The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, August 06, 1908, Image 3
i-;. " * ' "'* . " ' ' ' . '
PERSONAL MENTION.
People Visiting in This City and
at Other Points.
i
?Mrs. J. E. Salley is visiting relatives
in Orangeburg.
?Mr. J. A. Hunter is spending a!
while at Glenn Springs.
?Mr. J. W. Stokes is at home from
a stay at Glenn Springs.
?Mrs. M. W. Brabham left last
Friday for a stay at Hendersonville.
. ?Rev. J. H. Danner is visiting his
brot&er, Kev. s. w. uanner, m me
city.
?Mr. W. B. Bryan, of Allendale,
spent several days in the city last
week.
?Mrs. C. R. Brabham, Jr., and
children are visiting relatives in
Charleston.
?Mrs. W. B. Bryan, of Allendale,
is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
A. S. Easterlin.
,<?Mr. and Mrs. J. Aldrich Wyman
left Tuesday to spend a month with
relatives in Aiken.
?Mr. N. R. Hays, of Apalachicola,
Fla., is visiting the family of his
. mother, Mrs. H. J. Hays.
?Mrs. S. W. Johnson leit last
Thursday to spend a while at Char"
leston and Sullivan's Island.
?Mr. W. Paul Riley left last Saturday
for a stay at Hendersonville.
His family is there for the summer.
?Mr. Winnlfred Bishop, of Columbia,
spent last week with friends
and relatives in and around Bam
* berg.
?Miss Llewellyn Cleckley left
yesterday for a visit to Prosperity.
From there she will go to the mountains.
4
-?Mrs. Henry F. Bamberg left last
Friday to spend some time at Glenn
Springs. Later she will go to Hen*
dersonville.
?Mr. and Mrs. H. Spann Steadman
spent several days in Batesburg
last and this week on a visit to relatives
in that city.
?Mrs. G. W. Garland and little,
grand-daughter, Lucile Hunter, returned
last week from a visit to Mrs.
G. B. Hoover in Hampton.
?Miss Mary Hill, of Sumter, who
has been visiting her sister, Mrs. T.
G. Herbert, in this city for several
weeks, returned home last Thursday.
?Mrs. T. D. Jones, of Ehrhardt,
spent Sunday and Monday in the city
with her sister, Mrs. G. L. Kinard.
She was on her wa? to Newberry and
other points in the up-country.
?Mr. C. A. Dean returned Monday
from Rome, Ga., where he and
Mrs. Dean went two weeks ago to
visit relatives. Mrs. Dean will re'
\ main there for some time yet.
?Prof. J. C. Guilds, of the Carlisle
Kitting School, Bamberg, delivered
an excellent address at the
Methodist church on Sunday even;
' ing. He is a good speaker and his
hearers were much pleased.?Dorchester
Eagle.
?Dr. M. H. Wyman and Miss
Lallah Wyman, of Aiken, brother and
sister of J. Aldrich Wyman, Esq.,
s with a cousin, Miss Mell Duncan, of
Barnwell, spent Monday in the city
with Mr. and Mrs. J. Aldrich Wyman.
They came down to take the automobile
trip back to Aiken with Mr.
and Mrs. Wyman. The party left
Tuesday morning, and expected to
make the trip of sixty miles'in three
T*v?tttqtit in Mr Wvmnn's
ilVUI Ot X IT VUV AAA AU.A i . J ?
fine Rambler touring car.
Young Negro Burned.
Dallas, Tex., July 28.?Tad Smith,
< a negro boy 18 years of age, charged
with criminal assault on Miss Viola
D$lancey at Clinton, Hunt county,
was captured by officers to-day. He
was taken before the young woman
and identified.
The prisoner was then hurried toward
the Greenville jail. Before arriving
there, however, a mob of citizens
overpowered the officers, took
the prisoner and burned him? at the
stake. Fagots were piled up in the
public square at Greehville and the
negro was placed on the heap. Kerosene
oil was poured on and a match
applied. Smith slowly burned to
death while a thousand people looked
on.
