there are,
and these are men of broad mmas
who tower above the average the
country over. Strange but true these
men of renown in business, professions,
trades, etc., are all foreign
born, not from foreign shores but
have come into the city from outside
the city. Scarcely a native notable
is to be found.
It is commonly commented that
the Jews own New York and that
the Irish run it, so the outsiders boss
things generally and the natives
work for or under them.
In business life the merchant princes:
Stewart, Macy, Wannamaker,
Siegel, Altman, and others are all
from the outside, it is so in the professions,
So in all branches of life.
The great editors of to-day, those
of the past, all were outsiders.
To New Yorkers it makes no difference.
they don't care a snap, their
sole desire and bent seems to be to
exist, drift; local pride so prominent
elsewhere has no place here.
Why all these strange conditions,
the only reason the writer can give
is the density of the population in
the past, the phenomenal increase of
the present, the crowded, cramped
quarters, all have to make their
arena, more thought is given to elbowing
one's way through the crowds
existing, than aspiring to renown,
fame and foremost place. The new
man, the ousider, attracted by these
conditions and the masses of people
drops in with training impossible to
get here, ideas among other scenes,
grasps this situation at a glance and
pitches in and uses the multitude to
his personal advantage, as he would
a drove of horses, having become a
good driver before purchasing the
steeds.
The New York parents and children
are as subservient servants of the
outsider as the slaves of the South
ever were and are tolerated by their
masters far less than the slaves were
by theirs.
There is a field for study here, and
the student of human nature cannbt
find in the universe more to tackle
than in Gotham. [
H. W. Finlayson.
450 Broadway, New York.
Don't forget the cotton association
meeting here the first Monday in
August. Let us get together and
build a warehouse.
The legislature of Georgia is in the
midst of a strong prohibition fight.
The bill providing for prohibition for
the State has passed the Senate, and
the house now has the question up.
A determined fight is being made
against the bill by the minority, but
is seems almost certain that the bill
will pass.
I WHEN HE j
HUSTLED. |
Hy Abbie F. *Ransom. |
Copyrighted. 1907. by E. C. Part-ells. #
ftivmvtumuuuuuvmtuHiQ
She stood by the window watching
the retreating figure of the young man.
too much absorbed to notice the entrance
of her father until he was by
her side. Without speaking she leaned
her arm upon his shoulder and thus
they watched until the young man was
no longer in sight. Then her father
Rtioke:
"It won't do, Elsie. You've got to
tell him I said so. He isn't the one."
The hand which had been caressing
his hair was thrown out with indignant
protest and the girl faced him,
pained surprise in every curve of the
dainty lips.
"WTiat's wrong, father?" she den-tnded.
Why haven't you said that
before?"
The gray eyes gazing into her own
held far more kinddess than his words
They were full of stern decision.
"Because I haven't been sure. Now
I am. Fred Denton can never support
a wife. He isn't able to now, and he
never will be. You've got to call it
off."
"But, father," she began.
"Iffe no use, Elsie," he interrupted.
"It isn't In him. A young man to succeed
nowadays must get out and hustle,
and that's something Fred Denton
will never do. He spends his time in
his office reading, reading, reading, and
that never brought patieut to a doctor
yet
"Why, the other night there was an
accident at Cedar Glens. Kensett was
mixed up in it Had a drunken chauffeur,
and the whole car came precious
near going over the cliff. Would have
gone if It hadn't been for a young med.
who understood sprinting and who
saved it in the nick of time.
"As it was. Kensett got off with a
broken collar bone, a friend of his came
home with a smashed hand, and?well,
you read it in the papers. That sawbones
is fixed for life just because he
happened to be on the spot and knew
what to do and how to do It. But it
wasn't Denton. He was in his office
reading up the microbes of leprosy or
some other outlandish disease."
"Fred was just telling me," began
Elsie, when her father cut her short.
"Then, too, he had a little money In
one of the banks. Where's that? He
wasn't content to let it stay where it
was. He asked me what I thought
about Aurora stocks, and I told him
they weren't worth the matches to
burn 'em, but he invested in them.
