Bellefonte, Pa., May 8, 1903. THE DREAM OF THE TOY. The Sandman lost a dream one night— A dream means for a boy; It floated round a while, and then It settled on a Toy. The Toy dreamed that it stood in class With quite a row of boys; The teacher rapped upon his desk And cried, ‘‘Less noise! less noise !”’ Then, looking at the Toy, he scowled And said, “Next boy—foretell.” “0, please, sir,” cried the little Toy, “I don’t know how to spell.” ‘‘Indeed, I don’t know how itis, I'm sure I am a Toy, Although I seem to be in a class, And dressed up like a boy.” ‘What's that ? What's that ?”’ cried In awful tones he spoke; He came with strides across the fioor, And then the Toy awoke. the teacher There lay the nursery very still, The sheif above its head; The fire burned dimly on the hearth, The children were in bed. There lay the dolls and Noah's ark, “0 dear me,’ said the Toy, ‘I just had such a dreadful dream ! I dreamed I was a boy.” —FKatherine Ryle. A BIT OF BUTTON. It must have been ten years ago, that lazy August afternoon, that I read and doz- ed alternately on the couch, where a breeze from the south window came in to ruffle the leaves of the book. I was recovering from some bit of sickness, and the rest had gone for a drive; it was full peach season, and I was left alone in the house. The bees flew in and out of the hollyhocks un- der the window ; occasionally some adven- tarous cavalier would beat against the screen in a vain endeavor to force entrance. A shuffling sound came from the steps as one foot was pulled up after another. If proved to be Uncle Isaac, the old peddler who wandered around the village, selling parsley, pie-plant and other green goods. I called the dog to the mat, and shouted, ‘‘Come in.’ ‘‘The door is shut,’”’ he answered. I climbed down from the couch, and let him in. It muet have been a sprained ankle from which I was suffering that day, for I remember the pain the movement caused. Uncle Isnac seated himself in an arm chair, an old figure, his long white hair wandering over the forehead, and tumbling in stray locks about his eves. ‘Meester Ralph,’’ he began, ‘I have known you a very long time—ever since you were so high—=so,’’ hesaid, pointing to the lowest notch in the stick. I nodded absently. ‘‘I knew your vater when he was so high, too,”” he continued. “Yes,”” I said. ““Whatis it?’ Iwasa little impatient; I knew he wanted some- thing. ‘Meester Ralph,’”’ he continued, coming to the point, ‘‘will you let me have a coat for a day—two days?’ he said. ‘‘A coat with nice buttons, a good coat—it is of the society, the lodge.”’ “Where is yours, Isaac ?’’ I said sharply. ‘It is gone,’”’ he shook his head sadly, ‘it went very bad—to drink.”’ I lay and thought a moment, then I re- membered an old masquerade coat of two winters before; I had outgrown it; it ought to fit Isaac. I bave always thought I pos- sessed a grain of charity,after I climbed the weary steps to my wardrobe with my ach- ing ankle, that day. I gave it to the old man, and he thanked me with the grati- ‘tude of one to whom a present is not an empty thing. He wore it next day, proud as a king, simple as a child, at the annual parade of his lodge. It wandered away sadly from Isaac's little figure, and possi- bly some of the outsiders laughed, or the little boys whose mothers’ presence restrain- ed them from throwingstones, called names at him. But the little old man did not heed; he walked with the lodge, as straight as any of them. I know this is retrogression, but the scene came to me, as pictures sometimes will, at a word to recall them. I was sip- ping a late cup of coffee in a restaurant sev- eral thousand miles from that August af- ternoon, briefly scanning the morning pa- per. I stopped short at the name of the little Michigan home town where I had lived as a boy. Only a line: . ‘‘Webster, May 9.—Isaac Hills, aged 65, was run over by the A. C. & C. train, and instantly killed.’ ; Just that, bus the paper dropped to the floor. Outside, the long dusty California street seemed to fade away, and the holly- hocks in the old fashioned garden nodded to me through a distant lattice. My thoughts went back into the sweetness of the home time, and my coffee became cold, as a picture of the little old man in the masquerade jacket grew hefore me. A few months later—it was in the sum- mer time—I went East, not to the East be- yond where the Mississippi rolls—an un- derpaid, struggling professor in a little chapel and dormitory institution could not afford that—but to Colorado, on a business trip in the interest of the president. AsI stepped into the smoker after leaving Salt Lake, I almost collided with Billy Hutch- inson. We did not fall on each other’s necks-after a fashion now several thousaud years out of date, but we did shake two sinewy bands, and sat down on one of the red, dusty seats to talk. It was years since I bad seen Billy, the day we graduated, and there was something to talk over. He pulled out a cigar,handed me one,and reach- ed in his pockes$ for a match, fumbled oub a bandful of variegated stuff which. might have come from the pockets