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Eendrlck. 000-312 Seventeenth street; Louthan wcKsoa iiooit & Stationery Co.. iota ana aco street; a. eerles, sizteenta ana i-ur tls streets. TODAY'S WEATHER Fair, with slowly rls. Ids temperature; northwesterly winds. YESTERDAY'S WEATHER Maximum tem perature, 70; minimum temperature, 54; pre cipitation, none. PORTLAXD, SU3TDAY, AUG. 3, 1002. THE BIBLE AS LITERATURE. In. one sense of the wordjt would be puerile to speak of the Bible as in grave peril; for what it has withstood is evi dence 'of what it can still withstand; and when we say that the Bible is in grave peril, the real danger is not so much to the Bible itself as to the serv ice the Bible may render, if wisely used, to the human racel This being borne in mind, it is necessary to say that the Bible is in peril from two opposite sources Its sagacious foes and Its ehort-slghted champions. There are those who would make it a mere bundle of negligible myth and error, and there are those on. the other hand who Geem determined to destroy its usefulness as an Influence upon character by insist ing upon the impossible in Its applica tion. The greatest minds among unbeliev ers have had no quarrel with the Bible. In this field of controversy, as in all others, the Imperfectly understanding and smaller-motived pupils pursue crit icism beyond any point ever dreamed.of or countenanced by the masters. The unbelieving great mfnd, like Voltaire's, or Kenan's, or Matthew Arnold's, or Herbert Spencer's, is not hostile to re ligious truth and not irreverent to the Bible. They are wise enough to distin guish the truth from its erroneous en vironment, and they are magnanimous enough to revere the religious princi ple in man wherever and however mis takenly it may have found expression, to whatever unlovely, conclusions it has been led, to whatever crimes it has been made an innocent accessory, to what ever debasing or misleading Influences its adherents or advocates have com mitted It It Is in the hands of men like Thomas Paine and Robert IngersoU that relig ious truth finds hostile treatment, and even then not so much religious truth Itself, perhaps, as the molds and forms In which religious truth has been cast for temporary purposes. The half-educated critic of the Bible rails against actions recorded and ideas avowed in certain Old Testament writings judg ing them by the standards of our time. The great mind judges them by the standards of their own time, and com mends them as adapted to their time. The errors of translators and copyists, the errors even of religious zeal, de nounced by the half-educated as the burden of the Bible, are forgiven by the great mind who sees in them well-meant if stumbling efforts to protect the pre cious seed of faith and hope and love across the ages. The other hostile camp into which the Bible has fallen is the camp of .literal Interpretation. Having failed to estab lish the Bible as an authority, the churches are now seeking recognition for the Bible as literature. Its use in schools as desirable material for read ing Is being urged by those who have been wont to resist the literary view of the Bible as heretical. This demand is significant of the change that must come over the attitude maintained toward the Book by. its ostensible cus todians.. If we are to take the Bible as literature, we must apply to it literary standards. "We can no longer Ignore its composite and often unknowable authorship, the marks which the vicis situdes of centuries have left upon it, the sources from which its ideas and its expressions have been drawn. The Bible as literature is not the Bible as a penal code. "Whether we have, more to gain or lose in this transformation of the Bible from a divine inspiration to an Intensely human book, although the most pre cious book in the world, is ft hard question, and one which It is fortunate ly not necessary to answer. The old authority is gone, and the new appre ciation has come. "Worship is succeeded by admiration, to the manifest impair ment of a certain rigorous mandate that compelled a measure of moral rec titude. But there was no resisting. It is of no use to say. If it is a delusion, still let me cherish It for the good it does me. -Delusion cannot stand against the consuming spirit of modern inquiry, There was no choice. ' However lovely and of good report, however uplifting, inspiring and ennobling, error has no chance today with truth. The sword of. scientific investigation - pierces even to the joints and marrow and to the di viding asunder of soul and spirit. There is no staying psychology, any more than there was biology, or astronomy, or geology, or Luther, or Galileo, or Co pernicus. Studied as literature, the Bible dis covers to us its infinite .variety of au thorship, of origins, of points of view, of transmissions, of gains and losses from accretion and abrasion. History and prophecy, poems and dramas, cantatas and folk-lore, dream?, and rhapsodies, fiction and fantasy, diversify Its won derful pages. The learning and the fa bles of the ancient world-Chaldea, Syria, Egypt entered into Its early scrolls. The Ideals of Elohtst and Je hovist clashed through Its Infant his tories, the view of death underwent constant modification in different hands, a new Isaiah built his subllmer struc ture on the fabric of the old, Israel warred against Judah with pen as well as sword, talented scribes projected themselves Into the past and wrought out annals and laws and stamped them with the date of hundreds of years agone all with burning zeal for Je hovah and the salvation of his people. Hard as it Is to study alone In Its orig