University of South Carolina Libraries
! - 11 AUTO ACODMCHT Van Aim?t of IHtiuuilij Tragedy At Seaboard CYowing Following is a detailed account of the diatreasing tragedy near Hamlet whan an automobile plunged from a SB foot bridge to tbe railroad below, felling one man and fatally injuring others, brief mention of which was made in the last iaaue of The Herald: Hamlet, Feb. 10.?One person was killed and three seriously injured when an automobile, owned and operated by Mannie Shapiro, of Marlboro county, S. C., ran off the bridge crossing the Seaboard railroad three miles east of Hamlet about 2 o'clock this afternoon. Th. k.i J ? J~ a- ? iuu ui luge is ayproacnea on a heavy cnrve and the driver evidently lostvcontrol, Kbing off the side of the bridge, and the cor and occu* pants fell 35 feet to the railroad track below. G. F. Robertson, R. F. D. 3, Mnllory, S. C.,/was instantly killed, and his wife seriously injured. Mannie Shapiro is paralyzed from his waist down and is not expected to live. The young sister of Mrs. Robertson was seriously injured, but is expected to recover. Mrs. Robertson's two children, one aged about three years and the other three months, were injured. During the brief time the car hung over the edge of the bridge before taking the fatal plunge, Mau rice riesnman, or Baltimore, nephew of Shapiro, who was in the front seat with the driver, jumped out on the bridge and escaped injury. Sunday night the relatives of those injured had not been located, and no disposition had been made of the .body of Mr. Robertson. All of the ? injured were rushed to the Hamlet hospital immediately after the accident. About four weeks ago, Ben Ingram colored, ran off the same bridge and fell the distance of 35 feet, but with three weeks treatment at the hospital he was able to -go home. Today's accident was at the exact spot, and the railing which "was destroyed at the time of the first srccident had been replaced. The above is from Monday's Charlotte Observer. Mr. Shapiro came to this county about 15 years ago as a peddler. Later he merchandised at Dunbar, and moved a few years ago to Marlboro station, where he has been merchandising and farming. Mr. Robertson was the overseer nn hlo farm Uai lary, in the above dispatch, is evidently an error. They are from Marlboro station, Bennettsville, R. F. D. 2. The bridge where the accident occurred, is a very dangerous place. The "road runs nearly parrallel with the railroad, and the bridge is built ff ~~ "Speec Mor JUDGE BY New Suits. Nc Smart trim-lookii garments. Even urn Right now, with pr Here tor your chi Worth emphasizing Materials ofPoin ? f eatured are the uality and freshr H There is a most d perhaps just a little act/crc uuiin, per nap Colors are mouse, bi OUR FAMOUS TR1MM satin and straw combina y' ? HMM across the railroad, aa that there are sharp tura* la the road at both ends of the bridge. At oae ead there la also a hoary grade, going ap to the bridge, which causes many automobile drivers to spurt up ia order to go up to the bridge on high gear. The speed and the onarp torn caused the car to skid on the bridge, even after brakes were applied. It Is thought that Mr. Shapiro's car and the negro's, slided against the railing and broke it down. It is unsafe to approach the KrMoro ?WAO?V# 1/vm WI iUftO VAVVfiV V** IUW gc?i. If this bridge is not changed, the railroad and county are liable to have many damage suits. The road chould be changed so as to extend straight from the bridge for some distance, or else the side railings should be made strong enough to resist the impact of a skidding car. Weak railings, put up merely for ornament, are more dangerous than none at all. The editor of The Advocate talked ; to Hamlet hospital late Wednesday afternoon and was informed that Mr. Shapiro's back was broken, and he was in a very critical condition, with little chance of recovery. Mrs. Robertson and her sister and one of the children were doing very well but the other child was in a serious condition.?Pee Dee Advocate. "ARMORED HOUND" i As an Offensive Weapon "Tanks" J. Reputation is Now Assured. With the French Armies in the Field, Dec. 26 (By Mail).?The fuU.ure of the "tank" as an offensive weapon in battle is assured. French troops who have followed the chriotts of assault into the most recent battles on this front have ceased to speak of them in elephantine terms or to compare them