12 TIIE MORNING OREGONIAN. MONDAY, JULY 15, 1907. KING LEOPOLD 1 NHUMAN BUTCHER Member of Congo Reform As sociation Declares He Is a Monster. AWFUL ATROCITIES EXIST Rev. Herbert S. Johnson, at- the White Temple, Says Ruler of Con goese Sanctions IVIost Shocking and . Revolting of Crimea. Rev. Herbert S. Johnson, pastor of the Warren-Avenue Baptlat Church of Boston, Mass., told yesterday morning, at the White Temple, of the atrocities perpetrated against the negroes of the Congo Free State under the rule and with the consent of King: Leopold. Rev. Mr. Johnson had with him a small chlcotte, or hippotamus hide whip, with which the natives of Africa are often lashed by the authorities until the flesh Is a mass of bruises. The whip which Mr. Johnson brought with him Is about 2 1-2 feet long, but those used by the officers are often much larger and heavier. It is said that 25 strokes will render a man unconscious, as each cut of the whip goes -to the bone of the victim. It Is not uncommon, how ever, says Mr. Johnson, for a native to receive 90 .tshes. He declared positively yesterday that King; Leopold Is p scoundrel and a blackguard, that the terrible stories . of the horrible conditions on the Congo River are for the most part true, and that lately Leopold has taken measures to keep the missionaries from testifying to what la really happening there. . Rev. Mr. Johnson took for his text the story of the Good Samaritan, and read the words of Christ at the conclusion of the parable, "Go thou and do likewise." He said in part: I spent six weeks in traveling over the United States with some missionaries who had returned from the Congo Free State. During tbls time the word was passed about that Mrs. Harris, one of the mission aries, was traveling about with a reformed cannibal. I am the man. This shows what gossip is; but what 1 will tell you this mocnlng Is truth, for I have heard It from the mouths of those w'.ic have been on the Congo and know of the conditions existing there. Baptism and church membership are not the essentials of the Christian religion. The first essential is compassion for the op pressed. The Christian religion Is some times the halter with which to hang a tyrant. Formal religion is but a sham, painted white. Christian religion is the es sence of love and compassion. Blackest Crime In History. I want you to feel that this subjeot is personal to you and your church, and your community. I am talking to you today about the blackest crime that has ever stained the pages of history. It is a crime perpetrated by a professed Christian, yet who is a demontacal scoundrel, sacri ficing cur fellow-men by thousands to sat isfy his lust and greed, that he may In crease his harem and his American and for eign investments. A little more than 20 years ago an Amer ican citizen (Henry M. Stanley) discov ered the Congo Basin. England then lm medltely entered Into a treaty with Portu gal for holding the Congo Free State. About the same time Leopold, desiring to enrich himself, made representations to the United 8tates that If our Government would recognize his flag. he, as a true hearted philanthropist, without' thought of ' dividends, would .reign over the country nor the " sake of the moral and material welfare and improve ment of the condition of the natives. The United States performed that dlplomatio act and 'recognized the flag of Leopold. Other nations followed suit, and the upshot of the whole matter was that Leopold, through our Influence, became the sov ereign of the Congo Free State. 'How has he fulfilled his solemn pledge? He has robbed those people by taking from them nearly 1.O00.0UO square miles of their native land, and he now claims practically everything that grows or exists there. It 1 sail his private plantation, to be exploited as you would a sheep ranch or cherry orchard. Everything is his the native has a right to nothing. Even the wages paid to the black man are a pure gratuity. The sound of the shots on the fields of Gettysburg have scarcely died away. We are now citizens of a free country. Those people on the Congo have as much right to their native land as we have to ours, unless you believe, as some men do, that the black men have no souls. Has) Enslaved Xatlves. . In addition to these things Leopold has enslaved the people, 30,000,000 strong. How much in taxes, think you, does he demand of these people, especially of therubber gatherers? Every year they are taxed 300 days labor. If you are a laboring man perhaps you can realize what that means. James Gustavus Whitely, consul-general of the Congo Free State, an American citizen oh, I am ashamed of that says that Leopold is justified in taking the taxes from the poor slaves, as he pays them good wages. An average of 5 cents for two weeks work Is what he calls good wages. On this amount the native must find himself the necessities of life. If you want to get rich fast I will show you how to do it. Pay little wages and extort