inal or in any modern translation, when lit up with the light which science and language and contemporaneous in scriptions and textual criticism have shed upon it, its pages reveal them selves aa the most fascinating and in structive that human Tecords afford. The danger in taking the Bible as lit erature is that In so doing we are apt to forget its infinitely greater aspect; for the Bible Is not only a book like other books, but it is a book unlike other books, if not in kind yet infinitely In degree, because It is a force In the world. It is to read, but much more than that, it is to act upon. There are those who advocate the Bible as litera ture for no higher motive than that in so doing they hope to tftecredlt it as an Influence upon mankind. To all sudh the sufficient answer Is the Bible Itself as its influence upon history and Its present Impress on tile mind of man reveal it No book has so profoundly moved upon man and still moves. For whether we take counsel of its worldly maxlms, or solace in Its sonea of as piratlon, or Joy in Its promises, or chas tening in its awful warnings, or ecstacy in its passionate dreams, one rises from its perusal with a weighty sense of hav ing drawn near to the Infinite. And It is equally certain that in those sacred pages one Is drawn as near to the In finite as is possible for the mortal-mind. Nowhere else in all the archives of hu man thought, nowhere in all the arch ives of human thought that are to be. can the religious principle in man. which has its seat in the soul's deepest and most sacred depths, find so ade quate and satisfying expression as in this noble monument of the ancient Hebrew race. They who cling to the old translations because they awake blessed memories of childhood, knowing they are wrong, and they who love them for their enthrallment of stronc: old idioms that the language needs are all In danger of losing the Bible as a living force in the world, in their de votion to its superficial qualities of sound and pleasurable stir of memory. POETS PERMANENT PLACE. The "revival" of literary figures of the Victorian age is something due. no doubt, to the poverty of recent produc tion; but even this negative testimony does not do full justice to the real mer its of men like Dickens and Whittier, to whose message the world returns with new avidity ever and anon be cause of a perennial need. In all these periodical revivifications of old achieve ments there is none more freauent or compelling than that of Poe, the ship wrecked life joined so strangely to what able and dispassionate criticism has pronounced the most original force In our literature. Although scarce ten years have passed since the last wave of Poe enthusiasm swept over the sea of literary thought, two many-volumed emtions of his works are announced, with still others consisting of -"selections." An interesting commentary upon this phenomenon is contributed by Mr. Alfred Mathews to the current issue of the New York -Times Saturday Review, which the Interested reader is urged to seek and enjoy. It must have been a source of noltr- nant if secret regret to every Poe ad mirer that the popular estimate of the man's work has shown a curious and lamentable persistence In clinging to his poetry to the neglect of his nrose. His tales and criticism embody his best thought and the fullest exhibit of his art, and it is upon them that his per manent fame must rest. As Mr. Mathews says in his illuminative crit ique, it Is only when we pass to a con templation of his prose that we find the true poet Poe the' poet In his fullest freedom, vigor and variety. Paradox ical though it seem, it is none the less true that we find this most zealous devotee of form, and the writer wha has more than any other affected form in trans-Atlantic verse creation. hlmRPlf "only attaining profoundest poetic ut terance for the almost infinite sea of poetry that was surging in his con sciousness, when he cast off poetic form altogether and employed for his expres sion the flexible, unfettered medium of potential prose." For the blindness of the American public to this fact there are two rea- sona One is that Poe'a criticism, with all its acuteness and its confirmation by time, made him enemies among the formers of public opinion, and the other is that the gospel of pure art and ideal beauty and unalloyed truth fell upon the stony ground of Puritanism and among the thorns of Yankee thrift and sordldness. when we remember how hard was the way that Hawthorne's even less abstracted treatment of New "World themes fared in his time, it is easier to understand, the difficulties that arose for the aesthetic and psychic aims and processes which Poe called into being as the discoverer nf a new world. As for critlcls:n n.vorced from personal and commercit-. ends, as for the worship of pure beauty and 'its creation as an end in Itself, as for the apotheosis of musical, form and the weird region of Intellectual mystery- he was the first that ever burst into that silent sea." The American prepossession with ma terialism and theocracy is. then, the source of Poe's long eclipse. That la why he was hardly taken seriously here when Europe Idolized him. And now an accomplished critic, whose chief province has been the observation and chronicling df the literary tendencies of his time Edmund Gosse comes for ward and tells us that not one or two, but all of the English poets of the time, reveal the Influence of Poe, and that he more than any one poet of the past has affected their technique and resultant music tone, as well as, to some extent, their mood. And Mr. Mathews draws the cognate conclusion that the tiisiorv