Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 64, 19 April 1908 — Page 7

THE R1CI1310XD i'ALLAUHJl AL SO-TELWJKAJI, SUNDAY, APRIL 19, 11)08.

PAGE SEVE.

QUAKERS ACCUSED : OF EVILPRACTICE Queer Case of Thomas Case Has Just Been Brought To Light.

WHAT JONAH WOULD HEAR II? FEARS HIS LIFE WILL BE DARK AND CHEERLESS. cod Must Digest

COURT RECORD UNIQUE.

When placed on trial both case and his wife were found guilty of disturbing colonial meeting.

New York, April 18. The queer case tf Thomas Case is perhaps the mo.st Interesting of all the quaint records tad documents of colonial times that were discovered and published byHugh Hastings, until recently the NewYork State historian, in his annual reports. Case and his wife, it seems, were Quakers, and he was accused of ntany "evil practices" while his wife was charged with creating a disturbance in tha "congregacon of Mr. Leverich." The charges were tried before the court of General Sessions in New York n 1675. "Hee Was of God." Witnesses were sworn and testimony was taken. One of the witnesses, James Way, testified that Case had paid "hee was of God," and the court elerk in recording the testimony adds "and soe must hee bee, or bee of the Devill." Both Thomas Case and his wife were found guilty and fined. In the testimony are many quaint phrases and sayings. The record of the trial is an interesting one, and until found by Mr. Hastings had, it is laid, never before been recorded. It Is given here just as it was written oTer 2 years ago. Record of the Court. As recorded by the clerk of the court the case Is as follows: "Mr. Cornell Sworne: Saith, that yesterday was three weekes, he saw Tho. eaae at flushing at John Buono's or before his Doore and did see him make a great disturbance there; anmd bade him go away, and not make such a disturbance, to the wh'ch hee Answered, hee would not goe, till hee saw his owne time. "Mr. Wandall Sworne, Saith: That hee hath known Tho: Case fieu'ral! times since his being bound to the Good Behavior, Preaching and denouncing Judgm-t against ye People; And having seuerall people from Oyster Bay and other Places, at his House, Some Singing, and others in other Postures with Seurall Tones; In Particular of Sam'II Scudders strangs Actings, and others in Cases House, lying like Doggs, Hoggs and Cowes; Thorn. Wandall Acts Some, It was done before Case. "David Jennings "John Woolstoncraft I Sworne. Dead Brought to Life. "Woolstoncraft Saith, That Tho. Case told him at a particular time there was a great smell of Brimstone, hee replied, hee was afraid Case was going that way. "Another time, that David Jennings fell downe, as if dead, and Case undertook to bring him to life tho: Wandall was also present the same .time. "Jennings, formerly one of the Congregacon Relates that hee was as It were, smitten dead at the time Spoken of by ye Lord, as hee thinks. "Hee Saith, when hee was one of them, hee did at first. Shake of his owne accord but afterwards it tooke

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JOHN MARKLE. MarUlo. tho multi-millionaire of the anthracite coal field, fears becoming totally blind, and has gone to England, to consult some of the leading specialists in that country.

him, at unawars, when others did the like. "He confesses that Case hath Preached to him seurall times. "Mr. Cornell Saith, he hath with drawde severall from their ffamilves, particular one Edward Banbury, of Mad-Nane Neck who neglected hia ffamily, so that hee and his ffamily, were ready to starve. Resurrection Revealed to .Them. "That one of the Cases Crew pr'tended to have the gift of languages at Umes. "That Thomas Wandall Saith, that there was a meeting at his House, for 144 dayes together, and Keepes many poore People from their ffamilyes and bysinesse. "In particular Cleares wife and Applebyes wife (the woman Committeed on Saturday). "David Jennings "John Woolstoncraft Sworne "James Way, Saith, that about a yeare and halfe agoe. Tho: Case told him hee was God. But afterwards hee said hee was of God, and so'must hee bee, or bee of thee Devill. "Morrell Relates Case Cathecising of a woman beginning, who made thee &c. "Hee saith the same as James Way about God. "William Wyat. Saith, that going once to heare Tho. Case preach hee heard him say, that when hee should dye, hee should rise againe the third day. "Tho: Case being aske the truth of this, saith. It was revealed to him, that hee should rise againe. Wyat Saith That Case pronounced judg'nmt

against him. Mary the wife of Tho:

Case. "Jonathan Hazard. Sworne, Saith, hee saw and heard her say looking up to ye Minister Come the downe, thou that freedest thyself e and starrest thy tlock. "She pretends she went in obedience to the Lord to declare against Mr. Leveriches Doctrine. "The Constable Relates, upon the disturbance his leading her out of the Meeting, and persuading her to bee quiet. "The Court adjourned till to-morrow morning. Punishment Meted Out. "October 13, 1675.