big taxes. . Perhaps you will not believe the state ments I am about to make In regard to conditions in Africa. Perhaps you will believe the word of the Belgian minister who says all those interested in the Congo Reform Association are agents of the British government. Under pressure of publlo opinion, Leopold sent a delegation of three men down to the Congo Free State to make an investigation of conditions. Thetr re port was made in French, and Professor James H. Gore made the only English translation extant. He is a member of our church, by the way, but he ought to be excommunicated for making such a diabolical mistranslation, and thus seek ing to influence public opinion in favor of the dastardly work of Leopold. If I did not tell the truth about this I would have been in state prison long ago, but friends. It Is the truth. We fought Mr. James Gustavus Whitely in the Senate at Washington, and at last, after months and months of weary waiting, the Senate unanimously passed the resolution that this country co-operate with any other nation In ameliorating the terrible abuses of the Congo. The cause of King Leopold is no longer in court. The case has been tried and the sentence passed. The only thing needed is to execute it. King Leopold has 30,000 cannibal soldi ers. They are armed, it Is said, with rifles, but really with rapid fire guns. In addition they use the chlcotte, a whip of. hippopotamus hide, several feet long. The hide is cut in strips and twisted so that when the whip is used its sharp edges cut the flesh to the hone. John H. Harris, for seven years a missionary in the heart of the A. B. I. R. rubber district, told me that he had seen 60 of these poor slaves brought out to be whipped because they did not bring In enough rubber to satisfy ttut greed J of the King. It takes six men to whip the victim. Two seize him by the arms and two by the limbs, and throw him upon his face In the dust. Two more men stand by, each with a chlcotte, with which the negro Is given 90 lashes. After 25 strokes, Mr. Harris said the victim was unconscious, and after 90 the flesh on tho thigh was laid open to the bone, but i would drive you all away If I should tell you one half what I have heard from eye witnesses. The only crime of these men was that they were short in their rubber. Butcheries of Soldiery. I have heard the returned missionaries tell of seeing a fire burning in the woods, and upon going nearer have seen hundreds of human hands hanging by drying large hands of men, hands of women and. the hands of little children. There is an unwritten law In the Congo Free State that for every cartridge ex pended there must be a human hand to show. When the natives are short on their rubber these cannibal soldiers are sent out and shoot down men, women and little children. It makes no difference whether or not the particular people shot are the ones who were short in their rubbsr, and so invited the animosity of the authorities." Theirs is a process of Intimidation. For every man, woman and child shot, a hand must be brought in to show that the bullet was not wasted. In one month 6000 dried human hands were brought in, and the missionaries have told of taking the covering from boats at the river side and finding them filled with the hands of black people of all ages. G. Stanley ' Hall, president of Clark University of Worcester, Mass., is the author of a book which contains the statement that under this regime at one cannibal feast the soldiers ate six tons of human cutlets roasted. These things are hard to tell and hard to hear but profitable, I had almost for gotten that. The profits to Leopold in the last ten years amount to $35,000,000. This money he can invest In gilt-edge securi ties, American railroads for Instance. He Is building his new palace of the blood of his victims. In the last 15 years Leopold has slaugh tered, according to the report of the Eng lish Congo Reform Association. 3.000,000 black people, Mark Twain puts the figure at 15.000,000. which I think is more nearly correct. All these things are done by a fellow Christian. At least he professes to be a Christian. England has said that under certain conditions she will do something toward the betterment of the conditions of the' natives, and we have said that we would back her up. How ever, nothing has been done to this end. It has been said that King Leopold, hav ing been informed in regard to the state of affairs on the Congo, which he already knew very well, will himself reform his soldiers. There was a German soldier who took his cannibal band into a village and there gave them orders, or at least permitted them, to kill the people right and left and then to cut the bodies of little children in half and stick them up on poles here and there over the village as a warning to rubber gatherers who do not reach the mark. He was lately pro moted for his work. Intimidation of Witnesses. Leopold has passed a law that whoever hereafter