Year, in Advance Bellefonte, Pa., March7, 1890. Terns, £2.00 a P. GRAY MEEK, EDITOR. s— Can It be Possible ? In the bridge account as furnished by the Commissioners in their annual statement, will be found the following item : “Spring Mills bridge,” 8. C. Decker, put- ting on new plank....oocvninnennnnenn. $62.72 Now the allegation is made that this 48. C. Decker” is none other than a representative of JouN D. DECKER, one of the County Commissioners, and in this instance was used as a blind to cover up a transaction that robbed the county of just $38.72 in the matter of planking the bridge above named. Ira BARGER, of Spring Mills, sawed and fur- nished the piank for this job, for which his charge was $21.00. He and his hirad man put them on the bridge in one day, for which they made the ad- ditional charge of $3.00, makinga total for sawing, furnishing and putting the plank in their place,of $24.00, a job for which the county is compelled to pay to a representative of the Commission- er who had the work in charge,the sum of $62.72. If these facts are true, and we have them from a source that we con- sider entirely reliable, is it to be won- dered at that the county is getting into debt, and that an increase of taxation is staring everybody in the face as a re: gult of the management of the present board of County Commissioners ? If we are wrong in this case our columns are open to Commissioner Decker to set the matter right. EASES TET TR Country Roads. Never before was there shown so much interest in the improvement of country roads as there is at the present time. It is becoming a generally rec- ognized fact that the highways on which the travel and traffic of the country districts are done, do not com- port with the advanced civilization of this age, and this conviction has been strengthened this winter by the condi- tion of the roads which have for months been subjected to a mud blockade. It is easy enough to comprehend the in- eonvenience, but there is no estimating the loss from the stoppage of trade, which have resulted from the condi- tion of roads rendered impassable by the mad of this unusually wet season. For weeks farmers have been unable to bring their produce to market, suffer- ing a complete embargo on their busi: ness, and when they have ventured up- on the roads the strain upon their horses and vehicles, and the loss of time, have materially reduced the pro: fit of their trips. The embarrassment and loss sustained during the past win- ter from this cause, may, however, be compensated by an improvement of the country roads brought about by the peculiar experience of the muddiest sea- son on record. The necessity roads is generally admitted. The se- rious question is how it can be effect ually done without being oppressively expensive to the farmers, who, after paying their taxes—tariff and other kinds—are not in a sitnation to incur heavy expenses for road making. The present method of constructing the country highways is unquestionably a failure. The State Board of Agricul ture’s Committee on Roads is engaged in devising a general road law for the State, and is being favored with sug- gestions and advice from many qnar- ters. Itseems to be the impression of some that we should have good roads without much expenditure of means. While this is impossible, it should be the object of those who shall frame the new law to produce the best results with the least expense. What is done in the construction of roads should be done thoroughly, with the intention of being permanent. It is the necessity of coustaut repairing that makes bad roads, cheaply made, the most expen- sivein the end. There seems to be reason and equity in the suggestion that the State should bear a part of the for improving the cost of making and keeping the high- ways in repair, as they are not local 1n their use, but constitute a part of a general system of communication in- tended for the use, convenience and ad- vantage of all the citizens of the State who have occasion totravel over them. -—— On Tuesday the Iowa Legisla- ture re-elected Senator Arison by a reduced majority. If the Democrats of that State had known their strength and fully exerted it at the last election, ALLISON, as a Senator, would now be in the vocative. What a pity that the young Sampson of tariff reform in lowa didn’t know last year how strong he was. But he will hump himself vext fall, : Spring Straws. | The Spring elections in various States have Leen very favorable and encouraging to the Democrats. Tariff reform education is showing its good effect on public sentiment in Towa, the recent municipal elections proving that the impression male, as demonstrated by last fall's election, is permanent and extending. Districts which never be- fore