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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 30, 1908)
i. Preventable Losses React Stupendous Figures Throughout the Country DURIXG last year the American people, adhering scrupulously to their estab lished rules of building construction, managed to burn down $199,383,300 worth of property. It was a disappointing record. The av erage per year for the last five years has been $251,000,000. This year, however, has done fairly well in the property-destroying line, for it has fur nished such record conflagrations as the At lanta fire and the Chelsea blaze, the latter in volving insurances amounting to $8,846,879. Europe gazes with awe upon the lavish ness of the United States when it comes to grand bonfires. Some European countries are so envious that they profess to regard us as a peculiar breed of lunatics, unique in our ambi tion to possess the continuous record for un paralleled fire losses, in life and money, as we are rapidly acquiring world records in most other forms of human and inhuman en deavor. Building experts, insurance underwriters and specialists in public safety at home are IN 1907 the scant two hundred millions of losses In cluded no fewer than twenty-flve fires, each of which entailed destruction amounting to half a million dollars. There were two that overtopped the million one of them burning the street railway car barns ln New York city ln April and the other the great elevator Are at Superior, Wis., ln September. Nearly all of those large fires were community fires conflagrations spreading from building to building In the various communities where they occurred, Im possible of limitation more economical than they re ceived, even by fire departments which are as much marvels to Europe as are the conditions that foster the fires they figrht. The building: laws and the well-nigh imbecile lax ity In enforcement of the building laws of the differ ent communities that so insanely burned their money were directly responsible for the enormous losses. If there were any one year that presented other and tetter conditions of laws and construction, the lurid, flaring horizon of the chronically combustible United States might present sortie safe haven. But the records of the years are unvarying ln their vistas, as though one could not gaze across the perspective of the decades without beholding this huge, new, rich empire of man the sport of a race of incendiaries, with a far succession of volcanoes leaping flames to the Incentive of their torches. For the live-year period up to 1907 the destruction by fire In the United States amounted to 11.257.955.000, en average of J25o,000,O00 and more per year. The fire sequent upon the earthquake In San Fran cisco put upon the year 1906 the extraordinary burden of 35u,OO0,000, raising its total to 1518.611,800. an amount which may not be equaled for ages to come which may never be equaled if the American people in the matter of their conflagrations should achieve sense enough to lock the stable door before the horse is stolen instead of afterward. The record of thirty-three years, compiled from the slatlfctlca gathered by the National Board of Fire Underwriters, shows at a glance the steady, startling increase in America's waste of its most substantial values: Aaausl Fire Losses Id the tatted States for Thirty three Years. ASTirt I'ropsrty Lost 1151 619 0 l7.i44 I7D 141.008.484 141.11 2)8 1 18.717 420 118.25 4.575 110 581 90S 15J 597.810 10 929 80S i8. nr. 810 181 079 040 145 to; 1 Si 2? 184. 0H is s ;;i IIJ 811 8 181 181.809 Property i f 71 101.281 I 4 J0 0 i 25 100 i M IIS 00 j Tears. 1871. . 1 7. . 177.. n:. . , Kit... ). . . 1M1. . . 118 . lit.. MM.. . 11 . . . )... 17. . . IMS. . . 1. . . Hl.. . Trs. i.. . ikfl . . n ?4 . . is. . . 159 . . !7... mi. . . 1899.. . lo . . 1801. . . 77.701.7OO 74 141.404 Sl.Mft.A 84 101.024 100 .14 118 1 10 God (1 1 10; SU 7!l I 1K2 104 .'4 70 i 1901 1 ?0 tl 0S5 i 104 1 A t t ' o& 1 Zl 048 8 Jl 10 1 3 ! l0T 14) 714 M7 . That overwhelming fire loss of 1906 $518 811.800 with an earthquake visitation as the occasion fr 1J50.0OO.POO of it. h been ascribed in the cheerful American fashion of disclaiming responsibility to an ct of Providence. It being the bualncss of th Insurance companies to pay the Are lostt and of the peopis to brace up nd recoup the uninsured losses. Providence might as well bear th9 blame. Everybody composedly let it sro st that But the analysis nf &an Francisco's bulldinrs mads subsequently ihowed that America's butldinrrnethods. rather than lorg-suffrins; Providence, wers to blame for not only a vast pereentafs f ths firs losses, but also for much of the darnare effected sy ths sarth qusks. So 8n tbat exreptlffnal rear of disaster harked bsrk to ths people ln proving them their own worst saemiva Those losses of li cost more thafi ts nation's whole wheat rrop, which wss IIHII11H: tt sp- rroehs4 the valua of ths cotton crop, wsrth $841.