The Home journal. (Perry, Houston County, GA.) 1901-1924, August 09, 1923, Image 8

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"MIRACLE" SERVICE FOLLOWS REVIVAL "Greatest Mircale In World," Says Evangelist, “Is Saving Of The batteries Paris, Prance.—The French parlia- j Chester, HI.—One inmate of the ment now stands behind Premier Poin- Illinois Hospital for Criminal Insane care in declaring the papal repara- was slain by guards when thirty-one tions letter can have no effect on ^matoa battered their way through Frances decision to stay in the Ruhr y institution and made The senate’s recent indorsement of *f® don ?’ the premier’s indirect slap at the ^ R ® e ^ ec “ after the Inmates had Vatican’s commentary was followed £ by a similar expression of approval Jf® r aptW d * twenty ‘ ilx from the chamber of deputies, which 7®,^ * r®’ t«*bsL. by a vote of 38S to 190 agreed with ! J?!“'/Z Si M. Poincare that the government nev- ““jj? 1 °® d 1 er would.admit papal interference In X £ tU thI JS? ffi either her domestic or foreign poll- flned J 0 ^® + Illln °l 0 Btata penlten ‘ ct tiary at Joliet. the premier’s addreBS to the depu- 4 J® wounded guards ties also was marked by a. brief but ha £. ® lianc ® for recovery. ; pointed reference to those who op- Tb ® ^sane criminals maae their pose her coercivd policy. ® Bcap ® f, n k “° W “ a 5 "Today," he said,* "France appears the bul1 pen which is in the yard) to cortain peoplees who did not have part of their territory devastated in tho war and who did not advance a hundred million in behalf of Ger many, as a hindrance to financiers who are in a hurry to form trusts." 1 As to the pope’s letter, M. Poincare asserted that it should have no politi cal effect and that French. ^Catholics' need not be influenced by”*it for the' vaticun could not deprive France of Atlanta.—"The greatest miracle in the world,” said Rov. Raymond T. Richey, the evangelist of the faitb healing revival meetings at the audi torium, "Is the saving of the hurhati soul.” And much of this quiet miracle seems to be performed every evening. |The spectacular part of the service came when dozens of halt, maimed, .blind, deaf, mute, filed across the plat- 'form, to be "anointed" by the evangel ist, who disclaimed all power to heal but pleaded with each to "praise God" i" to heal thoti and ‘"call on Jesus’ soul diseases first and then mend their bodies. And there were re markable resultB as the sick old men and womon, young women, young men, small boys with withered arms and spindled legs, showed varying signs of cure. Among some of the miracles were: Mrs. E. Miller of 316 Window 'street, who complained of such a lame .back that mere walking was a torture, 'was able, after the healing service, io pick up her purse from the floor (Without a twinge of pfiin, she said. 'Deaf and dumb Binco he was two :years of age, Frank Bartlett of 434 <0&st #alr street was aUTo to'Ta?: ! ft .Tesus,’* "God" and "Frank" and to fcpar \he applaime of tho audience, ■H. 0. McKinnon of\3i4 Whitehall has been paralyzed on tho left side since .1913 when, as a locomotive engineer, he was severely hurt in a train wreck. After passing across the auditorium stage and confessing that Jesus could hoal him, he discarded his cane and walked up and down tho six-step stairs to the stage without any assistance. Mrs. J. B. Young of 95 Spring street claimed that for thirty-four years sho has been unable to hear a sound. She went home from the revival praising God that she had heard a whisper. most The first starting battery (1911) was an Exide, and today more new cars leave the manufacturers* hands equipped with Exides than with any other battery. We have the right size Exide for you, and the right kind of repair service for all 'makes of batteries. v two guards. £s the Jllinois law for-, bl|s tCe guards carrying weapons in-: side the "bull pen" they were easy victims for the assailants. A moment later more than a score of the inmates seized chairs and benches and began an assault upon the Iron bars of the prison. The bars, which are three-fourths of an inch thick, did not long resist the terrlflq battering, and before guards could ar rive from other parts of the building a passage-way had been created. Thirty-one men poured through the hole and scattered in all directions: The arrival of guards prevented furth er escapes and four of those who had gained their freedom were captured. Jackson 1 , who was one of the last to leave the What was due her under the peace treaty. 