•T he S ilvertons J ournal • VOL Ill. *■—> 8ILVERTON, OREGON, FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 1914. PAPAL NOTES (By L, D. Ratliff) "Th« Primacy of the Pope is the result of a Ion» development which did not reach its completion until Nichol uh (858-867) effected the papa! scheme the aubjection of every aec- ular power to the Church, and >f the Church to the Pope. Under Inno­ cent 111 (1198-1216) the Pope «'aimed to be the reprcaentatlve of Cod nr earth. All power waa c-mscquently hie, not only in apirituai matter», but alao in matters of the world.” Schaff, Encyclopaedia. e e e ■ Cardinal Manning, speaking for the ope said, 1 acknowledge no civil pow­ er. 1 claim to be the Supreme Judge and Director of the consciences of men: of the peasant that tills the Held, and the prince that sits upon the throne; of the householder that lives in the shadow of privacy, and the leg­ islator that make« laws for kingdoms. I am the sol», last Supreme Judge of what is right and wrong.” Thia is the Catholic etaimate of Joe Barto of Rome, a man who became Vice-Deity by the accident of Ecclesi­ astical politics. • • • » No Pope or Council has ever denied ^is purpose of the Roman Church to Pisacsa the Temporal Power of the nations of the world. • • • Cardinal Gibbons instructed his congressional lobby to inform the House Navy Committee what the Hierarchy wanted in the way of an increase of chaplains, and the creation of a rank among them. The com­ mittee attached the measure as a rider to an appropriation bill, but it was new business and one member could stop it. It was stopped and stricken out in the House, but was put back in the Senate. Our Oregon Senators sat like knots on a log and let it go through. Not a voice was raised against the order of the Cardinal. • • • Voters Protective leagues should be organised everywhere. In Toledo. Ohio, Norfork, Va., Pittsburg, Pa., and scores of other places the Romanites have been routed by organisation. We need it in Marion County. Rome has her representative nominee fir legislature, and there are other ^Bmincex who will be tools of the Pope’s bunch. • • Nearly all the Democratic members of congress from the west and north are Roman Catholics. s • • • The priest in the exercise of Con­ fessor is Christ for the ttmc and can­ not sin; hut he can ask the girl sug­ gestive and passion-inspiring ques­ tions preparatory to his final act of seduction when not functioning as priest. The Holy Confessional affords the opportunity, and the introduction for the rest of it. • • • Congressman Hawley voted for the Catholics against an educational clause in the Immigration bill. A Washington reporter said he wore a Catholic collar. A GOOD LETTER FROM BROTHER LEON L. MYERS La Grand, Oregon, 7-8 14 ilear Hosmer,— I just received your paper dated Au­ gust 7th and 1 read it with great in­ terest. I was especially interested in the letter written by Robt. Down con­ cerning the Gamer family and the I.iwenan case. Now while I did not get the paper which contained the art­ icle referred to by him, nevertheless in the interest of justice and a square deal I aesire to make a statement in regard to this same matter. Since we have located the sinister influence at work In our own ranks and have discovered the Jesuit, I can see where I was also misled to believe many of the things reported against the Gamer family. T now see that they were right at heart and always acted in the interest of the cause and have cared for Mary Lasen- an as probably no one could have done. The many friends assisting in this fight against Rome will rejoice to know that Mary Lasenan is in good hands and protected by the Lord in her struggle for freedom. I write ^iis to correct as far as in my power 0hs any wrong impression now exist­ ent derogatory to the character of the Garner family and of Mrry Lasenan. Leon L. Myers. NO. 41. The Dead Ex-Nun’s Affidavit AWFUL CONDITION IN OREGON A Peep into the Roman Catholic Holy of Holies. Fathers and Mothers Inferior who Parade as Saints while Committing Crime State of Washington, | Thurston County J one mu»l go tv tue Jdulher ¿superior and tell her and a»x Per lor a pen­ ance. r or laiauig at tne lame or be­ ing rate, one mu»l pro.irate oue-oeil op tne Poor uulu a oeli tor rising is rung, mere wa» a young »utter in tue Gervaia convent tpat outwardly aceineU very nappy, Pul it waa ouiy proven»«, 1 luuna out ner name wa» Smler Augtuune. Sue had taken the uiai.'» van out not tor me. Lui could nut leave tnc convent, sue Una u« ape wa» very unuappy ana devoutly wishaa »he ungni again nave lue while van. W e «Pu pot converse mueb except by notes written