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DROWN KD IN WATKRKK Lancaster Pharmacist l/0*e? Life While Hunting at Benvw Oeek (Tuesday's i^ncaslei Now*) Lancaster wa.<? shocked and deeply distressed Friday night when word reached the city from Liberty Hill thot Tom Doster had lost his life on ? hunting trip ut the mouth of Beaver creek during the afternoon. The news spread ranidly ^and soon groups of people could hi' seen dis cussing the tragedy, the facts of which were not available until a late hour Friday night. The facts and circumstance* sur rounding the unfortunate affair are substantially these as reported. sieve C. Williams and Dr. Thomas K. I^oster both of X*neaster, who were great friends and devotees to hunting and fishing, had gone down to the Catawba river a few miles be low Liberty Hill, where Beaver creek joins the river, to hunt, ducks. The men had left town early Friday morning, taking with them a steel boat, small detachable motor, a life j belt and other equipment. Dr. Doster had boarded the frail craft, about U o'clock and was engaged in setting out decoys along the shore. At the place where the men were preparing to shoot ducks the river is approxi mately a mile wide, caused by the hack-water from the Southern Power Company's dam. The river at this point is very deep- in some places and in others full of logs, snags, stumps and other obstructions. Dr. Doster had* gone down the river to drive the dueks, while Mr. Williams remained in the blind on shore. Several hun dred yards from where Dr. Doster was engaged in the drive he could hear the boat, but could not see it. The wind was brisk, whipping the water into rough swells and about this time the boat appeared to have capsized in the choppy waters. Dr. Doster was wearing heavy hunting togs and a life belt. He was able t<> get hold of the overturned boat. Mr. Williams, being unable to swim, could not ko lo his assistance, so he called to Dr. Doster to hold on until he could come to his rescue, In the meantime Dr. Doster attempted to swim to a log nearby in an effort to gain its support. On grasping the log it sank, plunging Dr. Doster's head down into the water and was not seen any more by Mr. Williams. He therefore hurried to nearby dwell-! Makes Your Car Freer Running Result: I to ll/% more mile* ; to the gallon Try ll.is remarkable new gear lubricant. Guaran teed by Alcmitc. Actual driving tests show it gives 1 to 1 >j more milt % |?er gallon of ga*. Due to i educed friction. Ixt us fill your gear# today with ALEMSTE Transmission Lubricant DeLOACHE MOTOR CO. Camden, S. C. ings to get help, hut being unable to find anyone, he made his way back to the road whore their car had been left parked. Ho proceeded to Liberty liil! where he securod tho a*?iHtanee of 0. A. Jones and his son and a Mr. Smith, an employee of the Southern Power Company. They accompanied MV. Williams to the nceno of the tragedy and assisted in recovering the body. Efforts at resuscitation were made but thi< unfortunate man had been in the water too long to be revived. Relative* were advised by telephone from Liberty Hill, the information reaching here about 7 o'clock, and the Mac key company's ambulance left immediately to meet the body and bring it to the undertaking parlors where an inquest was held and the remains embalmed. Mr. Williams is grieved and dis tressed beyond expression by the sud* denneas and sadness of the outcome of theii excursion and by reason of his inability to render his friend ef fective assistance. Dr. Doster had resided in Lancas ter since 190fi, coming hero to accept a position wth tho J. V. Mackey Co. Later he attended the medical col lege of Virginia, at Richmond, where he graduated in pharmacy and in 1909 the Lancaster Drug Company was organized and he became manager and prescription druggist in charge. He was associated in the drug busi ness with, the late R. C. McManus and in 191G was married to Miss Pearl McManus, second daughter of Dr. McManus, by whom he is sur vived. He also leaves two young. Burus, K. C. Doster and T. K. Doster, Jr. Other relatives surviving are a brother, .lack Doster, of North Caro lna; his mother-in-law, Mrs. McManus and sister-in-law, Miss Bess McManus of Lancaster, and Mrs. Kate. McManus Robinson of Chester. Upon the death of Dr. McManus in 1922, Dr. Doster was made presi dent of the J. F. Mackey