9 THE MORNIXG OREGOXIAX, ilONDAY, MARCH 18, 1907. S. EDDY'S METHODS Dr. Brougher Indorses Dr. A. C Dixon's Criticism of Christian Science. TEACHINGS ARE HARMFUL Declares Many of Founder's Ideas Vc,re Stolen Alleges That She Twists Scripture Into Proof of Her Doctrines. Rav. J. Whltcomb Brouffher preached lae the White Temple yesterday morning on "The Bible and Christ or Christian .Science." Ho charged that many of Mrs. Kddy'a ldena were stolen, and fur Ither, that while claiming to take the Bible as a basis for her theories, she had twisted its true meaning, or denied Its truth altogether. He said In part: "It was In 1888 that Mrs. Mary Baker Eddy claimed to have discovered this extraordinary eclence. Frederick W. Pea body, the great Boston lawyer, has in vestigated the matter carefully and de clares without hesitation that 'the whole Christian Science eystem, terminology and all, in so far as It Is a mental healing pysteVn, Mrs. Eddy obtained from Dr. Qulmby In 1364, so that when Mrs. Eddy says that In 1666 she discovered It, she states what she knows to be absolutely untrue.' So Instead of Christian Science being a direct revelation from Jod to Mrs. Eddy, as she claims, it is well known to those who have Investigated it that she stole the Ideas from this man Qulmby. "I see no reason for accepting the Idea that Christian Science was In any sense a special revelation to Mrs. Eddy. After reading carefully the volume entitled Science and Health," I am prepared to txate at the beginning that If the Chris tian Scientists are right in their theology and philosophy, then the Christian church 1m wrong and has been wrong ever since the apoBtolio days. If I do not under stand her language I think I have the right with another to complain that she does not give me a fair chance to under stand it. I have been In the habit of using my eyes and ears and other senses 3n the study of the world, but Christian Science will not allow that I have eyes or ears. She even strips me of my mor tal mind, and being a common mortal and not deity, 1 feel my loss keenly. In fact, she so denudes me that I feel like the thinnest spark or ghost that ever came down the pike.' Dumbfounds Dictionary Itself. "She dumbfounds the dictionary itself. She says her glossary, which Is Intended to "elucidate the meaning of the inspired writer." contains the metaphysical Inter pretation of Bible terms, giving their spiritual sense, which i also their orig inal meaning. It would be difficult to find any scholar in the land who would risk his reputation for clearness by using the terms 'metaphysical.' 'spiritual' and original' as synonyms, yet she does it. "'It is this shifting use of words that puzzles the ordinary reader and defles any attempt at understanding it. With this explanation for my stupidity, let us examine the theology of the system, test ed by the Bible. Mrs. Eddy says 'the Bible has been my only text book,' but it I la no wonder that she can draw almost any conclusion from it when we consider . her method of interpretation. Take this example fS. & H., p. 233): The word Adam phe divides into two syllables, and it jreads A dam. or obstruction. This sug gests to her the thought of mortal mind 1n solution, as opposed to matter. With this method it is not difficult to wrest the Bible from Its correct meaning. "Take the belief concerning God. Soience and Health says 'God Is divine principle . . . including in itself all mind the father, the mother God.' Note that Mrs. Eddy says 'Itself fills all space. Who ever heard of an Infinite Itself? A self-existent neuter. She denies the per sonality of God, while the Bible every where recognizes his personality. "Mrs. Eddy denies that God created the heaven and tho earth. The Bible says that In the beginning God created both. Mrs. Eddy declares that the Bible lies. S. & H.. p. bob). If Christian Science can rot twist the scriptures so that they fa vor the statement "that matter, sin, slck ijipss and death have, no reality," then she .flatly contradicts them. Is System of Infidelity. "Dr. A. C. Dixon says: It is a fact that Christian Science, while it claims to reverence the Bible, is a system of Infidelity which contradicts the Scrip tures or twists their meaning to suit Its own purposes. While Rev. Mr. Hinckley. ray assistant pastor, was reading the Scriptures without com ment, from the platform of the Rurgles Ftreet Baptist Church In Boston, a Christian Scientist In the audience was overheard many times saying, 'That's lie. Thafs a He." "Such is the attitude of Christian Science toward the Scriptures. If they can be twisted so as to favor the state ment that matter, sin, sickness and 4eath have no reality, they are so used, but when the Scriptures affirm against this statement, they are flatly contra dicted. Again, Mrs. Eddy denies the reality of death. The Bible says all (have sinned. 