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v' -'1 . / BBt.' ; :K %S ^ - . y | (Ehr lambrrg Ifrralfc "i ' ESTABLISHED IN APRIL, 1891 K''"5 ,.v. _ ? . A. \V. KXIGHT. Editor. .i Rates?$1.00 per year; 50 cents for six months. Payable in advance. J Advertisements?$i.oo per inch for first insertion, 50c. for each subsequent insertion Liberal contracts made for j three, six, or twelve months. Want No- ' jjS w - tices one cent a word each insertion. Local < lino finct cr> 1 v.n~. xiuv iiAow wvvAk) ?ward6. Tributes of Respect, etc., must 1 be paid for as regular advertising. j K Communications?News letters or on ( > ' subjects <"?f general interest will be gladly r p.. ^'v welcomed. Those of a personal nature $ will not be published unless paid for. ] I - Thursday, Sept. 19, 1907 ! jjfp*i , A mass meeting of the business 1 men of Bamberg- has been called to j s : meet in the opera house this (Thurs- ^ b ; <Jay) evening. The question of a j competing line of railroad will be taken up, and itjs hoped that every * h ' ? citizen with the interest of the town ^ at heart will be present. We need j and must have another railroad. ? m-' ' i I ft is probable that there will be 1 something doing along the line of ^ getting another railroad for Bam- j berg in a short time. Several of our r progressive business men are taxing i'&l , ' steps in the matter, and it now ? seems likely that determined efforts made to secure a competing > fin5 Nothing is needed more, and Jj we trust the movement will meet llfi? success. There is a State law which requires that'all pupils attending a public school shall have been successfully vaccinated. We trust that this wise provision is being enforced at the v Bamberg graded' school. Parents show a negligence which is' little short of criminal when they allow II"- their children tc enter school with- t yi out being vaccinated, and the trus- } tees and superintendent should see i . to it that the rule is strictly enforced { Bp\jif here. j We had a conversation about two j iS weeks ago with Mr. Geo. R. Bullock, < manager here for the Bell Telephone j Co., in reference to rebuilding the J fe'v telephone line to Ehrhardt and giv- 3 ing us connection with that town. . ^ He informed us that the company < |?; , would not rebuild the line, as they 1 could not figure sufficient revenue 1 H-.. on the investment.. However, the , i i it , i J E:, . company win De giaa to sen tne line i at a nominal price. Here is a chance ] for local capital. We do not know J that the investment would pay, but J the present line can be bought very J g cheap. Buford's Bridge Breezes. j . Olar, September 17.?Mr. Victpr 1 P Kearse went to Sumter. last Sunday. ( , - Misses Ada and Pearl Kearse, who j ||r " have been on an extended visit to fs:f: f relatives at Varnville, have retufned. ! Miss Ruth Brabham after a month's 1 "v v visit to friends in Georgia, came ( home last Sunday. v , Miss Kathleen Kearse visited her sister, Mrs. W. M. Walker, in Bam- j berg last week. ; - Mr. J. F. Brabham went to Bam- ( t \ >. berg last Saturday. ? . Mrs. R. M. Kearse, who has been ( very sick for some time, is slowly j improving. 7 Joseph Bellinger, of Colston, is visiting his uncle, J. F. Brabham, J Pthis week. ? Mrs. Tom Kearse, of Savannah, j Ga., is the guest of Mrs. A. P. Gray. W<5 nrp triad tn learn that Miss 1 - tr: . Alma Breland, who has been sick, is ft'-. better. i Mr. H. C. Brabham visited Bam- , ;v berg Saturday. We learn that two or three of our , neighbors here will make Bamberg |r their home-next year. * . We are having plenty of rain now, | tljje cottoik pickers have had to cease their work. ] 5; " Esma Coleman, who lives with her J grand-mother, Mrs. R. M. Kearse, J is on a visit to her father, Dr. J. F. w Coleman, this week. ' Mrs. Martha Kearse, of the Kearse section, visited "The Oaks" last week. - 3 Missionary Meeting. r = ^ Program of Woman's Missionary I Union, to be held at Bamberg Baptist I church September 27,1907. C 1/ Devotional exercises, 11 a. m. * ' ?Mrs. E. A. Sojourner. 1 . 