gave Democratic majorities were easily carried by the Democrats on the 4th inst. Des Moines, the capital of the State, did the unusual thing of electing a Democratic Mayor and the entire Democratic municipal ticket. The Democrats carried Fort Dodge for the first time in the history of the city. Ottumwa, the home of Captain Hutch- inson, who was the defeated Republi- can candidate for Governor last fall, al- so went Democratic, and reports gen- erally throughout the State show large Democratic gains. In New York the spring elections in many counties show the same tenden- cy, indicating the great harvest of tar- iff reform that will be gathered in November. renee ——A contemporary, with pardon- able pride in the magnificent physical features of our country, brags of the fact that on account of the prevailing over- flow the ;Ohio and Mississippi rivers at the point of confluence are each fifty miles wide, and asks what other coun- try can make such an exhibit? With- out wishing to detract from the natur- al magnificence of the Great Republic, we venture to remark that the Ama- zen river fw more than oo Sundred miles wide at its mouth without the aid of an overflow to swell the volume of its water. A I EAT BLA The Fence Law. A subscriber to the Warcaman at Frenchville,Clearfield county, writes us requesting the publication of the Fence Law as now in force within the State, and also asks us to give the counties in which it is lawful for cattle to run at large, as well as those in which they are required to be herded, or kept en- closed. The only fence law now in force and which ean in any way be termed gener: ral since the repeal of the act of 1700’ is the act of 1784, which applies only to the territory included at the time of its enactment within the counties of Huntingdon, Bedford, Fayette, West- moreland and Northumberland, and is as follows: All worm fences shall be four feet and a half high, with sufficient stakes and riders added thereon, and that the under rail in each pan- nel shall not exceed five inches from the surface of the ground, and the first four rails in each pannel shall not exceed five inches wide between the rails, and t. at the said fence shall have at least four feet worm ; and that all post and rail fence shall be four feet and a half high, and the distance between the rails as aforesaid. And be it further enacted that, from and after the passage of this act, it shall not be lawful for any person or persons, to kill, take or carry away any swine, shoat or pig, but in case of trespassing through or over any lawful fences as aforesaid, to take and umn-’ pound the same,and to obtain and recover such damages, in the same way and manner as is hereafter directed. As Clearfield county was a part of the ‘territory included within the boundaries of the above named conuties at the time of the enactment of the law of 1784, its provisions consequently apply to that county, unless changed or annulled by some local law since passed of which we have no knowledge. There is no general or local law foi any part of the State making it lawful for cattle to run at large, or providing damages for their owners should they be injured while Centre and Erie counties have euact- ments requiring railroad companies to pay damages for stock killed or injured where the railroads are not fenced, but know of no other counties in which stock raisers haveany protection of this kind. ' Neither is there any law pronibiting cattle from be doing so. we running at | large, except in such counties as have special acts on this subject. Since the repeal of act of 1700 catile running at large do so atthe risk of 7 : : ; f'here is protection for nothing but hogs by the act’ of 1784 given above. the owner. PO a] A Greater Danger. The Legislature of Virginia having ordered the printing, for public cirenla- tion, of Senator DaNIEL'S oration 02 the life and character of JEFFERSON Davis, the Republican papers have set up a howl about it as an evidence of South- ern disloyalty, and may include it among their many alleged reasons for the interference of the administration with the local politics of the South. Jerr Davis’ conduct antagonized the perpetuity of our government, but in a more insidious way the reckless pol: iticians of the Republican party, by their corrupt and unconstitutional practices, menace the Republic with » greater danger, because it is more diffi cult the prevent the accomplishment of their designs. --— The cable brings intelligenec of the death of young ABraHAM LINCOLN, son of the American Minister at the Court of St James. On account of his descent and the name he bore the American people take a sad interest in the decease of the grandson of a Presi- dent whose honesty and patriotism contrast strongly with