THi : NORFOLK WKKKLV NKWS-.IOl h'N.U , . FU1DAY. MAY . * . 1911 The Ni/rfOlk / Weekly News-Journal Tlie NUWH. KHtablUhctl 1881. The Journal , Kstabllshed 1877. THE HUBE PUBLISHING COMPANY W. N. N. A. HUBC , President. Secretary. fivery Friday. Hy tniill jmr year , $1.00. Entered nt llio poHtolilco at Norfolk. Noli. , nx second class matter. Telephoned : Kdltorlal Department No. 2L' . lliiHlness Ulllco and Job KOOIUB. No. 11 21 ! . The government la talking of coinIng - Ing a two-and-a-half-cent-plece. One can already smell the cigar It would buy. Luther Uurbnnk IH working to Improve - provo the grape fruit. Let UB hope he will succeed In producing a seedless variety. A new town In Kansas half way be tween Napoleon and Wellington has been named Waterloo. Kansas Isn't KO slow. As an armlstlco has been declared In Mexico , our people on the line will nt least get a chance to plant the vegetable garden. A cactus hedge along the Mexican border would prove discouraging to a frequent Interchange- courtesies be tween neighbors. In view of the way the supreme court makes over our laws , Is con gress degenerating Into a kind of nom inating committee ? The quieting down of the Mexican war talk makes it clear that what the Mexicans want Is not so much free dom us rotation in olllce. These trees that are planted on Ar bor day are coming along just in time to glvo the horses some nice juicy bark to nibble at this summer. The tercentenary of the King James bible Is celebrated , and some people's copies look as if they had been col lecting dust just about that time. There have been a number of dents made In the cost of living in the last three months. Meat , butter , lard and eggs have all declined appreciably. We call the Italians black-hearted for their Camorrn murders at retail , but we have somewhere a dynamite gang that docs the same business at wholesale. The- English had some smart speak ers at their peace meeting the other night , but the $300,000,000 they are spending for battleships talks more eloquently. That Camorra trial over In Italy dispenses a brand of justice almost equal to what is put up by the mock trial entertainments given by our sew ing societies. There is a hea\y drop hi the stt-el trust profits , but as Mr. Carnegie got an article accepted by the May Cen tury , he can still furnish a few more library books. . Cham ] ) Clark has broken four gav els in keeping the house in order. That's what comes from only hitting the desk Instead of the heads of of fending members. Although the board of health gave the garbage heap in Mr. Lorimer's back yard a shining coat of whitewash the neighbors are sniffing more sus piciously than ever. President Taft' has enough fight in htm to keep this session of congress busy , and sticking close to their job which is to pass the reciprocity agree inent with Canada. The Dutch have hauled down oui flag on Palmas , but the Impression prevails in this country that the Islam did not pay Uncle Sam for keeping the ( lag pole painted. Governor Wilson is starting out or n long tour of the southwest. It IE very kind of him to perform part o Mr. Taft's duties , while not gottim any part of his salary. They've got a new head for the An uapolls naval academy. Let us hop * he teaches the boys that a person maj be able to earn a dollar and yet out live the disgrace of it. Caruso was obliged to return t < Italy $50,000 short of what his con tracts called for , as a result of throa trouble. Italy will don mourning ii sympathy when ho arrives. A Cincinnati judge rules that moth ers have the exclusive right to span ! the children. We always knew thos messages that President Roosovel sent to congress were Illegal. Our society people are mortgagln their houses to see King Georg crowned , while In England they wll want one-way fare rebated to take th bother of going up to "Lunnon. " Oliver Wendell Holmes said a pa thing In a very happy way in thes words : "To bo seventy years youn IB sometimes far more cheerful an hopeful than to he forty years old. " The senators are quarreling eve omtnitlee placec. but the fact that ley wrangle over possession of the uck saw IB far from Indicating a dls- osltlon to do things to the wood pile. The country has a balance of trade ti Its favor of about $400.000.000. Hut ft IT we have paid the bills of the European tourists , the cashier will be ending us the usual overdraw notice. If ( Jene Debs Is going to bo elected resident next time , it might be well o wait until the witnesses are called n the dynamite cases before running fr any more of that typewriter ribbon lipped In vitro ! . The broom IB one symbol to be car- led in the New York suffragist parade in