The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, August 01, 1907, Image 5
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' . ^ C j
Personal Mention.
?Mr. Jas. E. Sal ley spent Sunday
in Orangeburg.
?Rev. Peter Stokes spent yesterday
in Columbia.
?Mrs. Jas. E. Sally is visiting relatives
in Orangeburg.
?John R. Bellinger, Esq., spent
Sunday in Charleston.
?Miss Blanche Garland visited
friends in Orangeburg Sunday.
?Mr. R. S. Simmons, of Bates
burg, visited relatives here this week.
?Dr. B. D. Bronson is spending
the week at home, as he is not very
well.
?Mrs. C. E. Garvin returned Sunday
from a visit to relatives in NewN
berry.
?Mr. and Mrs. John R. Bellinger
-left Tuesday for a stay at Harris
Springs.
?Mr. Henry J. Free has returned
+.n thp oitv. and will keeD books for
A. Rice.
?Mrs. F. M. Dunbar, of Augusta,
Ga., visited Mrs. Jno. R. Bellinger
last week.
?Mrs. Peter Stokes left yesterdaymorning
for a visit to relatives at
Williamston.
?Rev. J. M. Stead man, of St,
George, is visiting his brother, Mr.
H. Spann Steadman.
?Messrs. G. B. Clayton and H. A.
Hughes, of the Ehrhardt section,
were in the city Monday.
?Miss Ottie Harrison has gone to
Ulmers to spend a few days with
her sister, Mrs. J. C. Folk, Jr.
?Miss Louise Sheridan left Saturday
for an extended stay with relatives
and friends in Greenwood.
TT OT 'J
?master nugo ouenuoii, uui efficient
"devil, left Tuesday for a
visit to relatives in Orangeburg.
*
?Mr. H. G. Sheridan returned
last Friday night from a visit to relatives
at Vances, Orangeburg county.
?Mrs. Effie Wannamaker and
/ children, of Columbia, spent a few
days in the city last week on a visit
to relatives.
?Mr. W. S. Hogan, Head Master
of tiie Carlisle Fitting School, is
spending a few days in the city. He
say3 the prospects for a large attendance
this fall are very flattering.
He Was Saying Grace.
A deaf old gentleman dined with a
family where grace was always said.
When the guests were seated Hie host
bowed his head and began to repeat
Hie accustomed verse in a subdued,
reverent tone.
"Eh? What's that?" demanded the
deaf old man, who sat beside him.
The host smiled patiently and began
again, in a louder, more deprecatory
voice.
"Speak a little louder. I don't
catch what you say," the old gentleman
persisted.
A low ripple of laughter went round
the table. The host, his face crimson
with embarrassment, raised his voice
and repeated the verse. The deaf gentleman
did his best to hear, but failed.
He placed one hand upon his host's
arm.
"What did you say?" he demanded
irascibly.
The host cast him an angry glance.
I "D?n it, I'm saying grace," he
snapped, as he mopped the perspiration
from his brow.
Pistol Permits.
Of the hundreds of men who apply
for oistol permits to the police com
missioner only a few get them. The
applicants give all sorts of queer
reasons for wanting to tote a gun,
the most common being that they
carry large sums of money on their
person. All pistol permits have to
be approved by Chief Inspector Cortright
before they are granted. Early
in his police career he soured on
pistol carriers with the result that he
approves about one out of every fifty
applications. One man whose application
was turned down called on
Chief Cortright a few days ago to
learn why he couldn't get a pistol
permit.
"Why do you want to carry a pistol?"
asked the chief inspector.
"Because I always carry large sums
of money," replied the man.
The veteran policeman looked the
applicant over carefully and said:
"If you will show me right now
$25 in real money I'll indorse your
application."
The man flushed and stammered
that he was sorry, but that was the
first time in his life that he did not
have a large sum of money in his
pockets. Cortright insisted on knowing
just how much the man had. By
trying all his pockets he was able to
produce just $3. He did not get the
permit,?N. Y. Sun."
Not Interested.
She knew the man that sat behind
Was sizing up her hair
And peering through her peekaboo
With rude, ill-mannered stare.
When she could stand his gaze no
more
Resentment was too deep,
She turned to rebuke the chap,
And he was fast asleep.
A Puzzler.
