f'n I . sTV.cmr copy, 1 " Yollt. Siilixcril't'o-1 A ; WMS- mrectfullV&"cU',i' VOL. 2 No. 2. PORTLAND, OREGON, OCTOBER, 1876. 1 PKR AKItm, IIRP ISINaLE CONKS, cNT PAGAN TEMPLES. We give our readers in this number a picture of a pagan temple. It is a structure of wondrous massiveness and ornamentation. It lifts its head upon storied architecture toward the sky. As a building it is lofty and command ing, but what does it symbolize ? If we think of the darkness which clouds the lives of those who reared it, the su perstition and cruelty which is charac teristic of their worship and of the base qualities which they attribute to their gods, in whose honor it was reared, docs not our admiration of the building mourn that its greatness was for such a cause? There are other pagan tcmplca-than those which are buildcd in pagan lands. There are lives of men which are found ed and pursued for objects lower than pagan superstition. There are men who reach high station and disport them. tort before the gaze of the whole world, whose lives are as base as their fortunes are lofty. They endure for a time and then pass away, as pagan temples are passing away before the advance of civ ilization. Let us build something that will endure. Let us form onr lives up on right principles and for noble ends. Let us look upon this pagan temple and take warning that greatness must be true greatness or it will not endure. ANNUAL ADDRESS BEFORE THE 8TATE Ag'l SOCIETY. BY W. L. ADAMS, M. 1). Less than ten years ago I was dis gusted by hearing an orator in Boston announce that "art is the true test of civilization and human advancement." To-day I am a firm believer in the doctrine I then scouted j and if I was wrong then, and right now, your hum ble servant is progressing along with the rest of you. Suppose you should be taken up some night and carried in your sleep half way round the world, and then let down in a strange country among a new people, speaking an unknown language ; your first impressions as to the moral and intellectual statin of that people would be made by the evidences seen all around, of the extent to which art or human handicraft had gone in fashioning from original elements the comforts and conveniences of man. We all believe that other planets be sides our own arc inhabited, some, per haps, like Mercury, by an inferior race to ours; while others, like Jupiter and Saturn, we love to contemplate as peo pled with a race as superior to us as we arc superior (according to Darwin) to our monkey ancestors. Now if we could be set down, first on one and then on the other of these planets, and find that on the first the primeval forests were yet undisturbed, mere were no roads, no cities, no or chards and no fields of waving grain, that the people dressed in skins, lived in caves and sat on piles of bones from which they had gnawed the flesh of animals killed by rough bludgeons and stone spears, we should naturally shrink back with horror from such a people as low enough down in the scale of hu manity to be willing to dispatch us with a stone hammer and then eat us raw. We shouldn't want to tarry long among them, and should be well pleased to hear the last whistle and near the cry of the conductor of our aerial chariot u All aboard for Jupi ter 1" On stepping off upon this magnifi- manufacttirc diamonds from charcoal, to make all costly metals and precious stones from principles out of which they originally sprang under the slow process of geological formation. Suppose that ages - ago they had slaughtered their last cattle as useless cuniberers of the ground, science and art having taught them to make their meat, milk, butter, and cheese, not from the grasses, but from the elements found in nature, whence vegetation sprung, destined of old to be manu factured into meat, milk, butter and !i80li-if ifii? I PAGAN TEMPLE, cent planet, what would be our im pressions of the people if we should sec the evidences of art carried to such per fection that their cities contained noth ing but the most magnificent and con venient structures, their streets all broad and perfectly clean, flowers, fruit trees and fountains everywhere; facilities for travel, such that the four hundred thousand-mile circuit of the entire planet could be safely made in half a day; that all animal labor had been superseded by machinery ; that chem istry and alchemy had been carried to a perfection that enabled the people to cheese, by passing through the labora tory of an animal's stomach, till man should become wise enough to make his own laboratory and he independent of kicking cows and dirty stables. Suppose that we should find those people so familiar with the laws of life and so careful about their observance that they lived for millions of years; that they knew now to control the weather, make it rain when they wanted it, and cause it to "hold up" during Fair week; that they had ob servatories larger and higher than Mt. Hood, on which were mounted tele. scopes that enabled them to see dis tinctly what was going on through the wnoie soiar system, telescopes through which they had witnessed and photo graphed all the changes that have been going on on this little ant hill of ours. trom the time that flora and fauna first adorned its crust, down to the advent of man; and that in their athencums. were hung up nhotocrraohic nietures showing all the geological changes, evolutions and transformations that our planet has undergone during its puzzling geological epochs, with all its extinct and living animals down to this day. Amoncr a nconle who hml rnn-inl ilm arts to such perfection, what would wc expect to find ? Should we have any tear ol being murdered, robbed or maltreated? From the exhibitions of handicraft seen everywhere, should wc noi icci sure ol meeting a people with intelligent and pleasing faces, inspired with the belief that their world was made to he enjoyed, and that the best way to prepare for another world and please their God was to make a good use of their present world, and help their fellows to make such good use of it as to insure their highest possible felicity? Wc will now leave the people on Jupiter and come down to our own little planet, and sec what we can dis cover here, and what is the lesson of the hour, We shall come a little hum. bled, perhaps, and with some of the starch taken out of our conceit, a char, actcristic that weak men are noted for, especially illiterate Americans. By comparing ourselves with such as we have been talking about, we feel hu miliated; but by comparing ourselves, with the rest of the world, or even with our ancestors and that is about as fur as most men ever sec we naturally full into a sort of Fourth of July glorifica tion of ourselves. This isall well enough so long as it is not curried beyond the. verge of an incentive to still higher and nobler attainments; hut when wc carry it to the extent that the German did whom Coleridge met nt Frankfort, who. never spoke ol himself without tukinir off his hat out of profound respect, wc pei naps carry our egotism a little loo lar. My postulate is, that art is the touch stone of human civilization and human advancement, and I am going to slick to my text. I may not be as succinct as was a hardshell brother who, in taking for kh text "The world, the flesh and the devil," announced that for want of time he should "merely glance at the world, barely touch on the llcsh and then hurry on to the devil." Art is the disposition or modifimtmn of things by human skill to answer the purpose intended. I his is Webster's leliiution, a very correct one, and it answers my purpose exactly, for under it wc group in one cluster everything that belongs to this Fair. There isn't a machine on this ground but what is a specimen of human skill or a work ot art. Every fine painting, every bed quilt, every rag-carpet and every other manufactured article on exhibition, tell. just what progress its fabricator has. mane in an or skill in that direction. Those beautiful and delicious apple have lieen developed from the sour and worthless crab-apple by pomological art. These fine-blooded and fast horses, these thoroughbred cattle, fine sheep, goats, and superior swine and poultry,, have all been developed from "scrub" stock, by the long continued, patient and judicious use of art appliances.. The woman who sends beautiful rolls of clean, sweet butter to market, nicely packed in some proper vessel, is a bet ter artist and a better looking womo.