The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, November 04, 1906, Section Three, Page 30, Image 30

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THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND. NOVE3IBER, 4. 1906.
o0n
THE CLASS STRUGGLE: PROLETARIANS VS. BOURGEOISE
Enforced Divisions of Society Which Civilization
Has Accomplished Throughout Christendom
BY J. L. JONES.
pn S Caesar divided all Gaul Into three
J parts, so the Socialists divide the
" whole human race Into three
classes or orders. No one can understand
Socialism who is not instructed in this
classification. It is a simple and conve
nient arrangement. Apples, flour and
shingles are similarly assorted; so are
the floors in a three-story building, only
In the building you number from the bot
tom up, and 'in society from the top
down.
The three classes are proletarians, bour
geoise and nobility. The proletarians are
the improvident and dependent classes,
those who work for wages, and include
the laborers and hired help in cities and
on farms": These own neither houses nor
lands. . Their possessions, if . they have
any, consist mainly of children.. From
this characteristic of proliflcation. they
get the name proletarian, which Is derived
from proles, offspring.
The names of proletarians are seldom
written on the scroll of fame, in society
columns or on assessment vrolls. They
own a very small percentage of the prop
erty of the Nation, for when a proleta
rian acquires a fortune 'he straightway
deserts his class, shuns his former un
fortunate associates and forgets the pit
-MAN'S IDEAS CHANGE UNDER NEW .CONDITIONS
BY KAMARDS.
I jpy OES t require deep intuition to
B comprehend that man's ideas,
s views and conceptions, in one
word, man's consciousness changes with
every change in the condition of his mate
rial existence, in his social relations and
in his social life?"
"What else does the history of ideas
prove than that intellectual production
changes its character in proportion as
material production is changed?"
So said Karl Marx in 1S48, and he
above i6 called by various terms, as the
materialistic conception of history, eco
nomic determinism, and Professor Selig
man, of the Columbia University, in his
book called "The Economic Interpreta
tion of History," deplores the fact that
his nomenclature Is not used so that the
apparent harshness of the other terms
may not be so repellent.
Reduced to a common illustration, it
means that how a man gets his living de
termines his actions in all his relations
IN-SHORE
BY W. S. CHAPMAN.
IT IS not surprising it is just human
that little interest' is manifested In
the proposition to rid Oregon of the
Columbia River bar handicap by building
an open sea harbor at Seaside in Clatsop
County, with a ship canal thence to the
Columbia River near Astoria. People
are slow to accept new ideas, locally ap
plied. It took Captain Eads many years to
' convince Congress that he could improve
the conditions at the mouth of the Mis
hissippii River by constructing jetties,
and army engineers had to be shown.
Many years before the first steamboat
navigated the Hudson a man proposed
to build such craft to carry , Napoleon's
army across the English Channel, but the
matter was referred to the French scien
tists and promptly turned down.
Old - time Portlanders remember how
the question of a water supply bothered
this city some 3ft or 35 years ago. when
Sunday in
, BAPTIST.
First, the White Temple, Twelfth and. Tay
lor streets Rev. J. Whitcomb Brougher, D.
D., pastor. Prayer meeting, 10: 10:30, ser
'mon by the pastor on "Peter's Beply. 'This
Is That' ": anthem. "Nearer. My God, to
Thee" (Schilling); the Lord's Supper ob
served: new members received and welcomed;
Bible school, 12:10; B. Y. P. U., 0:30. leader.
Miss Florence Lefier; T:30, Dr. Erougher's
topic. "The Bed Too Short and the Covering
Too Narrow," first In a series of "Odd Texts."
The Temple quartet, aLso chorus, will furnish
East Ankeny and Twentieth
Rev. W. T. Jordan. At 10:30 A. M-. "The
Cross"; 7:30 P. M.. "The Cross"; Sunday
school, 12 M. Professor W. F. Werschkul, di
rector of music. In the evening, "Me."
Immanuel, Meade and Second Rev. G.
W. Griffin, pastor. Preaching, 11 A. M.
and 7:30 P. M.; Sunday school, 10 A. M ;
Junior Union. 5 P. M. ; B. Y. P. U., 6:30
P. M.
Russelvtll0 Schoolhouse Sunday echool,
2:30 P. M.
First (German). Fourth and Mill, Rev. 3.
Kraft, pastor Preaching, 10:45 A. M. and
7:30 P. M.; Bible school, 10:43 A. M.; B. Y.
P. V.. 7 P. M.
Eecond (German), corner Rodney avenue
and Morris Sunday school, 9:45 A. M.; serv
ices. 11 A. M., 3 P. M. and 7:30 P. M. Fred
erick Bueermann, pastor.
Mount Olivette, Seventh, and Everett, Rev.
J. W. Smith Services. 11 A. M. and 8 P. M.
St. Johns, Rev. E. A. Leonard, pastor Sun
day school, 10 A. M. ; preaching, 11 A. M. and
7:30 P. M.
Sellwood, Eleventh and Union. Rev. George
A. Learn, pastor Sunday school. 10 A. M. ;
preaching. 11 A. M. and 7:45 P. M.
Third. Vancouver avenue and Knott, Rev.
B. M Bliss, pastor 10 A. M . Sunday school;
preaching. 11 A. M. and 7.45 P. M.
Calvary, East Eighth and Grant Rev. A.
Lawrence Black, pastor. Bible school, 10
A. M. ; B. Y. P. V.. 6:30 P. M.; preaching,
11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M.
University Park Rev. John Bentalen. pas
tor. Sunday school, 10 A. M. ; B. T. P. U..
6:45 P. M ; preaching. 11 A. M. and 7:30
P M.. "Uncaged Criminals."
Highland. Alberta and Sixth Preaching
by Rev. E M. Bliss, 2:30 P. M.; Sunday
school, 3:30 P. M.
Arleta Rev. John Bentzten, pastor. Sun
day school, 10 A. M-; B. Y. P. U.. 6:43 P.