'If we say we have no sin we deceive ourselves, and the truth Is not In us.' "In the face of Mrs. Eddy's teaching, I am not surprised that no one accepts Christian Science in order to be saved from his sins. There is. according to the Christian Science view, no sin from which to be saved. Consequently, Chris tian Science runs no rescue missions, and makes no special effort to save Hie outcast. They spend their time looking after the nice people who have tome "error of mortal mind' to be cured. Jesus Christ 'came not to call the righteous but sinners to repent ance." Christian Science seems to have come for the purpose of calling the righteous and not sinners into the church. Who ever heard of a Christ ian Scientist going to the slums and reading 'Science and Health" to out cast men women? What's the use if there Is no reality in sin? If one has lost the sense of sin. he surely would not be bothered with" his conscience. "If we had the time we could show by numerous other quotations that Mrs. Eddy contradicts the Bible and the teachings of Jesus Christ at nearly rvery point In her so-called system of Iheology. She denies the necessity of In atonement, declares that the Holy Spirit is only divine science, repudi ttes the church ordinances, and denies the Anal judgment. Without Sense of Humor. "Now let us notice, for a few moments, the philosophy of Christian Science. One cannot read the philosophy of this sys tem without feeling that Dr. Hudson was right when he says. 'Christian Scientists are lacking In- a healthy, pro ' tective sense of humor.' Mrs. Bddy ay DENOUNCES the metaphysics of Christian Science, like 1 the rule of mathematics, proves the rule by inversion. For example: There Is no pain in truth and no truth in pain, no matter in mind, and no mind in matter. Mrs. Bddy must be the illustration of this theory. It would not be hard to believe that there was no mind in the gray mat ter that produced the metaphysics of Christian Science. My friend, if you are sitting next to a Christian Scientist, just stick a pin into him and let us see whether there is any 'pain in truth," or 'truth in pain." "This philosophy of nothingness is simply the Hindoo philosophy that has been taught in India for the past 4000 years. Fundita Ramanai, one of the greatest scholars of India, in a recent statement says: "What has this philoso phy done for the people of India? A tree is known by Its fruits. You are a people of some feeling. Everything is real. You feel that when other people are starving you ought to give them something to eat, but out In India they do not feel any sympathy for others. Why should they, when they claim the suffering is not Veal? The ultimate result of this philosophy is no compassion for sufferers, and supreme egotism. Christian Scientists in this country build no hospitals, and have very little sympathy for those who claim to be sick." "Mrs. Eddy says: "Decrepitude is not according to law, nor is it a necessity of nature, but an Illusion that may be avoided." This was written by one who is now a white-haired decrepit old woman, who, on account of her Infirmities of body, refuses to attend public meetings and to appear on public occasions. She declares that pain has no reality, and yet Bhe is known to have visited a dentist and received his treatment. However, I do not suppose that Christian Scientists ought to. be held responsible for not prac ticing all they preach. Insanity as a Fine Art. "Dr. Dixon has well said, "Christian Science is the art of making people think and feel as if they were Insane." Mrs. EUdy's teaching is insanity reduced to a fine art, advocated in eloquent language, studded by refined people, accepted by some, and practiced fully by none. "The secret of the influence of Chris tian Science is its power to heal some kinds of diseases. It does not restore maimed parts of the body, nor raise the dead. The process by which the healing is accomplished Is simply the well-known mental process. Some diseases are purely Imaginary, same are caused by a certain condition of the mind, and still others can be affected by auto-suggestion, when caused by some physical disorder. Dr. Price, the great psychologist, has cured scores of people by exercjsirg the power of mind over matter, but to say that this is the only method for curing disease, and that It is the divine method, used by Jesus Christ, is to assert what Is not true. Fhysloians of all schools cure peo ple of various diseases, but this does not prove that their method Is the divine method and the method used by Jesus Christ. Why Tliey Left Church.' "Nine out of every ten Christian Scien tists were once members of evangelical churches, who had never had any vital, spiritual experience. They were living a