The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, March 27, 1910, SECTION FIVE, Page 3, Image 56

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BISHOP MOORE'S GOLDEN WEDDING TO
BE NOTEWORTHY FAMILY REUNION
n
Famous Churchman Is Well Known in Northwest, Having Been Resident in Oregon Tour Years
Oldest Members of Episcopacy and Has Traveled Far in Service.
-Is One of
11
Add a personal charm that is of the greatest assistance in
both SOCIETY and BUSINESS. Not only from the stand
point of good appearance, but for health's sake as well, it is
a wise investment to keep your teeth in perfect condition
THE SUNDAY OREGOXTAX, PORTLAND, 3IARCH 27, 1910.
PERFECT
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CINCIXXATf. Maroli -'. (Special.)
The fiiftieth wedtling aniiiversar- of
Bishop and Mrs. Davis Hastings
Moore, of Cincinnati, will be celebrated in
Denver, Col., on June 21, 1010. There will
bo at that time in Denver a family re
union at which will be present all the
members of this famous family. Den
ver has hon chosen as the place for
the gathering because three of the
children live there. Bishop Moore has
consented to deliver the commencement
address at the University of Denver on
May 26. Ho and his wife and their
youngest daughter will leave here late
in May, make a brief tour of the West
ern conferences and then go to Den
ver. Dr. Eliakim Hastings Moore, the old
est son. is at the head of the depart
ment of mathematics in the University
of Chicago. His wife and son will ac
company him to Denver for this "for
mal informal srathcrinK"
Mrs. Hobart James Pitkin, the Old
est daughter, is the wife of Attorney
R. S. Pitkin, of Denver, and has three
daughters who will be present at the.
anniversary.
Vv illiam A. Moore, junior member of
the Denver law firm of Cronston, Pit
kin & Moore, will entertain his par
ents while they are In Denver. He is
married and has one daughter.
Alfred Truman Moore, well-known
Kew York newspaper man and formerly
prominently associated ' with the
f-ripps-McRoa league of newspapers in
Ohio, will go to Denver from New York.
Julian H. Moore, deputy District At
torney of Denver, and Miss Marion
riff Wiimmiit-ittiiiahfa
Moore, their youngest daughter, who
Uvea in Cincinnati with her parents,
will also be thore at that time.
Bishop Moore on June 21. I860, mar
ried Miss Julia Sophia Carpenter In
Athens, O., and the years of their wed-cU-d
life' have been divided between this
country, Africa, China, Japan and
Corea.
Bishop Moore is widely known in
Portland and throughout the North
west. He was" resident bishop for Ore
gon, ' with episcopal residence In this
city, four years, ending two years eo.
He succeeded Bishop Earl Cranscfn.
Bishop Smith took up the work of
Bishop Moore and is still in charge
here.
Bishop Moore presided at the 1907
session of the Oregon Conference, held
in (iraoe Methodist Episcopal Church,
Portland. He is one of the oldest mem
bers of the episcopacy, and has en-
.. . i I
V ' w v 1
A X
circled the srlobe in the years of his
service as a general superintendent.
Two years ago he was assigned to bo
resident bishop of Ohio, with residence
at Cincinnati, by the board of bishops.
PERSONAL LIBERTY IS ISSUE IN
KENTUCKY LIQUOR CAMPAIGN
Henry Wattcrson Says Prohibition Is Invasion of Personal Liberty
cans and Democrats.
-Some Very Caustic Remarks on Republi-
fN'OTi- rrharj .m rarlfrs hem would like
to know nhaL Henry Watterson has to say
at ihiB particular thn?. Following portions
of a lonjy editorial from tho Louisville
Oourler-.Tournal of Monday last are repro
difa'd. showing that ho deem the issue of
personal liberty, attackefl bv irohilltion,
the main Issue before the country.)
"Better England free than England
sober," said the good Bishop of Dur
ham. He did not mean to extol drunk
enness. He meant to stigmatize slavery.
Next after disease among mortal ail
ments comes slavery; the slavery of the
mind even worse than the slavery of
the body; loading both with chains;
lashing both with thongs; humiliating,
degrading slavery.
Better England under the Kestora
tion than England under the Common
wealth albeit neither was free bet
ter England "under tne Merry Monarch,
for all its license, than England under
the iron heel of the puissant but per
fidious Cromwell better that men
should regulate their own behavior,
their food, their drink and their ap
parel, responsible directly and solely
to God, than that they should be regu
lated by statute, or conventicle,- re
sponsible to a self-perpetuating hier
archy, playing alike upon their ignor
ance and their fear, and charging tliem
a stipulated price for its services as
an attorney before the Courts of Heav
en, "Better England free than Eng
land sober."