Where are they now? Whew! Now
you see 'em and now you don't"
"Father, if you would only listen"?
"Listen to what? The same old story
of love in a flat and your $500 a year?
I've got a deal on hand and won't be
home before tomorrow night. In the
meantime you just give me that ring
on your finger and I'll return it to
Fred Denton, M. D."
Slowly his daughter drew off the
ring, a curious expression growing in
her eyes, one which her father was
quick to observe.
"See here, Elsie," he said as he took
it from her. "I want you to promise
that if he calls you won't see him until
I give you permission; that is, if IJ
ever do." J
"You are very unjust, father; if you
would only listen"?
"I've waited too long already," he responded,
starting off. "Mind your
promise, Elsie; there isn't to be any
more of this nonsense."
"Perhaps there'll be more instead of I
less," she murmured as the door closed
behind him. Then she went up the
stairs to her room with a tread as full
of decision as his tones had been.
It didn't take long for her to reap
pear dressed for the street, and nrteen
minutes later she surprised a certain
young man who was very busily engaged
doing nothing at all in a pleasantly
furnished office of a downtown
business block.
"He wouldn't give me a chance to
say a single word," she concluded indignantly.
Fred Denton smiled complacently
into her flushed face. There was no
trace of the despondent lover about
him.
"We won't try to explain," he said.
"Suppose you take this trip to New
York with me this morning? You look
very bride-y," he answered. "White
dress, white hat, white shoes and
gloves. Really, Elsie, one would almost
believe that you had dressed purposely
for a wedding trip."
"Fred Denton, you don't believe"?
she paused, crimson to the very ears.
Then she added Irrelevantly:
"Father ran away with mother; I've
heard him tell about it time and time
again."
"Come on," Denton cried.
"It doesn't seem right, Fred. Father
has always been the kindest, the best
father in existence, and he is doing
this Just because he loves me."
"That's just the reason we're doing
what we are," was his ready response.
"Come, dear, we haven't a moment to
lose. You go to the Wilson avenue station
and take the train from there,
while I'll trolley it to Woodlawn and
get on board at that place. Then no
one will see us together until after we
leave the city and we are all O. K."
A ten minutes' wait for the New
York express is a time altogether inadequate
for repentance and home going.
Besides? there was the danger of discovery,
and no one of Elsie Kingston's
makeup ever flinched when danger was
In the air.
Then there was her ticket to buy,
her seat to secure and the ten minutes
had come and gone before she thought
?-* .v.
of looking lor friend or foe in that
crowded railway car.
At Woodlawn station she saw Fred
Denton swing himself upon the plat- i
form of the smoker, but the city streets
were far behind them, and the train
was speeding fast through the country
meadows before he joined her. When
he did. he held in his hand a lirtle
circlet of gold whose center held a very
familiar diamond. Slipping into the |
seat beside her, he said:
"Better put this upon your finger.
It's been away from its place too long
already."
"Why, Fred," she gasped, "where did
you get that?"
"Your father handed It to me a few
moments ago."
"Father! Where Is he? Where did
you see him?"
"tJa'o honv thprp fn the Rmoker." he
replied nonchalantly. "He gave it to
me just after the train left Woodlawn."
Her face went white.
"What did you say?"
"Nothing. I was passing through
the car on my way to you when he
hailed me and said in the pleasantest
tone imaginable: 'Mr. Denton, I promised
my daughter to give you this
package. There isn't to be any answer.'
I took it from him, with an
'All right,' and came on into the next
car, sitting where I knew he could see
me from his seat. Then I waited
awhile and hunted you up."
"He told me this morning he was
?' A a# flora
going away lur u wu^ic v*. uu; a.
Tears were very near her eyes. "Oh,
Fred, if he should see us and try to
make a scene! What will we do?"
"See here, little girl," said Denton
tenderly, "you've got your engagement
ring back again, haven't you? Now,
In the course of three or four hours I
Intend to supplement that with a plain
gold band. Don't you worry. Aurora
stocks may have gone up In hot air,
but I didn't. Your father wants you
to marry a hustler. Now, you Just
watch me deliver the goods when he
calls for them."
"First call for dinner! First call for
dinner!" cried the porter on his way to
the smoker.
