THE NORFOLK WEEKLY NEWS-.10UKNAL , FRIDAY , .U'NE 30 , 1911. The Norfolk Weekly News-Journal The News , Established 1881. The Journal , Established 1877. THE HU8E PUDLI8HING COMPANY W. N. . A. Huso , President. Secretary. lvery Friday , lly iniill per year , $1.50. Entered nt tlie poHtolllco at Norfolk , Net ) . , UK HOCHiul class matter. Telephones : Editorial Department No. 212. lIUHlness Olllcc and Job llooius , No. 11 22. Life wants bachelors arrested for contempt of courtship. That Oyster Hay dateline Isn't being used much this summer. IB the American army still In Texas , or has It all melted away ? Government mints are not In It with % * * ! Julep with the thermometer In the Halt ! has an & rccio General named Just. If his caiTbS name he should win. Mrs. Carrie Nation did not make hci dramatic Iiht | ; against the saloon Ir vain. She left a fortune of $20,000. England's first military aeroplane has been named the May-fly. Ol course it may and then again It maj not. A baker's trust has tieen organized but the rolling pin will continue U be a weapon of offense and defense it many homes. They only hilled three aviators am Injured two out of fifty Sunday at th < meet at Vlncennes , France. Play the game , boys ! Considering that George V'a crowi cost $7,500,000 , he Is not In any posl tlon to criticise the cost of his wlfe'i Bummer hat. There is a man In St. Louis win boasts that his wife thinks more o him than anything else on earth ex cept her pet dog. What an awful Job Mrs. Taft wil have to count nil those silver spooni dally , to see if burglars or the hire * girl has got any of "em. A good many people sigh for Eas ; street , when as a matter of fact It' : the most disagreeable and unsatlsfac tory avenue that life offers. The park about New York's nev library Is fully occupied , and If they'i serve pink ten inside , perhaps som one would come in and look at th < books. If congress is going to get Uncl Sam's garden hoed before the snov files , they've got to do something be tides smelling around the pig pen fo bad odors. A German killed himself in St. Loul because he could not learn to speal English. It seems surprising that : wan should expect to learn English 1 : St. Louis. The Nashville Tennesseean find fault with W. J. Bryan for eating porl chops in June , but no man ever live < on mush and milk and ran a success ful newspaper. "College girls listen to baccalai reate" Is the way the newspapers hea it up. Considering all the dressmal ers did for them , it takes faith to b < Ueve they listened. Judging by the rusted condition c the Maine , If they had waited a littl longer before trying to dispose of I there would have been nothing t raise or to remember. Postmaster General Hitchcock say the railroads could carry the mail fc $9.000,000 less. Uncle Sam Is th only man in the country who nevt kicked on railroad rates. John Muir , the naturalist , has gen to Chili to see a rare tree. If It is an kind of a fruit tree , we have the fee ing that some small boys of our neigl borbood will get there first. Plenty of places are sighing for th privilege of entertaining the nort pole through the summer season. Wh < lldn't Peary bring it along and a fe icebergs to keep it company ? The fleet of submarines stayed ui der water ten hours off Cape Cod las week , but they won't do it after tli summer girl gets located .it the shot resorts with all her fluffy clothes. Some , of the friends of the othe candidates for the presidential non ination are saying that Woodrow Wl ton is not a democrat. Some peopl would consider that a handsome con pllment. A Japanese university has esta' llshed a chair of commercial problt ; It would never do to have anything < that sort In America. It would be pr hiblted on the ground of disturbir business. Those wise in affairs of state sn the senate is going to vote for rec proclty but it Is going to wear tl country out first. It need not wor any longer to accomplish that em The country is already in a threadbare condition , Kansas Is calling for help to hnrvcct her great wheat crop and It is estimat ed that 18,000 young men from other states have answered the call. An exchange - change styles It "tho mobilizing of tlit yolden legion. " It has cost $800,000 In special nttor noy's fees to prosecute the trusts foi two years. We may never get the money back , but It's worth It to fee ! you can start a peanut stand wlthoul ashing Wall street. Hilly Sunday has just finished sl > weeks evangelistic services In Toledo Ohio , and received $15,000 fiom the people for his labors. This woult have lasted the old-time itinerant mln ister about thirty years. The hotel men from all over the country met at Boston the past week and wo hope the serried phalanx o open palms inado them