to each other. Unce she told me »pe wan tea to le-ive out that they would not let ner go. one once wrote a letter to a menu and gave it to tue to post a» 1 went daily to the puslultice lor the mail. 1 waa conscience stricken however, believing «.hat »he waa doing wrong and after concealing the «eller fur some time in my trunk 1 linaiiy told S'sler Bernar- ntm, tnc mother Superior, who com­ manded me to deliver the letle to her which X aid. She opened it and read it ana alter again scaling it, gave it to me to post which 1 did. A short 1, Rosa Anderson, being first duty sworn on oath say, that my inaideu name is Rosa Brandli, that 1 was bum in Lucero«, Switzerland, on the eighth «lay of September, 1869; and am uuw aged forty-four years; that 1 attended public schools, the principal of which waa a Catholic priest, and was after­ wards sent, while still a child, to a convent child» school in Switzerland under charge uf llie Benedictine sis­ ters; 1 wanted to become a kinder­ garten teacher; my mother sent me to the sisters' school at ingenbohl tn 1886; my suiter had been there before me; the mother suprior was a cousin of my mother; there were children oi rich people there, also orphans; all the children of this school were placed in classes: first, second and third c'asses; those who paid money sat next to the sisters at the table and were served ..rat; the other» sat at the second and third tables, if there was not enough food for all, these 'alter went without food. They all had to work hard for what they ale. There was a girl there, a very nice girl, whose name was «ime allerward» while »inter Augus­ Victor«. She wa» an orphan. She wa» tin« was away on a mission, an an­ an adopted child and not being liked swer came to her letter contap'tig by her parent» waa »«nt to thia money. The Staler Superior took the school. They used to punish her by money and kept it. W hile at the Ger­ beating her head against the wall and vais convent 1 had charge oí the Su- other cruel punishments. Sometimes • penor’» room. Uue day as i was busy the rest of us received cruel punish­ in the room a pnest came to see »is- ments also. Sometimes they made us er liemardnia; he came into her kneel before the crucifix for hours un­ room and she sent me on an erranu. til some of us children fainted from ex- 1 returned, but there was no one in hauslian. Sometimes the sisters made the Bister ¡superior's living room; 1 uh kneel before the crucifix with ai» ..ad some duties still to perform in extended until we could say the rosary- ner bedroom and started to go in. The over three times. Tiuy beat my slater isler was there '«nd also the priest, .o long that her sight was impaired. lie was in bed with covers over him. The sisters beat he* over the head. A11 She said the priest was unwell and the orphan» were treated the same way. .hat she was taking care of him. Soon They often punished us in theso wayj after this 1 decided 1 would not be­ which they seemed to think were easy, come a Benedictine sister. 1 became they told us that if we told any one acquainted with a lather Werner of what was going on, they would a Sublimity, Oregon. He was a punish us severely. When 1 was sick Benedictine also. Father Adelhelm, once, 1 sent home for some medicine; ■ no was the prior of Mt. Angel at the sisters refused to let me post the this time, was his superior and the letter. During this time I was re­ convent at Sublimity was under the ceiving a Roman Catholic missionary control of the Benedictine Fathers at paper from Oregon; it stated that on­ Mt. Angel. Sister Wilhelmina was ly the priests and the sisters were superior of the convent of the order civilized in Oregon; that the rest of of Precious Blood at Sublimity, where the inhabitants were barbarians; this 1 became a candidate and after a few­ paper also stated that the priests and weeks was made a novice. The Bishop sisters were frequently slaughtered by could not come up, so Father Werner Indians. They desired all who gave me the vows in 1887; when 1 wished to suffer for Christ’s sake to came to Sublimity, the sisters were come out as missionaries. 1 was will­ very poor; they had neither bedsteads ing to suffer. When 1 was seventeen nor mattresses, but slept on sacks of years old on September 7th, 1886, 1 straw on the floor. There was one left my home to come to America. I .