THE OREGON DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, TUESDAY 'EVENING, NOVEMBER 24,' 1908.
19
MY OTHERS
BESIDES THE
iHAKER
He Has His Uses, but the
World. Is Full of Good
Works Also, and Is Grow
ing Better "Brother's
Keeper" in Action,
By FREDERIC 3. HAS KIN.
(Copyright, 1908. by Frederic J. Haskln.)
Philadelphia, Nov. 24. Despite the
muckrakers who are looking only for
evtl; despite the would-be reformers
who expose only the seamy side of life;
despite the continuance of the world
old belief In man's Inhumanity to man,
this country is growing better every
day.' There Is a big. concerted effort
on the part of Its people to lift them
selves and others to a higher plane of
efficient cltlsenshlp. This is being done
through education, industrial training',
practical nelghborliness and an amplifi
cation of .that spirit of loving charity
which, according to the old Judeon law,
should make of a man his brother's
keeper. On every hand there 1b abun
dant proof of the great uplift of the
nation,
Out of the chaos of spasmodic giv
ing ana sentimental cnarity wnicn ap
plied only to immediate needs, is being
evolved a new system of practical phil
anthropy that has organised charity
into a helpful machine, and that offers
prevention and cure at the same time.
Because the best way to help a man Is
to show him how to help himself, mod
ern philanthropy Is beginning to devise
means of giving that help. State, coun
ty, district, city, church and private
charity still overlap In many places,
but charity organisation societies are
showing the greater good of systemat
ized effort.
Cop for Honest Unfortunates.
Buffalo organized Its rharltles SO
yars ago, Philadelphia 19. and New
York 26. Boston and Baltimore suc
cessfully organised shortly after these
and by 1881 there were 20 cities In this
country with organised philanthropy.
Charities such as these work to give
alleviation, offer permanent cure, and
provide for preventive measures. What
Is possible in the larger cities Is also
possible In the smaller.
Where a quarter of a century ago
the beggar was given alms and dis
missed as a nuisance, modern philan
thropy has a better plan. It feeds
him, gives him a bath and a room for
the night, and then begins a study of
his case. If he Is ill he a sent to the
hospital and given treatment, if in
curable, to the home for such; .if he is
mentally defective, he becomes n ward
of the county or state and effort Is
made to awaken his waning Intelli
gence; If he is blind or crippled he Is
flven a home and taught some slmola
ndustry that will make him self-sustals-Ing
and leave him his self respect. If
he Is strong, able-bodied and willing,
modern philanthropy will help him find
what he wants and offer him training
In night classes or free technical schools
to fit himself for better work
Bop Also for Even the OrishlnaL
If he Is a vagrant, a criminally Idle
fellow, he Is given a chance to reform.
If he Is -proved a criminal, then comes
modern philanthropy with one of Its
biggest arguments for altruism It at
tempts to cure rather than to punish.
In olden day a criminal was a moral
leper to be shut away in solitary con
finement or herded among others of
even worse propensities than his own.
Solitary confinement has proved of no
value in this country, and the segrega
tion of criminals has made them worse.
Idleness has proved the greatest curse
In American penal Institutions.
Modern philanthropy means to cure
each criminal If possible. More than
halfi the people that have committed
crimes are Ignorant of any kind of trade.
The present day method of treating
these people Is to give them a chance to
reform and become citizens by teaching
them a trade .nat makes them Inde
pendent when they go lnto the world
again. It means that the model penal
institution shall no longer torture these
morally sick fellows with the curses of
idleness or solitary confinement, but
offer them work as a cure.
Employers of labor In all kinds of
commercial md manufacturing enter
prises have been "Investigated" and
criticised until it is a wonder they have
the courage to go on proving their Trielp
fulness In the great uplift movement
Long before there were organizations
for prohibiting chlH labor, for abolish
ing sweat shops, or for uplift move
ment among mill operatives, there was
work being done by .employers In both
northern and southern cotton factories,
whether Inspired by commercial or by
altruistic motives. Every up to date
manufacturer Is looking for the best
devices that will preserve the health
and life of his employes, and the one
who does not seek to Improve ihe con
dition of his working people is soon
classed as a back number.