aware hov the public feels when asked to pai two prices for everything ; , . * " ' " . .v 'r " It is reported that our representa tlvo at the coronation ceremonies John Hayes Hammond , is threatenei with nervous prostration. No wonder if It Is ns hot In London as it is here and he has to spend hours in ImpOE Klbly elaborate clothing. It takes a Boston man to be pollti under trying circumstances. Prof. C. Curry of that city was knockei down the other day by a St. Loul street car. As soon as he recoverei his breath he apologized to the cor ductor for delaying traffic. There are many congressmen whi get "applause" in the Congresslonn Record who rarely get it from thel constituents. One member from Wes Virginia credited himself with elgl teen outbursts of applause in n shor speech printed in the Record whic ! ho never delivered. One railroad company has supplie its Pullman porters with vacuur cleaners with which to extract th dust from the passengers' clothinj The intention of the railroad may h beneficent , but the chances are thn these porters will use the machines t extract pay dirt rather than ordlnar dust. There Is no question but what th number of flies has been appreclabl reduced in the past ten years. Tw factors have united to bring about thl desirable decline in the annual fl crop , the smaller number of horse used in towns and cities and the di termined crusade against the pesti erous little Insects. A manuscript of eighteen page found in a monument of the elevent dynasty in Egypt and supposed to b over 4,000 years old , laments the goo old times that have passed away , an warns the young against the evils ( that day. This proves that the desii to return to the "good old days" ha prevailed in the human heart sine the time of Abraham. The results of the mobilization ( the troops in Texas has been worth a that it cost. The nation will never fu ly know how much trouble and vex ; tlon with other nations was prevente by the prompt action of Presidei Taft. The truth is that If the Monrc doctrine Is to be maintained the Uni ed States must make it very plain 1 the other great nations of the eart that it is not only competent but wll ing .to act as the big policeman whe : ever any trouble breaks out on th continent. New York has Just completed a rangements for undertaking new su way projects to cost $257,000,000. Tl biggest work now in the hands of or government , state or national , at hon or abroad , so says Mayor Gaynor , ar the figures support his statement , f < while as much or more will be Gpei on the Panama canal It is doubtf whether , when completed , the can will have cost anywhere near as mm as the New York underground railwt system when completed , for the pre ent plans are confessedly Incomplet Gov. Robinson of Arkansas hi found out for himself how insignificai governors may be when they real try hard. He attempted to veto tl resolution passed by the legislature that state ratifying the proposed i come tax amendment. After the ve he took up the constitution of tl United States and discovered that provides that congress may "propoi amendments" which shall be val "when ratified by the legislatures three-fourths of the different states It doesn't say a word about governor Like the boy who was kicked by tl mule , the governor of Arkansas w : never look quite as handsome but be know a whole lot more. It is generally accepted In Englai that Lloyd-George's latest scheme f > insuring against sickness and non-ei ployment will be adopted. It Is es mated that this measure and the o age pensions will , combined , make total of $125,000.000 contributed by tl tax-payers to the needy , annuall That the poor laborers of Englai need this amount under present co dltlons is unquestioned , but the givii of this great sum yearly dr.es not rei edy the conditions. At best the measures are simply palliatives. They are not cures. It Is a striking exam ple of the evils that come from cgn- gcnted population and an over-Indus trialism. That way lies degeneincy , pitiable poverty and vast riches. The British people are feeling high ly Incensed lit the- action of Sir Wil fred Laurier In bluntly refusing to accede to any Imperialistic proposals that would tend to bind members of the British empire together more per manently , and In stoutly asserting the right of Canada to adjust all her trade relations with other countries.to suit herself and herself alone. If the mem ory of the British people were a little longer , it would understand that Sir Wilfred's attitude Is the direct result of the action of the British parliament toward him and the Canadian people. The time was when Sir Wilfred was ready to bo ns much of nn imperialist as any one , but the British govern ment refused to meet his advances