Co., and by fine ability, steady habits and good judgment, the enterprises with which he was connected are among Lan caster's moM substantial business in terests. Dr. Doster was born at Alton, in Union county, N. C., the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Doster, who died ?many years ago, leaving him an or phan. He was reared by the late -J. Mat. Hough of Chester county with whom lie resided until he came to Lancaster to make hi- home. He was in his JlGth year. Funeral services were conducted Saturday afternoon at 'i o'clock from the late residence on Kim street in the presence of a very large gather ing of friends relatives and business associates of the deceased. Rev. J. S, C o pening, pastor of the Fir?t Bap tiM church, officiating. Interment followed in Westside cemetery. a Jung procession of car- bearing hun dred-. of .sorrowing friends and rela te*- to the gv.ive where, amid the assembled throng, the remains were tenderly laid. away, covered with a jna-s of most exquisite floral tribute**, *?athed in th?- nial rays of a kindly autumn -un. A brief -prayer in deep icsonat)t tone-, by Rev. W. Kilgo, imploring the lomfort of Almighty (Jod npon the bereaved family, closed the i cremoiiy and the gathering | tinned sorrowfully away. The cere mony of interment was beautifully and impressively carried out, assisted by Boyd Horton, Ira Jones, Jr., Steve Williams, Jack Lowery, Baxter Rob inson and l>;. <\ W. Morrison as pall- i i bearei -. Honot a:\ pallbi ai el .- : W. I'. Ben ? rtt, George W. Williams, Leroy Spring-. Dr. G. W I'oovev, Dr. J. D. Funderburk, I. T Wylie, R. S. Stewart. \mong the family connections whoj JEWELRY BARGAINS We have placed within one of our show windows a large number of parcels con taining- articles of merchandise (all new) ranging in value from SI. 00 to Slfi.00. To give our*customers an opportunit> to purchase a real bargain we are selling these parcels for SI .00 each, while they last. r Come in and purchase a cheap Christ mas present. Our guarantee is behind ?^aeh purchase. F. D. GOODALE JEWELER PROFITS FROM POULTRY IUk Return* Come From Henn That Lay In Winter, Bay a Hall J Clemson College, Nov. 17.-~The big profits come from hen# that lay egg* in the winter. Last week according to the New York market quotation*, the selected extra white shell eggs were Helling at eighty-five to eighty eight cents per dozen. It takes around ten cent* per dozen to ship white eggs to* the New York market from vSouth Carolina, this would leave about seventy-five cents to make a profit from. The New . York egg market may go a little higher than this, but these prices cannot be ex pected the year around, points out I). H. Hall, extension poultry hus bandman. A good average of forty cents per dozen for our eggs the year around will result in a profit from poultry. However, we canno't average forty cents if the hens' won't lay winter egg?. We must get these winter egg? if we want best results and a profit from poultry. Many people have the idea that poultry^ is a get-rich-quick scheme. If yoX? are starting in> the poultry business with .any such idea please get it out of your head. The poultry business requires 305 days each phase yet all three are interlaced and all make toward success with poultry. The first of these phases is the recognition of the fact that the poul try business requires 368 days each year of a man's t-ime. In leap%years it requires 3(56. Poultry cannot and will not thrive under haphazard feed ing and care. The next thing is to recognize the fact that the profits from each hen are small. One dollar per year is a fair profit for the aver age farmer and he would be satisfied with this. The last phase is knowl edge of the poultry business. In starting into anything we should study it from every angle and try to obtain a knowledge of every phase of the business. SCRAPS AND FACTS interesting Notes (fathered From Many Sources. Creek women more than thirty! year* of age, who can read and sign their names; will be permitted to vote in eommunal elections in 1927. Chicago's city council has passed | a resolution expressing a desire to secede from the State of Illinois to form a new state of Chicago. Hecau.se mackerel mysteriously ap pear and disappear, making mackerel fishing fluctuating, tlx* Bureau of Fisheries will study its movements and migration. A pair