An old white haired darkey living
on a plantation, not feeling well, had
the doctor pay him a visit. The doctor
told him as he was getting old he
must eat plenty of chicken and stay
out of damp night air. "But, sah,"
said the old darkey, "how can you
expect me to stay in de house at night
and still get my chickens."
SPANKED HIS MOTHER-IN-LAW
Bargeman In Correcting Woman Dialodged
Her Front Teeth.
Because his mother-in-law "sassed"
him James Henry Young, the captain
of a Hudson river barge, spanked her
so hard that he jarred two of her teeth
out, and now he is a prisoner charged
with assault.
Young and his wife live at 274 East
One Hundred and Thirty-fourth street,
New York city. He is in charge of one
of the big railroad floats of the New
York. New Haven and Hartford Railroad
company and when he gets
through with his work and goes home
expects to find his wife there.
After a particularly hard day Young
went home and instead of being wel
HE PUT HEB ACROSS HIS KNEE.
corned by his wife found the key unJ
J ^ Wa lrtf V*{moalf -JTI
uer me uuunuau uc ici uuogu ^
the lonesome flat and not finding the
expected hot supper had to go to the
refrigerator and cheer up on cold potatoes,
macaroni and other things.
After Young had fed the cat and
wa^. closing up the house for the night
his wife came in and told him she had
been up to her mother's.
"I'm going up there myself," Young
announced, and he went
Mrs. Mary A. Lyman is his wife's
mother, and Young asked her why she
persisted In keeping her daughter, his
wife, away from her, home.
"None of your business," Mrs. Lyman
answered, according to Young.
"Don't sass me," Young says he
warned his mother-in-law.
"I'll do as I please," Young says
Mrs. Lyman returned, and then followed
a "scissors" conversation.
Mrs. Lyman was telling Young exactly
what she thought of barge captains
in.'general and him in particular j
when he reached over and, picking her
up, put her across his knee and spanked
her. The spanking was a good, j
pound one, too, even Young admits, j
Mrs. Lyman says he knocked two of
her teeth out, but Young insists they j
fell out
HE SOLD HIS DAUGHTER.
Transferred Her For $100 to a Man
Three Times Her Age.
Bargained away by her father for
$100 to become the wife of a man
nearly three times her age is the lot
of Mabel Begosian, a pretty fourteenyear-old
Armenian girl of Worcester,
Mass., the bride of Isidore Shanheidan,
aged forty.
Friends of the girl reported the story
of the wedding to the police, and if
their statements are true the girl was
sold to the highest bidder. Mabel left
home a short time ago on account of a
cruel stepmother. A little later Shanheidan
opened negotiations with the
girl's father. The money bid was accepted,
and the following day Shanheidan
secured a marriage license, giving
the girl's age as eighteen and his
own as twenty-five. An Armenian
priest married them.
The police advised friends of the girl
to secure an annulment of the marriage.
This, her friends say, they will
at once attempt Dikran Thomajanian,
another suitor of Mabel, is at the head
of the movement to give her back her
freedom.
Arm Cut Off to Save Man.
Suspended In midair, with his arm
caught in the cogwheels of a traveling
crane at the Baldwin Locomotive
works in Philadelphia, John Rooks, a
painter, hung for two hours and twenty-seven
minutes. He was caught by
the arm as he passed the crane and
drawn Into midair. The clogged machinery
refused to reverse. A scaffolding
had to be built to him, and on it
surgeons of the Hahnemann hospital
worked and amputated the arm to re
lease him. Injections of morphine
deadened the pain until the scaffolding
was built He sustained internal injuries
also, and it is thought that he will
die.
Fierce Fight With Half a Snake. i
Church Barkley of Harrodsburg, Ky., |
had a terrible battle with a monster
snake a few days ago. He heard a
noise upstairs and went to investigate
and found a snake coiled on the bed.
He fired at it with his shotgun and
cut it in two. The part with the head,
about three feet long, made battle and
tried to bite and coil around Barkley's
legs. He had to fight it out with part
of the snake, and he says he never did
faster kicking, but finally dispatched
that part of the reptile. The entire
snake measured nine feet nine inches
?n length and had a horn or some hard
substance three inches long on the end
of its tail
IAN ||
UNPROTESTED
CHECK.