half-hearted, unsatisfactory Christian life. They were unwilling to meet the spiritual Ideals presented by the church, consequently, it became easy for them to accept a system that does not believe in the reality of sin, and which does not re quire great, personal, self-sacrifice of its followers. ' "In the next place, nine out of every ten have had some Illness for which mind-healing was Just the remedy needed. Jesus says that the sheep recognize the voice of their shepherd and follow him. A noted traveler put this statement to a test and found that no sheep except a sick sheep would follow a strange voice, but a sick sheep would follow anybody. So it has been In Christian Science. Given a church member who is sick physically, mentally and spiritually and he will fol low a system that promises comfort, cheer and healing." Dr. Brougher spoke last night on "The Struggle with Habit,'" this being the fifth in his series of sermons on "Je6us and Life Struggles." He said that a man should possess self control in all things, good and bad, and that no habit should enslave a man. That It is possible to attain this self-control he said, had been demonstrated. PATTL RADER BECOMES PASTOR Anti-Saloon rader Heads Hassalo Street Flock. Rev. Paul Kader was received into the membership and installed as pastor of the Hassalo-street Congregational Church, East Side, yesterday morning, after which he preached on the topic, "The Church." Rev. Rader was elected pastor at a meet ing of the members last Friday night, and entered on his work there yesterday, preaching morning and evening. The morning sermon was In the nature of an outline of Rev. Rader's views on what constitutes a true church of Christ. His text was, "On this rock I build my nhtirch. and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it." He said that that! church that works solely to attract is not a church of Jesus ChrlBt. and It will fail. "Men gather in crowds," he said, "out of curiosity for various reasons. A dog killed by a streetcar will attract a great crowd, and yet it is mere idle curiosity that attracts the crowd. A few pass along and prefer seclusion. The church that works solely for the purpose of get ting a crowd is not based on the Lord Jesus Christ. It may get the crowd for awhile, but after the attractions have ceased to draw, the crowd dissolves. Some churches have a congregation and others an audience of 6000, like the dead dog which draws a crowd on the street. It is not the business of the church to draw the crowd, or look for the results. These take care of themselves. "We have the different denominations, the Methodists, Baptists. Catholics, Con gatlonallsts, but after all the one church of Jesus Christ Is made up of members who believe on Jesus Christ We have the Humane Society, tho Society for the Protection of the Birds, other societies,. but they are not churches, but organi zations good and useful In their way. The church of the crowd alone Is not a church: it is an organization. The true church is founded on the rock spoken of in the text on Jesus Christ." Rov. Rader received a most hearty wel come at Hassalo-street Church yesterday. He had preached there occasionally, and hence is not a stranger. It is expected that plans will be adopted for the long oontemplated improvements, now that the church has a regular pastor. DR. DRIVER TALKS OX ANARCHY He Says It Came Into (he World With the Serpent. Rev. I. D. Driver spoke yesterday morn ing at the Grace Methodist Church on "The Ten Virgins,'" and in the evening on "Anarchy What Is It and How Did It Come?" He said that anarchy Is an absence of government and was brought into the world when the serpent in the Garden of Eden counseled the woman to do as she pleased without regard for law. Next Sunday night Rev. Clarence True Wilson will give the second of his series of Illustrated lectures on "The Anglo Saxon Race and Israel's Lost Tribes." the subject being "The Scepter and the Birth right" PHOTO POST CARD! SCEJTERT. K-lser Co. Lobby Imperial Hotel. THE SPANTON CO. The Commonwealth Bldg., on Sixth St. PHONE MAIN 2828 CHRIST AS PASTOR Dr. Foulkes Says Minister's Work Is Threefold. ASSUMES NEW PASTORATE True Teacher Must Follow tlie Course Outlined by the Mes siah in His' Walks Among Men. Rev. "William H. Foulkes, of Clinton, la., has assumed the pastorate of the First Presbyterian Church. He preached his first sermon in Portland yesterday to a large audience, and in a forceful man ner described the ministry of Christ and the requirements of a pastor. He said the minister has not done his full duty when he preached each -week, but that in the full meaninB of the term he should be, a minister. He said in part: ome of the reformed churches are content to use the generic 'preacher' and "pastor" to denote the man who fills the pulpit. The latter term brings him very near to us. so that he becomes a friend, but the term 'minister' means more. "Let us look into the three-fold minis tery of the Son of Man. and at his me thods. Christ ministered to the physical needs of those -with whom he came in contact. No one realized better than -he the Infirmities of the human race. Throughout his ministry he seems to have been saying to the people. 