by so much as a step. It.is . Te3J > , ! rg now whatjt entj-fl { tfur'years ago. The vacation season is at hand , Many thousands of people have looked orward to it with varying anticipn Ions for months , yet how many out ol he thousands who arc able to Indulge n any kind of vacation trip , get the rest and relaxation which their phys cal and nervous systems require tt H them for another year's strain' There are too many who work hardei 'laving ' a "jolly good time" than have through the year at their regular em ployment , others try to do the bun dred and one things that accumulate like old furniture in a garret , thai must be done "some time. " These things you mean to do some time grow into n heavy chain that drag ! one down till vacation time comes then in a spirit of desperation yox rush in and try to clean up your men tal garret in a few short weeks. The result Is anything but restful to the tired body and brain. Col. Goethals' insistence that congress gross take up at once the matter o tolls on the Panama canal is easily ex plained and the importance of his de sire made plain. The first is thi meeting this year of a conference o steamship companies in Europe to fl : freight rates on most commodities fo a long time to come. If these are fixee without regard to any toll on the ca nal , it may result in a great loss o business for the canal at the ver ; start. The second reason Is that tw < great steamship companies are plan nlng to build ships for the westen coast trade through the canal. If. th < toll to be exacted Is prohibitively high the ships will not be built , if they ar going to be low enough to admit of ; profitable business enterprise th builders ought to know it for It take two years to build the ships and b ; the time they are ready for use th canal will be practically completed If this question of tolls goes over t the December session it will result 1 : considerable loss to the government In view of a remark that was mad at the Ad club banquet the other nigh by a stranger In the city , during th course of an address , this point want to be emphasized in connection wit the existence of both a Commercis club and an Ad club In Norfolk th Ad club and Commercial club are hot working for the same upbuilding c Norfolk , not as rivals but as co-opera' ' ing organizations , and for the sake c Norfolk there must be harmonious ce operation between them. The Ad clu appreciates , The News has reason t believe , all the good work that th Commercial club has done and is d < ing ; and the Commercial club recoj ni7.es in the Ad club a healthy ce1 boosters' association whose only ah is to build up Norfolk. It is not question of which club shall do this c that , or which shall have credit fc this , that or the other. The upbuilt ing of Norfolk is the aim of both an both clubs are composed of enthue aetic Norfolk boosters who have n axes to grind and no motive for the ) activity other than Norfolk's advanc < ment into her proper position as th commercial hub of the richest agricu tural territory in the world. THE OIL ROAD. The completion of the oil road o South Thirteenth street , for three an a half miles out of Norfolk , marks tl : beginning of a new epoch of roadmal Ing in northern Nebraska , and the No folk Commercial club , which took tl contract to do the work for the count ; has earned by its achievement a las Ing place In north Nebraska's heart. Good roads have come to be recoi nized as one of the greatest needs c the country. The farmers are begli nlng to realize the money that goc roads will save them. Sooner or late they will be built all over Amerlc : And it marks a community as pr gressive , which gets into the front c these enterprises and plays the rol of the pioneer. A GREAT CROP OUTLOOK. When this country needs rain , rains. The two great rains that fell ov < north Nebraska and southern Dakot Saturday and Sunday , following tl : heavy rain of a week previous , hn\ put the crops in territory tributary ( Norfolk , in ideal condition and n boui tlful harvest in every line of soil-pr duce , is now anticipated. Never did the crops look bette around Norfolk. Corn IB two weel ahead of the average year , wheat Is an excellent yield , oats is an average crop and rye was never so good. The rain has done wonders for pastures , hay and potatoes. Prosperity Is the order of the day and business Is bound to hum In this territory during the coming fall and winter. It's a good time to stick around Norfolk. NORFOLK'S TERRITORY. G. L. Carlson gave Norfolk some startling figuies the other night fig ures that It would bo well worth while to publish to the world. He pointed out the fact that the soil In ten coun ties around Norfolk , an area of ninety miles square , Is of a quality which