the conduct of the present Republican leaders. Our Boston correspondent, in writing about the “distinguished” men of that city, makes a singular selection in choosing Joseru Cook to start with, If Cook is distinguished for anything in particular, it is for his being an ass. A Granger's Plain Talk on Pro tection. Hon. Gerard C. Brown, Lecturer of the Grange, Tells the Ways and Means Comvmittee What Sort of Pro- tection the Farmers Receive from the Tariff. We copy the following from the re- marks recently made before the Ways and Means committee of Congress by Hon. Gerard C. Brown ; Lecturer of the Pennsylvania State Grange: The census of 1880 disclosed a loss of nearly $68,000,000 in the actual value of the farms and indicated annual shrink- age in the market value of products. What this depreciation may amount to now can onlv be estimated, in the ab- sence of available data. But we see the evidence of it on every hand. Farming land, when sold, brings lower and still lower prices, and no wonder, for there is not a single staple farm crop which is produced at a profit. It is dificult, in many sections, to find a purchaser for any mere farm, especially one of any size. If located near some town so that itis ava'lable for building purposes,it often commands good prices, but this is a speculative val- ue and is not based on its productive capacity for farming land. This depreciation amounts to as much as 50 per cent. in the case of the richest and most productive farmsin the very best farming districts of the State. I am a farmer of York country,living midway between York and Columbia, say 8 miles from either, 36 miles from Harrisburg, 50 from Baltimore, less than 100 from Philadelphia,somewhat farther from New York and Washington, not far from the great emporiums ot the country, and surrounded by its great manufacturing industrial centres. A location which should afford good home markets if any can. And yet our wheat has averaged below $1 per bushel, below cost of production, for sometime past. It is now 74 to 76 cents per bushel. Corn from 36 to 40 cents. Fattening beef, once a very pro- fitable venture,has declined enormously. It is rave for feeders to get market | price for their corn. Tobacco raising no longer pays, when the risk and out- lay of so expensive a crop is taken into consideration. Dairying,to which many have turned for refuge, even when, as in our own neighborhood, it is conducted under the best approved system, 1s not remunerative. Creamery stock is dead stock. More farms were sold under the ham- mer 1n York county last year than ever before. In Berks county there were more sheriff’s sales than in any three previous years. This was not on account of any failure in crops, which were above the average. The highest prices paid for our beeves, which, of course, comprise our choicest cattle, is for expor?d. Even poultry, butter and eggs must be shipped to Philadelphia, New York or Baltimore to command paying prices, as for instance, turkeys now bringing 16 cents in New York, are now worth but 10 cents in York, and yet in New York they are sold in competition with those of all parts of the country, even from the boundless West. Our creamery butter—no better can be made —has not averaged 20 cents a pound, and has been below 15 cen'ls this Season. The fact is that prices are too low to yield a living profit, while taxes remain unrediced and the expenses of living are disproportionate to our means of meeting them. The protective system has not, especi- ally in the case of those farmers living near to the protected interests, resulted in the protection which was promised to them —that of an ample and sufficient home market. Hence the loss of profit on their products followed by loss of value of their farms, which, unless checked, must result in the loss of the farms themselves. Pennsylvania farmers are not alone “confronted” with this ‘‘condition.” In New England the dry rot is still worse. Lacking some of our great natural ad- vantages they “sooner went to the wall.” I quote from a recent report © “There are 887 deserted farms in New Hamp- shire, with buildings in a fair state of repair, or that might easily be made fit for occupancy. This inforination has been received in reply to an official circular of the State Commissioners of : hay $2 per ton. Finigration, making inguiry of the Selectmen of 160 towns. These deserted farms all lie in easy reach of the busy factories of New England. They have the home market with all its advau- taves, and area fair sample of the way thie hon®e marketenviches the husband- | man.» While in New York, Massachusetts | land Connecticut we do not have sim- ilar information, the traveler will no- | | tice that deserted farms are not unknown, | and itis a fact