shall make a statement against the king or about the situation,' unless he can prove that statement by witnesses in open court, shall be sentenced to five years In prison, which under prison con ditions In that country means death. It Is exceedingly difficult to secure witnesses In court to testify to these atrocities for they are often arrested or made away with long before they reach court. Why are we doing nothing? Why are we content to hold our prayer meetings and our Sunday schools and talk of heaven? "The kingdom of God is within you," says Christ, and its principles are mercy, justice and brotherhood. King Leopold of Belgium Is on trial before the Judgment seat of God for murder. This church and all churches of the civilized world stand on trial with him, as do all the citizens of America. You ask what can I do? Write to Secretary Root and ask him to do all In his power to save the Congoese. Tell him what you think about our connection with this affair. Then Join the Congo Reform Association and get its literature. G. Stanley Hall is president, and it has for vice-presidents such nlen as Mary Twain, Lyman Abbott, Henry Van Dyke, ravid Starr Jordan and Booker T. Washington. I believe the slaughter can be stopped withput the use of an armed force, simply by a little diplomacy on the part of the United States and England. Bishop Thoburn Slay Retire. Bishop Thoburn, the famous mis sionary bishop of India, is living quiet ly at his home on the East Side, and by order of his physician takes no part in public affairs. He says that he may never again see India, the field where he spent more than 40 years of his life, as his active work is now over. He went to India as a young mission ary and returned a bishop. On ac count of the condition of his health he has not spoken in public since he arrived in Portland, but spends his time with his grandchildren and in writing. Hold Annual Mission Festival. The annual mission festival of the St. Paul German Lutheran Evangelical Church was held yesterday in Haw thorne Park, under the direction of Rev. August Krause, the pastor. Serv ices begun at 10:30. At noon luncheon was enjoyed in the park. In the after noon services were conducted at 2 and 3 P. M. Mr. Krause was assisted by Rev. Mr. Flatman, of Aurora, and Rev. Mr. Relnhard, of the Swedish Church. The object of the meeting is to promote an interest in missions, and similar gatherings are held annually by all German Lutheran Churches. Y. M.- C. A. at Mount Tabor. The meeting for. men, held every Sun day afternoon In the Y. M. C. A., was transferred yesterday afternoon to a point on the eastern slope of Mount Ta bor, near ' the end of the carllne. A considerable number attended. Rev. B. Wallace Shepherd, ' the Bible teacher from' Michigan, delivered an address on "Infidels' Objections to the Bible." The music was under the direction of Pro fessor W. M. Wilder. An Appreciation of Mrs. Duniway. PORTLAND, July 13. To the" Editor: Al low me an explanation in regard to the ad dress delivered by Mrs. Abigail Scott Duni way last Wednesday at the quarterly meet ing of the State Nurses' Association. Mrs. Duniway's arduous duties connected with the equal suffrage petitions, now en grossing her entire time, had not given her time in which to prepare a paper for pub lication, but, at the request of the chair man, she made the notes furnished the Oregonian while the business session of the Nurses' Association was in progress, thus showing the versatility of her gifts both as a ready writer and speaker. It Is said that it takes a million men to make the poet of a nation. Mrs. Dunlway, with a prophet's snul, is voicing the needs of the million women living and the mil lions yet unborn, who will live to see the fruition of the seed she is sowing in season and out of season. She has a work none other can do. Her life is an inspiration, as are her Impromptu speeches, fitted to every occasion. Bhowlng always the master hand. And I am sure 1 only voice the sentiments of those who had the good fortune to hear her last Wednesday, when I make this ex planation, as one who has seen behind the scenes of a life of wonderful activity and devotion to what to her is a sacred cause. K- F- w- ' If Babr Is Cattuur Teeth Be sure and use that old well-tried' remedy, Mrs Wlniklnv'a Ennthln. Ccm . ..un. teething. It soothes the child.' eoftena the sums, allays pain, collo and diarrhoea. T Cause Is Often Poor Wages Paid in City Stores. SOME EMPLOYERS GUILTY Lacking Money Sufficient for Food and Clothes, Many Girls Fall Under Bad Influences and ' ' Are lied Astray. "The Young Woman With a Past" was the subject chosen for the sermon last night at the Taylor-Street Metho dist Church by Rev. E. M. Hill, acting pastor. He told of the causes which lead to the fall of young women, tak ing for his text Luke 7:37. He said i- part: "We are sadly conscious of the fact that there is In the twentieth century, as there was in the first century, th& young