can know no crop failure , regardless of drouth , It is a loess soil , the most productive in the world , and its fertil ity is the foundation for the building of an empire hereabouts which must demand pnij fUpport a city luSTiS * times nrger than the Norfolk of today. Mr. Carlson combatted the oft tolel ale that there is In the Black Hllh he richest 100 square miles In the vorld. That area of gold mines pro duces $3,500.000 a year on an average and once went almost to $6,000,000 n comparison with this the ninctj niles square around Norfolk produce ! every year $75,000,000 in farm pro lucts more than twelve times the wealth produced in "the richest 10 ( nlles square in the world" of the Black Hills. Mr. Carlson's research work in get ing at the facts about this country ought , to instill a pride in northerr Nebraska that the region never hai known before. It ought , too , to instil a determination to get down to mon scientific farming methods and thui to give this splendid poll a chance te do its best work. BURR TAFT , BUILDER. In connection with the oil roae which has just been constructed 01 South Thirteenth street out of Nor folk , the people of Norfolk feel in tensely grateful to County Commis sioner Burr Taft , whose efforts mad < this progressive enterprise possibl < and who may well bo termed the fa ther of oil roads in northern Nebraska But for Mr. Taft's untiring zeal Nor folk would have no oil road today. DuiJng his service on the board o county commissioners , Burr Taft ha done so many things for Norfolk thn this city hardly knows where to begii first in trying to express its appreci.i tlon for his achievements In Norfolk' behalf. The successful conquest of the w.i ter which formerly rushed down Int the west end of the city from hill northwest , and which for years causei thousands of djollars of damage am greatest discomfort to residents o that portion of the town , was due e > clusively to Burr Taft. The comple tion of a good road on South Firs street was due in a large measure t Burr Taft. The building of a substai tlal bridge across the Northfork o Norfolk avenue and now across thn river on North First street are th work of Burr Taft and now the pie neer oil road in this part of Nebrask has come as a result of his enterprise It is hard to estimate the good to community that can be done by a ma like that. THE NEW OCEAN MONSTERS. The landing in New York this wee of the Olympic , a ship 882 feet I length , and 175 feet from her keel t the top of her funnels , brings to on shores one of the marvels of the agi It becomes of personal interest to good many people who do not car about Its scientific aspects , from th fact that the big ships of this typ practically banish the danger of se sickness. The number of people who travel i Europe is about half what it would to could one get there by rail. The othe half are made permanently land lul bers by the terrors of this malady. If anyone can raise the price , for first or second cabin trip by one of th new large ships , let him never wasl a moment's thought on sea sicknes Under all ordinary conditions , yc will be more likely to get sea sick o your own piazza from swinging in tt hammock. Many people have previously bee out in some fishing boat on the ocea or lakes , where their little craft woul tip up at an angle about fifty time more unsettling than the angle : which an ocean liner can be lifted t the waves. Or they were out In sore coast steamship where there Is n ventilation other than the door froi their stateroom to a stuffy hall. Recollecting the distressing sym ] toms following such an experience when they set out for a wrestle wit old ocean they are actually seaslc before they leave the wharf. In a modern ocean liner , the powe ful motors drive into every siaterooi a steady current of live-giving sc air , whoso tonic tingle makes you fo get everything except your desire fc dinner time. As compared with travel about ov own country , it need not be partici larly expensive to go to Europe. Tli man on $1.000 salary so hates the n tlon that he can not do everything millionaire can do , that most of ov people insist on knocking elbows wit the millionaires in the first cabin , c we won't go at all. Meanwhile servants and other bar working people who were born In Ei rope Journey back and forth not infrequently ' quently to kiss the old sod , traveling second and third cabin with the thrif ty conservation of resources that Is characteristic of the narrower moniiN of Europe. EUROPEAN TITLE TRAFFIC. Repn'se'iitntlvo A. J. Sabnth of Chicago cage laid his hand on a sore spot Titus day , when he offered In congress n resolution Inquiring as to the purchase of foreign titles by American women Ho also wants to know how mucli American