"Persons in Prison. "William Graves, Tho: Case and Mary his wife, Samuel Scudder. Thomas Case the Quaker, his case taken into consideration, The Judg'mt of the Court is, that hee bee fined 20.1 and bee found for the good Behavior until the next Court of Assizes in the Penalty of 40.1. "And in the Case of his pursuing his evill practices, to the disturbances of the Government, or bee found amongst any Concourse, of those which do the like, either at home or abroad. Proof e being made thereof before the next Justice of the Peace, the said Justice is to send him to Prison, without Bavle or Mainpriza. to answer the Misdemeanor at the Next Court of Sessions. "Mary Case for disturbing Mr. Leverich and the Congregacon, the Judg'mt of the Court is, that shee shall Pay immediately the sume of five pounds to the King, and Continue in Prison till it be paid, after w'en to bee of the good Behavior."

SHOT UOOiG MAN In Frolicking Around Room Animal Knocked Gun Down.

Why 96 Hours? It requires 96 hours to turn white wheat into Mapl-Flake. Yet flaked foods can be made in onefourth of that time. Why do we employ so expensive a process? Simply to make every atom digestible to create a food that's all food. Wheat is largely starch. And starch, to be digestible, must be made soluble. The particles of the starch must be separated so the digestive juices can get to them. To break up the starch granules requires a high heat, long continued. With half-way methods, only half the starch will digest. The balance ferments and breeds germs in the stomach. Our wheat is steam-cooked for six hours, then cured. Then each separate berry is rlaked so thin that the full heat of our ovens attacks every atom. Then the flakes are toasted, for 30 minutes, in a heat of 400 degrees. We do that because we know it is necessary. We aim at a erfect food, not a cheap food. For the cheapest food, after all, is the food that supplies the most nourishment. Mapl-Flake is cooked in pure maple syrup. The reason for that is deliciousness.

Corona, L. I., April IS. A big Newfoundland dog fired off a double-barreled shotgun and wounded Frank Talleur of Corona, L. I. The wounded man's brother. Gustav Talleur, runs a coal yard at Strong's Causeway, Flushing, where the young man is employed. At night the dog is let loose in fhe place to help guard the yard, and when young Talleur arrives in the morning he chains the dog in the coal office for the day. Somebody left a double-barreled shotgun standing in the corner of the office and in frolicking around the dog knocked the gun down. As it struck the floor one of the barrels was discharged. The charge grazed the left side of Talleur's head, burning him with powder and inflicting a flesh wound. His wounds are not dongerous.

St. Louis Rabbi Declares Biblical Character Is All A Myth.

ROMANCE WITH A MORAL

ASSERTION THAT JONAH NEVER LIVED DOES NOT MEAN THAT THE BIELE IS UNTRUE THE MINISTER CONTINUES.

You must have nourishment must stop the irritation due to undigested food. You must end the painJ Kodol does, all that, at once and completely. And there is no other way. Please note our guarantee.

St. Louis. Ma. April is. Jonah never lived and the Hibicul narrative of how lie was swallowed by a wlutle is simply a marine legend a romance with a moral a parable, declared Rabbi Leon Harrison of Temple Is.ael in a sermon ;ie delivered to tho .st -i-tl '.its of Washington University. "That Jonah never lived, and that the big fish never swallowed him. does not mean that any part of the bible is untrue," said the rabbi. "The Bible is history, teaching by example, or it is poetry, inspiring to ideals through the emotions, or at times it contains a parable, charged with the deepest meanings, fraught with the weightiest spiritual messages. And the story of Jonah and the big fish was one of them. It was a parable against national oxclusiveness; it