Oar of Children.
Here in Philadelphia may be found
average examples of modern philan
thropy, both private and municipal, an
application of the Idea of "brotherly
love" that was the primary reason for
the city's being founded. Here found
ling babies ana orphans are taken and
placed in homes throughout the state,
a wise example that la being followed
by others. It is knows that, while in
stitutional life gives shelter, food,
clothing and instruction, It cannot give
the greatest essential mothering-for
lack of which hundreds of babies in ;
institutions have pined away and died.
The children here are under com
pulsory education laws and are pro
tected from xaexory worn until 14,
The first permanent day nursery in
America was established for Philadel
phia children, and Ihe first children's
playground in America was that set
apart for them In Fairmount park.
There are Juvenile courts to try small
offenders, and probation officers to give
advice when needed. A society helns
protect them from cruelty and another
helps rina nomes ror mem. A factory
inspection department ana tne fennsyl
vania child labor committee see that
there Is no evasion of factory lama
There are a score or more of colleges
and tecnnicai' scnoois open in the even
ings for young working people, and
there are social settlements that expect
to be of great help. ,
Shelter for the Wayfarer.
- The wayfarer here in a strange city,
either man or woman, can find at any
hour of the day or night a clean bed,
a bath and two meal tickets given in
exchange for three hours' work at
lodges kept by the Philadelphia Society
for Organising Charity. If the way
farer Is seeking; more permanent work
others take convalescent women, and
two sick diet departments or local in
stitutions furnish food , to trohold and
tuberculosis patients pa certificates
r pnysieians. -. . , ; . ,
. looking After Fablio SKesUtb,
. There are . organisations ; aiding the
municipality la Its' anU-tuberoulosIs
crusade. , , The board of health makes a
rigid , inspection, of houses , whose In
mates brlnr home faetorr work, and so
revests the spread of disease. In this
'city of homes" the health is further
sareguaraed by tenement house ana
building inspection by city officials,
aided by a volunteer corps of rent col
lectors known aa the Ootavla Hill asso
ciation. A "special agent" stands be
tween the municipal and the organised
charities as a sort of clear in house of
Information, and so prevents a dupli
cation or work, over lftuo persons in
the exoluslve employ of the city look
after those who need, help.
Here, where the first anti-slavery
protest was sianed ana where the Am
can Methodist Episcopal churoh was
organised, the negro is not forgotten
ana mere are social settlements ana
missions for that race such as are
found in Washington, Louisville. New
York and In a remote Rhode Island
village.
When there was great Idleness the
earlv nart of the vear. the city of Phil
adelphia appropriated $5000 and gave
n nubile parks, just as Chicago soci
eties arranged zor snow isnoveung anu
street cleaning, and Just as the Charity
Organisation society of Indianapolis the
year before used, unemployed men to
build homes for widowed mothers on
some property the society owned.
Satan and Idle Bands.
Modern philosophy sees that It if bet
ter and cheaoer In the long run to pre
vent crime than try so cure It. Blnce
most crimes are committed by men
trained to work, there is a general
tendency to prevent this by putting In
dustrial or technical training Into all
the schools throughout the ' country.
Congested districts offer opportunity
for crime and New York state is st
tempting to relieve the congestion in
city districts by placing people on
farms. Already 15,000 people, chiefly
immigrants, have been so placed, and U
is said that there is room in agricul
tural New York for 2,000,000 more.
Denver, through its Juvenile courts,
has saved 75 per cent of its criminals
without ever sending; them to reforma
tories an argument for more Juvenile
courts and child saving societies. The
probation system In Massachusetts has
kept 67,760 persons out of prison within
eight years, which means ynearly that
many citizens reclaimed for good uses.
As the greatest menace to civilization
is the unreformed ex-convict, bitter
from long confinement snd seeing the
hand of the world set against him, mod
ern philanthropy urges the rehabilita
tion of the discharged prisoner.
The Sage Foundation.