.1 Eczema Cored.
,J. R. Maxwell, Atlanta, Ga., says:
. . "I suffered agony with a severe case
of eczema. Tried six different remedies
and was in despair, when a
neighbor told me to try Shuptrine's
Tetterine. After using $3 worth of
your Tetterine and soap I am completely
cured. I cannot say too much
in its praise." Tetterine at druggists
/vf. hr mail liftp Snnn 2Sp ,T_ T_
Shuptrine, Dept. A. Savannah, Ga.
Sheds His Skin.
Trenton, N. J., July 30.?For the
twenty-eighth time in fifty-three
years William U. Cake, a lineolum
printer,is shedding his skin like a
snake does, only instead of periodically
casting aside the cuticle, Cake
is likely, to shed his skin any time.
First he is taken with a chill, then
the shin dries up and cracks on entirely
within two weeks. During
this- period he suffers agony. As
soon as the skin has been shed Cake
^ is all right again. He has several
children, but none of them are afflicted
with any symptoms of skin shedding.
Specialists have seen the man,
but none of them have ever done
him any govt.
Had Eczefba 15 Years.
Mrs. Thomas Thompson, of Clarksville,
Ga., writes, under date of April
23, 1907: "I suffered 15 years with
tormenting eczema; had the best doctors
prescribe; but nothing did me
any good until I got Tetterine. It
cured me. I am so thankful."
Thousands of others can testify to
similar cures. Tetterine is sold by
druggists or sent by mail for 50c.
by J. T. Shuptrine, Dept. A, Savannah,
Ga.
The representative arose to make
a speech, and his fellow members be,
gan to file out.
"Gentlemen," said he calmly,
"don't think for a minute you can
throw me down. My address is already
in the hands of tthe printer
with the 'applause' in the proper
places."
%
IN THE OLDEN TIME.
Col. T. J. Counts Writes of "Before
I)e Wah" Gentlemen.
We take the liberty of republishing
the following, which appeared
in last week's Barnwell People. Col.
Counts is always an interesting
writer, but- never more so than when
[his subject is "befoh de wah" times:
| Dear Holmes: Today, the 4th of
July, 1908, brings my 81st birthday.
T + .nod onH writo without
1 K^CLIL Olill icau auu mibv ..
glasses.
When yet in my teens I left Barnwell
for Graham's Turn Out (now
Denmark.) Maj. Henry B. Rice of
the firm of D. & H. B. Rice, with
whom I had no acquaintance before,
upon my application for a clerkship,
readily consented to take me at a
salary of one hundred dollars a year
and furnish me board. I had never
seen much of the railroad up to that
time, so you may imagine it was a
good big thing to look at. The S. C.
Railroad was the second railroad
known and when finished to Augusta
was the longest railroad in the world.
If my memory serves me right, the
first being up North, don't remember
- 1 4- 1.. mttac I
WD31 oia.it;, uui uiiij iwcuy uiu&o
long.
The stringers of this road were
eight by ten inches, wood, , twenty
feet long, with a flat bar of iron half
inch thick by three inches wide spiked
substantially to the stringer. The
engines were very small?perhaps
not one eighth the size of the present
engines. The passenger coaches
were round and in barrel shape,
while the freight boxes were about
seven feet wide by fourteen feet long
and enclosed (not with wood) but
very heavy cotton duck, the top, however,
being covered with tin.
Prom twelve to fifteen of these
freight boxes made up a full train
for the trip to Augusta. It was an
all day trip from Charleston to Graham's,
a distance of eighty one miles,
and that was all that the railroad
company required. The train forces
(as the farmer would say) would
stop, take out, and feed for the night.
J
INeXl muruiug Slici a, icaouuauic
breakfast hour they would fire up
and leave for Augusta. As a matted
of course the passenger train made
much better time, but took the whole
day to run from Charleston to Augusta,
as a great deal of the time
was consumed by having to wait for
the mail carrier to carry the mail
pouch into every mail station on the
road and there wait until the postmaster
assorted out the mail matter
for his office?lock the pouch and
hand it back to tne carrier.