that hundreds of farms can be purchased in these States for less than the cost of buildings, making the land practically free of cost to the purchaser. In Illinois the report of the Bureau of Labor Statistics for 1887 shows, “Farra indebtedness in the year 1870 to be $65,721,908; 1880, $103,237; 1887, $123,783,008. Also that the “mortage indebtedness of farmers for borrowed money has in- | crea-ed 23 per cent, since 1880—morve | than twice the increase of farm lands.” We also learn that the indebtedness represented by western morteages agore- gates $3.422,000,000, or $200 per capita for 17,000,000 people of those Slates. From Kansas a private letter from an old resident, a former Pennsvlvaman, who moved out to the Neosho Valley in 18 6, a good business man, says: Times are very close—never so hard before. Though blessed with good crops we can’t sell them for half what they are worth. During all the years I bave lived here 1 never knew things so low. Corn is 15 cents per bushel, oats 10 cents, wheat 55 cents, potatoes 22 cents, fat cows and heifers 1} cents per pound on the hoof, Fifty bushels of corn for a plain overcoat. To sell 25 acres of corn, or 1,000 busheles, and haul it ten miles for $150, is a hard way to make money. If we produce 450,000,000 bushels of wheat, and can consume but 235,000,000, the remaining 125,000,000 must find some other market, or eventually rot here; and the price wheat sells for in that market limits the market price of the wauch larger portion that we use here. The present tariff of 20 cents on w heat does not affect that price, and were it twice 20 cents, or were it $20, still would not raise it one cent a bushel. You ask “what is your remedy ?”’ I say, knock off the tariff for surplus. Give us a tariff which is not framed and calculated to pay a premium to other interests at the expense of the far- mers who are the largest consumers and the heaviest taxpayers; but which is limited to the needs of an honest and economical government, and which is as much as possible levied on the luxuries and as little as possible on the necessaries of life. This is all the Protection that we far- mers need, and all it seems to be possible for you gentlemen to give us. J — , The Era of Profligacy. Col. McClure in Friday’s Times draws the following startling picture of the profligate tendency of the present ad- ministration of the government: In 1828 the administration of John Quincy Adams was arraigned in every State in the Union because of its prefligacy, when the total expenditures of the government, including interest on public debt, reached the then appalling sum of-$16,000,000 in time of peace. In 1861, the first year of Lincoln’sadminis- tration, the total revenues of the govern- ment, exclusive of proceeds of loans, were $41,476,299,and the total expendi- tures,including interest on public debt, were $66,650,241. The civil war increased that amount $400,000,000 the succeed- ing year, but the entire average ex- penditures of the government on the peace basis for the decade prior to the rebellion, did not exceed $65,000,000. The revenues for the current year are now estimated at from $400,000,000 to $450,000,000, and the only extraordinary ex; enditure we have is for pensions. The estimates of certain expenditures given to the House by Mr. Peters, one of the prominent Republican members of the Committee on Appropriations, amount to 442,000,000, which do not embrace the prison pension bill, estimated at $11,- 500,000; the pension arrears bill, esti- mated at $471,000,000 the first year; the service or the dependent pension bills, estimated at over $100,000,000; the river and harbor bill for which over $30,000,000 are demanded, or the fortifi- cation bill, lately reported in the Senate for $126,000,000, of which $50,000,000 would likely be expended the first y2ar. Of course, the passage of all these bills is an utter impossibility, as they would bankrupt the treasury and leave a deficit of some $700,000,000 ; but every one of these measuresis earnestly and hopefully pressed upon Congress and it will be re- markable if most of them shall not be passed with more or less reduced appro- priations. If so, a bankrupt treasury is inevitable. Indeed, the passage of either the arrears, the scervice or the de- pendent pension bill would create a treasury deficit for the next fiscal year, and who can hope that the country will escape with the passage of only one of the three pension bills named ? ~The first tangible evidence of the era of profligacy upon which we have just entered is presented in the usual Urgent Deficiency bill, that appropriates $21,- 000,000 to square up the pension de- ficiency, although the last Congress appropriated every. dollar. asked for by the Pension