M. ; preaching. A. M. and 7:30 P. M.
Grace. Montavllla Rev. Gilman Parker,
minister. Subject of morning sermon. "The
Voice and the Vision of the Glorified Christ";
evening, sermon by Rev F. A. Leonard, of
St. Johns. The girl choir will sing.
Second. Seventh and East Ankeny streets,
Stanton C. Lapham pastor Services at 10:30
A M. and 7:30 P. M.; morning sermon, "A
Revival of the Church"; Bible school at
noon; Young People's Union, 6:30; evening
sermon. "The Greatest Work in the World";
special programme of music will be rendered
by the quartet. J. F. Bamford, director
and organist.
CATHOLIC.
Pro-Cathedral of the Immaculate Concep
tion. Fifteenth and Davis Masses at 6, 8. 9
nd 10:30 A. M. ; evening service, 7:30. Most
Rev. A. Chrletle, D. D., pastor.
St. Patrick's, Nineteenth and Sftvler -Rev,
from which he wai drawn. He forms new
associations and habits, because he can
afford to live in a higher station.
The proletarians are pre-eminently the
working class. They are always either
working or seeking work. When not
working they prowl round and hunt for
jobs, and pick up anything that is not
nailed down; so that it is usually sup
posed that the class name is derived from
the word "'prowl." This is a popular
error.
The Socialists call the proletarians wage
slaves. This Is another mistake. Labor
is not slavery to them. It is a naturai
and normal condition. It is the delight of
their lives. It is a ruling passion. To
them idleness is a calamity, rest a dreary
punishment, and ease a mortal sin. As
long as they are woiking they are all
right, no matter whether it rains or
shines. But just as soon as work stops,
mischief begins. They used to have a
frolicsome habit of tearing up pavements,
but now the pavements are fastened to
gether, so they can't get them up, and
they resent this Infringement on their
liberties by overturning streetcars and
blocking the thoroughfares with drays.
So it has come about that the greatest
problem of statecraft is not to reduce the
burdens of labor, but to increase them;
not to have less labor and more freedom,
but more labor and less freedom, in or
of life, viz.. religious, moral, political,
juridical, economic so much so that even
among blood relatives you can see and
learn without much investigation, often
times estrangement and ostracism, just
because of their economic conditions or
material existence.
There was a. time and not so far remote
when to question the divine and infallible
right of the Pope to dominate the ideas
of man as to his religious belief meant
anything but life, notwithstanding Christ
said "I am come that they might have
life, and that they might have it more
abundantly."
The power was also exercised as to the
intellectual ideas of man and many of our
colleges today are yet so circumscribed in
their endowments and teaching force that
they are nothing but centers for those of
certain economic conditions to hobnob.
And even our common schools, not
withstanding their purpose to give an
equal opportunity for the children of all
races to secure an education because of
their economic conditions many children
compelled to assist in the material ex
istence of the family or widowed mother
CANAL PROPOSED BY EX-GOVERNOR SEMPLE
the city employed a great civil engineer
to see if the Clackamas River would fur
nish a gravity system, but he reported
it would not. The old private water
company spent thousands of dollars
hunting for a clean supply and then built
their works five miles up the river and
gave the citizens Willamette water. They
said that was the only thing to do. The
people readily accepted the conclusion all
but a young civil engineer, Mr. C. B.
Talbot, a real genius, and the only father
of the Bull Run water scheme for Port
land. In 1874 or 5 I met. him one day
and he said. "Win, I've found a water
supply for Portland." "Where?"
"Bull Run Creek, a tributary coming
into the east side of Sandy River."
"What." said I. "bring that water
across two rivers?". And I waLked on,
pitying, in .my conceit and ignorance, the
man with the idea that was really to be
the greatest blessing Portland shall ever
know.
Now the people of the whole state are
Portland
E. P. Murphy. Masses at 8 and 10:30 A. M. ;
evening service, 7:30.
St. Joseph (German), Fifteenth and Couch
Masses. 8 and 10:30 A. M. ; evening service.
7:30. Rev. P. E. DeRoo, rector.
St. Francis, East Eleventh and East Oak
Masses, 6:30 and 10:30 A. M. ; evening serv
ice, 7:30. Rev. James H. Black, rector.
Immaculate Hear of Mary, Williams ave
nue and Stanton Masses. 6. 8. and & A. M.;
children's mass, 9 A. M. : grand mass. 10:30
A. M. ;. Sunday school, immediately after chil
dren's mass; vesper and benediction, 7:30 P.
M. Rev. W. A. Daly, rector.
St. Michael's (Italian). Fourth and Mill
Masses, 6:30 and 9 A. M. ; evening service,
7:30. Rev. A. Cestelli, rector.
Sacred Heart. 882 Milwaukie Masses 8 and
10 A. M. : evening service, 7:30. Father Greg
ory. O. S. C, rector.
Holy Cross-, University Park Masses 8 and
10 A. M. ; evening service. 7:30. Father Thlll
man. O. S.- C, rector.
Most Precious Blood. Montavllla Sunday
mass, 9 A. M. ; Sunday school. 10 A. M. ; ves
per and benediction. 8:30 P. M. ; week days,
mass, 6:30 A. M. ; devotion, 7:45 P. M. Rev.
L. A. Brosseau, rector.
Most Holy Rosary, East Third and Clacka
mas Masses 6. 7, 8:30 and 10:3O A. M. ; rosary
and benediction, 7:30 P. M. Very Rev. A. S.
Lawler. superintendent.
St. Lawrence. Third and Sherman streets.
Rev. John C. Hughes. Masses at 7. 8:30 and
lO:30 A. M. ; evening. '7:30 o'clock.
' CHRISTIAN. .
Central. Bast Twentieth and Salmon, Rev.
J. F. Ghormley. Services, 10:45 A. M.,
"Monumental Evidence" ; Sunday school, 12
M. , Junior C.' E.. 4 P. M. ; Y. P. S. C. E..
6:45 P.-M. ; revival service. 7:45 P. M. Spe
cial tnuslc: Mrs. McPherson Gale.chorlster;
Miss Eva Ryan, organist.
Woodlawn Sunday school, 10 A. M.; 11 A.