I was associated with D. & H. B.
Rice for ten or twelve years, continuing
as a clerk for a part of the time
and as a partner in the business for
the balance. My relations with the
old set of Rices was of such a character
that I feel it my duty and a
high privilege to add in a few words
a justitributd to the memory of these
true and. loyal Christian gentlemen,
who are not here to hear what I
have to say in my humble way, but
have long since gone to their rewards.
Old man David. Rice and his brother
Ben; old man Charlie Rice and his
brother John; old man William Rice
and his brothers Jessie and Aaron.
It was my pleasure in young- days
to have business transactions with
these old gentlemen, or most of tnem,
and it affords me the greatest pleasure,
even at this late day, to say
that in all my long life I have never
met a truer and more honorable,
high toned, and broad minded peo
i -
pie.
I have not set out in this letter to
discuss the merits and demerits of
the people at large, but to tell you
the kind of people that lived in that
day and time, and let you draw your
own conclusions and make the comparisons
between the people of the
present day, and those of isixty-five
years ago. T.
While a member of the firm of D.
& H. B. Rice we sold from twenty to
twenty-five thousand dollars worth
of goods a year, and of this amount,
we collected from ninety-five to one
hundred cents on the dollar and not
with the assistance of liens and mortgages,
but alone from a disposition
on the part of the people to pay their
just debts. While I have taken occasion
to pay tribute to a few of my
old friends there were many others
having just as much merit in point of
honesty and integrity. But I was
more intimately associated with the
Rice family for the reason of being
connected with the firm of
D. & H. B. Rice, a firm of long
standing and the senior being
the oldest of the whole Rice family
of my acquaintance. If .you will
indulge me a little further I will
mention some of the names of the
old people whom I had the pleasure
of serving across the counter for
many years and who never failed to
pay ninety-five to one hundred cents
on the dollar of indebtedness: Jno.
Turner, John Hanberry, Linton Lee,
W. B. Dowling, D. Dowling, O. R.
Faust, James Milhous, Daniel Parler,
John Guess, Z. G. Graham, H. B. Tindall,
John Sojourner, Joe Kennerly,
Henry Holman, J. R. Walker, David
Felder, John Jennings, Jonathan Eas
terlin, John Fogie, uaniei *ogie, juaward
Hays, Riley Copeland, George
Riley Daniel Kittrell, Sr., Daniel Zeigler,
Holman Zeigler, John Zeigler,
Jno. Rickenbacl^er, Hardy Tant, Jack
Barnes and his brothers William and
Dariing. This was the class of people
with many others of the same
type, that made up the list of the patrons
of D. & H. B. Rice and that
paid promptly in the fall just as I
have said before ninety-five to one
hundred cents on the dollar. Most
of these old people labored on the
farm and their wives and daughters
did most of the house work, bought
most of their sugar, coffee and homespun,
with eggs and chickens, and
no wife or daughter ever felt any
disgrace to go to the store and trade
or barter for what they wished for
the family.
During the spring and summer we
bought and shipped to Charleston
hundreds of dozens of eggs, and
chickens in proportion, and it was
this sort of trade furnished-by the
house wife, a helpmate, that enabled
the farmer to meet his yearly obligations
and enjoy the sweets of the family
fire side unmolested by the Sheriff
or other officers of the law. Words
are inadequate to express the pleasure
of visiting these country homes,
every inmate of the home meeting
you with a spirit of welcome, no one
would spurn you or turn their face
to keep from greeting you. They
were taught politeness and good
manners from the cradle, which are
two of the cheapest commodities ever
enjoyed by a people. All good,
honest people were at par and on the
same footing; little or no money
1 made no difference in the standing
of the people. #
Suffice it to say that they needed
no homestead or lien law to protect
their interests, but preferring honesty
upon which they could build a
lasting monument to their respective
memories. T. J. COUNTS.