Department. This pension deficiency appropriation brings our pres- ent pensions up to $111,000,000 annually, or nearly double the entire expenditures of the government before the war; and when either the service, the dependent or thearrears pension billshall be passed, a large tressury deficit will be createcs while the passage of all of them, as is quite possible, would make the aggregate cost of pensions next year equal to the entire sum expended for ths war in 1862. Congressman Peters did not call the halt upon his Republican brethren any too soon, but will his wise admonitions be heeded ? Doubtles: the colossal de- mands of profligates will force sober thought and some restraintin appropria- tions; but the era of profligacy is up- oa us. and a bankrupt treasury séems to be inevitable regardless of the earnest efforts which will be made to save both the treasury and the party. POE, Good-By Sarplus. The New York World says all plans for reducing the surplus, even by in- creasing customs taxes to diminish im- portations, have come to a standstill be- fore the impeding fact that all the revenues wil! be needed to meet the cost of the various schemes to which the Republican party is committed. For ten years past the government i has eollected annually an average of over $100,000,000 in excess of its or- dinary and necessary expenses. The bond purchases in which a large part of this sum has been absorbed mus* coon cease for lack of availablesecurities. In the natural order of things and in any other government in the world this ex- cessive revenue would be stopped by a reduciion of taxes. But this does not suit the purpose of the protected interests which have yielded “fat” under press- ure to the Rapublican campaign ma- chine. They have paid for a continua- tion of their bounties and insist upon a fulfillment of the bargain. [n this pur- pose they find willing co-operation among the members who are lavish in spending other people’s money for their own personal or political benefit. Tanner was right. The Surplus Must Go. Mr. McKinley's committee will not have even the poor satisfaction of abolishing the tobacco tax and giving the eaters of the weed “a free chaw.” Tke revenues will be needed. The Re- publican policy is ‘the war taxes for- ever.” _of right and moraiity blunted by wit- A Protest. AGAINST MAKING HERoES, MARTYRS AND SAINTS OF MURDERERS. The Sheriff, the County Commissioners and the Court Censured. From the Wage-Earner's Journal Dating from the time Seeley Hop- kins was taken to jail until his body | was handed over to the charge of his relatives, there has hardly been an act of the Sheriff, except the mere matter of his safe-keeping of the prisoner, | that is not entitled to receive the se- | verest condemnation of preachers, of | morgalists—in fact of all who bave the welfare ot the rising generation at heart. In the face of the conduct of the official named, dare any man seriously ask the question “Why Crime is on the Increase ?”’ and not write himself down either an ass or a fool ? We think not. In the interest of morality, let us briefly review these acts: From the time Hop- kins was taken to jail until the attempt of Sheriff Cook to have his body lie in state, in jail, after the execution, he was made the lion of the day—the hero of the hour. Hundreds were permitted to visit him out of mere idle and mor- bid curiosity ; every ribald werd, every blasphemous expression was in some way or another furnished the public, through the press, and the name of the murderer was kept in the minds and on the tongue of almost every one in the county. Until the very eve ot the exe- cution, Hopkins, if printed reports are true, was allowed to see the people in such numbers that these meetings as- sumed the character of regular recep- tions, these receptions being permitted by the sheriff, sanctioned by the Court, and aided by the county commissioners —wesay sanctioned by the Court and aided by the Commissioners, because it was in the power of the Court, as well as in the power of the commissioners, to have put an end to the unseemly pro- ceedings. Sentimental young women and effeminate young men—with others crowded the jail at times, with only harm to themselves and positive injury to the prisoner. It is even alleged that women of questionable character were permitted to visit his cell, and ths almost dying words of the prisoner—his thoughts di- verted from spiritual matters—was a half apologetic statement clearing the sherifi’s and his own character from a charge that he (Hopkins) had had crim- inal intercourse with two certain women in Bellefonte —naming them on the scaffold—who had visited him in his cell. Ttis further published that the sheriff himself ay to pay for the pic- tures taken of Hopkins, and