M., sermon; Christian Endeavor, 7 P. M.j.
I P. M.. sermon.
First, Park and Columbia Rev. E. S.
Muckley, minister. At 10:30 A. M-, "The
Call of the Gospel"; 7:30 P. M.. "Reasons
vs. Excuses": 12:15 P. M-. Bible school; 6:30
P. M.. Christian Endeavor.
Rodney-Avenue. Rodney avenue and Knott
F. Elmo Robinson. At 9:45 A. M., Bible
school and communion; 11 a. M.. sermon,
6:30 P. M., Y. P. S. C. E. ; 7:30 P. M..
Which Church Shall I Join?"
Advent. Second street, between Hall and
Lincoln Sunday school, 10:30; communion
service. 11:30; praise meeting, 7 P. M. ;
preaching, 8 P. M.
CONGREGATIONAL.
Sunnyeide, East Taylor and East Thirty
fourth Rev. J. J. Staub, pastor. Morning
service at 11 o'clock; subject, "The Church
at High-Water Mark"; 7:80 o'clock, subject,
"One Building That Defies the Earthquake";
Sunday school. 10 A. M. ; Junior Christian En
deavor. 3 P. M-J Senior Christian Endeavor,
6 30 P. M.
Hassalo-Street, East Seventh and Haasalo
Sermon. 10:30 A. M.. by Rev. Mr. Roper; Sun
day school. 12 M. ; Christian Endeavor, 6:45
P. M. ; evening service. 7:45.
Mississippi-Avenue. Mississippi avenue and
Fremont street Rev. "William L. Upshaw. pas
tor: Sunday school, 10 A, M.; M, . Thomp
der to keep the proletarians from rioting
and ripping off the bulwarks of society.
They raise the cry, "Work or bread or
blood." It is impossible to supply them
with bread enough if they are not work
ing, for they would eat all the time; so
the only peaceful remedy is to get them
back to work. If this fails, then one fac
tion is permitted to exert its activities in
kiling" the other off. This pacifies both,
and the number of applicants is reduced
so as to correspond with the supply of
work.
The bourgeoise is the middle class, and
includes farmers, small capitalists, pos
sessors of moderate fortunes, artists,
teachers, lawyers, doctors and other pro
fessionals: also the banking, insurance
and mercantile element, gentlemen on
fixed salaries or incomes, business men of
all complexions and colors, and the bet
ter paid and more prosperous employes in
all industries.
In this country the bourgeoise still in
cludes the majority of the "common peo
ple" and holds the most of the wealth.
In Europe the proletarians are more nu-,
merous, and their relative numerical pro
portion in this country is rapidly increas
ing. . This is due to causes inseparable
from the capitalist method of production
and exchange. .
The word bourgeoise is French for
burgher, which meant the inhabitant of a
burg or city a citizen. In the Roman Em
pire thescountry people were called pa
gans. Later they were called boors. In
cannot avail themselves of the opportu
nity, even though they have the privi
lege. And our common high schools, are
becoming quite uncommon in which with
their various "frat" organizations, aris
tocratic and snobbish ideas, are incul
cated just because of the economic condi
tions of those attending and the boy car
rying newspapers in the early morning
hours to earn money to pay his ex
penses to get a high school education
and the other boys engaged in various
vocations, compelled to earn their way
through high school, are handicapped in
their opportunities and are made to feel
It by their economic conditions.
I might carry this ljne of argument
through our juridical courts to show how
that the economic conditions of the par
ties coming before the judge and jury
determines its decisions, as also the po
litical, industrial and other affairs of
life, but I feel conscious that any per
son that has shown enough Interest to
peruse this article thus far is intelligent
enough to comprehend what might fur
ther be said in extension.
Now the great discovery of socialism is
that of the class struggle, and since any
facing a mighty situation. The only ob- f
stacle to the ultimate grand supremacy
of Oregon's commerce must be overcome
or circumvented. This matter of getting
ships to Portland has been worthily pur
sued for more than a half century, for
my father, the late Colonel W. W. Chap
man, together with his partners In the
early townsite of Portland, D. H. Lowns
dale and Stephen Coffin, themselves be
gan the work by removing some obstruc
tions from Swan Island bar. In 1S74 my
brother, Huston I. Chapman, applying
Captain Eads' ideas .about jetties, pro
posed the same means should do service
on the Willamette and Columbia Rivers,
and the plan which he then published and
advocated called for several small jetties
in the Willamette River and two ocean
jetties at the mouth of the Columbia
River, one on each side thereof. The
army engineers would not indorse the
scheme and it was turned down. Later
a board of United States engineers rose
to half the plan, and said one jetty at
the Columbia bar was all that was re
quired. It was built and found inade
quate, ' and the second is tacitly agreed
Churches
son, superintendents morning worship, 11,
"Our Personal Responsibility": Christian En
deavor, 6:30, led by President Ricketts; even
ing service, 7:30, "The Secret of a Strong
Christian Character."
University Park, Artisan Temple, Ports
mouth Rev D. B. Gray. At 11 A. M., wor
ship and communion; Sunday school, 10 A. M.;
J. E. Brous, superintendent.
Laurelwood. Arleta Hall Rev. D. B. Gray.
Sunday school. 10 A. M. ; Young People's
meeting, fi:30 P. M. : preaching, 7:30 P. M.
Fir- . Park and Madison Rev. E. L. House.
D. L At 10:3O A. M.. "How Can Sin Be Re
mitted," by Rev. Daniel Staver; evening, ser
mon on "Joseph a Model for Young Men";
Sunday school, 12:15, W. D. Scott, superin
tendent; young people's meeting, 6:30.
CHKI8TL4.N SCIENCE.
First Church of Christ, Scottish Rite Ca
thedral. Morrison and Lownsdale streets
Services, 11 A. M. and 8 P. M. ; subject of
sermon. "Adam and Fallen Man." Sunday
school at close of morning service. Wednes
day evening meeting, 8 o'clock.