of literature, taking constantly a larger cognisance or those writers who exert upon an age a formative influence, must admit as a strong element in tho making of the fuller and final estimate or ioes. relative power and place,- the fact that he made a more marked im press upon the manner of those British poets succeeding him than has any V other man of his generation. The ser vice to his own land is not less" pro nounced, for it is concluded that the masterful way in which he nreached the doctrine of beauty not as a dry pniiosophy, but artistically, poetically, as was done most of his work marks this as a service second in Importance to none that he Uerformefl. and the fact that he was the first who officiated In this high service of esthetics in America accentuates its significance and emphasizes the 1)bllgatI6n that we owe the author as one also owed to a pioneer, who, like the pioneer in all ages and all provinces, is entitled to especial honor. There is not a name in literature whose eminence in contemDorary thought could afford a more resistless answer to the indictment of commer cialism, captiously brought against American life today, than the name of Poe. All that blossoms about us today in the form of fearless criticism and entrancing lyric, and artistic tale, owes a aeot to his dauntless sdItIL All the half-suDernal beauty uncovered to our senses in the mystic cadences of sorrow, and the haunting presence of unavail ing regret, and the sweet though pain ful symphony of the bereaved cham ber and the mldnltrht tomb, are but the echoes of notes first sounded by his genius. These various minor chords of weird and soul-compelling solemnity, as they .have come to us in the pages of Bret Harte and Sidney Lanier and Bourke Marston and Mr. Aldrlch, as well as in Swinburne and Baudelaire. were strung by his master-hand at the terror-girt couch of Llcela. the seDul chral vault of TJlalume, the halla where Berenice played, the spot by the sound ing sea whence Annabel was reft, the catacombs of Fortunato, the shadowed chamber that still perchance is visited by the lost Lenore, the window niche where Helen stood, the vortex of the southern pole, the crashlni? towers of Usher, the lute of iErafel, and the Grand Canal of Venice "the wide win dows of whose palladlan palaces look down with a deep and bitter meaning "upon the secrets of her Bilent waters." "Who shall measure and who requite the obligation of humanity to the har assed and darkened soul that amid all Its Imperfection of will and weakness of moral fiber persevered to people the imagination of all succeeding time with these countless Visions of solemn beauty and unearthly sadness and unutterable awe? "Who that looks upon the boiling ocean can fail to hear there the shriek of Poe's Maelstrom and feel the touch of the Spirit of Eld? "Who that has loved and lost, but derives some incre ment of solace In his melancholy from the raven's shadow and the legend of Annabel Lee? Who that sits by the lone couch of death cannot hear in fancy the tapestries of the- haunted chambers and feel the spell woven long ago by the gifted and unhappy author who furnished in his life a moral as Impressive as the artistic splendor of his handiwork? That there are dis cerning ones In increasing numbers to rescue this man's memory from the neg lect to which ils own Ins and the coldness of his time had conspired to consign It testifies to the capacity of our American insight and the confi dence in American justice with which these appeals to the record are submit ted. The great debt to Poe is that sus tained by the fields of poetry, criticism and art. The way is open for it to be paid by their devotees In crateful praise and recognition. "What the world owes to the great man It must chiefly learn from his disciples, and if he lacks fitting monument of contempor ary or posthumous fame, theirs are the failure and the shame. SELF-SACRIFICE. On the 27th ult. Garfield "Wheelhouse saved Miss Huldah Anderson from drowning at Jamestown, N. Y., but was so exhausted by his efforts to keep her afloat until help arrived that he sank before he could be drawn on board the steamer. This Incident stands for one side of human nature, but the hideous, selfish side was displayed at a recent fire in Philadelphia, where two men saved tnemseives oy pushing a girl away from a window and saving themselves by seizing the ladder she was trying to reach. One of the men grasped the girl in his arms and threw her back. Both of these men savtjd themselves by the sacrifice of this little girl, accord ing to the testimony. In a great steaihboat disaster on Long Island Sound many years ago there were a number of frantic brutes who tore the life preservers from the women and children In order to save them selves. Men of thlB sort ought to suffer the fate that overtook the wretch de scribed by "Whittier in -his fine ballad of "Skipper Ireson's Ride." Skipper Ire- son malignantly left a ship to founder when he could have saved the crew, but he never has peace henceforth, for by night or day, sleeping or waking, he sees that wreck, he hears the cries and curses of the wretched sinking crew tfiat he cruelly refused to rescue. - The men that in a great marine disaster leave women and children to drown ought to see their specters night and day for the rest of their lives they love so well that they are 'afraid to risk death to save drowning women and children. Such men ought to live a great while, for they are certainly afraid to die doing good, and certainly not fit to die. It is to the honor of human nature that while deeds of Impulsive self-sac rifice are of dally report on the part of