«edroom in the convent which was oc­ came to New York city and from there cupied by Father Werner. Afterwards went to Rochester with my aunt and when the dwelling was constructed uncle and staid at the convent of the for Father Werner, the superior, sis­ sisters of the Good Shepherd. They ter Wilhelmina, took this room. The kept me behind screens and tried to sisters worked hard, but there was no hold me; they would not let me go harmony in the community. When­ outside to talk to my aunt when she ever the fathers would go away, the came to visit me; I was virtual'y a sisters were called together by the su­ prisoner. They had overall and suit perior, and they would talk among factotries inside the convent; the girls themselves that the priests were not were forced to do all the work; but loing right and whenever the superior they received no pay whatever. When went to Stayton or anywhere, the my aunt saw how I was held she took priests would tell the sister superior me home with her. She had a letter was wrong in certain respects; the from the sister superior at Gervais, trouble had been of long standing. Oregon, whose name was Sister Ber- The sisters were mostly old sisters nardina. While still in Switzerland, who ha«i formerly been a part of an­ I had gone from house to house beg­ other community presided over by two ging money to pay my way to Ameri­ priests. One of these priests was a ca, to Gervais, where this Benedictine good man, the other one had com­ convent was located. Nine of us came mitted a horrible crime so that the from Engelberg, Switzerland, at the two had a falling out. The good same time. I was the only one com­ prist appealed to the bishop to un­ ing to the Gervais convent. After re­ frock the criminal, but he refused and ceiving the letter from the sister su­ the good priest said he would no lon­ perior I left my relatives in Rochester ger remain under the authority of the and came to Gervais, where I arrived bishop. Some of the sisters followed on the evening of Decembr 31st, 1886. the criminal priest and some of them Two sisters met me at the train and adhered to the good priest, who re­ took me to the convent. I ate-alone moved with them to Sublimity, where in the visitors’ parlor. After two days he afterwards died. I was accepted as a candidate and had Father Werner was sent there. I did to conform to the convent rules which not learn, where this other convent were very utrict. Some of the rules was, hut it was some place in Oregon. of the Benedictine order are: No ta'k While at Sublimity, I noticed the sis­ ing in the sleeping room, in the hall ter superior, sister Wilhelmina, gave or on the stairs; If one does anything her night dress each month to the that is wrong or even thinks wrong, nov’ces; one day, as I and another of i he uu vices were oulaide washing, 1 »aiu io ner,— 'Uoesu t toe »inter su­ perior get tat X" bite »aid to me,— t»«.-ep your mouth »nut.” -1 suppo»oa »ue meant to »co'd me lor breaking Ine rule» about talking, but 1 noliceu she got latter ana latter, une uay »be wg» » ck ana a doctor came lrom mayion. one wan up in a lew days however. Une evening we were going upstair» alter night prayer, sister su­ perior called me back and look me into the vi» tor’» room and wanted me to »wear that i wouldn't tell some­ thing »he was about to tell me. 1 told ner 1 didnt know what it wax she wanted me to »wear to, so 1 could not tell what 1 would do. The next day she caned me into her room and »aid .he same tiling and we liad some dis­ cussion. Finally 1 promised that 1 would not tell the sisters. Then she told me she had milk in her breasts and wanted me to nurse her. A few mya later she drove to Stayton in the ouggy. The buggy stood outside the . ence. 1 stood inside as sister Wilhel- n ina came down to get into the bug- »y. ¿>be had a package wrapped up in paper with her which she roughly tossed into the buggy, so that the cover broke exposing the contents. 1 did not realize what it was then and «»aid,—“Aren’t you afraid of breaking that pretty doll?’’ She said she was going to town to get some material to dress it, but she never brought it back. The thing in the package was a dead baby, i Father Werner gave me lessons. 1 was teaching English and German. One day as 1 went in to get my les- .-on. Father Werner took me by the nand and took me over to a chair. 