Second Church of Christ, Elks' Temple,
corner Stark and Seventh streets Sunday
services, 11 A. M. and 8 P. M.; subject,
"Adam and Fallen Man"; Sunday school, 11
A. M. ; Wednesday meeting. 8 P. M.
EPISCOPAL.
St. Mark's, Nineteenth and Qulmby Rev.
J. E. H. Simpson, rector. At 8 A. M , holy
communion; 11 A. M., prayer and litany;
7:30 P. M.. prayer; 10 A. M. ; Sunday school.
The subject of the evening sermon will te
"What Is the Meaning of the Word Epis
copal ?"
Our Savior. Woodstock Rev. H. D. Cham
bers, general missionary. Services every
Sunday, 11 A. M. ; communion, first 8unday
in month, 11 A. M. ; Sunday school every
Sunday, noon.
" St. John's Memorial, Sellwood Rev. W.
R. Powell, In charge. Sunday school, 11 A.
M. ; services and sermon. 7:45 P. M.
St. Mark's Nineteenth and Qulmby Rev.
J. E. H. Simpson, rector. 8 A. M.. holy
communion; 11 A. M., prayer and litany; 10
A. M-. Sunday school; evening service, as
usual, 7:30, 'What Is the Use of a Church?"
St. Stephen's. Thirteenth and Clay Rev.
H. M. Ramsey, priest In charge. Holy
communion. 7:30 A. M. ; Sunday school, 9:43
A. M. ; services. 7:30 P. M. and 11 A. M.
Bt. Paul's. Woodmere C. L. Parker, lay
rector. Morning service -and sermon, ll.
All Saints. Twenty-second and Reed
Morning prayer and sermon. 11; evening
prayer and sermon. 8 o'clock. Rev. T. N.
Wilson will officiate. Sunday school as
usual. -10 A. M. m
St. Matfhew's. First and Caruthers Rev.
W. A. M. Bceck, in charge. Sunday school.
9:45 A. M-; holy communion and sermon, 11
A. M. ; services .and address, 7:30 P. M.
Bishop Charles Scaddlng at morning serv
ice. St. Andrew's. University Park Rev. W. R.
PowelL chaplain, Sunday school. 10 A. M. ;
service and sermon, 11 A. M.
Good Shepherd, Sellwood and Vancouver
avenue. Albina Rev. John Dawson, rector.
Sunday school, 9:45 A. M. ; morning serv
ice, 11 A. M.
Trinity, Nineteenth and Everett Rev. Dr.
A. A, Jiorrlaon. lettor; . Rev. F, C, WU-
the application of these names is found
the most potent reason for the modern
trend towards city life, the desire to be
'citizens" to be naturalized, to be wear
ing decent clothes and walking on pave
ments. -
Most men would probably remain pa
gans forever and hunt and fish and chew
tobacco for a living if they were only let
alone. But the women are determined to
be citizens, or perish in the attempt. It
is a perfectly natural .ovement up the
social stream as salmon and suckers as
cend rivers. The cities are the human
spawning beds.
The tastes and the habits of the bour
geoise differ from those of the prole
tarians. They live in another world and
call things by different names. They
never hunt jobs. They accept positions or
appointments. They never receive wages.
Their compensation comes under the head
of salaries, fees, dividends, charges,
prices, tips, gratuities, offerings, collec
tions, contributions, profits, rents, roy
alties and all-that.
The bourgeoise practice law. medicine
and magic; they till pulpits and offices;
they profess anything that can be pro
fessed without regard to consistency or
logic. They -engage in industrial pursuits,
commercial and manufacturing enter
prises, they hold positions, discharge
duties, perform functions, execute orders,
and, in fact, they will do anything under
doctrine must have a vital truth to se
cure and hold attention and a following,
is why when a man becomes imbued
with socialism and gets the conception or
becomes class conscious in the recogni
tion of the. class struggle he has a faith,
in conjunction with that of economic de
terminism and surplus value, that opens
up to him the past as well as the future,
that makes him strong within himself
with an aspiration and hope that this life
is worth living, and makes him strong
within himself to be a militant and posi
tive force in and to society, as witness
the martyrs to the cause in the past in
all countries and thousands in Russia
today.
He furth'er learns the difference between
the teaching of the churches and social
ism is very distinct, in that the one
teaches individual righteousness and sal
vation, whereas the other at once means,
in order to secure individual salvation or
economic emancipation, he has got to get
his brother workingman of whatever race
or color to assist him. This necessarily
brings about co-operation and fraternal
ism, therefore the international character
of the movement.-
upon to be constructed as originally pro
posed, after the first has been enlarged
and extended. It has been 32 years since
the two-jetty plan was proposed, and It
will take ten years more to put- it in
operation and then it may fail in meet
ing the demand that was not thought
of in 1874 nor in 1SS4 the demand, the vital
need of some means by which the great
leviathans of modern commerce may en
ter or leave the great Columbia River
when "a big sea" is tossing up the
ocean. This is the thing that will for
ever assure the supremacy of Oregon's
commerce.
The crisis has come and the man
to conquer It. Talbot blessed Portland
with clear, pure water; Eads improved
the navigation of the great Mississippi
River; and now Eugene Semple has
named the remedy for the' dreaded
Columbia River bar. He says flam it;
and in that magnificent article which
appeared i.n The Sunday Oregonian of
October 14, he not only shows how
the thing can be done by building an
ocean breakwater at Tillamook Head:
but he cites many instances where
liams, assistant. Holy communion. 8 A. M. ;
Sunday school, 9:30 A. M. ; morning service,
i 11; evening service, 7:30. Carl Denton has
arranged to include these numbers in to
morrow's programme: At 11 A. M.. "Pil
grims' Chorus" (Wagner),; "Fugue in B
Flat- (Bach); 7:30 P. M., "Adagio" F sharp
minor ((junmant); postiuce, ti tiat (westl.
St. David's, East Twelfth and Belmont,
Rev. George B. Van Waters, TJ. D.. rector
Holy communion, 8 A..M. : holy communion
and sermon, 11; evening prayer, 7:30; Sun
day school, 9:45 A. M.
EVANGELICAL ASSOCIATION.
First English. East Sixth and Market Rev.