with the lubbering, wallowing landships. The tank today is the armored hound j ! Of the chase. In narks lika (hp fox! hunt they dash ahead of the poilu hunters, keeping to the trail, exploring the ground ahead and when necessary digging the fox from his lair. When an official communique deal- ! | ing with a French victory told of the | capture of an entire German regimen- ' tal staff, it was a pack of armored ' hounds that dashed up a crest and collared the staff before the arrival j of the troops. When the same com-j munique announced the capture of dozens of German guns, it was again the hounds that took their major part. German gunners, like foxes, knowing the hound of old abandoned their weapons and scurried off through the'brush. Again a pack of "tanks," not satis- j fled to have led the' infantry to its j fixed objective, loped ahead among i the bewildered enemy and after showing their teeth over an area of sev-, \ Up"Febr PRESENT-DAY :w Coats. New Dr< ig suits of spring weight der normal conditions thi ices steadily rising, they :>sing are 25 styles, copies r. st Twill, French Serge, Ge new Bustle Suits, Smart i w less. Linings are pea Dresses of S }ecidedly practical note ai 1 more soberly; and the re s, what might be called tl scuit,canard blue, tan, seagull, There are plei ED HATS, Real Millinery Gen iftions and all straw, many singl HUNDREDS which had fixed the aiTum to go far ud bo torthor. 4 not her pack, l this time behind the infantry, arrived 1 to find the poUus hold up by MToral i machine guns. The armored hounds dashed on and literally digging the machine guns from their well concealed lain, also literally oblterated the "foxes" who serred them and the attacking were swept on with the ( "hounds" in the lead. { Not His Job. '] i "I'm not supposed to do that," said j he \ When an extra task he chanced to ( see; ' "Thut'8 not my job. and it's not my care, So I'll pass it by and leave it there." j Ana tne boss who gave him his weekly pay Lost more than his wages on him that day. "I'm not supposed to do that," he said, 1 "That duty belongs to Jim or Fred." So a little task that M as in his way I That he could have handled without delay Was left unfinished; the way was paved For a heavy loss he could have saved. And time went on and he kept hisj place ! But he never altered his easy pace, ' And folks remarked on how well he knew The line of the task he was hired to do; For never once was he known to turn His hands to things not of his concern. But there in his foolish rut he stayed And for all he did he was fairly paid, But he was never worth a dollar or more Than he got for his toil when the week was o'er; For he knew too well when his work was through And he's done all he was hired to do. If you want to grow in this world, g young man, You must do every day all the work you can; N If you find a task, though it's not your bit, , And it should be done, take care of it; ( And you'll never conquer or rise if , you , Do only the things you're supposed t to do. ?Edgar A. Guest, in Detroit Free Press. t Subscribe to the Dillon Herald | uary Business V faction First lSS De THE DEPEND NEW SPF T TT1? CT A-XTT\ A nnr Li^uiy o i miuaivUvi esses, New Hats. fabrics, in style ano^jnoc ise suits would be considi. are incomparable valves. d from models sold reguU i ibardine, and Poplin in A Russian Blouse Effects, E deccygne or soft silks erge and Jersey Clol yout the new dresses for S suit, as new modes indict le most p\easing t(happy i pearl, rookie and navy blue; a lty of Drezwellsley dresses ami as at $4.95 to $7.50. Crept le or double faced with crepe < OF DASHING NEW READ1 J" . . . TAiro > ^' f |Hr7TZT^LSHBEHBBe9KS9HBZB9B Following is a list of Dillon County man rejected by the Medical Advisory Board a# Columbia on account of phyrtcal disabilities: W. J. Crowley. Houston Manning. Arch Brlgman. juage joe uaoen imvii spent won- j lay in Columbia in conference with 3ov. Manning and other probate ' judges in regard to the new whiskey law. The new law increases the responsibility of the judges of probate m issuing certificates for whiskey. Statement of The Ownership, Management, Circulation, Etc., Required by the Act of Congress ok' August 24, 1912. Df The Dillon Herald published weekly at Dillon, S. C., for October, 1917. . State of South Carolina, County of Dillon, ss: Before me, a Notary Public in and for the State and