1MB3T .j&b&E&'+I To those who demanded that the 'bull pen" was shot to death In a fight with the guard. Within a few minutes after thd escape forty guards from the hospital and from the southern Illinois state penitentiary, which also is located near Chester, had taken up the pur suit of the fugitives. This force was son augmented by local police and Sheriff C. W. Heine, of Randolph county. Numerous citizens’ posses We handle only genuine Exide parts IDENTIFY Y0URSEI.F of officers. Residents of Chester and surround ing towns are terrorized. WITH BUSINESS MEN USE PRINTED STATIONERY LET US PRINT IT 1; OR YOU Logon Js Proud Of Lieut Maughan Logan, Utah. •The little city of Lo gan, nestling near the foot of the great, Wasatch range In Cache valley, points with pardonable pride to the achievements of her native son, Rus so; < L Maughan. The fight was the general topic of conversation here and groups of his friends waited impatient ly for news of his fight at newspaper offices. THF H0M15 JOURNAL Maughan was born in Logan 29 years ago, a grandson of Peter Maughan, reputed first permanent set- Russell Mau- PERRY, GEORGIA tier of Cache valley, ghan had an humble and Inconspicu ous beginning. Belleau Wood Consecrated To Dead . Chateau. Thierry —Belleau Wood. 8laye Wife And Baby; Then Suicides Memphis, Tenn.—J. A. Roe, 24, a farmer of Humboldt, Tenn., lib wife, 12, and their infant daughter, Doris, tre dead as a result of bullet wounds, said to have been inflicted by Roe when he appeared at the home here of his sister-in-law whore Mrs. Roe had nade her home since separation fjom •toe several weekB ago. Mrs. Roe was found dead and Roe dying when police cained entrance to a room into which .he husband, pistol in hand, had pur ged his wife. The child died later. crated to the 'memory of die Ameri cans who died there. The French flag at Foch’s command was hauled down to trumpeting by French buglers and the "Marseillaise" by the marine band Assaults Child; Beats Her Avenger Atlanta.—Police have spread a dragnet for an unidentified white man, who inflicted severe punishment on J. S. Astln, when Asttn attempted to (Place the stranger under arrest fol lowing an alleged insult to a ten-year- old girl. Astin’s daughter had gone to a drug store to get a can of con densed milk for her little slBter, and in her return when near her home she was seized by .the man whose name hBB not been learned and kisBed and hugged. When she screamed, he let loose his hold and she ran home to tell her father. * from the U. S. 8. Pittsburg, and the. American flag was run up to the strains of the "Star Spangled Banner." Washington.—Director Hines of the veterans’ bureau announces that he will have to go ahead with a policy with respect to the negro hospital near Tuskegee, Ala., soon, unless he can reach some middle ground with the committee of white citizens of that town appointed after his recent visit there. Jurors Fall To Agree In Priest’s Trial Montreal, Canada.-r-The jury which considered the case of Adelarde de Lome, former priest, accused of mur dering his half brother, Haoul, re ported a disagreement. They had de liberated more than forty-eight hours, The jurors were discharged by Chief Justice. Francois Lemieux after they had returned for the third time wtlh the report that they could not break their deadlock. , Negro Exodus Felt In Chattooga Summerville.—Although reports In dicate that hundreds of negroes in all sections of Georgia have left the state to go North to Beek work at higher wages, It is thought Chattooga county has lost the smallest number of any county in the state, probably less than twenty-five having goue from the en tire county within tho last twelve months, and already some of those who left earlier in the year have re turned and settled down to work. Maxwell Painted As Gay Lothario New York.—A portrait of George Maxwell, president of the American Society >f Authors, Composers and Publishers, as a Lothario who made lpve to many women and when he be came bored, rid himself of them by writing poison pen letters to their husbands and relatives, was drawn by District Attorney Maloney. De Lorme will stand trial again at the next session of the court of Kiug’s Bench. This will lie in September. ihelled By Kwangsians U. S. Gunboat Canton, China.— Previous to the re cent capture of Wuchow by the'Cou- stltutloualists the United States gun boat Pampagne, while patrolling the West river, protecting American in terests, was fired on, by artillery and rifles at. Dosing, twenty-seven miles helow Wuchow, by Kwangsi troops, al though the ship was flying two large American flags. It is the first time !n tho history of the West river that an American gunboat lias been fired on. The matter is being Investigated, t is reported.’ in the increases in Southern Railway Increases Wages Cincinnati^ Ohio.—Wage increases Damages Awarded Mother Of Victim Atlanta.—For the death of Dillarc. Jolley of Decatur, who was killed on April 16 on the Montreal crosssing by a Seaboard Air Line passenger train, a jury: in the city court of Decatur, returned a verdict of $20,000 in favor Mrs. Vina Jolley, the mother of the boy. The trial lasted twenty-four hours. The jury handed down its ver dict three hours after receiving the judge’s charge. The law firm of Hew lett <S? Dennis represented Mrs. Joll,ey. 1 k> H