'My Father knows, and my Father cares.' I am far from saying that the miracles were adjuncts to his power, but I do believe that they were done solely for the pur pose of relieving human needs. Beneath this there was a hidden meaning. No Hospitals Before Christ. The eleemosynary Institutions of to day have sprung from the teachings of Christ. Before the Christian dispensa tion there were, no such institutions as hospitals for the relief of suffering. In the lands where Christ is not known, in India, for Instance, where one in every 100 is Insane and one in every ten is blind, and where there are many lepers, no hospitals exist. It Is the same in the land struggling under the ban of Con fucianism. The minister who would ex emplify the work of Jesus Christ must throw himself into the breach of human suffering. ... The second phase of Christ s ministry was his teaching In the synagogues of the Jews. He ministered .to their intel lectual needs. He went among them doing good, and In regard to their down trodden law said. "'Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill." It has been said that the church is op posed to progress, but the church which is following in the footsteps of the Son of Man Is not opposed to progress, but Is rather making progress. As I came across the Rocky Mountains and saw the Mormon villages hidden away in the darkness of the towering rocks. I thought of how the mountains became barriers to hide away these people be cause they have feared the light. I thought of how these same Mormons have said "We do not fear the preaching of the church, but these Presbyterian women with thetr schools." May God forbid that any word shall be uttered here, either flippantly or half-thoug-ht-out, but may It be a. place where truth shall be enthroned, because God speaks through his Son and through his ministering servant. Must Meet Spiritual Needs. The last phase of the ministry of our Lord was to the spiritual needs of his people. The heart is often the sorest spot in man's being. Deeper than the mind and far more delicate than the Yesterday it was lively among' the trees of BELLE CREST Hundreds of People were cared for by the Belle Crest management It rained all day but nobody got wet Covered automobiles take people from their homes, allow them to inspect the tract and then take them home again Fifty-Three Lots were sold in six hours. TODAY, RAIN OR SHINE, THE SAME ACCOMMODATIONS AWAIT YOU. PHONE US AND WE WILL CALL FOR YOU. BELLE CREST LOTS ARE SOLD ON INSTALLMENTS Yesterday the rain didn't dull our ardor a bit. "We were out In it all day, but we were prepared for it. Belle Crest is a beauti ful place in all sorts of weather. "We had seven automobiles in motion from 10 in the morning till 5 in the evening, and on the tract we had covered carriages to handle the people. Everybody was comfortable, and everybody was enthusiastic. Unanimous consent votes Belle Crest the queen of Portland's subdivisions; but our saying so doesn't make it so. Nature has decreed this, and everybody believes it when they have contemplated the country for hundreds of miles about, as seen from its sightly Crest. Fifty-three lots were sold in Belle Cerst yesterday, to 42 people there's no speculation in this sort of buying; it means people are after homes if three or four people had bought 53 lots, we might figure differently. . cutaneous covering of the soul. Is that sore spot within. The gospel that can dry the tears of human sorrow, and make the grave lose some of Its horrors, this is the gospel which, since Christ minis tered to the needs of man and through 2000 years has not lost its power. This gospel of helpful power is what all the world wants and needs to hear. I can ask no greater reward nor any higher Joy than that of being your serv ant, weeping with you when you weep and sharing your Joys with you. I can have no greater blessing than to hear from the lips of my Lord the words, "Well done, thou good and faithful serv ant: enter thou into the joy of thy Lord." DESTCCTIVE CRITICS MANX. Speaker Deplores Tendency to Rush After New Teachings. Rev. H. Wyse Jones spoke at the T. M. C. A. .yesterday afternoon. He said In part : "Many scholars are switching off to some destructive criticism of the word of God. They have discovered some great teaching in India or some philosophy from some other country and set that up as the standard of living. Biblical