only a few moments before the execution the sher- iff sent out for a button-hole bouquet which had been prepared by one of the prisioner’s female admirers or sympa- thizers, the bouquet being carefully looked after by the Sheriff. No wonder a bungling execution should follow such reprehensible conduct as all this. The surprise is that the horrible scene was not made even more horrible. Then, after the execution, another show must be made, and men and wom- en—and even young men, maidens and children—were permitted to view the remains of the murderer,—as they rest- ed in the casket the prisoner himself had been permitted to see and had pro- nounced satisfactory. What for, let us ask the sheriff, the Court ard the Com- missioners ? To have the sensibilities of the youth of the county in the direction nessing the mawkish display of affec- tion and sentimentality as it was mani- fested by their elders ? And even An. drews—a much more atrocious. villain than the dead Hopkins—must also be brought out of his cell to witness the cold and lifeless form of his late com- rade in imprisonment, and the scene which followed graphically pictured in the newspapers. Out upon such con- duet. : But the end is not yet. Not satis- fied with the harm already done by making a hero of Hopkins, it is stated that it was the Sheriif’s desire to have the body lie in state for sowe time in the jail, and this was only prevented by the interposition of a gentleman who seems to have some regard for the feelings of a community supposed to have some ideas as to the propriety of some things and the impropriety of others. Yet notwithstanding this conduct on the part of the sheriff, even he is made a newpaper hero by the press repre- sentatives present at the execution. They say he was nervy, full of sand, showed a wonderful degree of nerve, etc., etc., when if these newspapers had told the truth they would have said just the opposite, and shown that just when the sheriff ought to have rad his wits about him—when Hopkins body went through to the ground— that official stood white and powerless to move hand or foot, and that it was a deputy, secured at the eleventh hours who, realizing the situation, saved the spectators from being witnesses to a scene perbaps never before enacted at a legal hanging. We admit it was a wrying time; a time when stronger men than Cook would have weakened, bat why nog tell she truth? It is no particular credit to any man to be able to say of him that without the least emotion he sent the immortal spirit of a fellow being into the presence of the Great God and Ruler of the Uni- verse. Our respect would be greater for the man who .would manifest a proper degree of emotion in such a trying time than it would be for the man who would exhibit no more feeling than a Digger Indian as he sends his tomahawk crashing through the brain of his victim! But why not tell the truth ? And why say Cook was not to blame for the breaking of the rope? If he experi- mented with it before the execution ;— if he made a sort of show of the horri- ble instrument of death previous to the execution, and to the extent that the rope was weakened ; if the rope absolute- ly broke the day before under a test of : Bellefonte Court, the commissioners, and the sher- “in'glery.” 190 pounds, how can all blame be taken from the sherifi’ for the bungling which | followed ? In the name of decency, of morality | ard of humanity, we protest against a repeating of this programme in the | case of Andrews, Who has already sent | a lving confession to the public,— | which has been printed and illustrated —and the reading of which will be poison to the hundreds of boys and’ girls into whose hands it will fall, one result of which bas followed quick, reference being had to the stabbing afiray between two pupils in the academy. And if the iff cannot be made to see tue impro- priety of such conduct we have here detailed, Christian ministers should ‘make it the theme of a pulpit discourse, and good and moral people in all parts of the county should assemble togeth- er and formally express their denun- ciation of such conduct. There is lit- tle cant about us, but we submit that “it is but mockery for teachers and i preachers to attempt to teach prin- ciples of morality, sobriety, or any other Christian virtue, when at the same time they permit to pass un- rebuked a course of conduct so de- moralizing, debasing and degrading as has been permitted in the case of Hopkins and now threatens to be re- peated in tke case of Andrews. Much might be said in derogation of the position taken by those who so emphatically argue that “all was well” with Hopkins, that he died the death of the righteous, and that his “soul is now C Perbaps so, but if so, it is a mighty