25y Edith M. Doarte. *
Copyrighted, 1907, by M. il. Cunningham. J
ItMUUHMMMnMUMUIMUUd
When all the legal formalities were
ended and the fortune that had been
Robert Maxwell's was finally handed
over to his "beloved daughter Elizabeth,"
that young lady regarded her
new found responsibilities in dismay
and promptly proceeded to shift them
to other and broader shoulders. James
Gordon had been her father's secretarj
and his shoulders were presumably better
fitted for the burden.
"But you cannot hand me over your
fortune to carry, as If It were a book
or a parcel," said Gordon distractedly,
though Inexpressibly cheered by this
profession of confidence. "You do not
understand"?
"Oh, yes, I do," returned Miss Maxwell
serenely. "I understand perfectly.
I shall appoint you"?
"Chairman of the finance committee,"
suggested Gordon.
"Yes," said Miss Maxwell. "I will
be the committee."
"Well, I shall do my best," said Gordon.
lausrhinsr. "But the committee
will please remember that It has certain
active duties."
"I don't see why It should have any,"
she retorted. "Practically, you have
already managed the estate for the
past five years. You were invaluable
to father."
"Perhaps I was," Gordon returned,
"though I don't remember It, and he
never mentioned It. However, I appreciate
your confidence and will serve
you faithfully; but (gravely) what if I
should make mistakes? Is it wise to
intrust the handling of so much money
to one man?"
"I should think it might depend a
good deal upon the man," said Miss
Maxwell softly.
So Gordon fitted up an office in a
downtown skyscraper, where he sat at
a table strewn with papers and pinktaped,
legal looking documents, figuring
and writing late into the nights,
?nd mirh Maxwell, having arranged her
financial affairs to her liking, annexed
a meek, elderly relative as chaperon
and turned her attention to other difficulties.
Her first, chiefest and most immediate
difficulty was her cousin Tom Cornish.
"It isn't that I do not like you," she
painstakingly explained for the hundredth
time. "You know I do. As a
sister, now, I"?
"Oh, drop it?" retorted Tom inelegantly.
\
"And anyhow I shall never marry."
"So it's all up?"
"I think I have been telling you that
for the past five minutes," said Miss
Maxwell impatiently.
""You know what I meant all along,"
he said sullenly. "Some one has been
giving you a resume of my vices."
- "Your vices are nothing to me nor
your virtues either. If you"? The
words died on her Hps. For the first
time in all their lives his arm-closed
around her. Convulsively he held her
to him, bending his head till his lips
met her soft brown hair.
"Betty, I?I've got to?tell you?I'm
in no end of trouble. I need you?I
need your help?I"?
By a single vehement effort Betty released
herself.
"How dare you? How dare you?"
she raged, then came to a dead stop.
Her eyes grew wide with dismay and
fixed upon the doorway at the end of
the room.
"Mr. Gordon," she said in a constrained
voice.
j It was Gordon indeed. He was quite
at the other end of the long room, but
I not so far that the late tableau could
itnooflTi v.-tr him and the distress of
UC UUOVVU - J . ? -
her face was Intensified in his as he
bowed hurriedly and the yellow portiere
fell behind him.
Betty blushed furiously. A person
looking on and not understanding
might, of course?she turned,suddenly
'to Tom, who stood staring at her uneasily.
"Now go!" she cried desperately.
"Go!"
Meanwhile Gordon had found his hat
and the sidewalk and walked blindly
down the avenue, forgetting the papers
he had gone for?forgetting everything
except a girl's flushed, dismayed face.
It was scandalous that she should be
allowed to drift Into complications with
that fellow. It was all very peell that
Cornish was her cousin, but what of
the fellow's character?a gambler, a
fortune hunter? Yet what could he
do? All day he had looked forward to
seeing Betty. Well, he had seen her.
And she must have been in earnest
She wasn't the kind of girl to let a
man?ana as memory gupyc-u. unu * %.
plunged gloomily on.
It was several days later that Miss
Maxwell, blue gowned and demure,
turned into the entrance of a bank on
lower Broadway and walked calmly to
the paying teller's window.
"I suppose you know that this overdraws
your account, Miss Maxwell,"
said that gentleman, handing out a
packet of fresh bank notes.
Thft irirl stared at him in astonish
ment "No, I did not know. I had not :
thought," she said nervously.
"That last check* was rather large- (
ten thousand"?1
"Ten thousand!" repeated Betty
weakly.