criti cism is all right if it is carried' on prop erly, but I refer now to the destructive criticism of the Bible. There seems to be somebody always standing on the street corner with his teaching ready to turn the feet out of the path of right to follow some Joseph Smith, or some Mrs. Eddy, or some slate-writer. "These people who have gone off on a tangent, on a side-track, so to speak, are of no use to themselves and are a positive curse to others. The fraternal order is another of the departures which Is likely to lead away from right. I am not against the secret order, but I am opposed to It In the place of a man's church home. There are hosts ot men today who substitute the fraternal order for the church." HEARERS MAY TALK BACK REV. VROOMAN TO SHARE TIME WITH AUDIENCE. Swedenborgian Pastor Will Try Ex periment of Allowing Free Dis cussion of Religious Topics. Rev. Hlrman Vrooman will try the ex periment for four Sunday ex'enings, be ginning next Sunday, of allowing the au dience to share the time with him in the presentation of the subject of the evening. The discussion will always be upon a strictly spiritual or religious theme. Mr. Vrooman will open and close the discus sion, allowing one hour for ten-minute addresses from the floor. The subject next Sunday night will be "What Is Re ligion?" The services will be held in Knights of Pythias Hall, corner of Alder and Eleventh streets, at 8 P. M. Mr. Vrooman is an orthodox Sweden borgian clergyman, thoroughly evangeli cal believing in the dlvlnltv of Christ, in the divinity of the Bible, in a life ac cording .to the ten commandments, and yet he invites persons of all religious or even nonreligious connections to stand In his pulpit and treat the subject under dis cussion from their respective points of view. He says that all religious beliefs must ultimately stand or fall upon their merits. When asked if he did not think thai cranks would disturb the meeting, he re plied: "In the first place the majority of thos who take part will undoubtedly be rep resentative men and women. Most cranks, however, are earnest and serious men and women, and such persons not only have a right to bo heard, but they almost always have something of value to present. However, I would advise all persons who are easily shocked, or who are quickly offended by statements that oppose their own views, to remain away. If a few offensive people should Intrude no harm should result." When asked if he were not afraid that some members of his own church would be led away into other denominations or religions or Into agnosticism by the force of the arguments presented by the speak ers, he said there is a fundamental rea son why such a matter should not give him any uneasiness. 'There is," he said, "a spiritual law that causes everybody sooner or later to come into a system of religious belief or unbelief which will harmonize with and be the expression of that person's ruling love. When two sides of a religious ques tion are presented in contrast, as they will be at these meetings, then it is best for the church and the world that each person select for himself the views which seem truest to him. Therefore if mem bers of my own flock leave our fold. I would pray God's blessing upon them wherever they go and feel satisfied with their decision." "One of the chief things which charac terizes this unprecedented age, in the early dawn of which we live, is that humanity has for the first time developed the intellectual capacity for reasoning as sanely and logically about spiritual mat ters as about scientific and prudential matters. Religious conviction henceforth therefore is to be based upon knowledge and reason instead of upon dogma and authority. These free discussion meet ings should stimulate those mental pro cesses which seek the rock of truth for the foundation of religious belief." PROBLEM OF MOHAMMEDISM Far Eastern Situation Likely to In volve America. Rev. Franklin E. Hoskins, D. D., who has charge ot the large printing plant of the Presbyterian Church at Beirut, Syria, spoke at the First Presbyterian Church last night on "The Mohammedan Missionary Problem, or the Eastern Ques tion." This subject has offered many difficulties to the American Department of State, he said, and he believes the United States will be thrown as suddenly and unexpectedly into the Eastern ques tion as she was Into the question related to the acquisition of the Philippines. "We have In our college in Beirut," he con tinued, "large numbers of Moslem, Jewish and other boys. These receive a thorough education along Christian lines, but they do not necessarily adopt tire religion of Christ. This education will go far in the future to modify the antagonism which has caused ruptures between the Chris tian and non-Christian element in the