May C. Mere man crouching on he sidewalks will ask timorously if his IB displayed as a weapon or as a lousehold implement. Mr. Taft told the New Yorkers that he did not want to annex Canada. As Uncle Saui has forty-six children of his own , with two more under way , it seems unnecessary for him to ask to adopt his neighbor's family. In what little spare time the grad uates of 1911 can get between games , hey are carefully writing out , on pa- ier. the solutions to many of the most lerplexing problems of modern civili sation. Once a year they are all olved. Mrs. Hetty Green is going to give up ier modest Hat in Hoboken and try ife at a swell hotel. For Mrs. Greene o set such an example of reckless ex- ravagance is discouraging. To whom shall we point with pride now when ecturing the youth on th beauty of economy ? Champ Clark wants to revise the a riff by schedules , a piece at a time , while Senator Bailey Is in for doing he whole job at one time. It remains o be seen which of these men has the most Influence , but we would be in clined to place our money on Chump at this writing. Professor T. J. See is quite safe in mzarding an opinion that every star system is inhabited by living beings , for unless Tesla gets Ills wireless go ng In better shape to the outer plan ets , not even the supreme court is ever going to be able to provo that Professor See is wrong. The long distance transmission of electric power has had an Important Influence upon the development of irid lands in Colorado and other west ern states. It Is said that even when water is procurable by gravity system ( lowing down from the mountains , electric pumping is often found pref erable. It has turned deserts into orchards and meadows. The Great Northern Railway com pany will use moving pictures to il- ustrate the northwest and its scenes of Interest. There is no excuse for Ig norance of scenery of our own or other countries with the moving pic tures now pxhibiU'd on every street corner. The only trouble- that the picture rompanles cannot be made to confine themselves to scenery. Wireless telephones aro. to be put Into practical use on railroad trains. Two wireless stations are to be estab lished , one at Sidney , Neb. , and the other at Cheyenne , Wyom. , which arc 103 miles apart , and connected by a single rail track. It is expected that communication will be kept up be tween these stations by wireless tele phone , thus avoiding all danger from accidents to block signals. In Grantham , England , a monster traction engine has been invented , which is designed for hauling guns in war time over rough roads and up and down hills. Instead of moving on wheels it walks along on thirty-two feet like an enormous centipede. The feet are metal bound blocks of wood which run on a huge endless chain It is said to be a success for the pur pose for which it was built. The carelessness of the Americar people is shown by the fact ( hat the fire waste in the United/ / States amounts each year to $2.51 and ir Europe only 33 cents. If we were as careful in the construction of oui buildings , and as careful to keep then from burning after we built them as arc the people of England and Ger many our Insurance rates would b < divided by seven that is , we wouh save six-sevenths of the amount w now pay for fire insurance. Robert G. Ingersoll in one of nil loftiest tllghta of oratory paid thii beautiful tribute to women : "I tel you that women , as a rule , are mon faithful than men ten times mon faithful. I never saw a man pursui his wife into the very ditch of dus and degradation and take her to hi : arms. I never saw a man stand a the shore where she was wrecked waiting for the waves to bring he corpse back to his arms , but I havi seen woman with her white arms lif a man from the mire of degradatioi and hold him to her bosom as if hi were an angel. " The expansion of the export trad of this nation keeps steadily or Whether the tariffs go up or down under the Wilson hill , the Dingley bill the McKlnley bill and the Payne bill the value of the farm and industria products of the United States which llnd a foreign market , has steadily grown until for the tlscal year It prom- I BOS to exceed two million dollars. If the record for the next three months Is maintained , the total value of the exportatlons for the year "mllng June 30 will be J 1,200.000,000 and the Unit ed States will be the greatest seller on the face of-the glob- . Vancouver , British Columbia , has put into effect the single tax. or land tax , which exempts from taxation nil forms of property and wealth except land. For some reason there has been such n rush of population and im provements into