taught a gospel of unrestricted humanity, proclaimed a God. not for a chosen people, but for all people, and offered to all, native or foreign, faithful or heathen, the open door of pardon, through sincere repentance. "The story of Jonah, like the story of Ruth, was an ancient story refashioned to teach a great truth. It came from the Phoenician coast line, whence came those other legends of Andromeda and her rescue by Perseus from the serpent; of Hoseone, saved by Herculee from a sea monster; of Ala, saved from the dragon by the gallant St. George. "In the Babylonian tradition Jonah

was Oannes. the fish god. who came ! from the sea by day to teach ami re- j turned to it at niglit. I "T' ' '? breadth of view and the deep insight of tap narrative and unique-! and extraordinary." said Rabbi Har-! rison. "The marine legend whose j variations we have mentioned is here informed with the peculiar genius of! Israel, with a solemn ethical sense, with a great spiritual lesson. .flore i so than perhaps any of the prophets, save in scattered verses, the story of Jonah conveys an eternal message from a universal God to an individual humanity. It teaches that no man can successfully flee from his true mission. If he does, storms will strike1

him. His career will be shipwrecked. Many a man called Nineveh has shipped for Tarshish. How many have arrived? A man following the call of his true vocation can not be thwarted.

These are the results of indigestion: The undigested food grows hard, and irritates the .stomach lining. It causes inflammation perhaps ulceration. That is the source of the pain. And that is why occasional indigestion often leads to chronic dyspepsia. Undigested food ferments and forms gas. That distends the stomach, causing symptoms often called heart trouble. Undigested food decays and breeds germs. The germs create poisons, and the food ducts of the bowels suck those poisons into the blood. That leads to blood impurity, and all its results. Often to kidney trouble. Then food that fails to digest is wasted, and thr body is robbed of its nourishment. In these ways scores of serious troubles are due solely to indigestion.

The remedy is to relieve the stomach. To lot Kodol. for a little time, do its work for it. Tonics and stimulants only spur the stomach to action. It is like whipping a tired horse. The food must be digested, for you must have food. And you must stop the irritation. Kodol digests all food, immediately and completely. The result is relief and rest. You will be astonished to see how quickly the stomach recovers then.

Kodol is not like anything else. Most digesters depend almost solely on pepsin, and pepsin digests only albumen. Starch requires something else; fat something else. A perfect digester must digest every food.

And such a digester requires the liquid form. So Kodol is liquid, like the digestive juices. For this reason its action is tnstant. Its effect evea begins in the mouth, by starting the rlow of s.ilivu. Kodol dicests alt food completely. This fact is easily rrocd. And you can prove, just as earily. that other means fail to dj that. They affect on'y part of the food.

Don't look for a cure for dyspepsia There is none. Nature must do the urine. Treat the weak stomach as ou would a lam ankle. He!iee it and h ( it rest. Not by dieting. Tor t hat mean p.irti.U starvation. You lie d all the toed !?! . a!! th nourishment you can irt. K.t what o-i need , the food that yo i want, and let KoJol digest it You won't n-.ed Ke iol Ions;, unless the trouble isehivnic. For most oik stomachs recour ery quickly with rest. Our Guarantee We ask you to prove, at our risk, that tho faefs are as we state them. Buy a large bottle of Kodol. and ask your drus-'tlst for the signed guarantee. If you are not satisfied, take the empty bottle back with the warrant, and your druggist will return your money. There will be no quibbl-j or question. This offer applies to the large bottles only, and to but one in a family. That is sufficient to prove. Then please tell others how much Kodol does. Kodol Is prepared at the laboratories of E. C. DeWitt & Co.. Chicago. The $1.00 bottle contains 2V4 times as much as the 50c bottle.

MOTHER THOUGHT LOST BABY INGYPSY CAMP Babe Was Rescued From Its Suffering From Exposure.

Portland, Me., April 18. After a tireless search of fifteen years for her boy, who was stolen from her at Pawtucket, R. I., by a band of gypsies when he was a mere baby, Mrs. If. A. Sumner, of 11 Portland street, is convinced that the youth who was found in a gypsy camp in Fall River is her son. now 1 years old. The boy says he is Leonard Allen of Middletown. N. Y. Greatly affected by reading of tho boy found at Fall River she called at police headquarters, told her story to Capt. McDo. ough and appealed to the department to exert every energy toward positively establishing the boy's identification. The boy. who was taken from the gypsy camp, has suffered from exposure, having been poorly c'ad. and was sent to the City hospital at Fall River.