woman with a past. The expression of the text, "A woman who was a sinner.' means but one thing. We are not speaking -tonight of the young man with a past, for society recog nizes no such man. .For the same sin for which the young woman is condemned to te forever held up to scorn and the contempt of the world, the young man is forgiven, even while he continues In his course. "A beautiful young girl leaves the old farm with the prayers of her parents fol lowing her. After weary seeking she at last finds a place to work In a store at a few dollars a week. Now the problem la to find board and lodging that will not cost more than her weekly stipend. At last a place In found in an undesirable part of the city. She realizes now that she needs money for clothes The clerks Jest at her home made garments. It Is very trying, but there is not a penny from her meager salary that can go for anything but board and lodging. "One night as she walks home, more discouraged than usuaj, a young man walks with her. 8ome trivial thing has happened, giving him an opportunity to introduce him self. She is homesick for a kind word and he says it. A ride follows on the next even ing, and some times he takes her to a rest aurant where there are boxes and wine is served. Drink the Lure to Ruin.' She has compunctions of conscience as she remembers the temperate habits of the dear old home folks, but he laughs at her 'prudlshness,' as he calls it, and tells her that the old-fashioned ideas about drinking wine In moderation are all gone among cul tured people. Then she sips the wine, for uo girl likes to be called a prude. "One day he brings her the most beauti ful garments and tells her a plausible tale of how his mother was so pleased with his description of her that she sent these clothes as a present. At first she refuses to accept them, but he urges her to Just try them on, which she feels she cannot re fuse to do. She goes to her roof and looks so pretty In the new garments that she Is Induced to accept them. As the days go by she is more and more under obligations to her . false friend. He presses his suit and promises to marry her, but in an evil day she realizes that she has been betrayed and that all is lost. She haa stepped beyond the pale and is now a young woman with a past. There are but three ways open to her now, to return home and tell-all; to en ter the ranks of the lost women of the great city, or to commit suicide. The ad record is that the great majority take one or the other of the last two methods. "Under the first condition which I have named the commercial Nimrod la slaughter ing his game for market, coining gold from blood, while under the other the gaily be decked huntsman is pursuing his victim to the death for the mere pleasure of the chase. All employers are not guilty of this crime, but many are. Many an employer Is murdering just as much as if he used the knife. He does it by demanding that his employes work for a wage smaller than they can live upon In a self-respecting way. Employers know what it costs to live, and they also know that their young lady clerks cannot come to wait upon their customers dressed in Calico. Such Employers Are Thieves. "It is the duty of such employers to per form a simply sum In arithmetic. Let them add board and lodging to the cost of cloth ing and then an amount above that for in cidentals and pay their girls at least this much salary. They will get better service and their consciences will be clear. It is putting it mildly to say that an employer Is a dishonest man when he pays less than enough for his help to support themselves upon with self-respect. If he pays less than this he takes what belongs to the em ploye as much as if the money . was em bezzled from the bank. Such' an employer is far worse than the embezzler, however, for he places the girls In such a condition of helplessness that an accomplice may steal that which Is of more value to them than their lives. The slave trader must reckon with God, and for slaving employers the next world will have no comforts and hell will be a cool place compared with the amltings of their consciences. "It is with cool deliberation that the ravisher of the young girl works. He schemes and plans as though his prey were of the lower animals. He gives no thought of the ruin to which his victim will come. He makes no bones of telling nla boon companions how he has a pretty young thing on the string. They laugh with him at the Intended exploitation of a soul as though it were a fine Joke. Without any compunctions of conscience he entraps this creature who seems the very incarnation of God's best thought for the race, and uses her as a mere tool. Having accomplished his purpose, he casts her aside as a man casts away a broken cup from which he has quenched his thirst." The subject next Sunday night will be "The .Young Woman and the Square DeaL" SPEAKS OF FALSE SHEPHERDS Church of Forms Merely Is Bound to Lose Influence. Rev