Vancouver that the prices of city lots have soared sky ward In spite of the extra taxes. This pleases the city authorities , who smil ingly announce , "More taxable value in sight. " And It Is the sort that can not be concealed , either. Thomas Jefferson and Alexander Hamilton are to be Immortalized by monuments in Washington. Thomas Jefferson was not only the third pres ident of the United States and author of the declaration of Independence , but added a million square miles to our territoryIt Is time his memory was honored. Equally deserving of recognition are the acts of Alexander Hamilton , Washington's gallant young aide-de-camp , the first secretary of the treasury , the man who was America's first and greatest financier. It is most fitting that these revolutionary heroes should be honored. The entrance of the reciprocity agreement into the political arena has produced a curious crossing of party lines. Probably the situation merely means that reciprocity is not , and can not be made , a party question. North western congressmen oppose it be cause they fear its effect on their farmer constituents , Mr. Cannon and his ultra-protectionist followers fear it for very different rejisons. They fear it may prove to be the entering wedge for lower duties on manufac tured goods and a readjustment of thy tariff all around. The two reasonn are utterly inconsistent , for both fears cannot be well grounded. Judge William S. Kenyon of Fort Dodge , la. , who was elected on the sixty-seventh ballot to succeed the ; late Senator J. P. Dolllver after a brief intervening term rilled by Ed itor Lafayette Young of Des Moines , the governor's appointee , is the son of a Congregational minister. He was born in Ohio forty-two years ago. He entered the legal profession and be came general attorney of the Illinois Central railway , and at the beginning of President Taft's administration was appointed assistant attorney general of the United States. The president is much pleased that so important , n member of his administration should be honored with a seat in the United States senate. A great many people are rather an ticipating that the real leadership of the senate in the next session among the republicans will be Senator Root of New York. The St. Louis Globe- Democrat says of him , "While Root'f service to the senate has been short , it has been long enough to show that lie is one of the best-balanced men in that chamber. His services as secre * tary of war and as secretary of state gave him a grasp of the larger issue. such as no other man in that chambci has , except Lodge. " When it comes to the democrats perhaps Culbertsor of Texas will come as near being leader as any other one man , witli Raynor and Stone close seconds. Ir the house "Uncle Joe" Cannon will bt at the front , although it is doubtful if ho will be accepted as leader bj the insurgents who fought him so bit terly. Boston has from colonial days hole the pretrtige of being the city of cul ture , but of late the Bostonians have been led to wonder why , since Bostor Is nearer Liverpool than New York Is It Is not the great American port. The reason as explained by President Mel len of the New Haven road , Is be cause the city of culture has no thought enough of the minutes tha determine points of entry and depar ture by water. A steamer docked Ii Boston can now land its passengers It New York by rail two hours quicke : than they can make the slow and dif ficult passage into New York harbor But this will not be true long , for thi Pennsylvania road has a plan to hav < the liners land at the far end of Lom Island , at Montauk Point , where then Is an excellent harbor and from then the Pennsylvania could take them ti its new terminal in the heart of Nev York in two hours. This is a net gaii of six hours which in this rushing ag seems of sufficient importance t spend millions for its accomplishment TAFT'S WORD FOR IT. President Taft declares the interest of farmers will not suffer as a resul of the Canadian reciprocity agree ment. He appeals for support of th measure. And President Taft's word ought t carry as much weight as that of som of the politicians who are opposin the pact. What's more , it will. THE PAPER DUTY. A strong resolution favoring fre print paper was passed by the Amei lean Newspaper Publishers associatio at their meeting in New York the pas week. The things the senate did last year to the paper tariff are still a sere subject among newspaper publishers. This was no cine where the tariff makers sat In stnlled easy chairs and submissively consumed cooked up fig ures representing only one side of the deal. Representative Mnnn of Illinois , a