of rabbits brought to Laysan Island multiplied so rapidly that their progeny starved themselves to death by destroying all the green vegetation on the i?.!;ind. . ** The respect for property in the linn- of ,the I hike of Ro'lo was so great that a pair of gold bracelets re j mained hanging on an oak tree near Koucn, unguarded and untouched for three years. A license is necessary to drive a car in Washington, I). C., and to ac quire the license one must be able to show that he can drive safely. The fii-i known reference to the sugar beet found in an old catalog of plants grown in the time of King Merodackbal: d:in, who reigned from 722 to 711 K. were here io attend the funeral were: Mr. and Mrs. S. PeWitt Hough and Jack Doster of Monroe; Mr. and Mrs. \V. Steve Hough. M i. and Mrs. H. C. A>heraft and Mrs. A. Marsh, Charlotte; Mr. and Mrs. .James Rob inson, Chester; la muel Snipes. Ham N, C. MASTER'S SALE. Stair of South Carolina County of Kershaw Court of Common Pleas K Bessie Page, as Assignee, of Char lotte W. Kittrcll, Plaintiff against Mamif K. Smith, Defendant Under an order of iouit herein, dated July 24, 1923, I will sell to the highest bidder at public auction, for I cash, before the Kershaw County I Court House door, in Camden, in said I State, dur'"i; '1,r legal hours of sale on the lir^t Monday, beinjc the seventh i day of December 192H, tho followincr described real estate: "All that piece, parcel or lot of i ;and situate, lying and being in thr : State of South Carolina, County of ; Kershaw, and in Wateree Township, j containing two hundred and seventy i six (27fi) acres, more or less, bound i ed north by lands of M. F. Furrier i and N'ortheast by lands of Scipio Mickle; southeast by lands of J. M. Nelson and others, and by tract num ! ber six (6) of lands formerly of the ! estate of Mrs. Martha M?cklo; south ? west by Camden-Ridgeway Public Road; northwest by lands now or for ; merly of J. B. Nelson; the above be ing the same tract of land conveyed ' to Mamie K. Smith by J. L CJuv on 'January 3rd, 1920." R. H. HILTON, Master for Kevahaw County. November 19, 192f? 4 ANNOUNCEMENT . ??? ? ? '' \ ? .? . 1 ?'> ' We beg to announce that . we have purchased the Jewelry business of Mr. Grover L. Blackwell of Cam den, S. C., and are now offering the entire stock at radically reduced prices at his former place of busi ness. This is your opportunity to buy Jewelry, Silver ware, Watches, Clocks, China and Novelties at great navings. It will pay you to visit our store now and make your selections for Christmas and the Holi ? ; , ? . v ' V': ? + " ?' . ? ... r- .7/' ? days. We also wish to announce that our buyer is leaving at once for northern markets to buy a full line of merchandise and Christmas goods. Your patronage is solicited with the assurance that we will give you at all times prompt and courteous service. WATCHMAKING and JEWELRY REPAIRING A SPECIALTY Camden Jewelry Company * G. B. Moteley, Manager 1641 Broad St. Camden, S. C. Mrs. It. M. McCown, formerly of Florence and wife of R. M. McCown, for M years secretary of state of iSouth Carolina, died at her home in Tryon. N. C., Thursday morning and the body was carried to Florence for interment. Tho Fruitland Nurseries, of Au gusta, Ga., has purchased a 400-acre tract at Belvedere near North Au gusta for $39,400, which it will use for its new farm. Eight children were slightly eur and bruised on the Antioch road six miles from Sumter Mortday after noon when the Antioch school bo was struck by a Ford par, driven b> a Miss Capfell, and forced into th* ditch. Fortunately, no one was seri ously hurt; and a Miss Smith, wk* was the only one of the injured thftt was taken to a . hospital, was di? charged yesterday. SIX - FOUR CHRYSLER FOUR Touring Car ... . $ 896 Club Coupe 995 Conch 1,045 .Sedan 1,095 CHRYSLER SIX Phaeton $1,395 Coach 1,445 Roadster 1,626 Sedan 1,695 CHRYSLER SIX Royal Coupe 1,795 Brougham 1,865 Imperial Sedan ...... 1,995 Crown Imperial 2,095 All prices F. O. R. Detroit subject to current Federal excise tax. We invite you to call by and ride jn the Chrysler. Drive jft, see and feel for yourself its speed, its swift response, its pliability of power, its smooth operation and even more particularly its riding steadiness and comfort. Then, we believe, you will inevitably share in the enthusiasm of its tens of thousands of owners.