Bamberg. S. C. July 4, 1908.
SHOT AT A DOG.
Men Chasing Mad Canine Killed a
Small Boy.
Wheeling, W. Va., July 18.?
Charles Snodgrass, a 9-year-old
boy was shot to death by Clinton Finley
while Finley and several other
men were chasing a mad dog. The
Snodgrass boy was standing on the
bridge at Glenn Run when he heard
the cry of "mad dog." He climbed
on the girders of the bridge, and
while there was struck by a bullet
that Finley fired at the dog. *
The boy dropped into the creek,
and when the body was recovered it
was thought he had fallen from the
bridge and drowned. It was only
when an examination was being made
of the body by an undertaker that
the bullet wound was discovered.
Lightning Burns Church.
t .mirprir. .Tulv 15.?During the
progress of an electrical storm here
this afternoon, Bethel African Methodist
church was set on fire by lightning
and within less than an hour
the building was in ashes. By reason
of a defective hose and low pressure
of water the fire company was
unable to cope with the flames. The
building was a wooden structure and
the loss is placed at $1,500 with no
insurance.
Gave Her Another Umbrella.
Rock Hill, July 18.?Dr. S. H.
Ezell, of Van Wyck, was in the city
yesterday upon rather unusual business.
He came in behalf of citizens
of Van Wyck and brought with him
a beautiful and costly umbrella which
he presented to Mrs. L. E. Cauthen,!
of this city, as a gift from these citizens
in token of their appreciation
of her pluck. It will be remembered j
that a few weeks ago Mrs. Cauthen
called upon a prominent lawyer of
Lancaster and broke her umbrella
upon his person in resentment of
treatment at his hands while she f&s
under cross-examination as a witness
in a case then on trial. These citizens
of Van Wyck sympathized with
Mrs. Cauthen and her cause and ap*
predated her spirit. For that reason
they replaced ner DroKen umorena;
with a handsome new one.
'Squire Bailes Skips Out.
Rock Hill, July 18.?The notorious j
"marrying squire," Willard O. Bailes
of Fort Mill Township, has skipped
the country, heading for, Oklahoma.
It will be remembered that he attained
his reputation as a Gretna
Green artist some years ago while
holding a commission as notary public.
He advertised for business, getting
out a business card with his picture
on one side and his price list on
the other. In this list were set forth
the many different styles and ways
that he employed from a plain everyday
knot to the most elaborate affair
with trimmings at prices to suit the
interested party or parties and his or
their pocketbook. Many were the
couples that Bailes united in matrimony.
However expert he was a knottyer,
Bailes got into trouble?domestic
trouble?and things went on until
he became an attraction to the
grand jury. When the sheriff went
with a warrant for his arrest Bailes
had skipped.
Sarions Affrays in Anderson.
Anderson, July 19.?Anderson
county had two fighting scrapes yesterday
afternoon which will probably
result in the Iqss of t^vo lives. Two
white men, Baz Williams, aged 21,
and D. C. French, aged 24, are in
the county jail awaiting announcements
of the deaths of each of their
victims.
Williams and his father-in-law,
Henry Martin, both of whom live
near Denver, were in Anderson yesterday.
They drank nearly two
quarts of whiskey, according to Williams's
admission. When they arrived
at Martin's home near sundown
Williams and his wife, who was
Miss Margie Martin, began scuffling
in the yard at the side of the house.
Martin evidently thought that Williams
was fighting her, and he advanced
on Williams with an iron rod.
Williams says that Martin hit him
across the head with the rod, when
he (Williams) commenced running
to get out of the way. Martin followed
him, says Williams, and while
running Williams picked up a shovel
and hit Martin across the head, crushing
the skull. Williams then got his
wife, Martin's daughter, and walked
to his home, one mile, distant, tie
was surprised while in bed by officers
this morning. He did not resist arrest.