2. Organization. $ 3. Reports from societies. I c 4. Baptist missions in Brazil. a 5. Why send missionaries to Ro- I man Catholic countries? \ |i;C 6. Paper?Mrs. Rickenbaker. i v , 7. Paper?Why women should be c interested in missions.?Mrs. W. D. I Rice. a 8. Business. 1 '* * 9. Adjournment. c The citizens of any prosperous I town are always public spirited and 1 united. Stand together, work for the I interests of the whole town. Always a stand ready to do your part. Don't i grumble and spend your time in I prophesying failures, but help to ( make every enterprise a succes, be 1 it great or small. Be energetic and a enterprising, and your example will c be imitated. ( r * 1 ' Our New York Letter. 'Come boys. I have something to tell you;" Draw near. I would whisper it low; You are thinking of leaving the homestead: Don't be in a hurry to go. "The city has many attractions. But think of the vices and sin;" When once in the vortex of fashion. How soon the course downward begins." Anywhere you go, everywhere, the young men are dissatisfield, and older ones too. "Hills look green at a iistance" is rather an old saying, but nevertheless true. People, particularly young men, read of the successes in cities, and every one imagines that only a chance is needed for him to eaual or eclipse them. Some do, many do not; by far about 999 of svery 1,000 fail to reach the goal. The one of a thousand is made prominent; the nine-ninety-nine are kept in the back-ground. "But," says the youthful genius,"! know I can io it; I am an exception." Now let me say, you may be, you must be, to ?ven out where there are so many to compete and contend with. For olasted lives, hopes, ambitions, a jreat city is the place?a perfect graveyard of failures. The writer would not discourage my ambitious boy, young man, or )lder, for the matter of that, but vould caution. Even the successes ire far from happy, and there is scarcely one who would not willingr y exchange his present for his hum}le past. It is a fact that in New fork City the men who have reached commence are from the country; shere is no denying this fact; it is a natter of history that they come ?rom outside the city. City birth, aising and training is groove-like* mp idpa narrowness, there is not ;hat general all-round knowledge of nen and things acquired by those in ess populated section, nor is there )red within these essentials that go x> make the man as he is constituted ilsewhere. * "Why not, then," inquires the young man, "are not my :hances good? I am an outsider." If rou possess these qualities, your :hances are better where you are; vhere you know-and are known. If -ou do succeed here, you are not latisfied as you would be while par;ially succeeding there. A million lere is not more than a thousand ;here; eminence here is not more ;han prominence there. The fact that the masses here are )y nature as stated precludes their especting or appreciating you here is friends there look on you. The jontamination here not only of bad, i)ut of differently constituted human beings, is sure to strike you, adhere, penetrate. He or she who can withstand it is indeed the rare exception. Associations are altogether different; family ties different; friendship different, and so different. The lack of genuine sympathy you ire accustomed to discourages, drags iown the sense of finer feelings you pring with you. At home you have genuine, true and tried friends to mingle with, to rejoice with you in prosperity, to grieve with you ipi adversity, to soothe your griefs and pains, to lay you away with tender, loving hands. In a great city it is all mechanical?"hired mourners," so to speak" after deaths envious, grasping or unconcerned while living, there is not, cannot be the home life as in the country. The family that gather around the board at meals, or the hearthstone evenings, in a large pity, is rare, very exceptional. It is for male and female one continual grind, hurry, bustle, rushing, to keep up in avery day pursuits, or, if moderation is attempted, you are left far behind )r get run out or over. More is accomplished here, more business'done, more money made, more strokes put in, bigger results, but less net. The reader must not conclude the writer is "dyspeptic" :>r "discouraged"; far from it. He :ame from the outside; knows both mds in the matter; has no regrets, but is endeavoring to look the matter square in the face and, from dose study and observation, picture things as they really are to the average run. Your correspondent came lere to stay, is here, and will remain; his record is not the one he vrites from, but that of the masses. \gain, New York does not, cannot, jecause of its propositions, welcome ;he stranger as he expects, or is dsewhere. Incomers are so plentiful; the New Yorker, instead of gladly seeing the city increase in jopulation, prefers less?so overlowing already. If you do come, roung man, come expecting nothing it the hands of Gothamites other ban you hew out of the stone yourself. H. W. Finlayson. Building in Denmark. r-v ri??. -i i T_ 4-U ? JLUSNMAKK, dept. li.?m uic post rear over 30 buildings have been erected here and in the next few nonths fully a dozen more will be milt, some of them pretentious ones. Dirt is being broken for a new $15,>00 chool building and the contract vill be let next month for the new Methodist church which is to cost >10,000. Garris & Corbett have pur:hased 15 acres from the Rice estate ind will erect thereon an up-to-date )laning mill, dry kiln, etc. They vill manufacture all sorts of buildng material, using several of the :elebrated Fay & Eagan planers. A >art of their machinery has already irrived. This enterprise has been ong needed. Dpnmnrk will be well represented it the different colleges this year, tfiss Edith Rice returns to Limestone; disses Eoline Inabinett, Lillian Nix, ^ula Hightower and Ella Barton will ittend Winthrop; J. W. Crum, Jr., etuns to Wofford; Monte Sandifer, ?aul Folk, Chas. Rice, Eddie Baxter, L R. Gillam, Elbert Steadman and Uvin Riley will go to Clemson; Donild R. Boozer will enter Charleston :ollege, and J. K. Mayfield and St. Mair Guess will attend Furman. {Valuable Fan @ Bamberg County ?& S5 acres, more or less, 4-room dwel stables, and one 3-room tenant house ?7 stables, about 70 acres cleared and ir ?& cultivation. Only one mile North o C., gcod for trucking or general crop @7 a bargain for a limited time. Price c ^ 36 acres, more or less, about 30 acri buildings. Only about one mile fi Vg Near enough to keep your town co @ Price only $20 per acre. 100 acres, more or less, about one ar Odom's Bridge; 75 acres cleared, 5-n ?7 dining room and kitchen, barn anc ^ other outbuildings. Lands in good s tion; good neighborhood. Price and ^?7 plication. i50 acres, about two-thirds of whi with pecan trees just coming into p ing. This property lies near the towi a railroad center. A bargain awai Will pay for itself in a few years. 1 cation. 442 acres, more or less, 4-rootn d and stables and other outbuilding acres cleared, balance in hardwood mile North of Midway on Southern R $10 per acre. 150 acres without buildings, ah cleared, balance in hardwood timber! one mile Hast of Midway on South Pritffe $10 per acre. 260 acres, more or less, about 100 4-room dwelling, barn and stables a buildings. Well timbered "with hare about two miles North-east of Bambe per acre. 910 acres, lies within a few hundred way. Farm and stock lands. Price lo 650 acres, finely timbered with hs lies about 5 miles of Ehrhardt on Coj 500 acres in Three Mile Township, and in a high state of cultivation, good in Bamberg county. Descripti on application. J. T. 0! Women have decided that in case they ; cannot vote, they will cut out the \ * 'Stork'' proposition. Perfectly proper to take Hollister's Rocky Mountam Tea. Its good for everything. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. H. F. Hoover. VALUABLE Plantation For Sale My plantation known as the Honey ford or Hutto place, containing two hundred and ninety four acres, well timbered, with both swamp and upland. Price thirty-five hundreddollars, one- I third cash, balance on one, two \ and three years' time, one-third each year, with interest at the rate of eight per cent, payable annually on the whole balance. Five-horse farm now open. 1 Mrs. S. H. Counts | Bamberg, S. C. " VALUABLE t Farming Land For Sale ; My plantation known as the Pinckney place, containing six hundred and thirty I acres: ten-horse farm open and two more can ' be opened. The balance in fine swamp timI ber, very valuable. Price, seven thousand I five hundred dollars. (87,500.) Also my plantation known as the Muse ; place, four-horse farm open, containing two , hundred and twenty-seven acres, with timber enough on it to pay for the place. Price, two I thousand five hundred dollars. (82,500.) , T. J. COUNTS ! Bamberg, S. C. I'dr'' Q.' FTHAI RI ' X Dental Surgeon - - - Bamberg, S. C. X X In office every day intheweek. Gradu- X Z ate of Baltimore College of Dental Sur- X X gery, class 1802. Member S. C. Dental X X Association. Office in old bank building X ' I I Dr. 0. D. Faust DENTIST BAMBERG, S. G. OFFICE IN FOLK BUILDING j ?J MASTER'S SALE. Southern Fertilizer and Chemical Co., plaintiff, against S. G. May field et al., defendants. By virtue of a decree of the Court of Common Pleas dated July 2, 1907, I will sell before the court house in Bamberg on Monday, October 7,1907, being salesday, between the usual hours of sale, to the highest bidder, for cash, ; (purchaser to pay for papers) all that < tract or plantation of land, situate in < the County of Bamberg, State of South \ Carolina, containing 600 acres and called < the "Williams plantation," bounded < north and east by Blackville public road, J south by the Little Salkehatchie river, < west by S. G. Mayfield's upper mill < place, of which land about 400 acres is \ farming land?cleared. < If terms of sale are not complied with < within one hour, lands will De resold, J on the same terms, at the risk of the former purchaser, until a purchaser is found wno shall comply. H. C. FOLK, Master for Bamberg County. Sept. 9, 1907. BAMBERG GUARDS REGULAR MEETING EVERY THURSDAY 8:30 P M fw. P. RILEY I FIRE, LIFE 2 ACCIDENT | 2 INSURANCE2 t BAMBERO, - - - - S. C. f n and Timber L 214 acres near Howe , -i cultivation and a portioi ling bara and This fine piece of^prop< with barn ana j for onlv $20 per act 1 fine state of j + r f Bamberg, S. Citv F >s. Will go at m application. A beauliful home with ?s cleared. 'No leges, situated on the We om Bamberg. ancj frQnts Calhoun and ! ws and hogs. acres of land in town of modern dwelling in gooc mile South of vineyard; about five acre x>m dwelling, half bearing; artesian w< 1 c+oKIac anrl or oil/-mi c nf crrwl rmre wa tate of cultiva- through dwelling; swim: terms on ap- one acre in flowers anc house and all necessary o ich is covered tory an^ two summer h< rofitable bear- growing over them; heal i of Denmark, of town abou* 2,500, sh: ts some one. cotton per year, and onb Price on appli- great health resort of * on the^Southern Railwa} ?.Qii- ? . ^ improvements, cut into r &b o sola from J6oo tofiooo | timber. One at ? low ,.Ca" .ailway. Price ,P"ce ?.? aPPhcatlon', 1 J lot, with three-room ten; pecans, for $2,500.00. tout 75 acres 5. Lies about (-)ne ?Ven *ot on corner tern Railway. containing one acre. Th placed at a low figure to acres cleared, request.^ nd other out- One 5-room dwelling < I wood. Lies and stables, large lot witl rg. Price ?10 and all under fence. Pi One lot containing 9 4[ yards of Mid- with 7 room dwelling, tb w; terms easy. and two 2-room tenant h irdwoods, and other necessary out build 1st Line R. R. fence. A bargain for som< well improved Three single sto*7 5-ro Few farms as of Calhoun street .u first on and terms nice fence. We are pui Price only $700 each. 'NEAL, Real Este PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY HHUHHHHHHHHIHflESflHHH Open jta Telephone Building ? 1 A AM/| oy expert. Arusu. vuuic auu jj examine our pictures. Prices from 60c to $6.00 per dozen. Special attention to enlarging and copying old pictures. T. J. POOSER & BRO. BAMBERG, - - - S. G. w ?7 I 1). J. L'bLK | CARRIAGE WORKS ANYTHIN6 ON WHEELS Delivery wagons, one and two horse farm wagons, ice wagons, log carts, sewing machine wagons, or any kind of special work built to order on short ! notice. First-class repair and paint shop, does pipe work and * carries piping and fixtures, brass fittings, engine supplies, I injectors, steam gauges, engine oils, large stock of buggies, harness, lap robes and whips for sale cheap. All work will be appreciated! and satisfaction guaranteed j D. J. DELK I BAMBERG, . . S. C. ?.