How about Kentucky? Watchman,
tell us of tha night. How about Ken
tucky? During more than 40 years now tha
Courier-Journal has braved the miscon
ception and therefore the displeasure
of many good people In order to provide
against dangers that were visible to it
but not visible to them. In no single
instance lias the ultimate event contra
dicted Its forecast, yet always it lias
had to combat some extreme, hot and
hasty. Intolerant and cocksure, for the
moment, seeming to have the state in
a sling and to be resistless. The re
actionary spirit after the War of Sec
tions which expected to accomplish by
political agitation what had been lost
by battle; the fiat scheme of liquidating
the National debt with greenbacks and
of flooding the country with an irre
deemable paper currency; the free sil
ver delusion which proposed to pay
all private debt with 50-cent dollars
and to make everybody rich by dilut
ing and debasing the money of the peo
ple each appealing to the passion, not
the" reason, of the time the Courier
Journal met full In front and on the
very edge of the fighting, not quitting
the field until the wisdom of Its con
tention had been vindicated before all
men. Never have Democratic party
leaders lost the state under its minis
trations. Never have they carried It
against its counsels.
The just adjourned Legislature may
not have been a miracle of statesman
ship, or a prodigy of learning and val
or, but if It had done nothing else, it
would have signalized Its public worth
and paid for the cost of Its existence
by putting foot upon the scheme of the
Anti-Saloon League to enslave and cor
rupt Kentucky.
The methods by which this organiza
tion proposes to corrupt and enslave
Kentucky ought to be its undoing. It
began by an effort to barmboozle the
Democrats, whilst preaching the essen
tial Republican gospel of flat moral
ity, laid In purism and paternalism,
whilst emanating from the Republican
strongholds of Maine and Kansas, and
whilst officered by Republicans of the
barebones species come down In regu
lar Apostolic succession from Cotton
Mather to Lorenzo Dow, and from Lo
renzo Dow to Heyburn of Idaho, and
such like. Happily Its fake game caught
only here and there some shortsighted
mercenary who, calling himself a Dem
ocrat, made the mistake of thinking
that Prohibition was going to carry all
before It, and who, willing to- sell not
only his own soul, but that of his party,
to get an office, stood ready to embrace
any fallacy that promised to pay- .
The Courier-Journal drove such as
these either back within the lines
whence they claimed to, have sprung,
or else into the Republican fold, where
they properly belong.
, e
As a result the Anti-Saloon League
is now a Republican, and its managers
no further wasting? their time on Dem
ocrats ami Democracy, are preparing
to put a Republican ticket in the Held.
This will fly the old threadbare and
dishonored flag of "Death to Kum"and
"Down with the Demon of Drink," the
main indictment of its platform recit
ing that the Democratic party is in arl-
liance with the Brewers and the Dis
tillers and therefore is in favor of
Drunkenness for its own sweet sake;
Its leading issue and pretended pur
pose proclaimed as the Divorce of Liq
uor and Politics, although, as a matter
of fact, it is the Anti-iSaloon League
which keeps Liquor In Politics, its
scheme being to get possession of the
machinery through the agency of hon
est, but misled temperance people and
then not to attempt to suppress drink
which experience has shown cannot be
suppressed, but to dispense privileges
In exchange for office and power, as In
the state of Maine.
It has already chosen its standard-
bearer an Iron-clad, dyed-ln-the-wool
Republican, who is known to smell of
Burley tobacco and presumed to be a
hero In the night-riding neighborhoods
It has already set up in a thousand
churches and lodges the Prohibition till
box for a mammoth corruption fund
Its basis of expectation is that good
Republicans will vote the ticket
whether they be Prohibitionists or on
posed to Prohibition, with' enough fool
Democrats caught In the temperance net
to total a popular majority. A mighty
good lay-out, let us say, li the creeks
go dry!
e
The Courier-Journal has declared
that no Democrat can be a Prohibition
ist. Assuredly, no Prohibitionist is, or
has ever pretended to be, a Democrat.
The effort of the doughface to ride the
two horses of Democracy and Prohibi
tion, facing both ways, is at once cow
ardly and dishonest. He who concedes
that politics has to do with religion
that riches may be created and man be
regenerated by legislation, is a Repub
lican and not a Democrat.
The fundamental difference between
Republicanism and Democracy lies here,
The upright and intelligent Republican
believes In the efficacy and the virtue
DO YOU NEED A NEW SET OF TEETH?