Gilman Parker, pastor of Grace Baptist Church, Montavilla, preached yesterday morning on "The Good Shep erd." His text was from John x:14. "I am the Good Shepherd." Rev. Parker said in part: "It was ecclesiastical oppression that called forth this declaration from the Christ. With the mercy and compassion which characterizes a true shepherd of a long suffering people, he had healed a poor blind man on the Jewish Sabbath. The self-exaited officials ,of the dead, effete church, had persecuted and ex communicated this same man for accept ing this help and for publicly confessing the healer. "When Jesus came on earth he found the world full of officious, dogmatical, and tyrannizing priests, who claimed to have the exclusive power over the religious faith and spiritual destiny of man; and from the present aspect of the religious world, it is very apparent that at the second appearing of the Lord that he will find the same religious conditions. Men who have the forms of true religion and are without its life and power, are dictating the faith, doctrine and conduct of the religious world in a marked de gree. Men wearing the sacerdotal robes of church officialism are dictating laws for the moral and religious direction of men who should be free from all human constraint and left to follow the dictates of a conscience enlightened by divine truth and vitalized by the Holy Spirit. Men who are exalted above other men by an assumed religious dignity, are saying who shall be saved and who shall be damned. "Over against this condition of things Jesus declares that he is the true and only shepherd; the only one commanding the entrances into the kingdom of God. That he is at once the only all sufficient deliverer of mankind from sin. and from ecclesiastical oppression and persecution. That all who assume tho prerogative of fixing the destiny of men and command ing their lives religiously, are 'thieves woman w in a as and robbers.' He came to free men not only of the substance and effects of sin, but to emancipate them from religious slavery; and that he has the exclusive authority and power In matters of re ligious faith and practice. "Assumed ecclesiastical judgment over the lives and soul-destiny of men, by any man or combination of men. Is the hih culminating point of plasphemy, and the strongest force of the Devil in damnlag men for time and for eternity that ex ists in the world. . "Jesus Is the good shepherd, having all authority and power to give eternal life to men; having exclusively the right to rule in and reign over the spiritual realm and destiny of human kind. All else is a fraud and a snare." Union Vesper Services. Union vesper services were conduct ed yesterday afternoon at 5:30 o'clock under the auspices of Central Chris tian Church. Dr. Ghormley delivered an able sermon. The young people held a short service before the sermon. Next Sunday evening John Wooley, the temperance apostle. Is expected to ad dress the union meeting. - TOUXG WOMEX ACT AS USHERS Will Serve During the Summer at the White Temple. 'One hundred young women acted as ushers at the White Temple last night. They were appointed yesterday morning to take the place of the men for the next two months, and they handled the large crowd last night creditably. Two women were stationed at each aisle, one to act as usher and the other to welcome members of the church as they came in. The singing by Fred Butler of "The Ninety and Nine" was a feature of the evening. Rev. J. Whltcomb Brougher spoke on "Mismated or an Unfortunate Marriage." He took for his text I Sam. 25:3, and painted a picture of Abigail, sensible. Industrious, virtuous and religious, mated to Nabal, rich but llltempered. Intem perate and irreligious. She did not seek a divorce, -however, but remained faith ful to her husband until God delivered her. MUST ELEVATE THE NEGRO DR. FOULKES SHOWS RESPONSI BILITY OF UNITED STATES. Higher Life Economically and Spirit ually Is Said to Offer Solution of Vexing Problem. Dr. William Hiram Foulkes spoke at the First Presbyterian Church yester day morning on the question, "Am I my Brother's Keeper?" He took up the negro problem from the point of our re sponsibility. There is considerable race prejudice against the negro, he said, but it is much harder for the American to realize where his own feelings leaa him than it is for him to see the awful re sults of the feeling of the Turk against the Armenian, the Russian against the Jew or the Belgian against the Negro. He said there are only four ways of dealing with the Negro. We can deport him; we can exterminate him, but in do ing so lose a great many of our own men; we can absorb him by intermar riage, which is against all the feelings In the heart of the American; or we can elevate him. The latter, said Dr. Foulkes, is the only solution to the prob lem. The Negro must be taught a higher life economically and spiritually. For his sermon at night Dr. Foulkes took the subject, "Broken