-Ia.419. more moderate. They class us simply as id iots. The difference is that the lunatic ong inallv had some intelligence; the idiot hac none. All the while, according to the opinion of Richard L. Humphrey, who is engineer in charge of the structural material investigations of the United States government, and has held the highest official positions in the national ad visory board on fuels and structural materials, insists that the millennium in fireproof con struction is at our command for the wishing of it. The spectacle of a whole nation ardently engaged in erecting buildings studiously plan ned to ardently burn down again is curious more curious to its own eyes than to the eyes of others. It meant a per capita loss of $6.10 to the entire population of the country. If we disregard 1906 on the score of long-suffering Providence and merge it into WHEN Wu Ting-fanK some tinio flgo an nounced that he expected to live to the Dfie of 200 years, people from all parts of the country wrote to ask him how he could do this. His reply did not coincide with the theory of Metchnikoff that the removal of the large intestine would conduce to old age. lie said that his recipe was two meals a day, absti nence from meat, a diet of wheat bread, nuts, cereals and fruits, deep breathing, mastication, and exorcise. Before Mr. Wu made this announcement a club had been formed out West, the members of which believe they will lire to the age of 100 by a method of living much siirpler than Wu's. Smiles and a liberal use of lemons are the chief requirements. The 100 Year Club, of La fayette, Ind., founded by Professor W. Earlo Flynn, of New York, is composed of the most prominent men of th place. State Senator Wood is president. H OW would you like to live 100 years of abun dant and joyous UfeT How would) you like to swake each morn ing feeling as sportive as a 2-year-old colt running free on a bluegrass pasture? How would you like to be so filled with the fy of livlnr that work would be one sweet tne blues Impossible, and ths tax assessor a welrom guest? According to the belief of the 100 Year Club just organised, all these blessings sod many more ara pos sible Ths members of this csw organtxatioo contend that tt is essr to live to ths rips old ags of 100. And thev nave set out to do so. The roles r which ths members of the 100 Tesr Club expect to fill out ths century, growing young as they grow old. ere simple. Pmties and lemons furnish ths foundation for ths whole system! Ths smites most be genuine soul-born smile. Any sort of lemons will answer ths purpose. DECIDENOTteDlEjMfeAR CLUB- THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL PORTLAND, SUNDAY HORNING, AUGUST 30, 1903 -i-S ' : the losses of the last decade, the price which every man, woman and child still pays annually on the av erage of ten years for the national bonfires is $2.70. As a means of comparison, it may be remarked that ln 11)05' the 154 cities having a population o over 30,000 sustained a total fire loss of $5-'. 797. 371. or a per capita loss of $2.42. The cost o new buildings erected in forty-nine leading cities in the same year was $644,620,873; In 1906 it amounted to $678,710,969. and in 1 907 to $661,076,286. It does look as though the population were Indulging in all the conflagrations It can possibly afford. And the total number of deaths from burns and scalds in 1900. the latest census year affording figures fairly reliable, was 6772 a holocaust which did not include those who perished of suffocation in the na tion's Innumerable fires. It Is all or nearly all needless, those thousands of agonized deaths as well as those hundreds of millions of wuste of wealth. No more authoritative explanation of how needless they are nor of how surely avoidable they are could be obtained than this, which has been specially prepared by Mr. Humphrey, government expert: provided enough are taken, for lemons are supposed to kill the microbes that prey on the human system. The 100 Year Club was the outcome of the appear ance of Professor W. Earla Flynn. Professor Flynn skipped into Lafayette wearing a smile and a very light-colored suit of clothes. He has a theory that light-colored clothing produces smiles and smiles be set health. He allowed the puMU" to fee. his muscles, measure his expansion and aland on hih chest. Professor Flynn made an impression. He gained the Indorsement of the ministerial association and be