staunch protectionist , and his sub committee spent eight months study ing paper. They visited leading Amer ican and Canadian mills. The committee established the fact that the labor cost of making paper Is less In our country than In Canada. They therefore recommended and the house voted , that wood pulp come In free , and that the paper duty be re duced from $ ( ! to $2 per ton. Hut the senate In Its majestic and Impregnable wisdom raised the paper duty to $ -1 , and the conference had to compromise on $ .375 , subject also to conditions. The argument has been formerly used that cheap paper would promote cheap and disreputable newspapers , given to attacks on property. if motives of tills character still tax the distribution of Information through the newspaper , these people seem reminiscent of several centuries ago when they used to smash printing presses. No doubt some of our higher- ups feel that the foundations of so ciety would be safer were there no newspapers. The paper trust , before the Payne- Aldrlcli hearings , showed that their earnings decreased from $2,138,117 to 4l.i2.t10. ( : ! ! in 1U07. To this it was hiiid that paper which they sold In this country for three cents was being mar keted in Europe for less than two. Leaving wholly one side the ques tion of the need of the American In dustry for the present measure of pro tectlon , as a question onhich there are honest differences , there is n need for free paper or at least for a very low duty , for the protection of our trees. If the hoary monarchs of the forest , which guard the regular flow of the rivers and perhaps rainfall , too , must be slaughtered that the American youth may read about the Katzonjani- mer Kids in the Sunday supplement , by all means let us take the trees of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland for this unseemly sacrifice. THE TALLEST BUILDING. Plans were announced In New York Wednesday for the tallest building in the world , to be 750 feet high , includ ing a tower that will run up to the fifty.fifth story notch. This edifice , to be erected by F. W. Woolworth. rises above the famous Metropolitan building by fifty feet , and over the so-called ' Singerhorn" by 13S. And in the memory of middle aged men , olllces could not be rented in our cities above the fifth floor ! The ancients built the tower of Babel on the plains of Shinar to reach to heaven , but the modern sky scraper is built to escape the "hell of not get ting money. " Against the sky scraper it can be said that it is a vampire sucking light and air from humbler neighbors , a concrete expression of the tyranny of modern business. In thp streets of lower Manhattan on a hot day trie healthful -down beat of a vertical sum mer sun is turned into the sickening steam of a human laundry. But on the other hand , what a stun ning effect of barbaric power is given by a sight of New York's towering structures as a whole ! . What mar velous and enticing story of achieve1 nient It tells , how the finger of for tune seems to beckon the young man to' ' enter this city of dreams , and win for himself his share of the golden 1 store ! An interesting scene may often be witnessed on an ocean liner , when a group of Europeans see for the first time this manifestation of American enterprise , these structures built to conform to the individual needs of American life. It Is so wholly differ ent from the more prosaic low level of European construction , where busi ness buildings seldom rise above 100 feet , that the foreigner stands breath less with wonder. The skyscraper is better fitted to New York than to many cities that have erected them , from Imitation , t much as the chappie turns up his trousers when It is raining on Lon don. Some artists regard these build ings as nothing but a grotesque array of gaunt parallelepipeds , even lacking the grace that goes with a bunch of tapering factory chimneys. But taken in the mass they convey an Impres sionistic sense of power. In a city shaped like a tape meas ure , they provide an economy of time. As experts say that a 2,000 foot build ing can be placed safely on a 200 foot lot , this airy expansion has only be gun. The records of 125 people a min ute passing many spots in New York streets will In time be greatly ex ceeded. A HOSPITAL OPPORTUNITY. The offer of the Episcopal church of Nebraska to perpetuate and maintain permanently a hospital In Norfolk , pro vided the people of this city will fur- nlsh the site and a suitable building , 0 which would not cost more than $10.- 0 . . 