"Yes. We did not question It, of '
course, because Mr. Gordon so often
draws large amounts." He looked at (
her keenly. "It was all right, I sup- :
pose?" i
"Yes; oh, yes," said Betty unsteadily. (
"It was all right. I?? suppose Mr. ,
Gordon cashed It?" !
J
; - % J w ; .
"He sent a messenger, as he usually
does."
Betty nockled. The bank swam and
for an instant her brain reeled as she
turned away, perplexed and vaguely
conscious of impending evil.
Ten thousand dollars!
Even to Betty's vague business reasoning
$10,000 seemed a good deal to
lose track of. But there must be some
good reason why Gordon had filled in
the check for so much, for Miss Maxwell's
methods of de^ng with the
management of her estate had not
changed, and, though she still signed
all her checks, she serenely washed
her hands of further responsibility,
and Gordon usually filled them in.
Once at home she hurried to her
desk. She had a prejudice against
keeping her check book in order, and
an appalling number of hastily scrawled
stubs confronted her. She worked
VviiqUtt nAtrorlnor a nofl xH+h fimirog flnH
counting up totals on her fingers. But
it was slow work, and near the end
one stub stared out from the rest provokingly.
It was blank.
She leaned her elbows on the desk
and, resting her chin in her hands,
stared hard Into space. There was the
check unaccounted for, and he had
filled it out for $10,000. No one knew
how many others he had used. He
was welcome to the money. She would
not fight It if she could. But he had
seemed so different, and she had trusted
him. Slowly her head sank on the
desk, and the heiress of the Maxwell
millions cried her eyes out like any
ordinary lovesick girl.
It was ten hours later?ten dreary,
interminable hours?that the clock on
Betty's dressing table chimed 1.
Betty shivered. No sleep had come
Kor attao rinffin or aiif a# VwI oVia
W VJ to. \JtLUU5 V U t Vi UUU) OiiC
slipped Into a dressing gown. She
would read. Anything would be better
than lying In bed open eyed and
sleepless moaning over James Gordon.
Her book was in the library. She
opened her door and ran hurriedly :
down into the hall below. Pushing
open the library door very gently, she
entered the room, then uttered a faint
scream.
The room was lighted by the faint
rays of a bullseye lantern.
Standing at her desk with his back
to her, opening her check book, was
?Tom Cornish.
Starting convulsively at sound of her
cry, he turned and confronted her,
white to the lips. "Betty," .he stammered.
\rko strtftrt vprv Rtni.
"Tom," she said, "why did yon do
It?'
But Tom had fallen into a chair and
hidden his shamed face in his hands.
"It's all up," he said hoarsely. "I'm
dead broke, and I thought I stood a
chance to stake myself once more. I've
had the devil's own luck lately. I
lost every cent of that other check."
Betty looked at him as if in a dream.
"The check?your check. I was dead
broke?debts everywhere?and I got
hold of your check book. I knew Gordon
did about as he pleased?and it
was your signature all right. I meant
to give it back to you, Betty, as soon
as my luck turned, I really did."
But to his mystification Betty was
looking at him with shining eyes. "It
was you who cashed the check for
ten thousand," she repeated softly. "It
was you?it was you." 1
It was weeks before she told Gordon/and
he, being a wise young man
In his generation, said no word of her
bygone Injustice, but his arms went i
round her, and he held her close, while
she, crying quietly, hid her face against S
his coat 1
"No other man would have under- '
stood," she whispered softly.
Her Very Good Reason. (
The two wives were discussing the i
pecuniary peculiarities of their respective
husbands, and they coincided with 1
great unanimity until they reached the
point of their own relation to the purse ^
strings.
"My husband never gives me a penny 1
unless he growls about my extrava- j
gance," said one. 1
"Mine does the same thing," attested
the other. 1
"But I get even with him." And her i
face showed the color of satisfaction.
"How do you ever do it?" t
"I go through his trousers pockets t
when he's asleep."
"Goodness gracious!" exclaimed the ^
other. "I wouldn't do that for any- ]
thing."