*oye Dickinson! [ INSURANCE AGENT <M WILL WRITE ANYTHING < > Fire, Tornado, Axident, Lia- o I bility, Casualty, in the J[ strongest and most re- < [ liable companies. o I TELEPHONE No. 10 B. Bamberg:, S.C. \ [ BRICK FOR SALE We are manufacturing a j High Grade Brick and can furnish Run of Kiln i at $o.uu i. o. d. cars 3 Badham, Sonth Carolina Dorchester Lumber Co. Badham South Carolina TITLES LOANS |g EXAMINED NEGOTIATED J. ALDRICH WYMAN 1 ATTORNEY-AT-LAW . i Civil and Office upstairs, over I Criminal Practice Bamberg Banking Co. I * ands For Sale 01 ill's mill, in fine state of Three two s i of tract in virgin timber. Calhoun stree irtv we offer for a limited finished. We e. veay easy terr >roperty . One s-room ing i Yi acres, , , . . trees in full tx own and country pnvi- . d d ;st end of Railroad Avenue, ? . f Broad Streets, contains 14 Bamberg, with eight-room t,on of tbe tOT 1 repair; good orchard and One brick s s in pecan trees, about one- East side of 1 ;11 417 feet deep flowing 16 and in busine ter per minute; water piped rear of same, ming pool and fish pond; ings all in gc 1 shrubbery; good servant boarding hous outbuildings; also conserva- able capacity Duses with beautiful vines trees; good g; thv location Ponnlation easv tprrrfc or ips about 15,000 ?ales of 1 , ? 45 miles from Aiken, the . 0 &e 0 S. C. This property lies in? ^ acre e r, and the land without the residential lots, could be per acre, but will be sold ly if you want a bargain, will sell ten acres of this *349 acres b ant house and five acres of a bargain. D 900 acres, a of Church aud Cox streets, H^es ^ is nice building site will be Barnwell corn a quick buyer. Price on Dn Main street, with barn 75? acres, o: h. garden, etc., good water, a.nd. timber la ice only $1,250.00. * limits. Will \ , , time, but will .5 acres on new road street, FuU'descripti( ree 4-room tenant houses r ouses, barn and str.bles and lings, good water, all under 26 ooo acres -one- Price on application, and 'terms on om dwellings on East side -class condition, all under tting this on easy terms. Fine farms tion. % ite Agent, Bambei VALUABLE REAM: An excellent dwelling, good location, at West Denmark. Write for particulars. 7 building lots on Palmetto Avenue 25x100,1 residence lot near union depot 100x231, one residence on Beach Avenue, in Denmark. Prices reasonable. One acre lot, 7 room dwelling, good, orehard aud outbuildings, near church and school, East Denmark. Price on call. 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. One dwelling and lot on 8outh side of Railroad Avenue. Lot runs from Railroad Avenue to Broad Street. $900.00. Vacant corner lot on Main Stredt, near graded school. Beautiful building site. Prion *1 con an JL 11VW fpxtvvv.vv? One 3 acre lot, with 4 room dwelling in Bamberg, well built, easy terms.. Price $800.00. 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. 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. A new residence with six rooms and bath and two tenant houses, with lot of one acre, on Railroad avenue. This is something to be desired. An unimproved lot on Church street. 60x200, near colored graded school. Price $150. One lot with <X)ttage, situated on east prong of Main street." Rents $4.00 monthly. 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 /\MOO nai cuuuot, 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^ A good cottage with large lot on Carlisle street. Price $1,300. Vacant lots for sale in desirable portion of this growing town. Come and see me if you are really interested. I am very hnsv hnt can talk to vou on business. Six room cottage on Railroad Avenue near business center, rents for $120.00. Price $1,250.00. Thirty (30) building lots on Carlisle and Green streets, payable in monthly installments without interest. The only desirable lots now in Bamberg that are upon the market. Parties wishiDg to pay cash will be allowed 6 per cent off. TO RENT. Two offices in heart of business district. Two 2-story residences, near F. M. Simmons. One 1-story house nearF.M. Simmons. - BARNWELL