gan preaching his doctrines. Professor Flynn's theory of life might be described as a mixture of physical culture, mental science,' smiles and lemons. In the beginning he Impressed th idea that the . mind plavs a great part in life, and this sounded good to the ministers. They decided that the churches shou'd pay a little attention to the welfare of the living that good health is a part of religion. INTERESTED MINISTER One week after Professor Flynn came, the Rev. John P. Hale, pastor of the Second Presbyterian Church, and a nephew of Edward Everett Hal, preached a sermon In which he acknowledged th work of Christian Science, and predicted tbat shortly all Christian churches will make the health of their jnemhers a department of church work. When Professor Flynn arrived at Lafayette he declared that he would soon have "the old stiffs danc ing the cancan " Dancing Is not In the curriculum of the 100 Year Club, but several of the staid members have been cutting capers and doing stunts to the amasement of ths inhabitants. At the same time they keep on smiling ana eating lemon chjf ,joctrns of the 100 Tear Club is that life is a Joy. If one Is really to llv happily apart from predlgested food, he must get In tuns with himself. The mind plays a great big part on must think, right snd fcellevs. Ths habit of smiling, accompanied bv a few simple regulations and lemons gets ths mind working as It ehnuld. The rules of the 100 Year Club ars not especiajlv strict concerning diet Members pledge themselves to eat less and masticate mors. Two meals a day. with possibly a light luncheon. Is decreed sufficient for an able-bodied man. Q.QQQQOQAVEAE. "The enormous losses of life and property by Are form a subject which should be widely exploited, in order that the public may be brought to a thorough realization of just how great this danger Is. Catas trophes such as the San Francisco earthquake and the fires at Colilngswood. Ohio, and Boyertown, Pa., prove to be but a nine duys' wonder, during which -the public Is horrified and the question of safety ln build ing construction is a common topic of conversation. "By 'reason of the impossibility of securing Im mediate legislation that will correct the evils the dis asters expose, the public soon lapses into a condition of Indifference, from which It is shaken ony by some similar holocaust. "Numerous buildings are being erected in many parts of this country to which the term 'fireproof is applied un,der the building laws. Their occupants en joy a false sense of security, which leads them to re lax or disregard the simple precautions bo necessary for their safety. "Probably no one stops to consider the lack of safety in the so-called 'fire-escapes.' many of them Meat is discouraged as a diet, especially during the summer months. Vegetables are put down as tha most valuable food. And above ail. liberal doses of lemon Juice are guaranteed to kill microbes in all grown-ups. The physical exercise followed by the clubmen does not differ greatly from that prescribed by the average director of physical culture. There are deep breathing, calisthenics, cold batfts. But above all. the mind must direct and control Uie exerclce. "Look here." said a member of the club when asked concerning the purposes of the organization, "we have no secrets and there are no mysteries, lit beifeve that by the proper will force and the proper living life may be extended. "Some of us have not been taking enough exer cise and some of us have t eeu eating too much, and some of us have been allowing our appetites to cdn tiol us. .... "We stmply have resolved to live simply, to eat enough, but not too much, to exercise, to recognise that nature Intended we should be well, to gain mental control over the tody and to take pleasure In ''""fhere Is nothing to our doctrine of life unlets the mind Is right Our thoughts make us what we are If we think riKht. we are right. See thesunsalns and not the shadows Just keep on smiling. "And how about the lemons?' was asked. "Lemons are great '" answered a devotes or ths century life idea. "I feel muck better since using them. Brother Flyr.n may hsve placed undue Im portance on their use. but I t-ll yoa boat they bars a wonderful effect on ones system. The membership of the club exceeds thirty and In cludes clergymen, lawyers and business man. The president is Will H. Wool state senator an a former law partner of uovirnor Hsniy restdentDr. Ldward G. Lewi,, pastor of Trinity M. WtlYIam J Klenly. a prominent business mn. Is secretary, and William f. oftMst Prominent attorneys of the ctty snd a former trustee It Purdue rr.lver.lty is the treasurer The executive committee Is romiweed of Professor W B Latta