Cisterns and the Living Fountain." Many, he said, have forsaken the gospel of Christ to follow the teachings of a Mrs. Eddy or a John Alexander Dowie. "It was but a few years ago," said Dr. Foulkes, "that I was In .Chicago and heard many ask, 'How do you account for the great claims of Dowie and the fact that peo ple of means and good education and Judgment apparently, are ' following him?' Ten short years have seen the bursting of the great bubble, have painted for us the scene of an old man, senile and despoiled, dying in the midst of his departed power, and of Zlon City In the hands of receivers. It is but an example of a great cistern broken." This is the last sermon of Dr. Foulkes' before leaving for the East on his Sum mer vacation. Next Sunday Rev. Ira W. Landrith, D. D., L. L. D., of Nashville, Tenn., will preach in the morning and evening. He was moderator of the Cum berland Presbyterian General Assembly, and is now prominent in the United Pres byterian Church. On July 28 and August 4 and II Rev. William Foulkes, D. D., of Kansas City, Kan., will preach at the First Presbyter ian Church, and on August 18 Rev, Charles Gorman Richards, of Sterling, 111., will preach. Dr. Foulkes will preach ait the House of Hope Church in St. Paul, Minn., July 28. On August 11 he will preach at the Forty-first-street Presbyterian Church of Chicago. From there he will go to at tend the Winona Bible Conference at Winona, Ind., and will preach at the First Presbyterian Church of Detroit August 18 and 25. He will return home September 5 or 6 and will preach again in his own pulpit September 8. Dr. Foulkes goes to the East on his vacation partly as a matter of choice and also because church business calls him. Judge Samuel R. Artman, of Lebanon, Ind., will speak at the First Presbyter ian Church Saturday night at 8 o'clock on the "Unconstitutionality of the Saloon License." ' When the Hair Falls Stop itl And why not? Fall ing hair is a disease, a regular germ disease; and a r r fiuers n S NEW IMPROVED FORMULA J quickly and completely destroys these germs. The hair stops falling out, grows more rapidly, and dandruff disappears. An entirely new preparation. The New Kind Does not change the color of the hair J. C. AYER CO., Manufkcturing Chemists, Lowell, Mui. PLEA FOB THE PARENTS REV. J. D. CORBY PREACHES ON FIFTH COMMANDMENT. Deplores Tendency of Present Day to Sacrifice All to the Welfare of the Young. Taking up the subject of "The Rights of Parents," which Is being discussed on the platform and in the press. Rev. James D. Corby, of the Universalist Church of Good Tidings, yesterday morning delivered an effective sermon on this topic. It was a strong appear for "old age" with a look into the teachings of the fifth, com mandment. His texts were: "Honor thy father and thy mother," and "Children obey your parents in the Lord, for this is right." Mr. Corby said: The fifth commandment sanctifies social life, and teaches that man is meant to live In families. The lova of parents for their children is far more intense and permanent than that of children for their parents. Wherever home life begins to crumble you will find sons and daughters who have ceased to love and reverence father and mother. No lesson of scripture is needed more than that of the deep and lasting love of the Jews for their parents, and the ten der regard with which they treat the aged. Think of Jacob's wall over his lost son Joseph. And Joseph's love for his father and ministry to his old age Is a beautiful example for all time. How David sobs forth : 0 Absalom, my son, would God 1 had died for thee!" It was from the Hps of Mary that Jesus gained his first great spiritual truths, and from the cross He commits his mother to the care of the be loved declple. All through the Bible the lesson Is that a child shall be the restorer of thy life and a nourisber of thine old age. Literature gives its strongest scenes to teaching the same lesson. Shakespeare's tragedy of King Lear turns mainly on the foul ingratude of his children; it is filial untenderness which wrings from the heart broken old King the agonizing cry: "How sharper than a serpent's tooth It is to have a thankless child !" Times have changed, and signs are not wanting that the fifth commandment has become obscured. This is distinctively the young people's age they are catered to, have their own papers and amusements and pleasures. Youth is called for in school, busi ness and professional life. Parents the aged have certain rights. They are not to be crowded out of life nor happiness. You and I are going to live to be Just as old as we can. "We will doctor every pain so as to piece out life to its farthest limit. The spirit of the age is put. ting the man and woman of 40 on the shelf. Homes for the aged are crowded and have a long waiting list. Few homes today have an aged one In them, and the heartlessness of some children is shown by parents In voking the aid of the courts to compel