"Shall we go now," Denton asked,
"or do you prefer waiting a little?"
"Father always likes an early dln!
ner," she answered, "and he'll be sure
I to pass through here very soon. There
won't be so many In the dining car.
J Let's go now."
They found a vacant table In the far
end of the dining ear and seated themselves
there. Scarcely had their order
been served when Kingston entered.
Elsie, raising her eyes, saw him standing
in the aisle, and she gave a little
sigh, which made Denton look quickly
around. A moment more, and he was
by their table.
"I will sit here," he said to the waltj
er. "Bring my plate to this table."
! When they were alone he spoke again,
this time to his daughter.
"Is this the way you .keep promises?'
"You did not ask me to promise not
to meet Fred," she answered, "so just
after you left I went to his office."
"Then what?" he asked.
"Then," said Fred, before Elsie could
speak, "I asked Elsie to take this trip
with me, and she consented."
"Huh!" grunted Kingston. "A wedding
trip, I presume."
"Hardly that," responded Denton,
"ae Tin* vpt Wp Inst ex
pect to be when we reach New York."
"Then what?" The question was
asked in a tone which made Elsie
quiver.
"Nothing much," Denton answered
coolly, "only Aurora stocks brought me
In a neat three thousand more than I
put Into them, and yesterday I secured
a position as house physician In the
Woodlawn sanitarium, and thafs good
for a couple of thousand' a year."
"What's that?" asked Kingston
sharply.
"You see, Kensett Is one of the most
influential men connected with that
institution, and the little service I was
fortunate enough to render the night
that drunken chauffeur tried to kill
him brought me the place. I've worked
for It for three months, but that
clinched It, sure."
"I thought that was a fellow by the
name of Lent," growled Kingston.
"That's what the papers said. I
AOfA wK/itSnr r?Q 1 IAH TYIA
U1UU k vaiu nucuigi uuvj
Lent or Easter so long as I got the
place and Elsie with it"
"Why didn't you keep me from making
a fool of myself?" her father demanded,
turning to his daughter with
a well affected semblance of wrath.
For answer she rested her elbows upon
the table, her chin In her hands,
and gazed fixedly into his eyes for an
instant; then she said earnestly:
"You are improving, father. I was
afraid you might lay the blame for
that defect in your constitution upon
the Lord. Most people do."
Three hours later In the parlor of the
Little Church Around the Corner the
bride was given away by her father.
The Intruder.
A Washington man was temng Borne
one of the trials of his wife, an excellent
housekeeper, with reference to the
servant problem. Just about the time
the mistress would get a new girl broken
to the ways of the household and
she would bid fair to become a model
servant she would decamp or enter
the service of a neighbor. One of
| these, a Mrs. B., had incurred the
especial enmity of the first woman,
for she had lately taken two servants
from Mrs. Brown. One night Brown
was aroused from his slumbers by
queer sounds In the kitchen. "Burglars!"
he hoarsely whispered In the
ear of his spouse as he prepared to
tumble out of bed and proceed downstairs.
"Edward," calmly observed
the wife, "I'd give anything to possess
your optimistic nature. Always looking
on the bright side. I'll wager anything
it's that odious B. woman trying
to get Mary away from me."
| Be Busir
The Check System is the
! like method of paying you
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 \lon?
BAMBERG BAN
Bamberg : : : : :
?jj tjj jjj ; j? jj; ?j,
| Something Ne
I* I 'have installed a first-clas
^ on the shortest kind of notici
'f* ets, column posts, and other
prices are lower than city
;? freight as well. Give me a
>?
( p
I H
11 H VEHICLE Rl
?
I 0
( ?
?
I am prepared to do all sort
t f pair buggies, wagons, log i
? ? horses, snarpen# plows, and d
If. in wood ana iron. Have
. horse shoer. Don't forget
?M. M. i
:: rouis lot railroad .
? 1 I?*!**!'