1 iad a sister garb on at the time with the red veil of the order. He said, “1 never knew your chaplet was lined,” and put his hand on my bosom. He wore one of the same kind. It was very disgusting to me. I struck his hand away and went out and never took any more lessons from him. He was very disgusting and indecent in his remarks. He had a flute with which he imitated vulgar sounds, hu­ man and otherwise. Some sounds, he said, were like those made by certain of the sisters, others by certai* ani­ mals. Once when I wanted to tell Father Adelhelm about the goings on, sister superior ran after me with a horse whip. It did not make any dif­ ference whether or not a sister was sick, she had to work anyway. Once they tried to make me eat acaterpiller for being unpleasant to the mother superior. Things we knew nothing of, as care of the livestock, for in­ stance, we were compelled to do as penances for little misdoings. On sev­ eral occasions my mother sent me money from Europe, but they kept it and wrote to my mother for more for my keeping, when they were al­ ready getting all my services free. Finally I made up my mind that I would leave the convent, and went and changed my clothes and told the su­ perior I was going. She found out she coulu r.ot stop me and tried to get me to promise to send any novices I heard of who wanted to join a convent. 1 told her I would advise them to drown themselves in the Wil'amette river before I could advise anyone to come to them. Then I went to Port­ land and was placed in St. Vincent’s Hospital where I worked several months. Father Orth had a church on Third and Sherman Streets, I think it was. He got me a place near St. Lawrence Church, I think it was. I got sick and was sent back to St. Vincent’s Hospital, where I was ill from fever for eight weeks. After I recovered I worked for three months more to pay it hack. That Is a sample of the so-called charity of the Roman Catholic Sisters. From there I went to work in the home of Mr. Stephens, who lived on Fourteenth and Everett Streets, I think. I was there several weeks; they were non­ Catholics and fine people. I gave n?ar- 1 • -ill the money I earned to the priests. Mrs. Stevens found it out and paid me afterwards on Monday instead of on Saturday. After doing some nursing in the country 1 went back to St. Vincent’s Hospital and worked a whi'e but received no pay. I had been to see Father Summer off and on and he knew I had had convent experience. He did not want this known publicly, so he got the Dominican Sisters to try to get me into their convent. There are two branches or degrees among the Do- minician Sisters: The regular choir sister.« and the lay sisters. I told i them I did not want to become a lay I sister. They took me to California I to their convent on Market Street in San Francisco. I joined as a candi-1 date. The sisters were all served in­ dividually at their meals. They had either colored or white wine and drank freely of it. 1 was always used to water and asked for it, but they in­ sisted that I drink wine. There was a large landing on the stairs covered with dry-goods boxes. As I passed these boxes on the stairs I heard shrieking and moaning, coming up from under the stairs. There was a secret passage from the boxes down below. I was there a few weeks when 1 was told I could not become a choir sister, because I did not bring the re- j quired amount of money. I told the , -ister I would leave and go to Port­ land. She said no, I must remain. Finally I was determined to go, they gave me a ticket on the steamer to Portland and secured a position with a family I had known in Gervais. They had a niece who asked me to go with her to visit the sisters of the House of the Good Shepherd. At first I said I did not want to go, finally the lady of the house prevailed upon me to go with her. When we got there and rang the door bell, a sister came to the door. We asked for the mother superior. The attendant said she could not be seen that day. My companion said to her “tell the mother superior it is Rosa Brandli.” In a short time we were ushered into the parlor and the mother superior soon came in. I was very much surprised that the mention of my name had caused us to be received and was still greater surprised when the mother superior came up to me and put her arms around my neck and said,—“so, you have come at last?” I said, “No.” But she began to talk and coaxed me and after a while I thought to myself that perhaps it is best that I be in a con­ vent and was persuaded to join. I watched them very closely however, as I felt somehow that I had been lured there. I was put in charge of delinquent children and slept in the same room with them. One night I awoke suddenly and saw a sister go­ ing away from my bed toward the door. My face and pillow were wet. It was chloroform. At that time I was past nineteen years of age. They had tried to stop my telling girls what was going on to prevent them from going to the convent. Archbishop Gross spoke to me about it, telling me to make no further men­ tion about my «xpersn.