money In stocks and bonds is in European coffers , owing to the high costs of such titles , and refers also to the "craze of the trust-nuule rich who are suffering from chronle tltleltls. " Mr. Salmth may be Joking. Or ll serious , ho will bo everlastingly Jol led. The remedy for this real evil h lot to be found in acts of congress ivhlch would tend merely to make the sold titles more attractive still , as be ng forbidden fruit. Meanwhile , all Europe , from Liver pool to Naples , Is dotted with former ly ruined castles that are now re gilded with American money , llu what does European society renllj think of the newcomers ? The Contemporary itevlew indlcatei the point of view by remarking : "Win would over hear of the Americans ii Europe except for their great wealth And In the society which they hav < attained , whore do they represent an ; moral or political force ? The bargain counters of Europeai nobility are loaded up with dissolut < and impoverished noblemen , usuall : ostracized by their own class , whosi families are only too tickled to ec ] them for American coupons. The process Impoverishes our hem < land both in money and personality It can never be stopped by any legU latlon. Of course there are a grea many international marriages thn are happy. But in the also frequen cases where a title Is squarely swnr peel for a fortune , the American git and her capitalistic father ought to b made to realize that they do not get : bargain. They have beJught and pal for the article they wanted , but the , have not got the goods. Why ? No matter how attractlv the girl may be , as an American sh usually has a rather picturesque ind viduality. This shocks the social re tape and conventionality of Europe She Is pronounced queer , erratic. Sh remains on the fringes of their s ( ciety. She thought she bought a lloo ticket admitting her to all the maze of the titled dance , but she merel has a general admission to the ga lery , entitling her to stand up at th rear and look over the heads of th natives. COST OF NAVY YARDS. Secretary of the Navy Meyer , speal ing before a house committee , favoi abandoning half of our navy yareli Mr. Meyer's offensive minding c other people's business is deplored b our politicians , who feel that the prh clpal duty of a navy is to repair pi lltical fences , and furnish a supply t reserves always on hand with whic to carry caucuses. It is on this account that the e : pense of our navy yards has alwaj been disproportionately large to tli total naval bill. The jackles doin real navy work on board a warshi ] who have signed papers under whic they must stand up In their llttl boots and be fired at in case of wa are too far distant from any partici lar polling place to become cogs i any political machine. Meanwhile , the land lubbers an hangers on and sinecurists of our r pair shops live within half a mile e the place where caucuses are held an they always vote straight. They mui bo cared for. Thus It is that in five years up ( 1909 it cost $40.000,000 to maintal our navy yards. During a similar p rlod the maintenance bills in Gre : Britain's home navy yards were enl $7,000,000. In the New Orleans navy yard I one recent year they paid out $78,24 for maintenance , and the shops p\ \ through a product worth $1,046. A recent commandant at one of tl big yards found that one of the pri : cipal jobs was to sign routine paper The heads of departments could n < settle detail matters by the quk method of talking face to face or eve the telephone , as would be done i any private business. Under the rule they had to write , and the comman < ant had to sign personally 300 to 1,0 ( routine letters dally. The prize paper by a paymaster r cently revealed that boat tillers , sir pie wooden sticks , average to cost 5 to $3 In several yards. The write said that he could buy a pick hand ! in a store that with a little whlttlln would make two fine tillers , for I cents. In one yard , a building occupied t three different bureaus had three ell ferent heating and lighting plants. I another a fine machine shop was o cupied by but one man. When will our people learn ho their dally cost of living Is enhance by allowing their public sen-ices to I run by politicians Instead of by bus ness men ? AROUND TOWN. Which side of the cherry pie argi ment are you on is pie made froi cherries with the pits in , enough be ? ter than the other kind to overcon : the feature of having to pit 'em when 'you t > ut It , or not ? We > would say that WOIIUMI favored the OUCH with the1 pits In , ( o save pit ting 'em , If we didn't know a man who doesn't Klve1 n dam how much weirk the women do , and who won't eat a cherry pie unless the pits are1 In , There's u weed ordinance in Nor folk , and It ought