t ASTORIA, OREGON, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1904. PAGE SIX. THE NARRATIVE OF A VISITOR WHO SAYS THAT BEING "USED TO IT' IS THE SECRET OF ASTORIA'S PRESENT WRETCHEDNESS Grand Free Offer, to Readers of Our Municipal Shortcomfngs Pointed Out by an Observing Gentleman Who Scores Our Carelessness. Our Miserable Thoroughfares Startle Him and Cause Him toWon der if We Are Lost to All Sense of Civic Duty. While Un sightly Woodpiles Greet His Astonished Gaze as He Goes About Sightseeing. Astoria, Oct. 1. (Editor The Astorian) Out here I am an easterner. Where I came from I am a westerner. From , those statements you may rightly con clude that I came from what Is gen erally called the middle west. Back In my state, Wisconsin, the people have heard of Astoria. The lit tle boys and girls there read about As toria In their geography books. Be fore deciding to visit your town I looked up Astoria in the encyclopedia and at las and found out some hard, cold facts About location, population and natural advantages. Then I boarded a train nd started west. "Ever been in Astoria?" I asked a fellow-traveler. "Tep; once," he said, dryly. "Never join" axain." "Why not 7" I asked. "Ever there r "No." Then you'd better turn back." The conversation I have quoted Is an actual one. The man I questioned told me more, but I decided to come on nevertheless. I was determined that I should like Astoria. I heard that Astoria was built on piles and on a sidehlll. The sidehill I saw at once, but it was a whole day before I discovered the piles. I walked up and down your main street Com mercial several times that first day, but It was almost dinner time when I discovered that It was paved with planks supported by piles. Before that I had supposed the street was macad amized and the work done poorly. I lived a year in Chicago and I have seen streets at their worst there. I have seen sand streets where the wheels sink al most to the hubs and mud streets where the slime Is a foot dep on the level and two feet deep In the holes, but 1 never saw such bad streets as you have here In Astoria. Down town It Isn't so bad as It is In the residence parts. But all over it's bad enough. I walked over Eleventh street to Duane Friday after noon. Looking west on uuane i saw several boards lying lengthwise on the street and 1 walked up to Investigate. I saw that the boards covered holes. Then, too, I saw that there were holes that were not covered. I looked down one of these and saw dirty water 10 feet below. The hole was wide enough for me to put my foot through. "Why don't they fix thaf holer I asked a man who was standing on the sidewalk. "Oh, I don't know; they will after a while, I guess," and he yawned and started to walk away. "Don't people ever get hurt by step ping Into these holes?" I called after htm. "Xaw," he said: "they're used to them." In that last statement It seems to me, lies the secret of Astoria's wretch edness. I went riding the other day. I sat on the front seat as we drove down one of your steep hills. The wooden pave ment was broken in numerous places, and the horses stumbled and threat ened to fall, while the carriage lurched like a ship In a storm. The driver kept looking down at the pavement "Trying to dodge the holes?" I asked. "No; trying to ride on the girders," he sM. "The trouble Is the blamed things don't run the same all along. They ought to fix this street, but, then, we're used to It." You're used to too many things out here in Astoria. Tou ought to get over being used to things and make a few changes. I stood on the corner of Eleventh street and Franklin avenue yesterday afternoon and looked at the woodpiles. I To the north I saw, by the Cole, one big woodpile that occupied the gutter for half a block. To the south I saw five piles of various slies. To the west I saw two woodpiles and a dilap idated wagon. Looking toward the east I could see only one woodpile, but, then, the street was torn up after al block. I walked down to tbe corner of Duane street. There were a plledrlver and four wagons In sight to the east, and sis wagons and four woodpiles to the west. "Why the wood piles r 1 asked an old man. i "No alleys," he said. "But why don't the people move the wood Into their yards?" 