Dies in Florida from Result of Quack’s Medicine. . . C.P. Nance Was Given an Overdose of a Powerful Medicine for a Disease Which Was Not Afflicted. . . Doctor Arrested on Murder Charge. . . Body Was Brought Back to Boardman and Buried in the Family Burial Ground Friday
C.P. Nance, formerly of near Cerro Gordo, died in Tampa, Vla., last Wednesday as the result of treatment by an unlicensed druggist of that place practicing as a physician. Nance’s death has been the cause of the arrest of the malpractioner who will be prosecuted by state authorities of Florida.
Nancy was born and raised in Columbus county near Cerro Gordo and had been in Florida since last September. He was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. R.J. Nance. His brother, D.L. Nace of near Boardman, was in Tampa during the illness and death of the victim, whose body was brought back to this county and buried at Macedonia in the family burial ground Friday. He is survived by three brothers and sisters.
Following is the account of the affair as it appeared prominently in The Tampa Morning Telegraph:
C.P. Nance, 1535 ½ Franklin street, employe of the Atlantic Coast Line railway, is in Gordon Keller hospital, and T.C. Whitehurst, owner of a drug store at 1546 Franklin Street is confined in the county jail, alleged to have administered to Nance by injection an overdose of a powerful medicine. Nance is expected to die.
Attaches of the hospital stated last night Nance has been paralyzed and in an unconscious state for three days as result of the injection. They expressed belief he could not live through the night. His condition was steadily growing worse, they said.
Allege Maltreatment
Nance was “treated” for a serious social disease though he was suffering only from the effect of poison ivy and had neve had a disease of the kind for which the medicine is used, his relatives said last night.
Whitehurst was arrested yesterday afternoon by Deputy Sheriff Haston Taylor after a warrant had been issued for him, charging practice of medicine without license.
Sheriff L.M. Hiers said last night at Whitehurst will be held in the county jail without bond, pending the outcome of Nance’s condition. In the event of his death, charges of second degree murder or manslaughter will be preferred against the druggist, authorities stated.
No Medical License
Dr. W.M. Rowlett of Tampa, secretary of the state board of medical examiners, stated last night that Whitehurst has no license to practice in this state, and that he had personally warned him against any attempt to practice or prescribe medicine here. Other physicians stated that Whitehurst is not a licensed physician in any state, and doubt was expressed that he is a registered druggist.
Charges will be preferred against him by the Hillsborough County Medical Association, pending the outcome of Nance’s case and possibly of criminal action, it was stated last night.
Evidence that on a previous occasion Whitehurst prescribed medicine for a man named Cohen had been obtained by the local medical society, it was stated last night.
From the front page of The News Reporter, Whiteville, N.C., Thursday, May 27, 1926
newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn85042236/1926-05-27/ed-1/seq-1/