The $10,000,000 known as the Sage
foundation, promises to be a big hilp
in the prevention Of crime. It furnishes
an annual income of half a million dol
lars to be used in making studies that
will result in "The Improvement of
social and living conditions in the Unit
ed States." A study wH be made of
the causes of poverty, vice, Ignorance
and adverse social conditions, snd a
remedy found if possible. Already it
has helped In a great education cam
paign against tuberculosis, has fur
thered the playground extension and the
charity organization extension move
ments, n has financed the Pittsburg
survey, making a year's study of the
economic and physical conditions among
workers there, and has made appropria
tions for scholarships In the four
schools of philanthropy in Boston, New
York, Chicago and St Louis. Bach mall
brings to the trustees of the fund hun
dreds of appeals for help, and, in proof
of the growing altruism of the times,
the great majority of these letters rep
resent good plans for the further uplift
of the people of the nation.
Because of the great uplift movement
the demand for systematized philan
thropy and organised charity, and the
need of trained workers in all phases
of charltv giving, may we not ulti
mately see In this country a government
department of charities, such as the
landtag of Prussia created by law three
years ago? The swift process of evolu
tion we are now witnessing in the world
of charity may bring it about.
vtlm rmsrD nr to i says.
PAZO OINTMENT is roarantMd to cor lor
rme or Itching. Blind, Bleedlnf or Protruding
Files In s to 14 flmys or money reronaea. oue.
Thanksgiving Manners
Yes, It's' polite to accept two helpings
nr Rovai mince Dies. Decause your nost
ess didn't have to bake them, and it
emphasizes her good Judgment hence a
compliment. NT B. They're so good
you'd forget "your manners" anyway,
so what's the useT
"Purttana." Ask grocer.
MOTION PICTURE
SHOWI
Merry Chase in Streets of
San Francisco With
Happy Ending.
JUsltea Press leased Wire,
Bart Francisco, Nov. . axmc an ex
citing chase through 20 blocks in the
center of the city, Frank Wieland and
Joseph Adams are la the city prison
charged with robbery. In their spec
tacular attempt to escape arrest late
yesterday the men captured two ve
hicles, while the pursuing police tpok
up the chase in automobiles. When
captured, one of the thugs drew his
revolver and attempted to shoot Pa
trolman V. N. Bakullch, A faulty
cartridge saved the policeman' life.
The men were discovered shortly
after they had broken into the Hotel
Lorin. They were seen by the proprie
tor. Charles R. Smith, carrying a bag
which was afterward found to contain
silverware. 8ml th, with W. C. Dorman,
took up the pursuit of the robbers In
a buggy. -
At revolver point the thugs held up
Robert Larkln, a municipal employe,
and stole his buggy. Leaping Into th
vehicle, they again too p their flight
A furious drive followed, in which the
buggy was smashed and the occupants
thrown out They Jumped into a fish
wagon, threw off the driver and started
the horse at a gallop. -- . '
By this time police were coming from
all nearby . stations summoned by the
frantic telephone calls of those who had '
witnessed the chase. An automobile
wae obtained and In a few minutes the
robbers were cornered. Adams showed
fight, and placing his revolver agalnet
Bakulich's head, pulled the trigger.
The cartridge failed to explode and
Adams was felled by Bakullch.
4aa
1 1 m
(Ail
THE
INGENUITY Of MAN
CANNOT MAKE BET '
TEN WHISKEY THAN
hunter
BALTIMORE
BYE
FROM SELECTED QRAIN,
SCIENTIFIC DISTILLATION
AND THOROUGH AGINQ
Sold st all first-class esfeg snd by Jobbera
WM. LAN A HAN SON, Baltimore, Md.
1
II f
lUDni
J I l LTD
WHILE nruck-rakerg .hare ben showing the rH -of
the times, there bis been a tendency to Iogigbt
of the good works that are ia progress. The
world it really not to bad aa ft has been jpfctaredr-che out
look Is not so gloomy u some persons believe. The tend
ency of the hour it upward, rather than downvwd. The
movement to raise manhood and womanhood to a higher
plane it nation-wide in its scope and abiding in itt effect
This subject wiH be ditcutted- in a series of special ertrdes
By FREDERIC J. HASKIN,
Ltegfanins in this paper Tuesday, Nor 24.