Turkish empire. "Very few people realise that tonight one-seventh of the race is of the Mo hammedan faith, and. that this is the only belief which did not exist at the time of Christ, but which exists today. In the British empire at the present time there are 94,000.000 Moslems, while there are not more than 55,000,000 Christians in the same territory." Rev. Howard Agnew Johnston will oc cupy the pulpit ot the First Presbyterian Church tonight, when he will speak to men only on Christian work -for men. He has Just returned from, a two years' tour of the Orient, where he has been making a study of the mission stations for the Presbyterian Foreign Mission Board. "THE MAKING OF MANHOOD" Man Chooses His Own Destiny and Shows . His Thoughts. Rev. Howard Agnew Johnston, of the Madison-Avenue Presbyterian Church, of New York City, spoke last night at the First Congregational Church on "The Making of Manhood." He took for his text II Cor., iii:18. He said in part: "Tou do not believe in a man's sincer ity unless he lives up to his profession. Every man reflects day tiy day the thing which is uppermost in his thoughts, the thing which rules his life., Others, after becoming acquainted with you, can tell the motives which are uppermost in your life, Just as you can In others. Pleasure dominates marly a man. Money rules others, and 'as a mat. thinketu in his heart, so lg he.' "I talked with a Japanese Major who had repudiated Buddhism, and who 'had studied the writings of Confucius, when I was in Tokio, and from what he had since learned of the Word he said it was not only the hope of the Individual but the hope of Japan. The Y. M. C. A. is doing a large work there, both in the army and out of it. If you don't like Schilling's Best tea and coffee, they cost you nothing. Over half the lots in Belle Crest are gone. One more weeli and Belle Crest will be off the market ; there will be no more lots left. There were only three hundred to start out with, and it doesn't take long to sell this many lots. A Word About Prices. Belle Crest is our first subdivision In Portland; and we want to get off right, as the saying goes. Friends and outside enthusiasm count for more than office en thusiasm every time. We purposely planned to put on the market the very finest tract of land purchasable in Portland, and at a price admittedly below the market. Belle Crest is the most beautiful tract of land in Portland, and four hundred dollars for a lot is just two hundred below the market, judging from prices asked for desirable lots in other parts of the city. Today be sure and see us either office or phone ns, and we will call for you any hour you say, THE JACOBS-STINE CO. The Swetland Bldg., on Fifth St , PHONE MAIN 359 OPPOSES HIGH ' LICENSE REV. H. C. SHAFFER SAYS SYS TEM IS WRONG. He Believes City Should Fproot Liquor Traffic Instead of Shar . . ing in Profits. In his sermon on "High License" last night at the United Brethren Church, East Fifteenth and Morrison streets, Rev. H. C. Shaffer took a position squarely against many of his ministerial "brethren and declared he was opposed to the 51000 license they are favoring-, and severely arraigned them for what he asserted was an inconsistent position. He denned in his address the position of the United Brethren Church toward the licensing of saloons, and said in part: Some days ago I was approached by a gentleman who asked me to sign a petition favoring high license. I told him I could not, for no man who claimed to be a fol lower of Christ could favor any kind of license. He answered by declaring that the Anti-Saloon League of Oregon was behind the movement. I denied it. He affirmed. He had Just come from the office. Officials of tho league had told him they favored it. I said to myself, "No wonder the league Is going to pieces." The second argument was that not only did the league favor high license, but that the City Ministerial Association had taken action, and was in favor of high license. I denied it. He aiTirmed it. "Sir," said I, "you are mistaken. I am secretary of that association and I know that no such ac tion was taken or even contemplated. While there may be a few men who claim to preach the Gospel, who would be guilty of favoring high license, they are very few, and their lniluence Is small." The third argument was tfcat I should sign, anyhow, for it would mean 2 cents to him. This needs no comment. No per son who has convictions could allow such a plea to move him. The plea that we need the money is ap parently the basts for the present demand for high license. The real fact Is, the liquor Interests of the state are scared at the rapid development of prohibition senti ment, and they are going to sidetrack the real issue by getting the people to think "how small our taxes will be if we Just have high license." That