many humble, obscure people, deeds of brutal selfishness like that reported concerning the Philadelphia fire are of very rare occurrence. Bismarck once put his life In great peril to rescue a servant from drowning, and to, the end of his life was prouder of the medal he received for his courage and conduct than he was of all the splendid decora tions he subsequently obtained for po litical and military service. The fact that acts of self-sacrifice of this sort always win admiration Is proof that the romantic deed, the romantic phil osophy exhibited in human conduct, has an Immortal life. The average man Is a dull, selfish. non-lnsplrlng creature In thought and purpose, but for all that humanity al ways did and always will take off Its cap to the romantic, unexpected, heroic fellow, whether in fiction or real life. The great novels that are sure of more than transient life are all of this sort Humanity would rather worship its own image idealized than look at Its own image hugging the dirt This is why a man who Is a great humorist rather than simply an acrid satirist catches the ear of the world and holds Its heart longest. Few people can read Swift, a satirist of enormous genius, compared with those who read Addison, Fielding, Lamb and Burns, in whom satire and humor relieve each other. The man of sentiment, the humorist, rules the hu man heart, and because this is so the romantic novel will always Include the immortal fiction. The heart df human ity in its best moments aspires to nobler deeds than the average man ever does; it is optimistic; It hopes for bet ter things, and it feels anger ahd dis gust for the artist who Is always tak lng snap shots at his fellows and In slstlng that the. worst man haa ever done is the best he will ever do. CHILD BEGGARS. The streets of Chicago, according to a recent dispatch, are to be cleared of child beggars. A beginning in this di rection, was made a few days ago, w"hen police officers detailed for this purpose rounded up and carried to the. HarrI son-street police annex scores of little waifs of both sexes, ranging in age from i to 7 years who are regularly sent into the streets to beg. Brought up to beg from their earliest years. these children become adepts In the vo cation, and through It they become as sociated wlth'all of the lower forms of vice and degradation. Infantile begging Is the school In which the tramps of the country get their first training their first lesaon Itt moral and personal irresponsibility. It Is a marvel that it is allowed to be carried on upon the highways of a great city unchecked, and even encouraged; by giving into the tiny hands out stretched to receive It the dole that shrill, piping, childish voices have begged. Recognizing the fact that the simple arrest and detention for a few hours in the police annex would not Trove a remedial measure, the Chicago officers who have taken this, matter in hand will hold these little beggars pend ing an investigation In the case of each by the Visitation and Aid Society. This plan will give intelligent, humane peo pie an Insight Into the workings of a system of family vagrancy that, from sending babes to beg on the streets to the equipment of the youth for the road or the young girl to a life of In famy, keep up the supply of Vagrants and criminals. "We are accustomed in 'thinking of child begging and other forms of Ju venile training in lives of social and In dustrlal worthlessness and crime, to regard them as afar off; as belonging to public and family conditions that differ greatly from our own. "We hear of these things shudderlngly, thankful that we know of them only through news reports from other and more pop ulous cities. "Would It be startling to be told that the germs of child beg gary have been and are being culti vated among us, and that the plants of this pernicious seed have already taken root upon our streets? Perhaps so; but this Is Indeed true. A welL-known woman, having occasion to cross one of-the plaza blocks a day or two since, was accosted by a boy apparently about 7 years of age, who in the tone and with the manner of a beggar who had had his schooling, demanded of her "a penny." Pausing, she said: "My little lad, are you not ashamed to beg? Don't you know that a boy should earn his pennies, and not beg them?" His only reply was to reiterate his demand in a more importunate tone. Reciting the incident to a, former member of the police force, the latter said: "That must be the son of - ," speaking a familiar name "a boy about 12 years old, who has been In the business long enough to be considered a professional." To the response that this lad was much younger, the man, who had had excel lent opportunities to study children on the street corners and in the parks. could only say that the cases were sim ilar, and that neither case was an un usual one. So, it seems, child begging has al ready gotten a foothold In this city. A thing monstrous in its possibilities for evil, it should be checked in its Inclpi- ency. The tale of the urchin weeping on the corner because he has lost his nickel and "It Is too far to walk home" should not move any mistaken philan thropist to supply this alleged loss and pass hurriedly on his way. The boy last mentioned Is said to have made money off of this tale every day for weeks by simply changing his location and pumping up tears to give color of probability to his flimsy lie. A little time given to the Investigation of a tale of this kind would be well spent. As for the child who begs outright, stat ing his desire for candy or firecrackers or whatever as a reason for asking for money, means should be taken to dis cover his