S. A. Siewert, pastor. Preaching at 11 A. M.
and 7:45 P. M. : subject of morning sermon,
"How Does Brahmanism Answer th Ques
tion, "What Shall I Do to Be Saved?"; even
ing. "A Young Man That Knew How"; Sun
day school, 10 A. M. ; Young People's Alliance,
6:45 P. M.
LUTHERAN.
St. James' English, West Park and Jef
ferson J. Allen Leas, pastor. Services at
11 A'. M.; subject, -'The Religion of Cer
tainty": In the evening the Lutheran League
will render an interesting miscellaneous pro
gramme, with Mrs. Leas, leading; Sunday
school, 10 A. M ; Luther League, 7 P. M.,
led by Miss Vera Albln.
Bethania Danish, Union avenue and Mor
ris Rev. Gudmund Grill, pastor. Services.
11 A. M. and 8 P. M. ; Sunday school, 12:15
P. M.
Norwegian Synod, corner East Tenth and
Grant Rev.- O. Hagoes. pastor. .Sunday
school, 9:30 A. M. , evening services at 8;
no forenoon services; Y. P. S., Thursday
evening; a full musical programme; Ladles'
Aid, Thursday at 2 P. M.
St. Paul s East Twelfth and Clinton Rev.
A. Krause. Services, 10:30 A. M. and 7:30
P. M. ; Sunday school, 9:30 A. M. ; Bible
lessons and young people's meeting, Thurs
day, S P. M.
METHODIST.
St. Johns Rev. F. L. Young. Services in
morning; 7:30 P. M.. popular address.
Falrvlew Rev. A- Byers. Services morn
ing and evening.
Laurelwood Rev. C. H. Campbell. 10 A
M., services; special music at all services;
Epworta League, 7 P. M. ; sermon, 8 P. M..
by pastor. Mrs. C. Miller and Miss P. Dick
inson have charge of the music.
University Park Rev. D. A. Watters, D.
D., pastor. 10:30 A. M.. Sunday school, W.
J. Peddlcord superintendent; 12:45 P. M.,
class meeting, P. J. Sharp leader; 11 A. M.,
preaching; 7:45 P. M., service.
Patton. Michigan avenue and Carpenter
Rev. Melville T. Wire, pastor. Services, 11
A. M. and 7:30 P. M. ; Sunday school, 10 A.
M. ; Epworth League, 6:30 P. M.
Trinity, East Tenth and Grant Rev. L.
F. Smith, pastor. 11 A. M-. sermon; Sun
day school, 10 A. M. ; Epworth League, 7 F.
M. ; sermon. 8 P. M.
Rockwood At 11 A. M.. sermon: 8 P. M.,
sermon.
Sellwood, Fifteenth and Tacoma Rev. A.
D. Wagner, pastor. Sunday school, 10 A.
M., A. F. Miller superintendent; preaching,
11 A. M.; subject, "Life and Light";
class meeting. 12:15 P. M., H. S. Stoughton
leader: Junior League, 2:30 P. M . led by
the pastor; Epworth League, 6:30 P. M.,
led by H. Stoughton; preaching. 7:30 P. M.i
subject, "At the Cross Watching."
Taylor-Street, Rev. F. Burgette Short, D.
D.. pastor. Classes, 9:30 A. M.; 10:80 A.
M., preaching; 7:45 P. M-. preaching.
Centenary, East Pine and East Ninth
streets. William H. Heppe, D. D., pastor
Communion service at 1030 JiiU, with ad
heavens, no matter how difficult, desper
ate or disgraceful-rexcept one thing, and
that is, they won't work.
Labor is the dead line between them and
the proletarians. They don't belong to
the working class. If there is any labor
to be done they advertise for help. They
hang out the sign of distress "Help
Wanted," and the proletarians rush to the
rescue as water flows into a hole. They
are always anxious to help other, people
but never able to help themselves.
In England only the upper crust of the
bourgeoise is classed as gentry, but in
America all bourgeoise are gentlemen,
whether plain or colored. A printer or
baker or barber is an artist, a policeman
is a dignitary, a mail cierk an official, a
peddler is a dealer in merchandise, beg
gars are licensed to present petitions or
levy contributions under many ingenious
and imposing titles. But none of them de
scend to the humiliation of work. To do
so would be to lose rank and be tnrown
down among the proletarians.
Who can blame them? I am no stickler
for the "rights of labor." Who, except
a proletarian wants to labor, anyhow?
Labor impairs the delicacy of the hands.
It stiffens and enlarges the Joints. It
destroys dignity of carriage and grace of
movement. A stigma attaches to those
that are condemned to it. Like some other
kinds of guilt, its embarrassing evidence
cannot be concealed. ,
Stains on the - character may be re
He begins to learn that protection, free
trade, gold and silver Issues of money,
publicity, rate control, rate legislation,
good men. etc., is not the solution of his
or the people's problems.
It presents a revolution in thought
and ideas. He becomes transformed.
The difference between a class-conscious
Socialist and a non-Socialist is
that of the difference between light
and darkness, heaven and hell. I take
the liberty to quote from a personal
letter from a man whose father's name
as an author is well known throughout
the world, and because of the princi
ples he espoused and set forth In his
books his name will be handed down
to osterity for generations to come
when those at present in the limelight
will sink into oblivion and truly be
men only of the hour. I quote the son.
"I certainly never will regret my action
in joining the Socialist party. Since
joining it I have had a spiritual peace
and mental interest that I never had be
fore, although I was always pretty
self-sufficient."
For hundreds of years has been ex
ploited the divine or infallible right of
European cities have built harbors by
constructing breakwaters in the open
sea. The matter of the canal from
Seaside to the Columbia is a trivial
thing. It might cost a million dollars.
Chicago built a back drain for its Sew
ers, and was glad that' It cost only $50,
000,000. Wideawake, determined Chi
cago! This information is to the point.
Chicago does things.