1 persisted. Oh, they will after a whtle. They're used to having It In the street." There you have It again "they're used to It." Astoria will have to get over being "used to It" and begin to do things. But 1 don't want to be a "knocker." Astoria Is a good town, better than most towns; and It's growing, and growing fast Anyone can see that. I took a long walk the other day and saw new houses being built every where, and good houses, too. I went through one of your mills and one of your canneries, ana saw nusue unu business. Tour stores look busy; there are few loafers on the streets, and everything looks lively and business like. Astoria has had a past. I am sure It Is to have a future that will be a surprise to the people. But the good citizens of Astoria will have to wake up. They will have to get over being "used to it" I may write more later. There are lots of nice things I have omitted to say In this letter. AN EASTERNER. H LIVING FOR OTHERS IS THE HIGHEST AIM OF LIFE The Rev. Dr. Dean Babbitt, of the Church of the Epiphany, New York, Says So ciety Is Responsible for Itself. "Neither you nor I know the tremen clous powers locked up In us for moral advancement and for doini? good, real izing high Ideals and making a large sucess In life. There are some of the young here who possibly have no plan of scheme of life. Morally, they are Just living from hand to mouth, with no definite objects, no particular aims, Just taking life Idly, a kind of shiftless, In dolent way from day to day, subject to any temptation, enjoying In a bap hazard way any pleasure that comes along, living for the day or the mo ment, Just like those Insects called 'ephemera,' which exist for a day, flit In Its sunlight, or drive before its storm, then are gone forever, for their nature 9 to die with the day; these young people 5ra Pt doln8 their be3t with a purpose, . j l';"t" ." Jjifci'MtiJiu. , - "jfcjfiw, Tst we are to consider th5 treat basal fundamental fact that to do cur best, live our best, realize tfie be n Us, we must get out of ourselves and dd good to other. 'Now, take this , basal, fundamental truth Of living for others, for self-real-; Izatlon, for doing our best In the church, In society, and In the family, and see the bracing power of this golden band. of unity and harmony, "First The Church.r Look at what that Is, what It' stands for, and what are Its fundamentals, and then see how necessary St. Paul's principle Is to Its proper working and the accomplishment of Its human and divine purposes. The Church, by Its nature and constitution, Is an embodiment of the principle of ation we should manifest for the faults and fallings of each other? What effort we should make to help and please each other, and by all this we come to our best selves. But this teaching of the Gospel, as I have already Intimated, reaches out far ther than the church, to all society. It Is Impossible to have this truth sink deap" Into the heart and life without It pro foundly affecting our relations to all men, women and children. The Chris tian meddles, so to say, with all things, all Institutions, all reforms, because his relationship takes in all men, for so ciety Itself has been built on this great truth, that 'we are all members one of another,' that one class cannot suffer without another class suffers. If a sa loon keeper ruins young men or boys, th Christian must be Interested, pro foundly Interested, In that and try to prevent it If corruption exists In city government and officials are bribed, Or the police ply blackmail or graft the Christian cannot keep away from Interference In these matters, because 'we are all members one of another.' 'If lawlessness, mobs and lynchlngs attack and undermine the fabric of gov ernment and make havoc with private and public rights, lessen the security of all men In thelf homes or business, or overthrow the fair fabric of civllt- zattoh and reduce society to its primal, savage lutit for revenge and blood, the Christian, In the pulpit or In the pew, cannot refrain from acting and setting his face as a flint against all this mobbtshness and violence against so child of God, a member of the social order, a brother, end we are all mem bers one of another. "And, then, this same principle of service and self-realization applies to the members of a family living together. The father, the mother, the children will live In gentleness and love, In the richness and Joy of a fellowship un known before, when they see that the altruism they are called upon to prac tise has such a profound basis In great fundamental facts of organic unity." IB KI1 CUlWW'tll'-tf m - , of organic unity stated by St. Paul 'cial and government order, because we when he says 'we are all members one of another," and the Church Is the body of Christ "This calls for a special kind of liv ing of Christians In the Church. If we be the body bt Christ,'" It we be mem bers one of another;' what love, tender ness, sweetness, gentleness we should have todard one" another t 1 What tlmate acquaintanceship we should have with each other? What conslder- are members tme of another. If ne groes are hunted, hounded, persecuted on acount of their color or racei de prived of protection, made the football of lynching madness, stripped of their political rights, mad a byword and a reproach all en acount of the black ness of their skin, the weakness or dif ference of their race, -the Christian, whether In the pulpit or the pew, must, will intermeddle, for the negro is a Pears' Pears' Soap has never offered premiums to induce sales. 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