to be enforced , along with Mayor Friday's comiuendablo or der to trim the trees. We wish these two 6 e > 'cloch whis tles would got together. We try to go to we > rk by the last one > and quit by the first one , hut the double alarm IH hard on the nerves , just the same. And speaking of whistles : There's a man In Norfolk who Is so deaf that he ? can't hear the' whistles at all. Ro- milt Is , If ho ever gets started to work , ho never knows when to quit. Our Idea of how not to enjoy life , Is to travel around the country and hold revival meetings In tent , with an audi ence of from one to two people per night. We hope you like your new crown , king. Dick Little of Chicago suggests that the way to crown a king would bo for the king to go down and pick out the nicest crown ho could find , and wear It home , leaving his old one to be re- blocked and repaired with a new bane ! and sweatband , and then sent up to the palnco for him to wear on rainy days and days when he wanted to ge fishing. Do automobiles get frightened at Fourth of July fireworks ? Doc Wiley Is going after beer. A man culdon't bo blamed for going af ter any kind of a drink , this weather "A Rise In Mutton , " says a head line. One way to get a rise in inuttoi : is to hit a sheep at the Country club with a golf ball. "Norfolk people read fiction , " says the paper. Which proves that NorfoH does read something besides The News. South Thirteenth street Is oij right The Fourth of July is only a weel away. First thing you know it'll b < Christmas. But the Fourth isn't what It used te be. "When Nebraska needs rain , 1 rains. I think It will rain before morn ing. " That was the remark of s speaker at the Ad club banquet UK other night. It didn't rain befon morning , but It did rain the next ane again the next. When Nebrask ! needs rain , it does rain , all right. What's become of the old fashlonee man who used to lie down on Ids bad under his automobile , to repair It ? That's not the only change that'i been made in the automobile busl ness. The first car you ever saw erode rode In , probably , was at the Trans Mississippi exposition in 1898 , whei you paid a quarter to die in the "horse less carriage. " Today , thirteen year : later , they're as common as horses. In fact the business Is getting si modernized that they announce 191 : models by the time 1911 is less thai half finished. We wonder why soim enterprising factory doesn't slip om over on the others and announce i 1925 model. By way of diversion , don't you real Ize that you would be a better cltlzei If you would cut the weeds In front o your home ? Won't you help maki Norfolk a better looking town ? Oi the square , the weeds do look awfull ; ragged. Are you making a Bogey record a swatting files ? One of the little jobs that the di rectors of the Commercial club cut ou for their new secretary a couple o months ago , was a campaign for ; hospital in Norfolk. There's no tim like the present. And there's no dls count on the fact that Norfolk stll needs the hospital. We likewise need some sort of ; fall festival , along the Aksarben line and if we're to have It this fall , it' time right now to be doing something Although W. H. Livingston is night policeman on Norfolk avenue officials of a local bank were notifies by restaurant waiters that the ban ! front had blown in during the wln < storm. Mr. Livingston , who is pas 70 and too old for his job , complain of having to walk around on the pave ment , because it hurts his feet. AI parently ho wasn't hurting his fee around the scene of trouble at 1 a. n Monday. He probably knows no\ that n bank front blew in he reai The News last night. We see by the paper that the nc\ golf champion of the United States 1 a youth of 21. who started as a cadd'.e. We see now that we started at th' ' wrong end of the game. Six more sleeps till the Fourth. What sort of a game was the Com merclal club secretary trying to rib ui anyhow ? On some streets the crossings ar so high that no speed limit ordinance is necessary. Did you catch enough soft water wash your hair ? Whiskers and lawns are about th same proposition. Let 'em go longe than they ought to go , and you can * do a good Job mowing 'em going end over. SATURDAY NIGHT iERMONS BY W.l'imvisliu ' PAYING YOUR FAKE. Text , "So ho paid the faro thereof. " Jonnh I , S. The book of Jonah hi unique. It'u the most ndmlrublo nhort story in the world. Literary correspondence Hchoolw nhould note it. It I * begun nnd Unifi ed In forty-eight verses. Won lib of Incident , progression of movement , va riety of detail , dialogue ) nnd narrative' , nro wonderfully balanced. HH con densation Is n model. Only ten veraw * In the seconel chapter of this fascinat ing book , yet they form n paragon of worship , prayer nnd pralno. Neverthe less no Bible book tins received half the cannonading that Jonnh hits. The world has had much to sny by way eif pleasantry concerning Jonah and the whale. It's been the lnughlngnte > ck eif Infidel nnd the victim of higher critic. With cnrlcnturo nnd ridicule , with Ig- nornucc nnd learning , they've attacked It. They've glonteel wildly over the * size of the whnle'u throat , ghrieko of merriment hnvo accompanied their measurement of the whale's intestines. The Bible unj'H the Lord "propure'd" a Krent fish. If ho prupnrcd the Huh I would suppose ho made the dlinenHleuiti to suit the cnso. However , the worlel wags on. No lens n echolnr than the former president of the greatest unt verslty of the went questions the Htory , nnd no loss n person than Christ him self thought It worthy to quote us bei- Ing correct I prefer to range myself with the Inttr-r. But the utory of that fnroff dny doetin't hnve to bo true. It' happening In your town today. Th Runaway Sailor. Indeed , Jonnh IB n typo of mnny people ple in mnny ngcs. There mnj bo Homo In your town , In your house , possibly one In your shoos. I'vo had some on the passenger list of iny church. If they'd only Jump overboard ! But , no ; they think the cnptnln nnd the crew nnd nil the other passengers ought to- be thrown overboard. They wnut te > stay nnd steer the ship. Oh , they've * good stuff iu them , I'm sure , but they raise storms and nearly sink the vea scl. You BOO , the man who's running nwny from Goel thnt'u what Jonnh was foolishly trying to do always Is an unhappy fellow. Did you over try to hide yourself from God by CXCUSOB or company or lies or loud laughter ? God nald to Jonnh , "Go to Nineveh" that was eastward by land. Jonah etnrted to Tarshlsh , westward , by wn- ter. With his bundle on his bnck ho Blips away from his little homo town In Galilee. Two days later he's skulk ing through the narrow streets nnd busy wharfs of the seaport town of Joppa. To those heathen sailors ho's n queer looking fish In strange waters. But ho hns found nn ensy wny out of n hard tnsk bo has eluded God , poor Jo nnh ! lie has not yet learned the les son that there's no place in ull the uni verse , lu the world that now Is or thnt which Is to como , for a man running nwny from God. Duty's never done by dodging it Jonnh steps aboard the rough craft , pnys his fnre , gangplank Is hauled in , anchor Is weighed , sails are hoisted. Soon the rigging is rattling in the strong breeze of the Mediterranean. Jonah smiles craftily ; has the nlr of a man who's secretly done n smnrt thing. He hns overreached God ! Ever feel thnt wny , neighbor ? Soon bo's in the hold nsleep. Hnrk ! Wns thnt laugh ter ? No ; 'twas the mutter of thunder nnd flash of lightning. Snap goes rig ging , crash goes the mast. The ves sel's pitching "n-bentn's end. " The su perstitious snllors are hunting the cnusc. They cast lots. Jonah's the man. lie confesses. They bring him to the side of the ship , lift him over the guard mil nnd drop him into the nngry wnters below. He paid his fare to Tnrshlsh , but ho never got there. Neither docs nny one who runs nwny from God nnd duty. It was nn ex pensive trip for Jonnh. lie lost money , time , approval of conscience and omilo of God would have lost lifo nnd BOU ! but for GcxJ'o mercy. Bin In the BOU ) is Ilko Jonnh In the ship the smooth est water IB turned into a tempestuous fiea. "Th D.vil'o Dlo * Ar * Loaded. " Satan robs you , doesn't deliver the goexls nnd dex n't refund. Ho tnkes your money nnd puts you off nt n poor landing plnco. He promises to tnko you from Joppa to Tnrshlsh nnd thrown you over before you nro halfway. Only one thing is certain ho never falls to collect the fares. Dealing with the devil is like playing with a gambler at his own gnmo when you arc surest ho hns you. My scoffing friend bought n stack of infidel books. How ho used to sneer ! Ho paid $10 for his ticket to Tnrshlsh when ho bought the books. Flo landed in perdition. You pny your price. The beautiful Chicago hclres nmrrled the young lord with hundsomo fuce nnd rotten chnrnctcr. Hnvo you read her heartbroken letters ? Sho'H paying the price. Thnt womnn who got the extrn pnir of silk hosiery through the clerk's mistake bragged of being in n pnir of stockings , but she's out n woman's finer nnd nobler in- Htlncts. Thnt man who dodged the trolley faro thought ho got a free ride , but ho didn't. Ho paid the coin of mcnnnoss nnd dishonesty. Ho wan poorer when he left the cnr thnn when ho entered. You must pny the fnre. You're pnylng either to Tnrshlsh or Nineveh , the devil or God which ? A classified advertisement will in troduce you to the loser of the article * you've found an Introduction of mu tual Importance. TTT \