county' aforesaid, personally apeared A. B. Jordan, who, * laving, been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he is the iwner of The Dillon Herald, and that Lhe following, is, to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true statenent of the ownership, management (and if a daily paper, the circulation), etc., of the aforesaid publication for the date shown in the above j :aption, required by the Act of \ugust 24, 1912, embodied in sec-' ion 443, Postal Daws and Regula-j ion3, printed on the reverse of this; orm, to wit: I 1. That the names and addresses of ; he publisher, editor, managing edi-1 or, managing editor, and business j nanagers are: Publisher A. B. Jordan, Dillon, S. Editor A. B. Jordan, Dillon, S. C. Managing Editor A. B. Jordan, Dilon, S. C. 2. That the owners are: (Give < lames and addresses of individual >wner8, or, if a corporation, give its I lame and the names and addresses of J itockholders owning or hold 1 per j ent or more of the total amount of ! itock.) Herald Publishing Co., Dillon, S. C. j A. B. Jordon, Dillon, S. C. D. S. Allen, Dillon, S. C. 3. That the known bondholders, nortgagees, and other security hold;rs owning or holding 1 per cent or nore or total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities are: (If here are none, so state.): None. A. B. JORDAN, Sworn to and subscribed before me j iiib inn uay 01 r eoruary, laiH. L. C. BRADDY, Jr., Copy Notary Public. ftth Needed Go< partm ABLE STORE UNG SUITS i, They are worth 5 iels that tipify the latest ired (ftop notched*' valm irly at $35.00; all the n ew Grey, Beige, Tan, Poi Waided, Pleated, Belted < and r?rp r _ . w gMMf U(I??CU th Have the Center \pring. The woman of i ite, ii the toning down oi nedium9 9 of styles that / nanv m?<l* ? ? ...2*1- * -?- * uuu v uiqiic uwkd ioqcd or n )ng them at $15.00 $17.50 \ 5 faced hats-?hats with entir or silk, trimmed with ribbons, f-TO-WEAR HATS AT $\. Hi CT? >nv.'< a the hm that pay*. It she does tot lay, kill bar, hot before you kill i?r lire her B. . Thomas' Poultry lemedy twice a day for a veek tad hen you will not kill her for ales rill be paying you a profit. It hot >nly makes hens lay but it is a rem>dy for Cholera, Roup, and Gapes. Ve guarantee it to cure or we round your money.?For sale by Pee Dee Cash Store.?Feb 18. ??mfcai ... ..._.^, :..JF* ijfcgMKflr >: ^^^SB^yflQVSHDBHBHnHHH ^ RELEASING THE BOMB?"7 Actual Scene Enlarged from t AND SOUL STIR "The. Z.eppelit A monster screen version of Gripping Drama, Portraying the KAISERISM. A Flash of lurid red! An earof frenzied cries from the throat Zeppelin, mortally wounded by ward the shell-swept earth, flar meteor. That's the tremendous clima> RAID," THO'S. H. INCE'S advancing cause of Democratic i pire, in whiih for the fifst time figure. SEE IT AT Everybod Monday or Wcdnesdaj AllmiMIMK A Jmll nuuuMiwu r&uuu Coming: Monday March 4, HI BRONSON HOWARD'S THROUGH" 8000 feet of thrill: ods at Special Lent S 535.00, yet our pr 1 word in womans fas hi ? among any suits at thi materials and linings ar lu Blue, Copenhagen, C and Trimmed styles all for a full seasons i of the Stage vashion will dress as art f the frivolous and the e 4 ias appeared in years. rimming in contrasting color 120.00 $25.00 e crepe brims; silk faced h flowers, fruits and ornamei 95 AND UP ~ 'v * ^ ^ Iod county km from fll.OM to 000 to place ot tiHItirti t Vawi^H for a ptortod bf U'mootbn or loafli&f8$M| You are inTttod t> itbnlt Win V\- y a| aid money to tite utardpH once. - HHH| JNO. R. WATSON. Treae. Dillon OraW-^&S 2-ai->t. > - Jl JSggBSBtt^B^B^M>* :*^ reSM^BI ", * v9 <^H P*^; .^H 'vv. v^H HE. ZEPPELIN'8 LA8T RAID." ^ I he film in THE SENSATIONAL :, RING SPECTACLE i's Last Raid99 G. GARDNER. SULLIVAN'S - ! Triumph of DEMOCRACY over splitting roar! A deafening chorus s of doomed men! And the mighty an enternal explosion, plunges toning and smoking like a giant c in "THE ZEPPELIN'S LAST mamoth spectacle, portraying the evolution through an enslaved emon record a Zeppeliri is the central - if* \ *** -5. ly? Theatre | r, February 25tb or 27th i ts 25c Children 15c . F 7RRF.KT R AWT TMenw i-lfcr IU \ Mightiest Melodrama "COM^ \ . y a \3 Prices?Satis* tore \ct> ic II ?w iw> j onable ready-to-wear ; same moderate cost. e guaranteed, a fact Ween, Navy and Black of stricking individvear. All Sizes. Utically as ever, but mbelishment of the 11 * ats in caterpillar braid, II I ''iv