parents, and these should be told of his transgression and warned by the proper officer to keep the child off the streets under penalties provided for the infringement of the statute covering the case. Let it be stated In plam terms that child begging upon the streets of Portland will not be permit ted, and then let measures be taken to stop it. The most efficacious of all means is In the hands of the people themselves, and can be used without coming into disagreeable contact with the parents of the little beggars. It Is simply to refuse the dole asked, sup plementing the refusal by a warning that a second offense will be followed by disagreeable consequences. "Walf flndlng wagons," carrying In a single hour forty children between the ages of 4 and 7 years to a police station of a great city for begging, form an ob ject-lesson In easy-going philanthropy that should warn the people of a smaller city, where child begging is Iii Its Infancy, to throttle the evil while yet it can readily be taken In hand. The austerities that are still prac ticed in the name of religion find their most severe expression. In this country at least, In the case of the' Carmelite nuns, small bands of whom are closely cloistered in various places. The quar ters of one. of these bands in Philadel phia are thus described by the Ledger of that city: The nuns bedsteads consist of plna boards laid on o. trestle a tew Inches above the floor. Upon this is laid a sack of ztraw and a hard pillow. The sheets are woolen. They wash from a brown bucket on the floor. In addition to this, they have in their room a little table, a brownstone Jus for drinking water, brown soap, a brown toothbrush mug and scarcely anything else. In Europe still, and formerly in this country, the Carmelites denied them selves Are in Winter. "When it is added that these pale- faced nuns rise at 4:45 In the morning and spend most of their waking hours In prayer; that after their cloister Is formally sealed no one i3 permitted to enter the cloistered part of the con vent, and visitors, even nearest rela tives,, are not able to see or speak to the nuns save through bars'that sep arate them perpetually from the out side world, the dreary., monotonous life to which they are dedicated becomes dimly apparent- "While it Ja not diffi cult to conceive that sensitive natures. duly wrought up through the emo tlons, may come to see in thls con strained and bare existence the very essence of piety and devotion to duty, it passes all comprehension that intelli gent men and women, in touch with the world and its beauty, its possibilities for happiness and its opportunities for practical usefulness, can encourage or evenpermlt such pitiful sacrifice of all that raises life above the dead level qf existence. Diligent investigation of the recent mine disaster at Johnstown, Pa., brought out much evidence tending to confirm fhe statements that many min ers ignore the rules against handling open lamps in the mines. To an in fraction of these rules the explosion, so disastrous to life and property, was in all probability due. The lesson pre sented thereby is not a' new one. It haB, on the contrary, been repeated again and again, its grewsome illustra tions drawn from the suffocating depths of wrecked mines in the black ened bodies of miners, who have met swift death because of the heedless ness of their co-laborers. The story is, indeed, as old as the indifference or recklessness of men who, having be come familiar with danger through its dally touch, cease to regard It as Immi nent. No power or device has ever been found that can be relied upon, at all times, to protect men from the re sults of carelessness or Imprudence when working with the destructive forces of Nature. A careless turn of the hand, a moment's lapse of memory, a brief disregard of the rules that In sure human safety In handling the mighty forces that man has harnessed for his use or placed in subjection In the pursuit of his plans is sufficient to release an energy charged with de struction that before moved in harmony with his will. Up to this point man. through his Ingenuity, Is In control. Beyond it the sway of force is absolute. It seems that at last there is a law against hazing at "West Point, that neither political nor, personal Influence can subvert. Cadet Pendleton, found guilty of hazing, has been dismissed from the Military Academy, though he was In his last year. The member of Congress whose appointee young Pen dleton was, In trying to secure his re instatement, was informed that the law covering the case Is very explicit, and that neither the Secretary of War Yior the President can turn aside Its pen alty. This is well. The country has had quite enough of Booze trials and their scandalous developments. A law that would expel without hope of re instatement even the President's own son caught In the brutal sport of haz ing has long been needed for the gov ernment of "West Point. Now that we have it, and the assurance that it will be enforced, the atmosphere of the Military Academy ought to be much Improved. Those who conduct them selves as gentlemen should need have no fear of It. Those who do not ought not to have the benefits of "West Point. Perhaps one of the reasons why Port land citizens are frequently prone to subject their town to rather critical analysis Is that they feel she can stand it that her Virtues are so numerous and her strength so unmatchable that no criticism can do her "harm. A man occupying an Invulnerable position Is not offended ty hostile examination; he whose position Is weak seeks to con ceal that fact by pretending great strength and shouting It all the