AMERICAN ROADS GET MEXICAN LAND GRANT

Given Right of Way Into City Of Mexico.

Chicago, April 18. A land grant of one million acres has been secured from the Mexican government by the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific and the St. Louis and San Francisco railroads, which gives the right of w;iV for the Frisco extension into the City of Mexico.

MAYBE RECALLED Charges Made That They Are "Old and Feeble."

Tabitha: Geld Medal Flour leads them all.

St. Petersburg. April 1. The Novoe V re my a thinks it not impossible that, in the near future, four Russian, ambassadors to European courts may he recalled simultaneously, because they are all "Old and feeble" Th four are Count Caf-sini at Madrid, Mr. Zinovieff. at Constantinople. Mr. P.elldotf at Paris and Count Osten-Sakrn at Berlin.

PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY

THE OXYOLI

ATMENT

COS'i'LT MATTRESSES.

BATTLESHIPS ARE TO BE REPLACED

Maine and Alabama Taken From Atlantic Fleet.

Children like maple sugar better than anything else that is good for them. And this is the children's food. The price is IS cents per package. It requires no more cream than a 10-cent food, so the real dilTerence in cost is a trifle. The difference in food value is greater by far. So don't jjo without the food that you like best the food with the maple flavor. For Mapl-Flake costs less than cheap foods when you measure by nourishment. The only food served in individual packs? la. hotels, clubs, csfes. snd on dinicg car.

iSjJ Kucms BULTwri unrraa

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LIVED AFTER HANGING. Men a,-.d Women WSo Survived th; Ordeal of the Scaffold. Innumerable Instances of resuscit:; tion after hanging are recorded. Hen ry 111. granted a pardon to a womai; named Inetta de Balshnm. who was suspended from t o'clock on a Monday to sunrise of Thursday and after ward "came to." Ir. Plot tells of a Swiss who was hanged up thirteen times without effect on account of the peculiar condition of his windpipe, it having been converted into bone by disease. Annie Green, a servant girl, was

hanged at Oxford in IGr.O and recover j ed fourteen hours afterward under a

doctor's treatment. Mrs. Cope, whr was hanged at the same place eig!i1 years Inter, also recovered. On Sept. 2, 17:21. Margaret Dickson was banged at Edinburgh and recovered while being carried to the grave. She lived for many years aftervraril and wa? universally known as "Half Handed Maggie Dickson." A housebreaker named Smith was hanged at Tyburn la 170o. A reprieve came when he had been suspended e quarter of an hour. He was cut down bled and revived. William Dueil, bans ed in London in 1740. revived and was transported. A mau hanged ii Cork in 1705 was taken in hand by t physician who brought him round In six hours, and w are told the fellow had the nerve to attend a theatrical performance the same evening. Richard Johnson, hanged at Shrews bury. Oct. 3. 169G, obtained a promise from an andersheriff to place him in the coffin without changing his clothes. After hanging half an hour he still

showed signs of life, and on exaraina-f

tion It was found he had wrapped cords about his body connected with hooks at the neck which prevented the rope from doing its work. Th apparatus was removed and the man hanged effectually. It may be offeted in explanation of the cases mentioned that there was nc drop used at executions in those days, the culprit usually sufferins asphyxia without the, cerebral column being broken .Laafloa TU-Ba - -

Washington, April IS. Upon the recommendation of Rear-Admiral Evans, the battleships Maine and Alabama will be detached from the Atlantic fleet and will be replaced by the Nebraska and Wisconsin. The Maine and the Alabama will return to this coast and will be placed in reserve, after being thoroughly overhauled. These two ships have been in commission for about six or seven years. The hospital ship Relief, now at Magdalena Bay, will accompany the battleships in their trip around the world.

HELD HOUSE WARMING. Elks Comfortable in Temporary Quarters. The local lodge of Elks had a housewarming last evening at their new quarters, the Starr property on North Ninth street. Many members of the lodge have contributed rugs, furniture and other furnishings and the temporary heme now looks vory attractive. All the members who attended the house-warming last evening had a most enjoyable time.

i

Arup

T JiYirSffVnnn.

acts geatlyyet promptly on the bov els, cleanses the system ejectually, assists one in overcoming

stipati

on

.V.

hnbilual conslio

permanently. To get its

beneficial ejjecls buy the Pennine. pianujacturcd hy the California Jig -Syrup Co. SOLD ET OWNCr DRUCWSTS; H iBOTTU