COUNTY. Eight building lots in the heart of Allendale's busy business centre. For prices write me. H. M. GRAHAM, Bamberg, 5oi I Hoover's I i IQ AI WAV5 Ite?" * i i L4 r ? i > i v LARGE ASS( TOILET ARTICLES, PERFUfl SOAPS, BRUSHES, RUBBER GOO AND DRUGGIS' Remember us When in Need We TELEPHONE 44 * i Easy Terms I tory S-rootn dwellings on West side of t in first-class condition and nicely are putting this valuable property on fiw ns. Price only $i,20D each. 4A dwelling on Midway street contain- 4 barn and stables, fruit and pecan. earing, good water; all in good re- C? r fence. This property lies within . churches, schools, and business por- 4 vn. Price, with easy terms, fijp5o. 89 tAro cinnrlc. cfAr^? ir v TT fooT Ati fiM LU1 V_ j OiiiglV, OWi J j A / J 4VV.V, VU tfain street, in first-class condition, A ss center; with 6-room dwelling in sk? barn and stables and other outbuild>od order. An ideal location for a t *t. Can be enlarged to any reasonLarge lot with fruit and shade 07 arden, all under fence. Price, with ^ x^ pen lots in town of Midway containach. Will be sold at a bargain. Barnwell County ? ^ etween Caves and Ulmer. Will go at A pcfrintirvn on A on flrmUoflfinn bout 2 miles from Seiglingville and 5 W lendale. One of the finest farms in ft Hampton County nly one mile from Fairfax. Fine farm ? .nds, which lie very near corporate A go at a reasonable figure for a limited Jjjr warrant fancy prices in near future, Dn and price on application. A timbered lands near Ybor City. Price A and timber lands. Prices on applica- j|| ^ -|f STITF CflR W\ F V i n I b I VII Vfllakl -;S? 25 shares Bamberg Cotton Mills Stock. 530 shares Bamberg Oil Mill Stock. V v | Various building lots in all sections of the town and other farm property for sale. If you wish to buy anything, or if you t % have any property for sale, let me sell it for you. 119 acre farm, five miles from Bamberg, near Odom's bridge. Good bargain. ~ ^2 60 acres land one mile from Bamberg, heavily timbered. Price $2,000.00. 400 acre farm 5 miles of Bamberg, 12 horse farm open, high state of cultiva- ji tion, 12 tenant houses in excellent condition. Price on application. v 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'e bridge road. See . me for prices. -/ 180 acres of land, Odom's place road ^ wen improved, win reni ior raw. rrcce - &? $3,000.00. 600 acres clay land, 7 miles from Bamberg, well improved. Terms reasonable. M Price $8,000.00. Fourteen acres with cabin 1 mile West Bamberg?9 acres cleared. Price $420.00. - '?M 300 acre farm two miles North of Bam-. ,, ^ berg. Good residence and fine farm. Price $6,000.00. 600 acre farm 5 miles South of Bamberg. ;: a gilt edge farm. Price on application. 'v 34 acre farm two miles South Bamberg. *M Buildings worth $300. Price $600. 200 acre farm 4 miles from Bamberg. " Price $3,000. 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. Good farm of 166 acres two miles East r* of Bamberg. Price $2,500. Timbered lands for sale on Edisto ;:$M river at rock bottom prices. 117 acre farm one mile from Bamberg. Well improved with barb wire fencing "-k all around. The timber is worth the price. Price $4,000. 300 acre farm in Buford Bridge 'town- . j ship, well improved with new dwelling, ': & etc. Price $4,000.00. 400 acre farm, five miles from Bamberg. Rare bargain. $6,000.00. . 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. 1000 acres land, the best in* Bamberg : county lying on the Southern Railway. ;jjy If you havf money and want to double it call on me, but don't write, would be too unsatisfactory to both of us. 296 acres good land near Olar, will rent for six bales of cottonl Price on yy application. BEAUFORT COUNTY One truck farm, Beaufort county, 160 . acres, under high state of cultivation. Price $8,000. HAMPTON COUNTY. 4000 acre farm in Hampton county, heavily timbered and good land. Prices Wi right. If you don't want to buy put it '%'* off until January. Real Estate Agt., j nth Carolina. Jrug^tore "! I UP-TO-DATE ,? |vl )RTMENT OF . 1 Ir j:W 1ERY, PATENT MEDICINES, ? >DS, PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES, I rS' SUNDRIES. I Serve you Promptly and Efficiently 1