000 at the outside , affords Norfolk an enviable opportunity to establish an institution for which there exists an extraordinary need. Norfolk needs a hospital. Not only to care for Its own sick nnd Injured , but likewise to meet the demand made upon thlp city by the territory which looks to Norfolk as a commercial hub , the demand is felt. Everybody real- l/es that. The great problem In connection with hospitals In small cities , is al ways the maintenance. As pointed out by Dr. F. A. Long of Madison In ills response to Omaha's welcome to the State Medical society Wednesday , It Is an open secret that private hos pitals In small towns , with rare ex ceptions , seldom pay. Dr. Long's sug gestion is that physicians and citizens get together on some sort of working basis , the physicians bearing a share of the losses , In order to maintain the hospital. In Norfolk no such sacrifice \vould be necessary , tinder the offer of Hie Episcopal church of Nebraska. I'nder this plan , the only require ment upon Norfolk people would be to furnish the .site and building. Hlshop Williams has expressed n willingness to maintain hospitals In a limited nuiii * her of Nebraska cities , and Norfolk Is one to which the offer comes. It is no private hospital that Norfolk wants. Such Institutions , we are told on every hand , seldom pay. Sooner or later they heroine financial burdens and In the end they are closed , serving only to discourage future hospital ef fort H. But with the guarantee of a church to perpetuate the Institution , not only are the lowest possible rates assured , for the benefit of the public , but all worry as to the future of the hospital Is done away with. It comes to stay. Norfolk has raised a good deal more than $10,000 for many an institution that It needed much less than It needs a hospital today. Norfolk enterprise and progrossivonpKS never yet have failed to come to the front when the city's needs demanded. And the cost of a hospital Is really n small matter , when the Importance of such an insti tution Is recognized. The directors of the Commercial club have endorsed the plan of accept ing the offer made by the Episcopal church of Nebraska , through the local rector , Rev. D. C. Colegrove , and it is to be earnestly hoped that the club's campaign for the funds needed to build the hospital , may meet with prompt success. Norfolk never need ed anything worse tl'-.u It needs a hospital right now. AROUND TOWN. A few golf balls In our May basket , please. You MAY not eat oysters any more this season. A chunk or two of hard coal in our May basket , if you please. Nobody seems to be worrying about the dandelion crop. A. Showers didn't wear his welcome out by any means. In fact , didn't stay hardly long enough to leave a card. It is said that Madero is insisting that Diaz1 resignation shall not be of the Senator Bailey type. A Kansas City man is declared a great athlete because he can throw a wet blanket 200 yards in any gather ing. The old superstition that "three times is the charm , " is another fizzle. Fire has tried to wipe out the North western depot at the Junction a half dozen times within the last year , and hasn't , succeeded yet. But we want to confess one llbelous statement in yesterday's News. The paper said the damage to the depot amounted to $3. We submit that il $3 worth of damage had been done , there wouldn't be any depot left at all. In fact , It's hard to prove that there's any depot left standing , as if Is. There's the same lack of evidence around the site whore the Union Pa cific depot ought to be. The Northwestern has It on the U. P. somewhat , however the North western depot is at least trying to burn up , while the Union Pacific hasn't had the decency to even try to burn. Norfolk needs a hospital. Morning , May. It's the month of flowers ( snow balls ) . Yes , we'll take coal in our May basket. And theappearance of three blades of blue/grass ( or should one say spears ? ) likewise helps some. The Chicago Tribune ' Line-O'-Type man has offered to dedicate a bust tea a deserving saint , if he can master the mashle stroke this summer. We offer heartfelt sympathy. We've gone busted trying to get It Hero's how not to cure a fold : Stand out in the yard wltn the lioso nozzel In your hand , leaking pure , cold city water all over your legs and feet for half an hour. What's the use of owning a spring bonnet , when you're always afraid to wear it , for fear you'll get caught in the rain ? About time for another depot tire In Norfolk. Dam Near Went Out. The Pierce dam near went out last Friday. News Item. Not all the May baskets went un hung. Maybe there weren't all the hangings in connection with this one that there ought to huvo been , but there was one. The doorbell zipped iml there was the little basket out on Iho