discouraging fact to the hun- dreds and thousands of men and women who through much trial and tribula- tion, and after the making of many sac- rifices, are working their way heaven- ward. One thought more: If legal executions are to continue, let the French method of strictly private exe- cutions be adopted, and when the mur- derer has been sentenced, let him forev- er be lost to the world. Then, perhaps, some good from capital punishment would follow, but as it is, with heroes made of murderers, how can there be anything else than harm done ? Proper Road Laws. A Bill to Suit All Parts of the State Difficult to Frame. John A. Gundy, of Lewisburg, Pa., as Chairman of the State Board of Agri- culture’s Committee on Roads, gives his idea of how to obtain better highways in the State, as follows: ¢“A general road law for Pennsylvania suited to the varied conditions of the several sections of the State, will be difficult to frame. But such a law is needed, and should designate the kind of road to be con- structed, which should be suited to the kind and amount of traffic on the road. Many roads are so little used that to macadamize them would be reckless ex- travagance. ; COUNTY AND To VNSHIP SUPERVISORS. “A County Supervisor should be ap- pointed who should be competent, and should authorize the kind of road to be -constructed. . A township supervisor should be elected who should be made primarily and individually liable for damages resulting from his negligence, and should give bonds for faithful per- | formance of his duty. The road taxes should be made payable in money in all cases. But no law will be enforced unless the people are in sympathy with it. They can only be brought in sym- pathy with a new road law that would make radical changes in the making of roads and collecting of taxes, by educa- tion, by showing them by actual de- monstration thatit will be advantageous and economical for them to support such changes. This can best be done by the construction of short stretches of ma- cadam roads on the most important highways in each township, selecting the worst portions of such roads for such improvements. Seeing such roads and using them in comparison with poorly made mud roads will be the most potent educator that can be had. APPRECIATION COMES TARDILY. “This is well shown in the Cassait road in Montgomery county, asalso ina short stretch of about eighty roads of macadam made in one of the townships of Union county some fifteen years ago. The portion macadamized was about the worst section of a four-mile road leading out of Lewisburg. The stones were at the side of the road, and were broken and the road bed covered wide enough for two tracks, depth of stone unknown, at a cost, I am told, of only four dollars per lineal rod, or $1,280 per mile. The supervisor who constructed the road was voted out of office the following spring, as might have been supposed. But te- day, fifteen years after, with not one dollar spent on this section since, this road is considered the most economically constructed in the whole towship, and the supervisor now receives the credit due him at the time. Roads on which such permanent improvements are to be made should be properly located, and changes contemplated should be made before the work is begun. MACADAM’S SYSTEM THE BEST, AT PRESENT. “But is the macadam system to be the road in the twentieth century? I think not. The Appian Way, running from Rome to Capua, has been in use for 2200 years, and the macadam, a cheaper form, has been in use for 100 years. Surely the genius of the twen- tieth century will devise a better plan. 1t this improved road be a steel rail rest- ing on a steel tie, like the street railways of our cities, or whatever form js likely to be adopted, all work done should be such as will be suited to the new roads, and probably nothing more nearly fills this requirement than the macadam sys- tem. But whatever is done, let us go as fast as the education of the people will warrant. If they are educated to de- mand good roads, they will come; if not, it will be difficult to get them un- der any law. IEC CTT Sur Kxew Him BETTER.—Among the converts at the present revival jin Richmond is a man whose wife left him recently on account of alleged cruel treatment. Sorrowful and repentant, as the story goes, he called on the partner of his bosom, not long since, to promise better fashions and ask her forgiveness. The aggrieved wife listened to his story, but concluded that she could not over- look his past offences. «But the Lord bas forgiven me,” urged the saved sinner, “and , why can’t youl" . The woman shook her head emphatic- ally as she replied : #If the Lord knew one-sixteenth part of your deviltry He'd never forgive you ‘in this world or the next.”