was the plan of the liquor forces In 1880-89, when prohibi tion would hare swept the country had It not been for the liquor men's high-license system inaugurated in Nebraska and other states by them, in order, as it was after ward learned, to torn the people's atten tion from the vital issue of the hour prohi bition. And now in Oregon, with a good opportunity to place three-fourths of the state under prohibition within the next five years, an attempt is made and is encour aged by a few well-meaning, but short sighted, advocates of temperance, that while it is wrong to license the saloon, if we can only get a little more money out of the sa loonkeepers it won't be so bad after all. If this license of a crime is increased, who will pay for It? The saloonkeeper? No. The brewer? No. The distiller? No. The drinker or the drunkard? Yes, a part; but his worse than orphaned children, and, worse than widowed wife will pay the most of it. Shame on us. If we must take bread out of the mouths of the hungry and clothes off the backs of children, and coal or wood out of the fireplaces in the homes of our. drunkards, whose characters have already been stolen in order that "our taxes may not be increased or may be lowered." COUGH drops, throat lozenges, or cough syrups may relieve a cold, but they don't cure it Scott' 's Emzttrlon not only immediately re . lieves your cough or cold, but cures it by giving you the strength to throw it off. Take Scott "j" Emttfofon for coughs and colds. ALL DRUGGISTS; 50c. AND Jim It is morally wrong to tax the drunkard because he Is down and a slave to habit and cannot help himself. It is unfair to make the drinking man pay his legitimate taxes, the same as I do, then to add an indirect tax upon him and his family, be cause he Is already the victim of our com plicity with the liquor business. Drinking men who favor this proposed law are very foolish, that is all there Is to it, and are acting the very part that their masters desire them to. It would be far better to sever the re lation of partnership between the Govern ment that Is to say, between the people and the liquor business and have free whisky, than to have low or high license, and thus place the stamp of approval upon the blackest business that ever hailed from bell. Talks on Syrian Life. Revs. Franklin E. Hoskins D. D. of Beirut, Syria, spoke on "The Home Life of the Women of Syria" at the Y. W. C. A. "at home" yesterday afternoon. Rev. Howard Agnew Johnston; of the Madison-Avenue Church, of New York City, will address Portland business wo men at the Y.. W. C. A. at 12:30 today. AH women and girls are invited. DENIES CLASH WITH U'REN Mrs. Levelling Says Only Banter Passed Between Them. MILWAUKEE. Or., March IT. (To the Editor.) A news Item in today's Oregonian, in which my name was mentioned gives a false Impression. I wish to say a word in correction. The occasion was the opening of the Grange Hall. Many visiting members were present, and, it being an open meeting, the public generally was Invited to listen to speeches from the Grangers' standpoint. A programme was given, after which ten-mlnut speeches were delivered. Among the speakers were doctors and lawyers, who, in a vein of pleasantry, were Joked for being Grangers. They were especially funny at the expense of Robert A. Miller, and fired questions at him. which he parried good-naturedly. While U'Ren was speaking. Colonel Miller, to get even with him. asked U'Ren if he were one of the agriculturists who farmed the farmer, whereupon I spoke, saying: "No, he is the S80 statesman." Another woman asked him about his record concerning the anti-pass law. Answering this question U'Ren made excuse, saying he was chief blunderer in that matter. To this I re marked aloud. "We well know you are a blunderer." As Mr. U'Ren was fresh from the Legisla ture, where he had been busy lobbying for laws which were opposed to the principles of the Grange, was It any wonder he caused displeasure? There was no disturbance of any kind. The master of the Grange would not have permitted disorder. All interrup tions were of a pleasant character. If there were any hisses they were directed toward Mr. U'Ren, who. it appeared to me, was a. very unpopular person. In this same article I am accused of be ing a Socialist. I do not deny it. U'Ren first called my attention to Socialism as the next step onward, when In our home, working for the referendum. After he went to Oregon City he endeavored to establish a Socialist party, without success. He then spent con siderable time and energy ln securing large lists of subscribers for a leading Socialist paper. You can see that Socialism had nothing to do with this matter at all. " S. V. LEWELLING. After typhoid fever, pneumonia and other prostrating diseases, take Hood'a Sarsaparilla. 8 8