f Purdue. Forest O'lar. a leading foml ture l.r: Fr John P. Ha, ra.r ef tm tjd Preebyterlan Church, the Rev. A Coijn P" f the rtrst Christian Church, and Dr. J. W. Btuxmer. professor at Ptirdus exterior stairways so constructed that under ordinary conditions it is difficult for any one to walk down safely ith any degree of rapidity. How much lass likely, then, are people, under the excitement of a firs. t-escape from a building? "In a Are people are practically bereft of all rea son, incapable of acting- intelligently for themselves. It is only necessary to bring to fnind such catastro phes as I have referred to, and the Iroquois Theater, ln Chicago, to realize that people under such conditions) are like a flock of sheep or a herd of stampeded cat . tie. "A proper means of escape from a structure lit tho event of fire is one by which a person Is conveyed quickly from the upper to the lower portions without being compelled to exercise any volitlo in th matter and without endangering his safety. "It would seem that we might take' as an exampla of a suggested 'contrivance for rapt and safe exit la case of fire the wooden chutes, commonly known M 'down and out," which are to be found at the seashore resorts and used for purposes of amusements. "Such an arrangement would be practically adapt-f able in the case of schools, theaters and hospitals, where a straight chute from the upper to the lower floors would enable the inmates, and especially th children, to be quickly and safely removed from th building. Even in the case of hospitals the patients la their cots could be removed in properly constructed chutes without serious disturbance. "In considering the question of safety In structures where large numbers of women and children or hu man beings more or less helpless are assembled, th height to which such structures should be erected be comes one of prime importance. I am of the opinion that structures of this character should not be allowed that are more than two stories ln height. In suclt structures it would be practical to Install one or more chutes from the second to the first floor, making it well-nigh impossible for tho inmates to be Injured lit the course of their escape. LAWS INADEQUATE "The building Itself must be of the highest Are) resistive typo, ln order to reduce ths loss of life to minimum; It is evident that no type of flre-esoape or other means of exit will prevent loss of life where the . structure Is a tinder box. "The loss of life and property by Are in this coun try is appalling. The whole nation was Interested In the Congress of Governors, held In "Washington during; the month of May. for the conservation of the natural resources of the United States. If It is necessary to conserve these natural resources. Is it not much more necessary to conserve the structures in which the re sources Itave been utilized? "When we consider that the annual losses by nrs ln this country are between J 2 and $3 per capita, while the per capita losses in the principal cities of Europe . do not exceed 33 cents per annum, it Is evident that the laws in the United States must be either entirely inadequate or inefficiently enforced. "The great cities of this conntry-New York, Phila delphia, Chicago are so full of flytraps, especially la the congested districts, that, it is miraculous they were not destroyed long ago. "While it is true that In Europe the per capita losses are much less than ln this country, we should not lose sight of the fact that the knowledge ! tha methods of nreprooflng abroad Is no better than our own. The low annual per ciplta losses there are due to ths fact that ail buildings are required much higher type. It la the construction of fl "f tin der boxes which are not tolerated abroad, that Is re sponsible for our excessive annual losses from Bre. the building materials Is rapidly fiicreaslng; aew . torws X nn r. rnmin Into existence, which efT.r "Our knowledge oi a- ..7 "-V-- ; far greater resistance to are iun - resistance to at attainable 'H one would rut siuir '"V"?. "r" whW-h Km occurred in reinioroe "'! vbikhos anot th.compaV.tlv.l, small loss . compared with the enormous tosses ot other form, c t construction it won !, net b hard to dn a. DoealMe rrlirnlum Is far from being unatt4nar . It snouM be borne in mind, however, that It M t.u 9salbie to obtain an absolutely areprpof strsctur. -? reVroof is relative ene, fr. M t.- n XnalfJTf a& M I sufficient, and If It be sufid,. , IfonVed. there Is se buUding Material that . -BaUdlnss therefore, be designed t offer t-e maximum res.8-ance rs.hle: but th-stlm . proof- ualer ordinary eeadltions, 8ili r.l SatieiSc the o reoU.d weui fee ei,4 t, a minimum." - ' . . '