The attending physician says
that Martin is in a dying condition
and he expects death at any minute.
French shot a negro, Will Super,
three times with a .32 Smith & Wesson
pistol. French runs a livery stable
in Williamston and Super had
been doing some work for him. Super
came to the stables yesterday
afternoon in a drunken condition and
became incensed at some of French's
words. French admits he had been
drinking. Super advanced on French,
so the latter says, with an opened
knife. French received several gashes
in his clothes and hat and one wound
in his arm. He had a .22 pistol in
his pocket and drew it as Super was
making other advances. He shot
three times, each bullet taking effect
in Super's stomach. French
came to the city last night with his
uncle, W. -A. Cooley, and surrendered
to Sheriff Green. The negro is in
a dying condition and his death is
expected before to-morrow morning.
+
i
SPECIAL NOTICES.
Advertisements Under this Head 25c
For 25 Words or Less.
Eggs Wanted?Highest cash prices
paid for fresh eggs by Free & Co.,
Bamberg, S. C.
Stolen?A pointer dog, white, with
liver colored spots on body and head;
named Sport. Reward of ten dollars
for return of dog and evidence to
convict thief. J. H. MURPHY.
Wanted?Several active, energetic,
reliable men to sell an article of general
use. No family can do well without
it. Only reliable men need apply.
Address Quick, care the Herald.
NOTICE TO PENSIONERS.
All Confederate soldiers and sailors
of the late war are required by law to
meet in their respective townships on
the third Saturday in August, at four
o'clock in the afternoon, and after
organizing they will elect one of their
number, who is not a pensioner, to
meet in the court house on the first
Monday in September for the purpose
of electing a pension board for
the county.
J. B. HUNTER,
Chairman County Pension Board.
Bamberg, S. C.,_ August 4, 1908.
I PORTABLE AND STATIONARY
Engines,
AND BOILERS
saw, Lftio ana smngie ahub mjevwrB,
Ptunps and Fittings, w ood Saws, Splitters,
Shafts, Pulleys, Belting, Gasoline Engines
UAR0B5T0CK LOMBARD
Foundry, Machine, Boiler Works, Supply Store
AUGUSTA, GA.
University of South Carolina.
Wide range of choice in scientific,
literary, graduate, and professional
courses, leading to degrees of Bachelor
of Arts, Bachelor of Science,
Licentiate of Instruction, Bachelor
of Laws, Master of Arts, Civil Engineer,
and Electrical Engineer.
Well equipped laboratories, library
of over 40,000 volumes.
Expenses moderate?many students
make their own expenses.
' Next session (104th) begins September
23rd, 1908.
For announcement write to the
President, Columbia, S. C.
IID. J. DELkl
I CARRIAGE WORKS |
I ANYTHING ON WHEELS |
Delivery wagons, one and two I
horse farm wagoift, ice wag- I
ons, log carts, sewing machine I
wagons, or any kind of special I
work built to order on short I
notice. First-class repair and I
.paint shop, does pipe work and |
carries piping and fixtures, I
brass fittings, engine supplies, I
injectors, steam gauges, en- I
gine oils, large stock of bug- ' B
gies, harness, lap robes and I
whips for sale cheap. All work I
' nn/J OOflQ_, fl
Will ue ttppic^wvcu aim mviufaction
guaranteed
'
D. J. DELK
BAMBERG, S. C.
J. H. DIXON
Machinist and Engineer
General Repair Shop.
We repair all kinds of machinery
and carry a full line of Pipe, Pipe Fittings,
Valves, Injectors, Lubricators,
Oilers, etc. Bring your engine and
have the cylinder bored. Make It run
like new and give you more power.
Bring your cotton gins and press parts
and nave them repaired before the
busy season. A stitch In time saver
nine. We repair saw mills, grist mills,
cane mills; In fact we rim a hospital
for slek and disordered machinery.
Bring it In and have it cured. Gas engines
and automobile enginecyllnders
- *
borea, ana new uiBiAixxD auu _
that won't leak. Gives you more I
power and better efficiency. We re
pair and charge storage batteries.