their children to keep thc from starving. I plead for the divine rights of old age and obedience to the fifth commandment. It Is sad, but true, that some parents have invited this condition by failing to exact that reverence that is their due. Those who demand most of their children receive the most. Parental authority appears to be at a discount, and fathers shrink from con trolling children even of T years. Parents have a right to the companion ship of the young. We have fallen into the bad habit of separating the children from their parents, in school, church and society. It is pathetic to' see a son or daughter go from home day and night and give no thought to the father or mother who would enjoy the same company. Happy the youth whose father Is his companion and chum, and thrice happy the daughter whose mother revives her life In the career of her child. If you are fortunate enough to have your parents living, cherish are care for them; write them as often as possible. Sit down today and write to the loved ones in the old home. When the postmaster of England visited home and asked his sister what his mother enjoyed the most, she re plied, "Your letter every week," he took care that instead of one, two letters came to his mother every week, thus doubling her pleasure. Parents have a right to honor and love. Many' forget all that has been done for them, and are cruel and unthankful to their parents. Bitter the regret of those who neglect the wishes of their parents. When James the Fourth of Scotland was young he stood in rebellion against his father. All his manhood was a penance for that sin. In memory of It he wore under his robe an Iron belt, and to that belt every year he added a new link an ounce in weight, that his repentance might be heavier, every year of his life. Parents have a right to religious co operation. The fashton changes in re ligion ; education and marriage draw dif ferent temperaments to various places of worship at least we should hold fast to th faith and labor earnestly to extend the righteousness for which our elders con tended. It saddens parents to see their children come to the West and drop the habits of worship and turn Sunday into a day that smothers the finer feelings. Parents have a right to work. It is downright cruel to prevent the mature and aged from helping on the world's work. To force those who have tolled all up the years to sit In the corner with folded hands Is a hardship. Young men cannot plume themselves as the only men of achievement. Men at DO do with ease what was difficult at 35 and impossible at 25. Youth only gains 20 per cent of the prizes. . Savages kill the aged, and this is kinder than to let them exist and force them to be idle. If the aged work slow, remember how patient they had to be with your bungling fingers while you were learning how. It is better to wear out than to rust out. Parents have a right to care and protec tion in old age if need come. As they would share their last crust with a child, far more should the young deny themselves, if need be. that their parents should not want. What TT'.' air v laor APEN HUNGARIAN NATURAL Cheap Effective Palatable BOTTLED AT THE SPRINGS, BUDA PEST. HUNGARY. sort of a youth or girl Is it who, earning good wages, can see the mother drag her heart out with hard work, yet selfishly put every dollar on their back or on their own pleasure ? The f urnished-room-and-to-mouth existence followed by so many makes an excuse for the neglect of the aged. They have no room, no conveniences; but, what is worse, they have no heart to share the best they have with the father and mothor who ministered to their helpless need. I am heartily In favor of old age pen sions. Men and women who have tolled long and honorably till they are 65 deserve better frm society than a ride over the hills to the poorhouse. Cultivate the sanc tity of the home. Stay home more make that the place of amusement, instruction and love. Build a home where old and young may live together, loving and being loved, revealing the blessed truth that we are one family in earth and heaven chil dren of the Alt Father, who is love. MORALITY 0F SOCIALISM Speaker to Believers Says New Order Would Elevate Morals. At the Socialist meeting held last night in Alisky Hall, George Vandergoet spoke on "Morality Under Socialism.' "If morality is, as the dictionaries define it, a rule of conduct whicji governs the Individual and shows him how he should act toward his fellowman, why is there such a difference in the. practice of it? If it is a sentiment implanted in the mind of men, then the idea of morality should' be similar in the minds of all men. But this la not so. The Hottentot would not consider it immoral to kill his own children, while we would consider it Cure IV1 EN FOR YOU CAN PAY WHEN CURED It is not a question of whether you can be cured, but whether you will be cured. Don't wait until it is too late. The cure is absolute ly certain. I