If you do, ve will make you a set that will look exactly
like natural teeth that will give your mouth and face
a natural expression. To those unacquainted with the
methods of the "Wise Dental Company it may seem a
broad statement to make, but we are prepared to prov e
it by the same men and women whose appearance
speaks for itself. ' -
A FEW THINGS WE CAN DO
Fill out hollow cheeks
Make old faces young
Remove deep lines and wrinkles
Make thin faces plump
Correct a flabby or withered skin
22-Karat Gold or Porcelain Crown for -22-Karat
Bridge Teeth, Guaranteed, Each
Gold or Enamel Fillings, Each - - - -Silver
Fillings, Each -
Good Rubber Plates, Each - - - - -The
Best Rubber Plates, Each - - - -
$5.00
$3.50
$1.00
50c
$5.00
$7.50
At these prices we furnish the VERY BEST of metals. Our work is all inspected by Dr. "W. A.
Wise; and no work is allowed to leave our off k'e unless it, is PERFECT in every respect. OUR
FIFTEEN YEARS' GUARANTEE GOES WITH ALL WORK. We don't extract teeth except
as a last resort. It is not the class of work we like to exploit, althouph when it is necessary we
do it painlessly and with the utmost care. WE AIM TO SAVE THE TEETH.
l ...fc 7-,,
DR. W. A. WISE
S3 Vpr ft I,ealpr In Plnlr
Dental Work In Portland.
Guaranteed Bridge Work
Guaranteed Plate Work
TheSmiuense advantages and possibilities of bridge work in the
hands of skillful dentists are not fully understood by the general
public. It is generally supposed that where most of the teeth are
missing a plate is the only recourse. Nothing: is farther from the
truth. If you have two firm teeth, we can attach a bridge, without
a plate, that will be perfectly firm, look as well as natural teeth
and chew your food to' your entire satisfaction. Nothing- looks
worse than missing teeth, not to speak of the injury to jour health.'
Delay makes matters worse, so you had better decide -to have that
bridge made at once. It will not take long. Free examination.
If your plate is well fitted, it will perform its work satisfac
torily, fill out tbose sunken cheeks and improve your
appearance a thousand-fold.
Wc guarantee every plate to fit perfectly. Badly fitted
plates drop out and cause untold annoyance. Avoid trouble
by having your plate made here. Free examination by our
experts.
The Wise
DentaJ
n
c.
DR, W. A. WISE, President and Manager
Phones A and M 2029. All Work Guaranteed.
Office Hours 8 A.
Tailing Bldg.
M. to 8 P. M.; Sundays 9 to 1
, Third and Washington
of the. strong:, parental hand in govern
ment reaching: out to correct the man
ners and the morals of the people where
they offend some arbitrary canon of
ethical or party faith. The upright and
Intelligent Democrat believes exactly
the contrary that the betst govern
ment is the least government consis
tent with the public order; the people
individually free, each to pursue his
bent according to his conscience. Hence
in the outset the separation of Church
and State: the relegation of ethics to
the schools: of theology to the sect's:
of conduct and apparel and diet to the
home.
The Courier-Journal is a Democrat
and not a Republican. It will never
surrender the least item of this blessed
philosophy. It will die In its tracks
before it yields an inch of ground
which it .holds to be sacred.
So. let the heathen rage and the val
iants of fanatici&m come yea. the
hordes of Satan disguised as saints and
quoting Holy Writ we shall be ready
to meet them on the threshold of the
House of Truth, beneath the Demo
cratic roof-tree of freedom: of freedom
for all, exclusive virtue ' to none: no
quarter to those that wear the mask
of Democracy to pander to the lust of
Republicanism: the black flag to those
that deny td their neighbors in public
what in secret they claim for them
selves "Comfounding signs they are inclined
to.
By damning those they have no mind
to."
And we invite all liberty-loving,
fraud-hating Kentuckians to stand and
fight with us. for these simple rescripts
of our common birthright; that no man
shall be despoiled of his property with
out due process of law; that no man
shall be restrained in his person with
out due warrant of law: that no law
shall be enacted that obstructs the
right of any man to worship God ac
cording to his conscience, that, except
in the case of crime, crosses his thresh
old for inquisitorial purposes, that
molests him or . his wife and children,
or the stranger within his gate, in
their walks and ways, their habits and
opinions; because he whose cabin is
not his castle is a slave. whUe he who
would force his neighbor to do as he
does, to think as he thinks, be he fan
atic, or be he hypocrite. Is neither a
good citizen nor an honest man, but a
would-be despot, whom it were flattery
to call a traitor!
Taxes Out of the Common.
London Chronicle.
For taxes out of the common, one
must turn back to the days of George
III. For In the reign of that monarch
one was almost forced to "die beyond
one's means." The army and the navy
were in urgent need of money and the
chancellor was at his wits' end. He
thoucht of the dead and gravely sug
gested a tax on cofTins. "Which proposal
recalls tho day when one could not be
born without involving a proud parent
In a tax. A graduated tax. The blrt'li
of an eldest son, for instance, cost a
duke as much as 30 pounds, whereas, a
cotager was forced to pay only 2 shil
lings. To be born with a silver spoon
in the mouth cost money in those days.