Our correspondent tells how philanthropy has become s
science, how modern dries are organizing private charities
into great machines for greater good, and how hundreds
of factories, mills, acid stores have instituted welfare work
for their employes.
He describes the work of day mtrseries, of institu
tions for the blind and the insane tells of recreation cen
ters and playgrounds for children, and gives an account of
life in a model factory. He shows how citizens are being
made from immigrants, saved to the state by juvenile
courts and reclaimed bv reformatories. He tells of modern
clubs for working girls, and explains the uplift spirit of
the unions and the brotherhoods.
These articles are not altruistic essays they are a
trained reporter's account of facts. They shine with the
light of promise, but their optimism-k justified by the con
ditions they describe.
THE GREAT UPLIFT.
I.-
m. .
nr..,
v..
vn.
vnr.
IX..
x.
XI..
xn.
XTTL.
XT?..
Jffoflera PTiflBnthxoiiy.
..Organized Charity In Hew York.
..Welfare Work.
..Say Ifarteries,
...Schools as Social Centers.
. .JRew World lor the Blind.
Jlefiiending the Jmrnigrant
.A STodel Factory.
. The Playgrounds Horement
. . .Reclaiming Criminals.
..Cuing the Insane,
..Juvenile Courts.
. . ..Clubs for Worldngrtrls.
. . . .Uplift in Organized tabor.
or making an effort to return home,
special attention la priven his wants. At
the Catherine Street House of Indus
try homeless women and 'children are
given shelter, and men are received
at the Galilee and the Whosoever gos
pel missions. The department of tub-
lla safety sees that no able bodied per-
son snail subsist on cnarity: it gives
him- a hearing- and a chance to make
good. ' .i 1
Here, where was located the first
hospital ever chartered in America, the
municipal hospital last year treated
2608 patlenis, Awhile :?,558 "outdoori"
er charity, cases were attended by the
cltvs district physicians. Visiting
nurses are sent to homes needing them,
there are twn lhatria.' nrl a iMthnr.
odge 1 for convalescent children, three
0AL$
For Range or Furnace
kL Per
Ton
Washed and Screened
No Soot
No Dirt
F. B. JONES & CO.
EAST 7 both phones B 1771
ICIHI
"I claim to know a great deal
abbot a lew aliments, rather tban a
little of all buman Ills."
" Different doctors have different ideas In
regard to cures. Some calL- a suppression of
symptoms a cure. They dose for drug ef
fects and claim that nothing more can be
dona But the real aliment remains and will
bring the real symptoms back again, per
haps the same as before, fyut very likely
leave the patient In a much Worse condition.
I claim that nothing less than complete
eradication of disease can be a real cure. I
treat to remove the disease, and not merely,
the symptoms. I search out every root and
fiber of the ailment, and I cure to stay
cured.
I not oply cure all weak conditions
promptly, but I employ the only treatment
that can possibly cure such disorder perma
nently. It is a system of Jocal treatment en
tirely original with me, and !s employed by
no physician other than myself. This may
seem a broad assertion, but It Is Just as sub
stantial as it is broad.
I Cure the Cases That
Others Cannot Core
A bold .statement, but Just as true as it is
bold. Vo. aU cases that others fall to cure
are curable by ray methds, but fully 90 per
cent of them are. The way to learn wheth
er your case is curable is to consult me. I
know exactly what can be done In every In
stance. I ought to know this, for I have
done nothing else other than treat men's dis
eases for twsaty-five years. If your case Is
curable -I will treat you. If It Isn't I will
not. If I treat you, and If you so desire.
.El!f
SB. TATXO&,
The Leading Specialist.
MY CURES ARC
PERMANENT
In 11 my work I am
thorough. painstaking
and careful to gtva Just
the right treatment re
quired in each individual
case. For 25 years 1
have been proving my
ability and my business
methods have always
been strictly reliable.
My unqualified success
Is due to a thorougtt
medical education, sup
plemented by years of
experience in men's spe
cial diseases only. My
treatment is as correct
as modern science can
make it. Others may
offer Inducements such
as cheep treatment or
?ulck treatment, but my
oremost claim is for
thoroughness, which in
the long run in EVERT
CASE: means the cheap
est and the best.