while, However, it may be questioned whether Portland is not greatly Injured In the eyes of those not well acquainted with her by the free habit of aome of her citizens to make light of her strength and to commend ephemeral qualities of other towns, as if Portland's lack of them were fatal. The man who won't stand up for, his own family, his own town, his own state, his own coun trythe man who befouls his own nest what of him? "With the passinsr of Mrs. Able-ail At- wood, a woman of gentle, conscientious life and endeavor has finished her earthly career. Mrs. Atwood had been for many years a resident of this city. Her seat in the Unitarian Church was seldom vacant on Sunday morning dur ing all these years never. Indeed, ex cept by eason-vof Illness. As deDend- able In other respects as In her attend ance upon church, her character for generosity, kindness and svmDathv was well established and greatly admired. .airs. Atwood lived to the venerable age of four score and three years, a model of cheerfulness in atre as she had been of energy and thoughtfulness in her earlier years. Her obsequies, held In the Unitarian Church this afternoon. will complete in tender, hopeful, rem iniscent strain the record of a forceful yet gentle and blameless life. The circumstances of General Smith's arrival In San Francisco are of pa thetic significance. Others had come triumphant from the very exacting ser vice Inthe Philippines and with some thing of the glory of conquering heroes. He came to find his long career as a soldier ended In a dark shadow to re ceive judgment that he had dishonored the flag that he had often risked his life for. He had failed in the test of re sponsibility, and justice demanded that failure be written in terms that could not be misunderstood where others sim ilarly tempted should see IL The man must suffer for his mistake because he earned punishment, because the good of the service, the honor of his coun try and the cause of humanity re quired it. Count Castellane. son-in-law of th late Jay Gould, has at length agreed to pay (out of his wife's inheritance) for the $400,000 worth of bric-a-brac and curios purchased from an antiquity dealer of London, in the first flush of his suddenly acquired wealth. His sa gacious brother-in-law. Georue J. Gould. who Is trustee of hl3 sister's patrimony. will dole out the amount on the In stallment Plan out of the Income from the fund. The Count had his fling, and It was a costly one. His wife's rela tives on this side of the water, from prudential reasons, will see to It that ne does not have another. Suppose the President should write the message the antis want him to write, denouncing the Army and the whole people for standing behind it how would It Bound? "Would it alter the status of the Philippines or the Filipinos? "Would it be likely 16 con tribute to the efficiency of the military arm of the Government? "Would it in any sense teach patriotism or self-respect tp the American people? "Would It draw respect from abroad? "Would not the antis themselves be- as d!ssat- loficd as ever? STRIKES AND PUBLIC RIGHTS. This artlcla Is by Samuel Gompers. president of the American Federation of Labor, who" will apeak In Portland tomorrow evening- In connection with every strike of any moment, though not, we' have" ob served, in connection with lockouts or blacklisting, a certain portion of the press takes up the cry of "public rights." What, It is asked, becomes of the rlgnts and interests of the "third party" to a labor-capital controversy, the great, help less public? The workmen have the right to strike for any reason whatever, good or bad, wise or foolish; and they claim the right to boycott those who have of fended them. Employers have the right to discharge men at will, and thus precip itate difficulty- Have the byfitanders, the consumers, no rights that the classes named are bound to respect? Thus runs the argument, and it is plaus ible. As -a rule, those who make it wind up by advocating some form of compul sory arbitration or state regulation of wages, hours and conditions of labor. We are not going to discuss the general ques tion of compulsory arbitration, as our po sition has been made sufficiently clear in previous articles; but it may be pointed out in passing that those who advocate that remedy In the Interests of the 'third party" are really proposing a radical, a revolutionary change in the law and poll cy of the country. They have a right to their opinions; but they must not confuse Issues arising un der existing law3 with Implications and deductions from principles that are pecu liar to the philosophy of industrial rela tlons, principles that have not been ac cepted or recognized. "When they talk about public rights, they must confine themselves to rights under the present politico-economic system, not under a conceivable system which has not been adopted. From this logical and proper standpoint. It Is plain that the ."third party" has no standing in the forum of law, equity and reason, in any case where neither capital nor labor oversteps its constitutional bounds. A great strike entails inconven lence and hardship; but what of It? Is the public entitled to insist that a man shall work on terms that are unsatisiac- tory to him, simply because it needs his product? Men work or engage In business to earn a livelihood, not from motives of altruism. They may stop when they please, Just as the farmer may refuse to raise crop3 witn- out regard to tho needs of the consumers, The "public" does not provide for tUe wage-workers; it leaves them to pursue their interests as best they may, and all they owe the public, legally speaking, is