BURGLAR ROBS IN COURT
Breaks Into Harrison-Street Sta
tion; Takes Jurist's Coat.
CHICAGO, March 26. A burglar broke
Into the rourtroom at Harrison street
police etalion soma time during the night
and stol9 three coats and a hat belong
ing to Municipal Judge Crowe, whicn
were hanging in a locker.
The thief, evidently a fastidious one.
also ook a whisk broom wiih him, in
order that he might keep clean the
clothes he had acquired.
The courtroom is near the desk ser
geant's office, and although policemen
slept overhead and others sauntered about
the station, the burglar was not heard.
His operations were not discovered until
S A. M. today, when Edward J. Corco
ran, the clerk, entered the chambers.
"Hello, what's this?" he asked.
On the floor before him lay the lock
of the Judge's clothes closet.
The door was open and the hooks, upon
which three coats had hung, were bare.
Drawers of cabinets were open. Several
drawers in which complaints against
persons sought by the police are kept,
were partly open, and It is possible that
the thief perused these.
$30,000 WOMAN STARVES
Recluse Has to Be Coaxed Away
From Home.
LOWELL, Mass., March 26. A tidy
fortune of $30,000 has been found hidden
in strange places in the home on Church
street of Miss M. Jennie Osgood, a re
cluse of 77. who came from New Jersey
about six yeans ago. Mrs. Lydia F. Pres
cott, of Montclair, X. J., and a Miss
Clark found Miss Osgood without food
and helpless.
Hidden in mildewed rags was J1S00 in
tarnished gold and silver. Bank books
showing deposits of $30,000 were found
stuffed In a ragged mattress. In a pile
of rubbish were deeds showing that she
owns the block in which is her home.
"Several days ago they Bent me word
to Montclair that Miss Osgood had not
been seen for four days." said Mrs. Pres
cott, "So I came to Ixjwell and in com
pany with Miss Clark went to Miss Os
good's home. We found her helpless.
We werd far from being welcome. She
refused to go away. She toik hold of
me and shook he so that 1 haven't got
over the shaking yet.
"Yesterday we went there with an auto
mobile again and this time, telling her
the-, was going to have a pleasant ride
managed to coax her into .the enr and
took her to "West Medford to kind people."
EVEN HOSE NOT SACRED
llobbers, Seeking Money, Force
AVomcn to Kemove Stockings.
ST. LOTTIS. Mo.. March 26. Two jovial
young men entered Mr. Ttwliy's cafe last
night and displaying revolvers, quickly
put themseves in possession of whatever
was valuable In the pockets of Mr. Tuohy
and his waiter.
Just then Mrs. Tuohy. wife of the pro;
prletor, and Mrs. Marie Morrissey en
tered. Hastily concealing their revol
vers, the young men turned their atten
tion to the women.
"Having heard much concerning the
stocking as tho woman's bank, wc must
request you to kindly remove your hosi
ery," one of the robbers said, as ho
opened the door to a private dininc-room.
"We await your plea.sure," he said, bow
ing them into the room.
A minute later two pairs of stockings
and two pairs of shoes were thrust
through the partly opene. door, but no
money or Jewelry was found in them.
"You are honest, ladies. I apologize."
said the robber ujion concluding th
search.
The robbers then rifled the cash regis
ters, helped themselves to the best the
pla.-e afforded and departed with $150 in
cash.
FREE a FREE
AND OVER $3700 Ii: OTHER
PRIZES. READ PAGE 2, oECTION
1, THIS PAPER.
Aids Nature
Tho great success of Dr. Pierce' Golden Medical Dis
covery in curing weak stomachs, wasted bodies, weak
lungs, and obstinate and lingering coughs, is based on
the recognition of the fundamental truth that "Golden
Medical Discovery" supplies Nature with body-building,
tissue-repairing, muscle-making materials, in con
densed and concentrated form. With this help Nature
supplies the necessary strength to the stomach to digest
food, build up the body and thereby throw off lingering
obstinate coughs. The "Discovery" re-establishes the
digestive and nutritive organs in sound health, purifies
and enriches the blood, and , nourishes the nerves in
short establishes sound vigorous health.
it your dealer otters something "last as goott,"
It is probably better FOR tflMlt pays better.
But you are thlnklni of the care not the profit, so
there's nothing "lust as good" for you. Say so.
Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, In Plain English; or. Med
icine Simplified, 1008 pages, over 700 illustrations, newly revised up-to-date
Edition, paper-bound, sent for 21 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of mailing
only. Cloth-bound, 31 stamps. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.