Mr. Eugene Semple formerly an Or
egon editor and later Governor of the
State of Washington is a natural en
gineer, a learned and a practical engi
neer. He saw the value of the mud
flats of Seattle years before he could
induce any other person to agree with
him. He originated and is successfully
carrying out the plan which has made
those waste sands more valuable than
the beach at Nome. And in proceeding
with this great work he has had to
procure material, so he said he would
just build a ship canal through the
mountain Oregonians would call it a
hill between Elliott Bay and Lake
Washington.- Uncle Sam was about to
build such a canal at the north end of
dress on "Why This Perennial Interest in
Calvary?" In the evening, second sermon
of faith series; theme, "The Range of
Faith." Morning class. 9-30. Sunday school,
12:15: East Water-street mission, 3:30: Jun
iors and Intermediates, 4; Epworth League
devotional, 6:15 P. M. : quarterly conference
and official board meeting Monday, at 7:45
P. M. Miss Kennedy, organist; E. S. Miller,
director of chorus.
Montavllla Rev. Harold Oberg. pastor.
Preaching service both morning and even
ing. Sunday school, 10 A. M. ; Epworth
League, 6 :45 P. M. : Junior League, 3 P. M.
Central, Russell and Kerby Rev. J. T.
Abbott, pastor. At 9:45 A. M , class meet
ing; 10:30 A. M., sermon; Sunday school. 12
M. ; Epworth League. -6:30 P. M.; sermon,
7:30 P. M.
Grace. Twelfth and Taylor streets Clar
ence True Wilson. D. D.. the pastor, will
preach at 10:30 and at 7:30: his subject will
be ' The Oldest Dramatized Tragedy In the
World." The male chorus will' sing again as
night. Class meeting at 9:30 and Sunday
school at 12:15; Young People's meeting at
6:30.
METHODIST., SOUTH.
Foresters Hall, 171 Second street Rev. E.
F. Mowre. At 10 A. M.. Sunday school; U
A. M., preaching: 6:30 P. M . Epworth League;
7:30, regular preaching service.
PRESBYTERIAN.
Third. East Thirteenth and Pine streets
Rev. Andrew J. Montgomery, pastor. Preach
ing, 10:30 A. M., 7:45 P. M.: morning sub
ject. "Religion at First Hand": evening. "The-f
ize or Christ Is the Light of the World."
Sellwood Rev. D. A. Thompson, pastor.
Sunday school, 10 A. M. ; morning service, 11:
subject, "A True Conception of Christ"; Junior
Society, 3 P. M. ; Christian Endeavor, 6:45
P. M. ; evening service, 7:45; subject, "The
More Abundant T.ife. "
Hawthorne Park. Twelfth and East Tay
lor Rev. E. Nelson Allen. At 10:30 A. M.,
preaching; noon, Sunday school; 6 30 P. M.,
Christian Endeavor; 7:30 P. M.. preaching.
Mizpah. Mary and Powell Rev. Jerome R.
McGlade. D. D. At 10:30 A. M.. "Pure and
Undenled Religion"; 7:30 P. M., "The Unwrit
ten Things Which Jesus Did."
Piedmont. Cleveland avenue and Jarrett
Rev. L. Myron Boozer, pastor. 11 A. M.,
sermon: Sunday school, 12:15 P. M., T. F.
Kershaw superintendent; evening, 7:30, ser
mon. Arbor Lodge Chapel, Bryant and Curtis
Rev. J. R. Dunning. Ph. minister. Morn
ing sermon, 11: Sunday school. 12:15.
Westminster, East Tenth and Weidler Rev.
Henry Marcotte, pastor; sermon. 11 A- M.,
7:45 P. M.; Sunday school. 12:30, Y. P. S. C.
E., 6:45 P. M.
Firs United, Sixth and Montgomery. Rev.
A. W. Wilson, pastor Services morning and
evening.
Chinese Mission, 145 K First Mrs. W. S.
Holt. In charge.
Kenllworth Mission Rev. J. R, McGlade,
D. D.. In chaote.
Midway Mission Rev. D. A. Thompson, In
charge.
Zlon (German), 127 Best Twenty-eighth
Rev. August W. Reinhard, pastor. Services as
usuaL
Eagle Creek Services In charge of Rev. W.
S. Holt, D. D.. synodical missionary for Ore
gon. Men's Resort and People's Institute, Fourth
and - Burnslde :Rev. A. D. Soper, in charge.
Services at 4 P. M. and 7:30 P. M. ; Sunday
school. 8 P. M.
MArahall-Strcet tfarghajj, and Seventeenth,
moved; sins may be pardoned or trans
posed into virtues as white as snow, but
the peculiar physical effect produced by
labor cannot be washed out by any known
brand of soap, nor hidden by the most ex
pensive or fashionable clothes, 'xhe Bible
says that labor was imposed on man as a
curse. Human laws inflict it as a penalty
on criminals. Anyone condemned to labor
may properly be called a convict.
There is no right to labor. The only
right is to be free from labor. Men fight
for these rights, but there is no need to
fight for the right to labor; that can be
won By begging, a trade in which slaves
are better schooled.
When a member of the bourgeoise Is
driven by the march of the millionaires
out of business or employment, or com
pelled to work for wages that he con
siders below his dignity, he may sink to
the level of the proletarians or he may
not. Some commit suicide; others become
strikebreakers. Pinkerton detectives or
trainrobbers. Some take to chemistry and
discover a new and harmless method of
embalming beef, while others increase the
rate of mortality by experimenting with
glycerine in the manufacture of bombs.
Others embrace the Socialist '"philoso
phy" and become possessed by the popu
lar delusion i.iat the world is going to be
redeemed by putting slips of paper into
those cunningly devised contraptions com
monly called ballot-boxes. These join the
Why Socialism Has Made Such Large Growth in
the Minds of Men the World Over
ideas of the peoples, as also the divine
right of Kings and Queens to dominate
the governpiental ideas of the people
(but have always had to maintain ar
mies to support them), and so with the
intellectual and political ideas of the
people.
The Socialist comes into the arena
to explode these arrogated sacred and
divine rights, as well as the now domi
nant sacred right of George F. Baer,
who claims that God, in his Infinite
wisdom, has appointed him as the vice
regent to own the coal mines and the
sacred right to withhold from the peo
ples of the earth the means of produc
ing the means of life.