respect for the-law. But. of course, In addition to legal re sponsibilities and limitations, there are the less definite moral responsibilities. Not everything that is lawful la expedient and reasonable; "the extreme of law is the extreme of Injustice," it has well heen said. Now, it is certainly pertinent and lm portant to ask whether organized labor has shown Itself reckless of these moral obligations to the public, whether it has Insisted In any considerable number of cases, on the letter of the law regardless of all considerations of propriety and rea son In a comprehensive snse of these terms. "We have had many strikes of late, some of them of a serious character from the public Aandpoint. "Which side was It which defiantly ana scornfully disregarded public opinion, and talked about "managing its own business in its own way?" "Which side declared that It was impertl nent and Impudent and outrageous for the "third party" to make Its influence felt for peace and adjustment? "Which side said that the law was all sufficient, and that other considerations were mere foolish sentiment and harmful weakness? In the strike of the anthracite miners who said "no concessions, no arbitration?" The presidents of the coal-carrying rail roads said it. "Who offered to accept arbitration of the strictly Impartial kind? The representa tives of the 147,000 miners. The operators and railroads opposed the efforts of the conciliation committee of the industrial department of the Civic Federation; and even the suggestion or President Roosevelt's intervention under a supposed statute, discovered to have been repealed, was resented and characterized as dangerous and vicious. And all this in spite of the" fact that railroads enjoy exclusive and valuable privileges from the public, and that the coal-carrying roads were notoriously par tics in an illegal monopoly, aa shown by the plain statements of the Industrial Commission! If moral obligations are opcratH'e any where, they are surely operative In cases where the industry affected by a strike is a Rational monopoly, where franchises have removed the natural check of supply and demand. In Chicago there was a strike of team sters employed by the big packing com panies, which aro under public accusation of unlawful monopoly. The strikers de manded recognition of their union, an in crease of pay, and some other things. The packers declined to "deal with strangers" or to recognize the union in any way. The peoplo of Chicago were practically all against the packers, and they had to yield; but they, not the teamsters, at first rejected arbitration and friendly mediation. so perverted aro the notions of Illiberal and short-sighted employers that when the simplest truth Is stated it sounds like a paradox. It Is forgotten that the workman, too. has his "business" to manage, and that. to say the least, his part in production is as essential as that of capital. when workmen Insist on certain terms. they are not seeking to control the em ployer's business, but to lay down the conditions of their own participation in that business. Too many still assume that the em ployer Is to be thanked and regarded as a benefactor for paying wages at all and giving his employes work! This miserable fallacy Is back of every arrogant claim put forward by capital. But for it, everybody would see that if the workman has something: to arbitrate. eo has the employer. In fine, a candid examination of the facta will satisfy reasonable men that the Inter ests and rights of the public arc seldom disregarded by organized labor, and that the obstinacy, superciliousness and big otry of certain types df employers are re sponsible for the number, duration and character of strikes and labor contests. Assuredly, no sane man will ask workmen to accept any terms employers choose to grant them. "What more can labor do than to nxree to accept meditation and arbitration? what more does consideration for the "third party" require? " Let. then, the champions and snakesmon for the public, address their protests and appeals to the backward and short-sighted employers whosi name, also! Is stlii legion. urgamzea laDor needs no converWcn. It Is ready to do the right thing at tue right time In 18SA. trhen tha nill nilm. ..vu tion law was under consideration, among other oblectton vrr Intnmmul ream ik.t t.- vit. --- -1 - " M.at. um uiu re pealed the investigation of such labor disputes as the' on'i nrtTT tinrfpr ffmlftmHMi . . as wera Iffvestlsated In 1S34. , THINGS LOCAL AND OTHERWISE. The observant stranger in Portland he is here in large numbers at this season of tho year usually asks how it happens that the chief commercial city of Oregon is situated 110 miles away from the ocean, and not near It. If he has visited Cali fornia, he has in mind the geographical position of San Francisco and Sacramento and their relative Importance. He sees these reversed in Oregon, and naturally wants to know why. Should he put the question to a pioneer, he would likely re ceive a correct answer, but few visitors get in touch with old-timers, and our feeble guidebooks are silent on the sub ject. After the visitor learns why Port land became the commercial city of the Northwest Coast he is still puzzled to know why Portland for 50 years has been the chief seaport, with steadily increasing ocean trade, domestic and foreign, greater this year than ever before. "Without at tempting an epitome of early history, I shall set down one fact In connection' with tho founding of Portland. Creation of a city so far inland was not an acci dent but the result of Intelligent design. About 57 years ago. a Yankee doing bus iness at