doorstep in the chilly night , cryIng - Ing to come In. But the frost hadn't hurt It. It was still fresh and greou. And Inside were the Implements with which to enjoy life the year round black diamonds for Furnuoo Uolf ( threw of 'em ) and whlto little guttu percha spheres for the "cow pasture pool , " of the vlntago of ISSS. An Around Town prayer bad been an swered. And enough's enough - at least , until another May day. To tell the truth , wo could use two depot tires at once , to good advan tage. Hero's a new suggestion for you to For that matter , It's been about time for a good many years. think about : Norfolk needs a hospi tal. The Rosebud was willing to stand for a day's blizzard , for the moisture that two feet of snow would mean. Anybody would be. The Queen o' the May had to wear furs and her woolens to keep from freezing to death. The job hunters are after Hunter's job. The May flowers haven't como through yet ; it's enough to gut the trains through. Norfolk wt'ds a hospital. Why doesn't somebody invent a loft- or that will loft ? Don't fret about the fruit. It won't help things the least hit. Can anybody remember a month of May when wo didn't get a killing frost ? What's the use ? How old does a boy have to ho before - fore lie can be given the job of tak ing care of the furnace ? You can't make a bogy score at F. G. with Soft C. And the three chunks of hard C. that came in that May basket didn't last long enough to make a record with. But even though we had to take care of a furnace , there was one thing to be thankful forVe : didn't have to go out into the cold , cold garage and let the water drain out of any auto mobile tank. There are compensa tions , after all. Norfolk needs to draw two depots and a hospital to fill Its hand. ATCHISON GLOBE SIGHTS. There are more drag-along * than complete failures. It Is probable that you will have to make your opportunity. Some mon seek rest when what they need Is to go to work. No joke is so good that you ought to try to tell it over the telephone. You can't run away from disgrace and take your conscience with you. Those who et beat are the ones who insist there is nothing in politics. A traveling man who visits with the help is never very strong with the proprietor. Just because you don't care for con sequences is no sign you can dodge them. Don't sing about the last rose of summer , but think of the first and be cheerful. Considering that "to him that hath shall be given , " the under dog gets a lot of consideration. Another very common human frail ty is to be proud of things which should cause shame. It may be said for the cat that no one is so stuck on it as to call it a Noble Animal. Is there any man so modest that he does not feel inflated when he puts a good one over ? Whenever booze or premium stamps are defendants it Isn't hard to guess the decision. If you need a few drinks to make you feel chserful , you had better go on with a sober grouch. "Here's where I pay as I go , " re marked the dead beat , as he bought a ticket for a late train. The average wearer of white shoes doesn't devote enough time keeping them at their original color. There may be some excuse for let ting your bad temper run away with you. but don't push It along. As n rule , a woman who starts a breach of promise- suit needs money more than she needs to have her wounded feelings soothed. The records of congress also show that a number of farmers have been able to overcome their deep-rooted prejudice against the derby hat. The crying need of the day is a re former who can induce restaurant men to Increase the homeopathic doses of butter they usually servo. A man will get used to new shoes In a little while , but ho requires a long time to get a diamond ring "broken In" so that he won't notice It SATOPA1 REVSAMUELKPURV1S.D. THE COD or THE FIRE. Toil , " 1 uin como to end flri > upon tlit nrlh.-Uike ill. 49. Sec the dlBclploH start ! No wonder - the Prince ( if Peace a HrcbrnHtll Queer teaching. Fire's the agent -if death , not life. The world Knaps wltti horror nt 8nn FranclHco's hnlocnusi Mother's earliest admonition to chll rtren Is not to play with mutches. 