Newspaper Page Text
McDaniels
Medium weight yard wide V f\
Shirting Ginghams, Colored . 11 f (
Linene, Calico, Curtain M vr
Goods and Cotton Checks yard
Short lengths fine 40 inch
Sheeting, Pretty Ginghams S F"
Colored Linene, Best 36 I
inch Sheeting, Mattress
Ticking ....... yard
Beautiful Ginghams Percales, f
Galletas, Cotton Crepe,
Cretonnes, Pajama Checks S \*
yard
Fine 32 inch Ginghams, p-'c
Romper Cloth, Percales, f yard
Shirting Madras ....
Good Blue Shirting Cheviotsl^^ ar^
Pepperell 10-4 Unbleached C! C^y art j
Sheeting
Pepperell 9-4 Unbleached
Sheeting , ... TU
■ "> -■ 7-7 -v
A. R. McDaniel & Cos.
Five to Five St:res
Cartersville. . Calhoun
„ Once” Delivery
When you need some groceries,
want them in a hurry in fact,
you must Have them in time for
dinner—Phone 62 and they will,
be in your hands almost as soon as
you hang up the ’phone.
We maintain a special delivery service *
just to accomodate our customers. Try
it to-day on any special you may need.
GROCERIES-FEED STUFFS
ROGERS & COMPANY
117 W. Main St. Phone 62 Cartersville, Ga.
THE TRIBUNE-NEWS, CARTERSVILLE, GA., AUGUST 23, 1923.
STONER.
%
e !'• • we .ah? halving all t*ie rain we
j wish for now.
i Mr. K. M. Pen fie’d anil son Earl and
l ,r George Muse arrived home from
| nirmingham, Ala., Sunday.
Air. I)oc Bennett, of Chattanooga;
Mr. ami Mrs. Hoy Bennett anj Mr. and
Mrs. Will Kdwards, of Adairsville ) spent
the week-end with home folks at this
place.
Misses Agnes Stoner and Jewell
I .an drum spent one day last week in
Cartersville.
Hev. Scott Dodd is very ill at this
writing. We hope for him a speedy
recovery.
Misses Myrl and Willie Hose Evans
and T „ j r „ spent the week-end with.
relatives near Uarnsiey chapel
Mr. and Mrs. Nolan Coffey, of Law
rencebung, Tenn., are visiting their
mother, Mrs. P. B. Mayfield a nd other
relatives.
M.ss Agnes Stoner spent one night
last week with Mrs. Penfleld.
Mrs. John Woriey and her attractive
daughter, Miss Ruby, were visiting in
this Community lasi week,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Paris left Sun
day for a visit in Etowah, Tenn. They
motored through in their Ford.
The singing given at Mr. Mayfield’s
> .honor of his sister, Saturday night,
was enjoyed by a large crowd.
Willie Belle Stoner returned
home one day this week, after two
weeks’ visit in Rome, Ga.
Success to The Tribune-News.
a No Worms in a Healthy Child
All children troubled with Worms h&ve an un
healthy color, which indicates poor blood, and ass
role, there is more or less stomach disturbance.
GROVE S TASTELESS chill TONIC given regularly
for two or three weeks will enrich the blood, im
prove the digestion, and act as a General Strength
ening Tonic :o the whole system.ONature wii! Chen
throw off or dispel the worms, and thedhild will be
in perfect health. Pleasant to take. bOc per buttle.
IMAGINING HIMSELF GOD, S. C. MAN
EXECUTED FOR M ORDERING “SATAN”
The Greenwood (Sc.) Index-Jour
nnl recently published the following
editorial account oi a little known hap
pening ,'n the early history of South
Carolina;
That a man as a result of religious
derangement should imagine himself to
he God, and while under this hallucina
tion killed a fellow man under the de
lusion that the other -man was ’’the
and then be hanger for his
%rime in Charleston is an item of
South Carolina history not known so
commonly as Sergeant Jasper's saving
the flag, and a few others.
Bishop Francis Asbury, in his Jour
nal. on the occasion of being near
"Weaver's Ferry, on Saluda river," re
la,ed the tragic event as having been
told him by inhabitants of that region.