Oregon City, tho commercial, pc-i lltlcal and social center of the territory at that time, bought a claim in what Is now the heart of Portland; then the dens est forest in the Willamette Valley. Some six miles west of this claim, beyond the hills, lay a considerable prairie which In that early day was cultivated, and pro duced wheat. This Yankee. Frank "W. Pettygrove, conceived the idea of build ing a wagon road from the river westward over the hills to Tualatin Plains. A sur vey made at his own expense showed such road to be feasible, and from his own funds he built the road. He established a wharf and store at what Is now the foot of "Washington street and diverted to that point trade which hitherto had taken a longer route to Oregon City. At the very start, the buying of agricultural prod ucts, the selling of supplies to settlers, the. Importing of merchandise and the ex porting of grain were carried on prac tically under the same roof. Trade, river navigation and deep-sea shipping were In terlaced here In the earliest days, and they have grown together since. The town followed Pettygrove's lead. He first brought the farmers' product and the deep-sea vessel side by side. It was not long beforo steamers suc ceeded flatboats. They plied up the Wil lamette and up and down the Columbia. Portland was their home port. Sailing vessels, coast and foreign, discharged and loaded cargo here; so with coasting steamers. For more than a generation every pound of merchandise that came Into Oregon and Eastern Washington, ev ery bushel of wheat that went out, and every traveler passed through Portland. "With tho advent of the railroad, only the method of conveyance was changed. Com merce continued in the lines which the steamboat plfineered, with Portland as the center. As In Pettygrove's time, products of the soil and the ship meet side by side in our harbor today. Another fact: For four miles In front of Portland, the "Wil lamette River is a natural harbor with a minimum depth of 40 feet. "But Portland surely must have had rivals." is the almost invariable comment of the observing stranger. It would take all your fingers to count them. A shoal and a bit of swift water at the mouth of the Clackamas prevented Oregon City from being the metropolis of this youpg empire. All the other rivals were llko Portland, upstarts, but they failed be cause they had not planned to bring the products of the man who wanted to sell into the warehouse of the man who want ed to buy. This Is what Pettygrove did for Portland. If he had been less restless after he laid the foundation and had stayed here Instead of removing to Port Townsend, he might by this time have a public monument. Notorious May Yohe is breaking Into print again. Because she happened to strike the fancy of a fool with a title who married her, foreign press agencies seem to regard her as a person of consequence. Beat for her, for disreputable Captain Strong, and for the public, is oblivion. Tracy's flight through the State of "Washington has served one good purpose. Everybody reads of his movements, and these cannot be followed Intelligently without a map. I Imagine that more than one family atlas will be opened today for a study of the geography of the North eastern section of our sister common wealth, jj. Lmsob Taught an Eavesdropper. Kansas City Journal. Telephone party lines have their amuse ments as well as their discomforts. When the telephone rings for a neighbor across tho way. it Is the greatest temptation In the world for some women quietly to take down the receiver and hear what Is going on. One woman who has been quite an noying to the other people on her party line got a lesson the other day she will doubtless remember. The telephone rang, and, as usual, she went to it and quietly took the receiver down so that tho two who were trying to talk could hear each other only indistinctly. "Hello, hello. Mrs. Brown. Oh, dear, somebody's got down their receiver. Can you hear me? Oh. I .wish they'd stop thatr. Tho woman who was listening heard her distinctly. No, I can Just barely hear you," came the answer, indistinctly. "It's so provok ing, isn't it? Now, I want you to come" The rest of the sentence was lost. "Hello, Mrs. Brown hello! Can you hear me now?" "Yes, a little that woman across the street ha3 got her receiver down-r-that's Mrs. M.. you know. I guess 6he rushes to the telephone to hear what I've got to say every time my 'phone rings." Indeed, and I don't do any such a thing." came the third voice, and the two women who were trylnjr to talk heard the receiver go up with a soft click. "I guess she got excited and fcrcot her self." said Mrs. Brown. "Yes, I rather think she did," came ths answer. The party line of that nelKhborhon works better since the Incident. Farewell, I,lel Thomas Hood. ' Farewell. Life! my senses swim. And the world Is growing- dim; Thronging- shadows cloud the light. Llko the advent of the night; Colder, colder, colder still. Upward steals a vapor chill; Strong- the earthy odor grows I smell the mold above the rosel Welcome. Life! the spirit strives! Strength returns and hope revives; Cloudy fears and shapes forlorn Fly like shadows at the morn; O'er the earth there comes a bloom; Sunny light for sullen gloom. ' Warm perfume for vapor cold I emell the rose above the mold! The Silent Voices. Alfred Tennyson. When the dumb Hour, cloth'd th black. Brings the dreams, about my bed. Call me not so often back. Silent Voices of the dead. Toward the lowland ways behind me. And the sunlight that la gepel Call me rather, silent Voices. Forward to the starry track J Glimmering up the heights beyond ma On., and always ont