Call when in trouble and see what we
can da ,m
I SHOP AT COTTON MILL I
ROAD NOTICE.
Road overseers are hereby requested
to warn out the road hands at
once and put the roads in good condition.
The roads in some places
need working badly, and we cannot
have good highways unless they are
kept up. Do not delay, but go to
work at once. By order of the board
of county commissioners.
J. B. KEARSE,
H. D. FREE, County Supervisor.
Clerk of Board.
Bamberg, S. C., July 21st, 1908.
Typewriter ribbons, 50 cents each,
at The Herald Book Store. We have
ribbons for the Oliver, Monarch,
Underwood, Hammond, L. C. Smith,
Fox, and Remington.
- \
/ _ ; . V . : J ' ;
I South Carolina Co=
19th Session Will Begin
Handsome Brick Building, coi
Music Rooms, Art Studio, P
Society Halls, Gymnasium, Dii
same roof. Hot and Cold Wat
ing is heated by steam. Thous
putting in up-to-date furnitun
Large Faculty, representing
The President and ten teachers i
Thorough Course of Study, I
S., and A. B.
Strong departments of Musi
Practical Business Courses
I Bookkeeping.
Strict Military Regulations <
Our Graduates are always ir
The general verdict is that o
ment of character as well as in
In competitive examinations
scholarships, our students have
Patrons and former students
every Southern State.
Believing that personal att<
greatest factor in the training <
number of boarding students, t
Student to receive the personal
Expenses very reasonable.
For application blanks, catalc
PRFS F N
| | EDGEFIELD
4 The Carlisle
I Bamberg, .
A first-class school for boyi
^ a perlenced teachers. Cnuj
*? Elocution. Excellent hea
sickness past two years.
gA, Bath, Military Discipline, 1
^ Write for catalogue
f W. S. HOOAr
InEhrhardt Bai
?| BHRHARDT till
^ Capital Stc
I We do general Danamg dui
We are backed by a strong
every safety. We allow yoi
savings department. We
courtesy consistent with goo
of individuals, firms, and c
and shall be pleased to mec
contemplate making changei
J. L. COPELAND, J. C. I
President. Vice I
^ ^ ^ ^ ^
gjil.-ilirli g-a.- n:ir. iTi rt: si: if
I AUGUfi
8? |
EXCURSK
jg DEM
? Norfolk, Va., (For Sea
niington, N. C., ( Wrigt
gg way, S. C., (Myrtle Bei
? * Through Pullman
; No. 82 Direct to Norfi
? A. M. August 15th.- Ti
j| f ' any Train Until Septei
? Your Party and Go...
\ I Atlantic
{ ; FOR RESERVATION OR
r j W. J. CRAIG,
f* - Passenger Traffic Manager
f? WILM3>
f
&&&&&&&&&&&&
AN OPPC
Fine Farms Will
One hundred acres, almost in cor
porate limits of Bamberg. Abou
sixty acres in high sfhte of cultiva
tion. CroDS in sight. Corn (not oi
Williamson plan) about thirty bush
els per acre. Cotton, with only abou
five hundred pounds fertilizer pe
acre, very nearly or quite a bale pe:
acre.
Eighty-five acres; about sixty-fiv<
acres in good state of cultivation
One four-room and one three-roon
tenant house; one shallow and tw<
deep wells of good water. Crop:
good. Only about one mile North o
Bamberg.
Thirty-six acre^, about twenty-fivi
open; no buildings. Crops in fai:
condition. This property lies onl:
about one mile from Bamberg.
1,<"1 mnnv lnpffpr farms, con
maV % V* J wummrnmmj ,
taining from 250 to 1,500 acres, ly
ing from two to ten miles from Bam
berg, S. C., in this and Orangeburg
counties. Prices and terms on appli
cation.
CITY PROPERTIES FOR SALE.