4* *4# *4* *4* *4* *4* *4* ?4* *4* *4(
tft iftift #f? <f; jf# ff* tf;
i i? ?4* '4**4*H* *4*
1VERY LO
?? =
$ TO NORFOLK,
ii
(a
ACCOUNT JAM
CENTENNIAL I
| VIA SOUTBE
< i*
-Iti Season, sixty day*and fifteen d
I ? April 19th, to and including Noven
( i*
; * Very low rates will also be mac
J Z uniform attending the Exposition
?
$'. Stop Overs will be allowed on
< ? tickets, same as on Summer touris
{ * 1
# #
:i [; For full and complete informati
% T Railway, or write :
1 R. w.
: : Division Passenger Agent .
! ?
VALUABLE REALE
An excellent dwelling, good location,
at West Denmark. Write for particulars.
7 building lots on Palmetto Avenue
25x100,1 residence lot ne$r union depot
100x231, one residence on Beach Avenue,
in Denmark. Prices reasonable.
119 acre farm, five miles from Bamberg,
near Odom's bridge. Good bargain.
One acre lot, 7 room dwelling, good
orebard and outbuildings, near church
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.
8 one acre lots on New Bridge street
^ - -* ? ? tCnAuooh
D6Sr OOUlueru ucpuu i ivavu.
, 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.
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.
Fourteen acres with cabin 1 mile West
Bamberg?9 acres cleared. Price $420.00.
300 acre farm two milea .Nortn or .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 Bamberg.
Make no inquiries unless you are
able to buy something of rare value.
Good farm of 475 acres about three
miles from Olar. Price $2750.
H. M. GRAHAM,
Bamberg, 5oi
M
. I
%
iess=Like
^tm
most dignified and businessr
bills and other obligations. ;
to keep tab on yourself?to
f money uselessly?is to put
1 check against it. In just a ;
;ed at how much you do save. I
iy Down Today to
i^ivir; rnwDAMV
IYII^VJ wuiTirm^ i s
: : South Carolina |
s
i i J
fJ; .?gj
;s wood lathe, and can furnish ; *
5 all styles of balusters, brack
ornamental wood work, My * 5
dealers and I save you the
t 1 (
* ?
X *1
EPAIR SHOP K \l J
7
;
s of vehicle repairing. I re- ^ I
carts, repaint ouggies, shoe t
o almost any kind of retiring ?
a first-class blacksmith ana * , 'tl
me t ? ' ' 1
SMOAKil
f
AVENUE BAMBERG, S. C. | J
I? il? gi m gi -li gi S |
iilSgMli-Iiiliiligigiiliiligiilig |
W RATES li
v'?|
VA? ?Sr RETURN If
?
IESTOWN TER" i ?
exposition j
RN RAILWAY ll
a .
ay tickets on sale daily commencing ? ?
aber 30th, 1907. j | ; |
le for Military and Brass Bands in ? ?
3?
season, sixty day and fifteen day
rt tickets. ? I .'SH
on call on Ticket Agents Southern J ^
. -'f
HUNT' . It'll
I 1 '-:Y
.... Charleston, S. C. :; |
-i--i--i- :? ii--i?S
STATE FOR SALE.
Good farm of 160 acres two miles East 1
of Bamberg. 'Price $2,500.
Timbered lands for sale on Edisto la
river at rock bottom prices.
One acre lot with'6 room cottage on
Railroad Avenue. Delightful location
Price $1,600.
If 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
-11 J Tk. mnrth thp nrfpA
an aruuuu. iuc nuimi u
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 BambergRare
bargain. $6,000.00. 1?
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 street,.
60x200, near colored graded school.. g
Price $150.
One lot with cottage, situated on east,
prong of Main street. Rents $4.00 month."
ly. Price $400. :'M
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 Bamberg's
stable lot. The most valuable
business property in Bamberg.
Three unimproved lots on street in
rear of colored graded school, at remarkably
low figures?
110 acre farm five miles south of Bamberg.
Good place. Price and terms easy.
1 3A_qr>Tt> farm <ai-r milpe frnm Rnmhprcr
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 Carlisle
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. J am very 4
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.
Hno 1 -et.nrv hnnse nearF M_ Simmnns.
One 4-room residence on Orangeburg .
street, with three acres of land.
Real Estate Agt.,
tftferOx
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