'I'll * clang nf the iron th rented flrc tx > H In the night nrouseH mnu lu terror. Mid dle KCH put the devil In authority m hike of fire : Dante describes flume hi fcrmil regions lu bloodcurdling Htniln. Dore t-kctchcH them with HvUl brtislu If the devil IH ruler of the region f fire , how Mtruuge to rend that our Gml IB a Gud of fire ! Isn't that an iinoni lily ? No. Fire Is the chosen Hlgn ot Goil from naming sword nt paradise flaming tongues nt 1'entecont. Kvery new epoch initiated with fire. Pillar of ( lie lu wilderness ; tire nt dedication < > f tnbernncle ; Shcklnah ( Ire burning con tlnually In temple. The llguro IH wovmt into our dally npecch. Ardent until rim. cnthUHlnmn ( lint kludlcn , passions Unit burn.Yo complain of coolnenH , Icy r f- H'ne , cold ninimor. No vegetation above timber line on Pike's peal ; too cold. "The utter nb- Hence of heat and life In the nrcttr nialtcs our existence Intolerable , " of ) serves NmiM-n. All animal and vcgc table life depends on fire and heat for ciTiitlou mill development. Flowcri. bees , birds , mankind , thrive In tin * sun. "Say. auntie. " I call to the out black mummy working In her gurdoa. "why don't you plant your garden on this side the house ? Then us v > bite folks could M'o it from the roitd. " "Humph , " she grunt.s , "Home preachers got p - llglou 'n not much else. Mawnin' si strnks this po'ch an' In de iiflnnoun * ( knvnh bed. Nuthlif grows on tlmt nnwth side. Groun's lee cold. Set-its got to have wn'mth to grow. " The RIIW shine-- , blossoms come , harvest field- ? \ bow their heads with golden grain. orchard branches weighted wllh fruii- . 1 know a church that needs warmth. Chill of worlilllness Is there. Kermoiu are beautiful , but lt' the frigid benuT of winter landscape. Allans nre ( her" , but ( Ires are ont. Wish some ICIIJiii iron Id chnllenge them to prove "Hi * God Hint iiiiHHeroth by tire. " A co-lit stove In the church basement doesn't fllwnjK iiicin spiritual wnrmth. Fire Meant Testing. Know America's greatest exlrnrt- gancc jipnrt from drink ? Fire ! Lii-tr yenr more than hnlf the rnlue of all the year's building. Millions go up In smoke. "Loss covered by Insurance " Never ! Any more than lost Bleep < ir lost years c n be recovered. But whllt * fire destroys It reveals much. When the ( jiinke nnd fire were over In FriH . whnt revelations ! Viiulty nnd < 1U honesty in building Iny bnre. Pr tentious ornament nnd flimsy coimtnii-- Uon o\ eryhere. . "Buy , Jim , see th.it man going there ? That's Smith , th builder. All his buildings mood' " There's n eulogy ! I'd rather bo Snilf.d thiui commander of a battleship fle r Cliliiiituwn hud n cleansing , first Unit * In fifty years. Stand nt the Ulln door of Trenton pottery. "Why do you necil such heiitV" "To bnke the Impurity out of the clny. " I peer In at the nwa moving like figures In Dantc'H "Infer no" t Slrelton. "Why such greii * : bliibt furiiiices ? " "No Bteel without removal of baser metals nnd alloy * " Fire either i-hnnges or destroys. Beacon Fires of Triumph. "I cnmp to bring n sword. " nay * Christ. .SoniftiincH it's the nre battle. "Tliere'B a time of war ud time of pence , " H y Solomon. "War Is hell , " Indeed , but many a mor- inent for the betterment of humanity ban gone forward on a powder care. Miiuy n fearful wrunt : IIBH been H top ped oulr by fire suid sword. The * < ; ord of the Milieu telln when surrender of Lee vi a * n mum need throughout I hi north , and many portions of the Houtu pence fires were IlKUted. Men ami women elied tears of joy about them. No more CIIIIUOIIH beluhiug forth fir * . no more ride Uurrels uplttiiiK tongue * of fiaiue. Now only catupfirea < rf pence. Two years Inter.Enjrland w * burning liencon Crt-H of jubilee in hou or of her qneen. From Malrern HIU the hij'iial wits given ; In eight mluuNm It flubbed from every hill all the way to the lake country In Ciimberlnuil If ChriHt ciime to bring fire and i Kword He alio came to bring peace. When ChriHt went home the fire of the Spirit WUB dung earthward. Kin dled in upper room at Jenmalein , Jr. KOOU faprcnd through the city , then Jn den and Smuurin. Presently Aula All nor wtiH blazing through that other firebrand , run ) , the Christian. Soon the spnrks fly across the archipelago into Macedonia , then Into Greece It- > elf. Hy nnd by Home IH visited by the gospel fire , then from Uurop * across the Atlnutic to America , ev erywhere "Ills mlnlsterx a flame of fire , " telling the story with words than glow nnd burn ami kindle. At th- * l bt the world ItHtlf to be destroyed br the fire of hlH judgment. Any place of tnfely ? Out on the pritlrie. DO rain for ninny wcuks , ttll xrna * parched nd dry. cnrcletm herdsman drops n mutch ; In InNtuut tin wind fans it ; flv-t minutes Inter it In n wall of fire twen ty feet high. Frontiersman caught Outrun it with swiftest home ? Never' Quickly at bin feet he xtarta another hlnxe. Flat on tbut Imrue.d grass hit fafely w H . Over 1,800 years act the fire of Ood'a wrath xwept over Cnlvary. On lt tilenk rock we Trltt wifely Hand ou day of worid'n doom. Print awant ad tellinjj what it 1 * and what you'll sell It for and "tun It Into money. " New * -wnnt nd * are \ |