I
:
:
MY FEE FOR. A CURE IS
$10
In Uncomplicated Cases
Whit Weakness Is and How
I Curs It
"Weakness" is merely a
symptom of chronlo inflam
mation in the prostate gland,
brought on by the Improper
treatment of some contracted
disease. A complete and radi
cal cure Is, therefore, a ques
tion of restoring the prostate
gland to its normal state, and
this I accomplish promptly
and completely without the
use of Internal remedies. My
treatment Is a local one en
tirely. It is original and sci
entific and has been proven
absolutely effective by thou
sands of tests. I am con
vinced that by no other meth
ods can full and permanent
restoration of strength and
vigor be accomplished.
FREE CONSULTATION
Call at the office if possible
for Free Advice, Examination
and Diagnosis. If you cannot
call, write for symptom blank.
Yon Pay When Well
Varicocele
l thorough cure without pain or cut
ting. Every case of Varicocele X . treat
proves the superiority of my mild and
harmless method, and the folly -of re
sorting to surgery. In most instances
it is even unnecessary to detain the pa
tient a single day from bis business.
The treatment I employ is distinctively
my own. and can be had at my office
only. Do. not submit to the knife and
hospital expenses, when a complete and
Jermanent cure oan be had without the
oss of time, and without pain qr cut
ting. J
Specific Blood Poison
Others dose the system with mineral
S Olsons scarcely less dangerous than the
lsease Itself. The best they hope to
do by this treatment is to keep the dis
ease from manifesting its presence
upon the surface of the body. Under
my treatment the entire system is
cleansed. The last taint vanishes to
appear no more. I employ harmless
blood-cleansing remedies. They are
remedies heretofore unknown in the
treatment of this disease. They cure
by neutralizing and absolutely destroy
ing the poison In the system. Such
cures cannot be other than complete
and permanent.
T .tat. nnlhln. In n M . m ham rtn An. n I... V. . -
uviuui. ,i. in iuiiiuuui.ciu.ul. UUfc 111" .WHft.. .UIW UBIO.
T It will cost you nothing to call and talk over your case. You can find
Out all about VOIir trntlhl. Jtnri VOll nan l.t.r apranff. tr havln lM.m.nt
rooms, are tne largest,
y
any time you like. My offices, comprising ten
most elegant and best equipped In the west.
! The DR. TAYLOR Co. !
COBITZB SECOHD AJTZ XOBBXSOBT BTBEBT0. rOBTKAVD. OXZOOBf
lTivate Entrance, 03414 Morrison Street. X
4 4w$$ 0 $ w4
A good sphool none better. Well established reputation. Successful
graduates. Skillful, painstaking teachers. Living Expenses low. Many
other advantages. Let us tell you about them. Write vfor catalogue.
SALEM, OREGON W. I. STALEY, PRINCIPAL
1
Damiana Bitters
A wonderful invlgorator and nervine
A powerful apfcrodlslao and special tonic
for both sexes. For sale at drug stores
and liquor dealers, or by . Woodard,
Clarke & Co., 4th and Washington Sta
OXiABXB WOOOWAKD 9BUO CO.
POBTliAjrp, OB AQEBTB.. , :,, . ,7
FOR WOMEN ONLY
Dr. - Banderson's Compound
Bavin and Cotton Root Pills,
the best and only reliable rem
edy for , rEMAIiB TBOV
BZ.E8 ' AITI) XBBKCTO&ABX
TUBS. Cur th mnat nh.H.
hate cases In 8 to 1ft days. Price $2 per
box. or S for 5j mailed in plsln wrap
per. Address T.-J. PIERCS, 211 Alisky
bld- 1SS loartlaoa-gt, PSrilaad, Or. .
)i fySXl. "
HYDROCELE
The term "hydrocele" is taken from
"Hydro" water, and is literally a
pouch-like distention of the tunica
vaginalis from an unnatural accu
mulation of straw colored fluid in
the sack. The reflex diseases that
develop as the case approaches the
chronlo stage are many. It is
usually of slow growth but a steady
Increase Is certain sometimes reach,
ing the size of a man's head. Elec
tricity or local applications In its
treatment are about as effectual aa
pouring water on a goose's back.