-es in th' con­ vent and to keep my mouth shut. I have had myself insulted many limes in the confeixion-d by being nske-l questions concerning sexual matters. A priest in Gervais always asked me if I was with a certain young man and if we touched each other and this was after I had joined the convent. I have also heard Father Werner make fun of things told him in con­ fessional, also the priesta pretend to regard these as privileged. I heard Father Orth say in Portland, Oregon, that before many years the desire of the Catholics to elect a president and to rule America would be fulfilled and that the Catholics could fight their way, if necessary, that they had plen­ ty of arms and ammunition. I have seen the sisters weep bitterly who had to go in to where the priest was. One sister I know would cry when she went in and again when she came out. This sister had a small crown of thorns which she wore under her veil. Often in the school room I h»ve seen her press this crown down on STICKERS If Jesuitism was out of the world, there would be no war. • • • The priests are getting the long green out of their short green dupe». See the point, Charlie. • • • Are yuo afraid to say or do any­ thing worth while for fear of a loss of trade? If so you are just a com­ mon coward. The woods are full of »uch animals. • • • The wholesale House of Humbug is situated at Rome. It has branches all over the world. Samples of holy wa­ ler, beads, talismans, holy fathers and miraculous lies can be seen in the monastic sample room at Mt. Angel. Oregon. • • • No reasonable man or woman wants to hurt the Catholic people or the “in- •r c rcle” of the priesthood. All that true Americans want is to stop the confidence game of Catholicism and to save our country from its demoraliz- in ; influence. • • • The banks of Germany—Dutch bank of Berlin, Dresdener Bank, Schaffhausener Bank, the Darmstad- ter Bank, the Disconto Gesellschaft» Bank, and many others in Europe, are all connected with the great arma­ ment syndicates, so powerful and so profitable, of Krupp, Schneider, Arm­ strong, Vickers-Maxim and the rest. War is Profit! • • • popes and the kings, with the aid of their priests and their re­ called nobles, have lived for ages in luxury and ease while the producers have struggled in poverty for a most miserable and stultified existence. And whenever the people have, in spite of their over work and under feeding, tried to throw off the yoke of s’avery, the parasites have had the gun already loaded and precipitated war. Awake ! I! Mr. Carnegie’s company was fined $500,000 for putting off worthless ar­ mor plate onto the government. The battle ship Oregon had three plates of this kind. Cleveland reduced the fine to $120,000 and the government went right on buying of the swindle« who bad already awb *5.000,«'00 of illegitimate profits on his armor plate deals. Who pays for «va« Im-i«-css 7 crime in the world? Has Capitalism and Catholicism anyth ig to do with it? her head until the blood trickled down. I have seen sister Mary of St. Vincent Hospital in Portland cry when she had to go into the room where the priest was when called by him. In 1900 I think it was, or possibly late in 1899. We were living in Beaver­ ton. I went to visit the home of the Order of the Precious Blood at Beaver­ ton. I inquired for sister Wilhelmina who had been the Superior at Sub'imi- ty. They told me she was no longer Superior. They said she had just gotten home and had been very sick and was very weak still. She looked very old in­ deed. I spoke to her about an old man who wanted work. She said I would have to see the priest. She took me into a back bedroom and called the priest. He came in with his clothes all open and part of his person was exposed. I told him about the old man. Then he asked Sister Wilhelmina if she had taken me about the building and the children’s nur­ sery. Sister Wilhelmina looked at me strangely knowing that I remembered the Sublimity incident. She was or­ dered to show me the children in the nursery. There were ten or twelve children in the nursery. They were the children of the sisters. They took in other children only to blind the public as to what was going on. They knew I was married and had children, but persuaded me to stay in the home. This sister stood between me and the door when I was leaving to force me to. stay. She was anxious to have me return to Catholic faith to protect her past record. I kn»w from the weak­ ness of Sister Wilhelmina, when I saw her at Beaverton, that she had been ■ gain confined, I knew this also from her talk and from her anxiety toward me. (Signed) Mrs. Rosa Anderson. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 30th day of December, 1913. A. J. LOVERIDGE Thurston County, Wash. Justice of the Peace for T ittle Rock