One seven-room dwelling; barr
and stables and other outbuildings;
all recently built; wired for electru
lights; yard fenced; deep well ot
good water. The lot contains about
three acres. We are offering this foi
a limited time at only $2,000.01
J. T. C
Real Estate Agent
'CM .-J.
' ' ' v^v?
- " ?,
Educational Institute !!
> Thursday, Sept. 24th, 1908 ! j
ltaining 52 Bed Rooms, Class Rooms, I jl
arlors, Offices, Large Auditorium,
ling Room, Kitchen, etc., under the I 1
er on every floor. The entire build- 8 %
lands of dollars have been spent in ^
i and equipments.
the best Colleges and Universities. K a
live in the building with the students. 3 5
eadiilg to the Degrees of B. E., B. I I
c, Art and Expression.
?Stenography, Typewriting, and f 3
)bserved in all departments. * 5
1 demand. f S* - ;
ur Students show marked develop- 2 ?
for West Point, Annapolis and other 5 I
: always been eminently successful. I?
of the S. C. C. I. can be found in j r
mtion to the individual pupil is the 2 Iof
the young, we take only a limited tyt
hereby making it possible for each S g
i attention of the faculty. |
)g or any information, address S |
.K.BAILEY
SOUTH CAROLINA ] |
TJieS
- - - - South Carolina r
land girls. Strong faculty of ex- fcf
jual advantages in Music and
Ith?not a single case of serious As.Gymnasium,
Athletics, Shower j
Uniform Drees. H25U)0 per year. A|
V, Head Master
iking Company? , ;
x X X SOUTH CAROLINA f
>ck $20,000.00 8
siness, and solicit your account. |\g
Doara oi directors, lasunug juu bbv
a 4 per cent, on deposits in oar |A J
extend to our customers every K ' P-M
d banking. We receive accounts */M
lorporations on favorable terms, Rf Y;'*M
it or correspond with those who J?
3 or opening new accounts. 10
CINAKD, A. F. HENDERSON, W %||?
'resident. -Cashier. JV
;TrU14th| I
DN RATES|
MARK g
side Resorts) $10.5CL WilK ^ \|jj|^B
itsville Beach) $5.50. Con- A
ich) $5.$0 % X
Sleeping Cars on Train
oik, Arriving Norfolk 7:30 T
ickets Limited to Return on
tnber 1st, 1908. Make up * ? V;2i
i) -gy
Coast Line
ANY INFORMATION WRITE ] ?
T. C. WHITE, 11
General Passenger Agent .51 ;
fGTON, N. C. j
JRTUNTTV
Go At Panic Prices
Also five tenant houses; three with -y4
t ,four rooms each and two with two ^
- rooms; all in fair repair. This lot
i contains about four acres. Price oncx ??
- ly $1,100.00.
j; Also two open lots containing two _ Jf
acres, more or less. Will let these
go for only $250.00.
B Also one five-room house on Main /' -*
Street, with barn and stables; 4eep
" > x T ?X xx.X.l.fl Ann . BBS
J Weil OI good water. HUl uuuiaius vuc ;,r,
j acre, more or less. All in fair repair .
B and under fence. Price only..$1,260. ' *$
* One open lot on New Bridge Street,
measuring 105 feet front by about * ?
3 300 feet deep, by ninety feet, more.
r of less, wide on back. Pine site.for / \ /
7 a residence, and large enough for a
hotel, as it lies less than one hun- i
_ dred yards from depot. Price and l
. terms on application. "e
'-ft-.**!
Also one open lot on Church Street, J:\
> measuring ninety-eight feet front and '
- back by 53% feet deep. Will go at
a bargain. Price and terms on appli- >'j^
cation.
i Also a block of lots on Railroad ' :%
; Avenue, West, containing ten acres,
i more or less. About five acres of pe?
nan trpps in hoflfine. An ODDOrtunl
t ty for young men to invest in and der
velop. Only the one chance. Price
> and terms on application.
)'NEAL
Bamberg, S. C.