But my treatment will cure any case
in a week to 10, days without pain
or detention from business, and It
will pay you to Investigate my
methods. If I cannot show you ten
times more cures than any other
specialist In the city I will make
you a present of $100 In gold. I am
doing business on facta, not fiction,
and am prepared to demonstrate
these facts to your entire satisfac
tion. What I say of hydrocele Is none
the less true of
VARICOCELE
In such ailments as these you are foolish to relv noon the unatm.
ported word of any man. Don't do It from me or any one else. Is It
nut niiio . .s. n.iiiiiiB m kb aome or tne gooas oerora you
get any more "pig In the poke' business T I cure these ailments la a
week to 10 days. ,
ISO CURE, INO PAY
ISO EXPERIMENTS
JNO FAILURES
We make a specialty of diseases of the delicate and sensitive centers
and treat no other class of ailments.
Our entire time and practice are devoted tn th cur f HT.rvm nt.
BOir, VA&XOOCXXiB, STXICTtTRS, X.OST VTTAUTT, BTTBBOOBI.B.
FILES, FISTULA, DISEASES OP TKB KTDlrXTS, B&ADSXB, VBOS-
X-O. A.MI iuuv, vun a aavix.j VSWXWJCJUS, WSAUISBS AJT9 A
DISEASES COHXOxr TO SUIT. Our fee in uncomplicated cases is
Don't Starve Your Nerves
A great many people suffer from
ailments caused by weak. Impover
ished nerves, and try to cure these
troubles by dosing , their stomachs
with drugs. It Is impossible. Drugs
are poisons, and poisons wreck the
nerves.
If you are weak, run-down, ner
vous and unambitious; if you suffer
frequent headaches and have spells
of despondency. It means that your
nerves are starving for new energy,
electrlolty. That's all they need, and
nothing else will cure them.
Electro-Vigor saturates the nerves
and vitals with electrlo life while
you sleep. It builds up strength and
vitality in every weakened organ
and drives out pains and aches. '
Electro-Vigor Is tie only success
ful appliance for Infusing electricity
into the body. Its Influence is pow
erful yet soothing and pleasant to
the nerves. All nltrht long It sends
a volume of electric energy Into the
ailing part. It will cure all such
troubles as lumbago, sciatica; in
somnia, nervousness, rheumatism,
weakness of arty kind and stomach,
kidney, liver and bowel disorders.
I have used Electro-Vigor about 40
days and I feel like a new man.
Electro-Vigor has done even more
than you claimed It would do.
3. PRESCOTT.
Burkee, Or.
GET THIS TREE
"Write for my free, 100-page book
of information. This book is written
In plain language and chock full of
Interesting facts to every sufferer.
It is handsomely illustrated. It Is
worth a dollar to any man, but I'll
give it free and pay the postage if
you will mall me this coupon.
$10.00
PAY WHEN
CURED
S. A. Hall, M. D.
1314 Seoond Ave.,
BBATTIiB, Will.
doiiu III na j 1 v v j vui
free 100-page illvjftrated book.
Kama
' 1
.i:..;V.
'Address ;...
If you have mde mistakes in the past correct the mistakes. Con
sultation and advice' free. If you cannot call at-office, write for self
examination blauk many cases cured at home. Medicines $1.60 to H0
per course.
Hours 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. Bnndays, 10 a- tn. to 12.
St Louis MesduSd Dispensary
OOBJTXB SXCOBTO ABB T.
1MSTT.T.
roBTXJuro. obboob.
Every Woman
uHosiea a ucmia now
. tooei u weaaarfal
MARYIl Vkhirliffa Sorsv
iBtwtlriHlMH A.
MsWUMm, bert-Aaf.
. estJilo Conv.nl mil
gyyv ;s iini
KM n J
l.tMlmtWkra
If b. mnne( MFsly tBS
.ill .ft Kctp mo
Mur. but Mad fttJBB ft
llliutntwl book mW. It
full Mtrtlealan Snd dmrtion. t.
as sr nn voilK.
tm Si
Oarse Os. 1
ails Sns Oe I s
Journal W ant Ads ray Best
mm 1
v -
.",''-1'
-