There is only one divine right and
that is the right of life, and anything
that militates against this is immoral
and wrong and must be set aside. Only
that which is beneficial and conduces
or contributes to its well being and
welfare must be maintained and is
moral and right.
As he learns the philosophy of eco
nomic determinism and surplus value
he begins to learn of the evolution that
the Pope to dominate the religious
How It Would Eliminate the Only Problem in the
Way of Portland's Commercial Supremacy
Seattle at an estimated cost of $8,000,
000 in fact, had spent some hundreds
of thousands of dollars on actual work,
then dropped It, because Mr. Semple
was constructing a similar canal at
the south end of Seattle, mainly to get
material for tideland filling.
More than this, it is rumored that
Mr. Semple inspired, if he did not plan,
the proposal by which the Govern
ment's $S,D0O.00O Lake Washington
canal will be constructed for King
County (and Seattle), for less than
$1,000,000. Seattle does things.
The Columbia River bar is a serious
matter when one is considering Ore
gon's immense possibilities in the fields
of ocean commerce It is' a dreadful,
direful thing.
Mr. Semple comes opportunely and
says the open ocean harbor and the
canal thence to the Columbia River can
be built for $2,000,000. Nobody disputes
his published statement of facts and
conclusions The price is not much for
the great State of Oregon. The business
men of Portland in 1S92 subscribed $2,000.
000 in bonds for the Hunt railroad between
Rev. C. W. Hays, pastor Sunday school, 10
A. M.; 11 A. M., sermon: 6:45 P. M., Y. P.
S. C. E.; 7:30 P. M.. sermon.
Mount Tabor. Prettyman avenue and Bel
mont Rev. E. M. Sharp. II A. M.. sermon.
First. Twelfth and Alder Rev. Robert Mac
laren, of Los Angeles, Cal., will preach morn
ing and evening. Edgar E. Coursen has
arranged: Prelude, "Old German Song" (Men
delssohn); anthem, "O Sing Unto the Lord"
(Holden); contralto solo, "A Prayer for
Faith" (Bartlett); postlude. .prelude in D
(Bach); prelude. "Spring Song" '(Shelley);
anthem, "As Pants the Hart" tSchnecker); so
prano solo and quartet, "There Is a Land of
Pure Delight" (Shelley); postlude. andantino
(low).
Church of the Strangers, Wasco street and
Grand avfnue Rev. E. F. Dubois, pastor.
Morning service. 10 45. "Pitching Your Tent
Nearer Heaven": Christian Endeavor, 6:45 P.
M-; Sunday school, noon: evening service, 7:30.
"A Ribbon of Blue.",
Forbes. Sellwood and Gantenbeln Rev.
Harry H. Pratt, pastor." Services morning
and evening.
Fourth, First and Gibbs Rev. John Ra
gan Welch. At 10:30 A. M , sermon; 7:30 P.
M.. sermon.
Calvary. Eleventh and Clay Rev. B. E.
S. Ely. Jr., pastor. Services. 10:30 A. M.
and 7:30 P. M. ; subjects. "The Will of
God the Christian's Encouragement" and
"The Hero Who Never Shaved." Choir, un
der direction of H. ,V. Mllllgan.
UNITED EVANGELICAL.
First East Tenth and Sherman Rev. A. A.
Winter, pastor. At 10 A. M., Sunday school;
11 A. M., sermon by Rev. H. L. Pratt, presid
ing elder of Portland district; 6:30 Ki L. of
C. B ; 7:30, worship, with sermon by pastor;
prayer service Thursday evening.
Ockley Green -At 10 A. M-. Sunday school,
11 A. M.: sermon. 6:S0 P. M-, Young People's
meeting-: 7:30, sermon by Rev. H. L. Pratt.
Second. Fargo and Kerby Rev. J. Bower
sox, pastor. Preaching at 11 A. M. and 7:30
P. M. on "A Study of St. James' Epistle"
"The Necessity of a Fixed Purpose": Sunday
school at 10 A. M.; K. L. C. E.. 7 P. M.
' UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST.
First, East Fifteenth and Morrison Rev.
H. C. Shaffer. Bible school, 10 A. M. ; ser
mon. 11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M. ; Y. P. S. C.
E., 7 P. M.
UNITARIAN.
Church of Our Father, Yamhill and Sev
enth Rev. w. G. Eliot, Jr., minister; Rev.
T. L. Eliot, D. D-, minister emeritus. Serv
ice at 11 A. M. ; subject of sermon, "World
liness, Otherworldllness and Unworldllness';;
Sunday school, 9:45 A. M. ; kindergarten, 11
A. M. ; adult class, 12:30 P. M-; Y. P. F.,
6:30 P. M. i
UNIVERSALIS!.
First, East Eighth and Couch streets At 11
A. M. , song service and sermon by a lay mem.
her on "What Shall We Do to Be Saved?";
Sunday school, 10 A. M.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST8.
Auditorium. 208 H Third between Taylor
and Salmon Elder George A. Snyder. At
7:30 P. M.. "The Evils of a Union of Church
and State Foretold in Prophecy."
SWEDENBORGL4N.
Now Church Society Sunday school, 10
A. M.; lay services. 11:30 A. M., In Knights
of Pythias hall. Eleventh and Alder.
T. M. C. A.
Y. M. C. A., Fourth and, Yamhill streets
Concert by Clifford's Orchestra at 3 P.- M.,
followed by an address by "Jim" Thompson,
of New York City, and solo by Miss Eula
Bennett, of Portland, Discussion Blt-la
Socialist Salvation Army and squander
their time and pennies in sticking little
red stickers on box-cars and distributing
copies of the Appeal Vo Reason eriong
people that no one but a mad fanatic
would ever suspect of having any reason,
to which an appeal could be made.
Here we have the class struggle be
tween the proletarians, who insist on
work or death, and the '5ourgeois. who
disdain work and will die for liberty. It
seems as if those who want to work
might be permitted to work all tney
want to and those who don't want to
might sit on the fence, stay at their hotels
or go fishing.