cause no pain, and you need not be detained from your work for one day. I espe cially solicit those tases In which the many so - called treatments have failed, or where money has been wasted on museum doctors, electric belts and other appliances. THE ONLY DISEASES I TREAT. Spermatorrhoen, Lost Vlajor, Vari cocele, Rupture, Plies, Hydrocele, Organic Weakness, Syphilis, Acute and Chronic Gonorrhoea and Pros tatic Inflammation. FREE CONSULTATION AND EXAMINATION T invite every weak or diseased man to call for free advice, and if desired I will make a free examination and diagnosis, but the visit will not obligate nim in any way to become my patient. i Office Hours i 9 A. M. to 0. F. M. Sundays, 10 to 1 only. THE DR. TAYLOR CO. corner second and morrisox streets, Portland, or. Private Entrance 234 V4 Morrison Street. SEE US FIRST And You Will Not Have So Many Medical sio 27 Years in Portland. Are you suffering; from Indiscretions, Weakness, Spermatorrhoea, Kidney, Bladder, Dribbling; T rine or Prostatic Troubles, or Contracted Blood Disease, Varicocele, Hydrocele, Swellings, Rupture, Ulcers, Sores, Skin Disease f If so, see us at once. Stricture Our cure dissolves PVPrv flhtril;tinn Inflammation, stops every unnatural discharge, reduces the prostate srland. cleanses and heals the bladder and kidneys, invigorates health and soundness to every part of the Varicocele often produces an obliteration of the vital powers. We cure the most aggravated cases of Varicocele without pain, suffering or inconvenience Not only do we give internal constitutional remedies, but we also employ a local treatment which restores the perfect circulation of the blood and regenerates the secretions, while the glands are enlarged and vigor and vitality are renewed. You will acquire from this cure a sense of well being which accompanies good, healthy and robust manhood. CONSULTATION FREE WRITE if you cannot call. All correspondence strictly confidential and all replies sent in plain envelopes. HOURS 9 A. M. to 6 P. M.; evenings. 1 to 8:30; Sundays, 9 A. M. to 12 noon. ST. LOUIS MEDICAL AND SURGICAL CORNER SECOND AND YAMHILL TA PURGATIVE WATER. USES. For occasional or habitual constipatipn. As a safe, ordinary, and gentle laxative. In bilious attacks and liver disorders. For improving the complexion. For persons inclined to obesity, gout, or rheumatism. Against results of errors in eating or drinking.' not only cruel, but highly immoral. I have read that the Japanese would rather commit suicide than be taken prisoners, and we know that suicide is not moral, for it is against the laws of God. And there are mapy other examples to show that morality is not defined by all men In the same way. Morality has been evolved entirely through the mode of life). Through all time, everything that was for the benefit of the Individual was moral. "What was once considered moral Is now thought to be Immoral. The con. ception of morality changes with tha times. The speaker said that Just now the capitalistic class established the moral law, and everything is in the interest of that class. Socialism, on the other hand, is for the benefit of the entire world. The capitalists want their interests advanced. They wish to be honored for their wealth or position or power, said he, while under Socialism a man would wish to be hon ored only for the good he could do his fellowmen. Morality, which the speaker maintained is so largely determined by wealth and the power and station wealth gives, under Socialism, which does not recognize selfish Interests, would be brought to a higher plane In representing the standard of all men. Entertain Portland Visitors. ABERDEEN. Wash., July 14. (Spe cial.) A meeting of the Chamber of Commerce is to be called by President Finch to talk up a plan of entertaining the business men of Portland who are expected to visit Grays Harbor on July 28. The entertainment will probably be a banquet to be given in the Hotel Washington. DR. TAYLOR, The Leading Specialist. I NEVER GUESS, Experiment or take chances of any sort. I attempt to cure only those diseases that I have been curing for the past 25 years, and fel sure I am Justified in saying that I have learned all about them. Were I lacking in knowl edge pertaining to my specialty I would never have attained my present success, nor would I to day be recognized as the leading specialist treating men's diseases. If afflicted, you can depend upon It that the service I offer you is the service you need, and is serv ice such as can be rendered by no other physician. FEES TO PAY We are curing more men than any two specialists in Portland. Our cures bring us patients sent to us by their friends we have cured. OUR FEE No Pay Unless Cured the stricture completely and removes ,nm tVio iirlnflrv numa cr n alia... nil body affected by the disease. When neglected, varicocele undermines the strength, deranges tho functions, racks the nervous svstem anrt DISPENSARY STREETS, PORTLAND, OREGON. 1