"Why not? Haven't we a right to *
the money as well as they have?" i
"Yes, but I wouldn't go through my j
husband's trousers pockets for it" r
"I'd like to know why?' said the
first quite Indignant at the apparent ^
reproof. 3
"Because," blushed the other, "he |
carries his money in his waistcoat 'J
pocket"?Pearson's Weekly. *
When Banks Are Bitten. j
"Speaking of bad checks," said the
cashier of a downtown bank, "don't
you believe for a moment that most
of the expert forgers are behind bars I
or frightened into Inactivity. The distinguished
professionals?those accus- j
tomed to play for a fortune at a single
throw?are pretty well In hand, but a
there are others.
"As a matter of fact, the public I
would be surprised to learn how many
bogus checks, perfectly executed, get I
Dast the bank officials every week in
tills city." "
"Don't see many of 'em in the police
court cases," a listener suggested. h
"Of course not. Most of the checks c
are for small amounts and are made
good by the bank officers. Why? Well, E
because it does a bank no especial good
to have it known that forged checks
can pass through its windows. So the
matter is hushed up. Even when a u
man is caught in the act he Is often
allowed to go free If be is merely an
agent and will tell who his principal is.
It's business policy."?New York Globe.
Be Busir
The Check System is the r
like method of paying youi
And one of the Dest ways
Keep from spending a lot oj
I all you get in the bank and
little while you'll be surprise
Bring Your Mone
BAMBERG BAN
Bamberg s : s s :
| Something Ne
I have installed a first-class
on the shortest kind of notice
*?? ets, column posts, and other
*? prices are lower than city <
;? freight as well. Give me a 1
;;
i
I H VEHICLE RI
? ??
>
V- I am prepared to do all sorts
* ? pair buggies, wagons, log c
? ? norses, sharpen plows, andd(
V- in wood ana iron. Have i
J? horse shoer. Don't forget i
$
* *
?M. M. I
! : ROU1S LOT RAILROAD A
Ijil-:I;-I; :! u--I--Ij -I-il? il :!?
:! il? !? tl;
$ VERY LO1
i >
?? =
il TO NORFOLK, 1
t?
} ACCOUNT JAM
I; CENTENNIAL, E
\l VIA SOUTHEI
i *
* ? Season, sixty day and fifteen da
? ? April 19th, to and including Novem
i +
? ; Very low rates will also be mad<
l\ 1 uniform attending the Exposition
?
V. Stop Overs will be allowed on s
* * tickets, same as t>n Summer tourist
? >
* ? For full and complete informatic
;? Railway, or write :
? ?
Si n U7
1 I\.? ^
^ 41
Division Passenger Agent .
; !;;f;;T;;Tt?Ta;Ya>T;;T;>ys>%>Ta;Tufi.
*A* ?4? ?4? <
VALUABLE REALf:
An excellent dwelling, good location,
it West Denmark, Write for particulars. <
7 building lots on Palmetto Avenue
15x100,1 residence lot near union depot ]
L00x231, one residence on Beach Avenue, .
n Denmark. Prices reasonable.
119 acre farm, five miles from Bamberg,
iear Odom's bridge. Good bargain. ~ .
One acre lot, 7 room dwelling, good
jrehard aud outbuildings, near church \
ind school, East Denmark. Price on call.
60 acres land one mile frem Bamberg,
leavilv timbered. Price $2,000.00.
One acre vacant lot in the heart of \
Bamberg. Price $500.
3 one acre lots on New Bridge street
iear Southern depot. Price $550 each. 105
acre farm, one mile South of Bam- <
Derg. Good dwelling and outbuildings,
leavilv timbered. Price $2,500.
One dwelling and lot on South side of
Railroad Avenue. Lot runs from Rail- 1
oad Avenue to Broad Street. $900.00. <
400 acre farm 5 miles of Bamberg, 12 '
iorse farm open, high state of cultivaion,
12 tenant houses in expellent condi- j
ion. Price on application.
Vacant corner lot on Main Street, near
graded school. Beautiful building site. ]
Price $1,000.00. J
200 acres of land near Rev. Romeo
Jovan?well timbered and a bargain, i
?1,500.00.
350 acres clay land, 5 miles tV)Uth of (
Bamberg, on Odom's bridge road. See
ne for prices. ,
180 acres of land, Odom's place road,
veil improved, will rent for $250. Price .
S2.700.00. ;
600 acres clay land, 7 miles from Bam- j
>erg, well improved. Terms reasonable. 1
'rice $8,000.00.
One 3 acre lot, with 4 room dwelling J
n Bamberg, well bnilt, easy terms, i
'rice $800.00.