But this is an impracticable theory. The
trouble is about the dividing up. The
fellows who sit on the fence want to
come in on the division for big salaries
for bossing the job or granting permission
to the other fellows to do anything.
Statesmanship has found no solution to
the problem so far. but fight it out. It is
not to my economical interest to advo
cate any other remedy. War creates lu
crative employment for historians and
undertakers, in both of which honorable
professions I may admit that I have some
small standing.
The next class to be considered is the
nobility. This is a difficult and delicate
task and probably it would be better to
postpone to another occasion the content"
plation of so sublime a theme.
Corvallis, November 1.
is going on in the present society
whereby, through surplus value, main
tained by sacred man-made law, the
confiscation of the natural resources,
industrial inventions, public utilities,
means of production and distribution,
the wealth of the world is fast passing
into the hands of a small coterie of
men so that now they have arrived at
the point with their constantly larger
accumulations of capital they must en
ter Into the lines of distribution, viz.:
retail cigar stores, grocery stores, shoe
stores, dairy products, etc. Not only la
he defrauded of the product of his la
bor, but even his savings (representing
his industry, thrift, economy and self
denial) become sterile deposits in our
banking institutions for further means to
furnish his plutocratic friends with
the power to fasten the chains more
tightly on him, and he begins to learn
the significance of a recognition of the
class struggle and the motto which
alone will immortalizethe name of
Karl Marx: "Workingmen of the
world, united you have nothing to lose
but your chains; you have a world to
win." J. H. FAIRBROOK.
Walla Walla and Gray's Harbor, just to
get that road to run a branch from Van
couver. Wash., to Portland. And Oregon
is vastly more able to do what Portland
could do in 1882. Let the United States
go ahead building the jetties. The Colum
bia River will be the route except during
storms. Then steamers, ships and other
craft can come and go by way of the
ocean harbor and the inshore canal.
Incidentally I remember' that the con
gress caused a board of engineers to look
for a place to construct a harbor of refuge
somewhere on the Oregon or Washington
coast: but they reported they could not
find a place. Mr. Semple has foand a
place. Oregon's proposed ocean Harbor
would also be a harbor of refuge, "a) very
ready help in time of trouble."
The State of New York is awake.
e. and
XiBt Ofl
savel.
is enlarging the Erie Canal at a. cost
$120.000.0n0; and she is doing this to gavel.
her commercial supremacy on the At
lantic. Surely it is time for Oregon to awake,
and do something.
Portland. Oct 30
classes at 4:30. Fellowship luncheon at 6:30.
All men invited.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Olive Branch Mission. 2S9 Davis Meet
ings every night in the week; noonday
prayers. Sundays, 3 P. M., A. Wells super
intendent. Friends. East Male and Thirty-fifth Rev.
Lewis I. Hadley, pastor. 10 A. M., Sunday
school; preaching. 11 A. M. and 7:30 P. M. ;
Christian Endeavor, 6:30 P. M.
The Reorganised Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-Day Saints meets for services in
Woodward Hall. Montavllla, as follows: Sun
day school at 10 A. M. ; preaching by Elder
John Kalor at 11 A. M.. by W. S. Pender
at 7:30 P. M. ; Zion's Eellglo-Llterary So
ciety. 6:15 P. M.
The First Spiritual Society. Artisans' hall,
Ablngton building. Third street near Wash
ington Conference, 11 A. M. ; lyceum. 12:30
P. M F. E. Coulter will lecture on "Man '
What Is He?" at 7:45 P. M., followed by
Mrs. Ladd Flnnlcan.
The Church of the Nazarine, 423 Burnslde
between Tenth and Eleventh Rev. H. O.
HenrlckB. pastor.' Services. 10:30 A. M., 3
and 7:30 P M. . prayer meeting, Wednesday
evening. 7:30.
The Church of God. holds regular services
at the chapel, 430 Hawthorne avenue. Sun
day services, 2:30 and 7:30 P. M. ; Sunday
school, 1 P. M.; prayer meeting, Wednes
day, 7:30 P. M. ; Elder G. T. Neal, pastor.
Millennial Dawn, G. A. R. hall, Second
a-nd Morrison Services at 2:30 P. M.
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Saints, hall 400 Allsky building. Third and
Morrison Services at 2 and 7 P. M. ; Sun
day school. 10 A. M. Apostle George F.
Richards, of Salt Lake City, will speak.
Services will be resumed at the Divine
Truth chapel. Allsky building. Third and
Morrison.-at 11 A. M. Thaddeus M. Minard,
pastor: H. E. Martin, musical director. Sun,
day school, 12 M. ,
Bishop Scadding's Engagements.
The official engagements of Bishop Scaddlnsj
for November are:
November 4. Twenty-flret Sunday after Trin
ity, 7:30 A. M-, St. Stephen's; 11 A. M., St,
Matthew's; S P. M.. Seamen's Mission.
November 6 Monday, meeting of school
board.
November 6 Tuesday, 6:S0 P. M., laymen's,
dinner, Arlington club.
November 7 Wednesday. 4 P. M., address
Consumers' League; 8-10 P. M., reception,
Church of Good Shepherd.
November 9-11 At Pendleton.
November 12 At La Grande.
November 13 At Baker City
November 18 7:30 A M., St. Stephen's; 4
P. M., address Y. W C. A.; 11 A. M.. St.
David's; 7:30 P. M.. St. Stephen s.
November 19 Meeting of board at mlesions.
No-ember 25 11 A M., St. Stephen's; 7:30
P. M., St. Paul's. Oregon City.
November 26 Monday. Chinese Mission. (1
P. M. ; 5 P. M., St. Paul's. Oregon City.
November 28 Wednesday, confirmation s,t
Woodstock. 8 P. M
November 29 Thanksgiving service at Trin
ity Church.
November 30 St. Andrew's day, 8 P. M., St.
Mark's, Brotherhood of St. Andrew service.
Red Eyes and Eyelids, Weak Eyes
And, Tired Eyes Reed iluilne Eye Ionia,