The Kind That Are Used on the Big Plato Glass Wagon. Trobably about as costly a sort of mattress as any is one that is mads not to sleep on at all. but to spread on the long, broad table or platform of the wagons built for carrying plate glass. These mattresses, which are made of curled hair, are very thin, scarcely thicker than a comfortable, and must be made with the greatest care to inBure perfect uniformity of thickness. A lump anywhere would be likely to break the plate of glass resting upon It. and there would be still greater danger if the weight of two plates of glass was rested on the lump at once. A mattress for a plate glass wagon cofts, according to size, from $00 to $73. In use the corners of smaller plates carried on it cut into the ticking covering, and sooner or later It has to be made over. Simply to make over such a mattress costs from $20 to $23. On the table topped and mattress covered glass wagons the biggest plates are carried with confidence and safety. The table Is built to remain absolutely rigid, and the thin but uniform mattress protects the plate from jar. Before plate glass store fronts had come into common use, when the handling of a big plate was counted as a good deal more of a job than it is now, they used to carry a great pane of glass in a sort of frame, which was put on the wagon with the glass in it. At its destination this frame or support was worked carefully across the sidewalk to the store front, where the glass was dislodged from it to be set, and altogether the setting of a great plate of glass was then quite an undertaking. Now. with the setting of such plates a common daily occurrence and with men skilled in the handling of them, they simply carry a big plate out and lay it on their mattress covered table topped wagon and carry It to where it is to so and there slide it off. to rest it for a moment on blocks on the sidewalk, and then they pick it up and carry it to the window front. Then they run under the lower edge of the glass lifting straps, by which men standing inside the window a well as men standing outside can 'lift on It when the glass is put into place in the window frame. There again it Is raised on blocks until the straps can be withdrawn, and then the blocks are taken out and the glass secured In place, all this being done with great care, but still with comparative ease and quickness and with certainty, and in these times great panes of glass are thus moved and set on all but the windiest days. Cleveland Plain Dealer.

Oxonized Air Now Taking the Place of Medicine in Ihe Treatment of Many Diseases. I have added to my office equipment a new apparatus of recent invention which is attracting considerable attention over the country. It is an electrical device whereby the air is converted into ozone, and the o2o:u, by being forced through a combination of volatile oils, is converted into a peroxide compound called "Oxyoline."

This is Inhaled and Is the cii' al lve . 1 ' ' i

aerated and properly oxidized. That V. - ...... - .1 i . - . . I 1 . ..

there being too little oxygen in the i;

blood is attested to by a great major-

wjv

ity of the medical fraternity. That JJJi.f3 f ' -I

this condition can be and is being ov

ercome is likewise demonst

thousands and thousands

sought the mild and pleasan

ment of oxidizing the blood and have

found a speedy cure.

The theory i3 one of pure, fresh alr.l oxidizing the blood by Nature's'-

me

for the

rated by , ' I

who have . & Wl'.2lT,.:i '

t treat- 'MlKl

thod. Pure air means more oxygen ".H. . .

better combustion and assimilation of M&Mt i

the food products, better elimination! 4 'p of the waste products, better circula-J ' ' tion of the blood, better functional per t ' formance of all the organs of the

body and the equalization of body temperature. Headache, backache, loss of memory, sleeplessness, dizziness, palpltn tion of the heart, blotched complexion, bad taste in the mouth, coated tongue, flushing of face or body, floating specks before the eyes, cough, tightness of chest, difficulty in breathing, limbs going to bleep or creepy sensations, menstrual disorders, nervo is debility, catarrh, asthma and all forms of nervous and blood disoiders are quickly and jiormanently cured bv this new method. In order to demonstrate the efficacy of this new method TRIAL TREATMENTS will be kiven ABSOLUTELY FREE for 3 days to all who apply at my office. DR. J. E. TAYLOR, 30 S. 10th St. Hours 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. Richmond, Ind. Lady in attendance

NOTICE-

I have located and opened law offices in the Westcott Block, second floor, over Nusbaum's store, and will be glad to see my clients and friends there. W. C. CONVERSE.

Pattt: Gold Medal Flour is very hight

TO

I.I

Burn Artificial Gas in an Artificial Gas Range. . Do it now and watch your gas bill. See the Richmond Light, Heat & Power Co.