25 shares Bamberg Cotton Mills Stock. ]
530 shares Bamberg Oil Mill Stock.
Fourteen acres with cabin 1 mile West ?
lamberg?9 acres cleared. Price $420.00.
300 acre farm two miles North of Bamierg.
Good residence and fine farm. ?
'rice $6,000.00. 1
600 acre farm 5 miles South of Bamberg,
gilt edge farm. Pric8 on application. 1
34 acre farm two miles South Bamberg,
luildings worth $300. Price $600. t
200 acre farm 4 miles from Bamberg. I
'rice $3,000. 1
Two story dwelling on New Bridge f
treet, lot 80 feet front and 255 feet deep,
ood water and stables, rrice
One two story brick buildiDg in the eart
of business centre. Pays 10 per
ent. on investment.
100 acre farm near Howell's mill,
tents for $125.00. Price $1,000.
1000 acre farm near the town of Barnerg.
Make no inquiries unless you are S
ble to buy something of rare value.
Good farm of 475 acres about three
liles from Olar. Price $2750. s
H. M. GRAHAM,
Bamberg, Sou
-
v * yM
*
^
iess=L,ike
' '^5
________
nost dignified and business
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. -i
y Down Today to ,
KING COMPANY
: : South Carolina.
flflOCqiqHSgiOipgHPg |
win Bamberg I;
i? |
5 wood lathe, and can furnish ; j ' %
all styles of balusters, brack- J
ornamental wood worK, My aj
lealers and I save you the T \.|j
2PAIR SHOP b |!
tm
;
arus, repami, uugKiea, aiiuc . jjfi
> almost any kind of repairing i ?
a. first-class blacksmith ana
me
5MOAKI
VF1SJ1IP RAMRFPO. S. C. ! Z -
SV RATES 11
VA., <Sfc RETURN j f 1
estown ter- v ? j w
;xf>ositioin 11 'h
E RAILWAY il l
? A-AAIA AAifiwi/mAififf ^ 1 t '. -
>y ucft.cw5 \Jii oaic uaujr tv/uiiuwiviiig WM!9
ber 30th, 1907.
? for Military and Brass Bands in ?
eason, sixty day and fifteen day * *
; tickets. ??
>n call on Ticket Agents Southern | |/ ;^|||
HUNT ||
. . . Charleston, S. C. j '*jH|
STATE FOR SALE.
Good farm of 166 acres two miles East v
rf Bamberg. Price $2,500.
Timbered lands for sale on Edisto
river at rock bottom prices.
One acre lot with 6 room cbttage on -M
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. "*l|?
Price $2,250.
117 acre farm one mile from Bamberg. .Va
Well improved with barb wire fencing U -H
all around. The timber is worth the price. ^ ;f|
Price $4,000.
300 acre farm in Buford Bridge town-,
ship, well improved with new dwellings 'Ji
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"
? T>-:i A T>K?? 39
JUG Sure, UU Aamuau avenue. imo wr
something to be desired.
An unimproved lot on Church street,.
30x200, near colored graded school- %}
Price $150.
One lot with cottage, situated on east '
prong of Main street. Rents $4.00 month- ,
[y. Price $400.
An unoccupied lot adjoining residence
occupied by H. M. Graham.
An unoccupied lot, 424 feet, on Bamberg : #
it 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 r
business property in Bamberg.
Three unimproved lots on street in , ' ^
rear of colored graded school, at remarkibly
low figures^
110 acre farm five miles south of Bamjerg.
Good place. Price and terms easy. ^
136-acre farm six miles from Bamberg,
rhe timber worth price of place.
An excellent farm between Bamberg %
ind Denmark. Don't write or see me
inless you have the money.
A good cottage with large lot on Carisle
street. Price $1,300.
V arious ouuaing lots in an sections 01
he town and other farm property for sale,
f you wish to buy anything, or if vou f
lave any property for sale, let me sell it v
or you.
Vacant lots for sale in desirable portion
if this growing town. Come and see me
f you are really interested. I am very
msy but can talk to you on business.
TO RENT.
Six offices in heart of business district. ^
Two 2-story residences, near F. M.
limmrms.
One 1-story house nearF.M. Simmons.
One 4-room residence on Orangeburg
treet, with three acres of land.
Real Estate Agt.,
th Carolina.