Avery small account of it is to be
found n German settlements a nd the
Lutheran church in the Carolinas by
Dr. G. D. Bernheim.
The than who was hung in Charles
ton was Jacob Weber, also referred to
as Jacob Weaver. In a signed con
fession, written in the Charleston jail
before he was hanged he signs his name
Jacob Waeber." The confession is dat
ed April 16, 1761. He was hanged not
long after.
Weber lived in what is now Lexing
ton county, not far from Saluda river—
hence Weaver’s, or Weber’s Ferry.
Around him were Swiss and German
Palatine settlers. The Palatines, it
will be recalled, were Germans who
through persecution had fled to Lon
don for refuge, and became so numer
ous that lying George paid a bounty of
so much per head to transport them to
•America, after having -assured them
they would be given lands of their own
in the new country. This was done
and many thousands came to South
Carolina under this plan.
It is a well-known fact to all stu
dents of theology that religious perse
cutions inevitably Ming religious hal
| lucinations. Witness the case of the
i Camisards in France. A hundred years
of persecution there failed to change
fthese plain people of the hills from
! Protestantism to Catholicism, but it
! did cease to develop gome of the strahg
est and weirdest hallucinations known
|to history. Stevenson, in his charming
notes on’ his journey through the land
| of the Camisards notes that in those
terrible days of persecution the Prot
| ostants were one and all beside their
! minds with zeal and sorrow. They
were all prpphets and prophestess^s.
I Children at the breast would exhort
i heir parents to good works. “A child
j of 15 months at Quissac spoke from its
mother’s arms agitated and sobbing,
I distinctly'and with a loud voice.” Mar
shall Villars has seen a town where all
the women had seemed possessed by
the devil and had trembling fits and
uttered prophecies ujron the streets.
And it was not only women and chil
dren. Stalwart, dangerous fellows
! used to swing the sickle or to wield
| the forest axe were likewise shaken
I with strange paroxysms, a iid spoke ar-
I acles with sobs and streaming tears.
This condition in France among the
! Camisards was lout a sample qf what
I was to be found in any land where the
! people suffered religious persecution.
In South Carolina the poor palatines
j wore not persecuted, but they had been
; in their native land, and having come
J*to this new and strange country, sepa
| rated by thousands of miles much of
the distancejbeing across the ocean it
self, no wonder the r simple minds
j were distracted. ,
Jacob Weber was the father of a sect
\Vhich took his name and continued to
spread even after he had been hung.
Will You Be Waitin'?
When Lumber Goes Up?
; e do not say lumber is going up, but our prediction is lumber
will advance at least 10 per cent before October 1. It has a greater
chance of going up than down, for lumber today at our yard is 50 per
cent below’the peak of prices of 1920.
This is no wild guess, but facts, and those who are going to build
tieed not wait longer for the price of lumber to come down—for if they
do they are only kidding themselves and paying good money for rent,
when they could have their own hoipe to live in in a short time.
With Ameica 800,000 homes short, and building going on every
where, do you think for one minute that lumber will be any cheaper?
We who are lucky enough to live in the good old state of Georgia
are paying less for our lumber than most anywhere else in the whole of
America. So take our word for it that lumber is as cheap as you will
see it—and go on with your building as before.
Delay is the Enemy of Success
BUILD NOW
L. F. Shaw $ Sons Cos.
Phone 245
though hie fellows did not continue his
fatal hallucination of believing that
any one of them was God. It is said
the sect spread from South to North
Carolina, thence into* Maryland end |
Virgin a. Though the heresy took the
name of Weberites, Dr, Mulhenberg, in I
his account says -that the founder o.
the sect was one Peter Schmidt. Weber
himself was a Swiss. . He first became
an ex-horter—the settlers had a sermon
from a visiting clergyman about every
twelve weeks. Weber pretended to be
God the Father, another the Son, and
a third the Holy Spirit; and the pre
tended father having quarreled w.th
the pretentefl son, repudiated thy pre
tended son, chained him in the forest,
and finally fathered his gang, who beat
and trampled the poor man until he
died; he is reported also to have killed
the pretended holy ghost in bed. A
report of these circumstances having
reached the authorities in Charleston,
the militia was ordered to arrest the
pretended detity when he was tried,
condemned and executed upon the gal
lows.
Dr. Hazelius tells of how Weaver as
leader personated Christ; another the
Holy Spirit; a certain woman, the wife
of Weaver, the Virgin Mary, and one
poor fellow was doomed to represent
Satan. He‘says excess followed excess
until,at lengtH Weaver (Weber), repre
sent ing. either Christ or God, ordered, in
virtue of his dignity, that Satan should
be chained in a hole in the ground, and
finally that he should be destroyed.
For this purpose they met, placed the
unfortunate man in a bed, covered him
with pillows, on which some seated
themselves, while others stamped their
feet on the bed until the life of the
man became extinct. The corpse was
then taken out of bed and thrown into
! a burning pile of wood, to be consumed
into ashes.
Weaver (Weber) was tfied and sen
tenced to be hung. His wife was par-
I doned. He was hung some time after
j April 16, 176}, in Charleston,
i It is impossible to realize at this day
I and time that such a thing could have
| happened in South Carolina.
A Woman’s Way
‘‘l tried for four months to get my
wife to try Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy,
which I know had helped a friend of
m ne who also suffered from stomach
trouble. She insisted her case was
different. 1 finally had to bribe her
with anew dress. The first dose pro
duced remarkable results, clearing up
her complexion and restoring her ap
petite. She can now eat things she
hadn t been able to tor many years. ’
It is a simple, harmless preparation
thht removes the catarrhal mucus from
the intestinal tract and allays the in
flammation which causes practically all
stomach, liver and intestinal ailments,
including appendicitis. One dose will
convince or money refunded. Young
Bros. Drug Cos., and druggists every
where. —adv.
BETHEL
We are needing rain very badly at
this writing.
The singing school will close Friday.
Everybody is invited to come out to the
church (this) Friday night for the clog
ing exercises.
Rev. H. H. Popham is carrying on his
rpeeting at "Pine , Grove church this
week. •
Miss Lucile Bayard spent one day
last w T eek with Misses Alien and Luna
Rutledge.
Mr." and Mrs. Wiley Lovell, of Rome,
is spending this week with Mrs. Par
ham.
Mr. P, L. Roberson and family spent
Sunday‘with Mr. Arthur Brooks and
family.
Mr. Henry HolUlnd and family were
Produces Wore Eggs At Less Cost
If you want to gather eggs by the dozens where you
now get only two or three, try The Ful-O-Pep Way of
feeding and you’ll get them.
Thousands of poultry raisers are doing it right along —
you can do it too if you’ll feed your layers
PUL-O-PED
JL DRY MASH JL
f LAYING GRADE
- —- -
BARTOW FERTILIZER and FEED CO. r
Phone 58 “We Deliver” Phone 58
visiting Mr. Wes Morgan and family
Saturday night and Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. freeman Popham and
children spent Saturday and Sunday
with Ai ;*. adu Mrs. i-A-wie VVi K.erson, of
Rome.
Mr. and Airs. Gilbert Roberson spent
The \)
Spot!
vjglpSSf/ Moyq Para Sugar
/ 01Q Savior
Onra-Cola
The Great Egg Producing Feed
Ful-O-Pep Dry Mash makes eggs be
cause it is the raw material from which eggs
are made —it’s a combination' of green
feed, animal feed and high protein feed;
contains just the right minerals and it sure
does produce the eggs. The results our
patrons are getting who feed Ful-O-Pep
Dry Mash prove it conclusively. Keep
Ful-O-Pep Dry Mash before your hens all
the time and you’ll get eggs in abundance.
Manufactured by
The Quaker O&ts (propany
Address: Chicago. U. S. A.
For Sale By
Sunday night with Mr. Jim Cornwell
and. family.
Mr. anj. Mrs Elys Cornwell were
guests of Rev. and Mrs. H. H. popham
Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ebib Popham and .little
sons, of Temple, were visiting rela
tives in our community last week.