of any school- boy—a few stray coins, lucky pieces, a col- ored stone, a jack-knife, a couple of but- tons, and a match. Hutchinson was about to push the mass back into his pocket, when I noticed one of the buttons—a curiously shaped cross on a golden background— which seemed somehow familiar. ‘Hold on,” I said, grasping his band, and knocking the collection on the floor. I rescued the button from underneath the seat, and picking up the scattered articles, returned them tothe owner. He looked at me with a half puzzled smile. “What have you taken a faney to now 2’? But as I held the button up for his in- spection, he snatched it from my band. “You can’t have that, it’s from the dead, poor old-Isaac.”” I knew now why it look- ed familiar, a relic of my old masquerade jacket. Hutchinson held it in his band, stroking and caressing it as if it was a liv- ing thing. ‘‘It. belonged to him,’’ he said gently. ‘“There is quite a story about it.”’ “Ves,” I replied; ‘‘it was Ikey’s; wasn’t he killed by a train? Isaw something of it in a San Francisco paper. T never heard more, just saw the notice.” ““There is more, much more; but how did you know it was Ikey’s?’’ I had just fin- ished telling him about the old masquerade coat, when there came an interruption. A big man lumbered through the aisle and sat town beside Bill. I saw him color un- der the interruption, but he introduced us. “My law partner, Mr. Rogers—my friend Professor Monroe.” We talked on desul- tory themes for a few moments, and I thought he had forgotten Isaac. Then he turned to his partner. ‘‘Roger,”’ he said, ‘‘you must excuse me; I had just started to tell a little story when you en- tered.’ And with that he began. ‘I suppose the button is just as much yours as it is mine. But that is why I have it. You know, Ralph, Isaac was al- ways pretty much, what you call in police court, plain drunk, and he didn’t improve with age. He meant well enough, but he couldn’t hold out, and the young men around town who liked to call themselves sporty, used to get Isaac in a saloon, espe- cially if he had some little coin, and that was the end of him for the night. We would find him on some doorstep next morning, or maybe in a snowdrift, if it was winter time. Those devils !”” Hutchinson exclaimed, and from his expression it was well they were not in the smoking car. ‘After a while,’ he continued, ‘‘they be- gan to send him to the county jail for ten days or so, as a public burden. The old man felt the disgrace terribly as first, but he couldn’t keep from the saloon, and he took the trip again and again. ‘Then the lodge got after him; perhaps there were some among them who were as bad as Isaae, but they bad money, and it didn’t matter. The old vagabond drinker was a disgrace to the organization, so they said. You know how proud Isaac was of his lodge ?'’ I nodded, the memory of that afternoon before me. ‘‘It came up at a meeting, and most of the members wanted to expel him, but the old man had some friends, and after he bad made a plea with tears streaming down his face, ‘some of us hadn’t the heart to do it. I—I voted against him. It wasn’t passed, but laid on the table for a week, to come up at the next meeting. ‘‘A day or two later, the old man, de- spite his promises, fell again, and the jus- tice gave him ten days of meditation. The marshal accompanied him to the station, Isaac walking dejectedly beside, his head bent, his ill fitting suit banging in limp folds about his figure. My brother Jim— you remember him, don’t you—and his little girl were going away on a visit, and I was at the station tosee them off. The marshall talking politics with a group of bystanders never gave a thought to help- less Isaac there on the edge of the platform. ‘While Jim was looking after the trunks, the little girl—just four years old that day, with a mass of tumbling golden curls fall- ing in disorder about her face—toddled up to Isaac, and looked up into his eyes. ‘Poor little man,’ she said and went on with her play. Possibly it aroused some faded,long lost memories; perhaps she reminded him of his little girl asleep in the churchyard, il of ber father’s deeds—he never told. ‘‘A moment later it all happened. In an instant, while we could scarcely breathe, little Alice toddled on to the track just as the Chicago express shot around the carve a few feet away. The engineer frantically applied the brakes, but the mass of iron rolled on. I shut myeyes—Icouldn’t bear to witness the sight—while Jim, who had just come out of the building, made a dash for the track, but was held back, where he couldn’t see. “Is may have been a confused image of his own little girl came to the old man and he thought it was her. They say he never glanced at the oncoming train, hut stagger- ed on to the traek, pulled at her dress, and pushed her over in the gravel and dirt on the other side. He might bave escaped, but he stumbled—aud then it was all over. They found this bit of button after ward.”’ ‘Well, it was a blessing to get rid of such a worthless character,”’ said Rogers, blow- ing a circle of smoke. Hutchinson turned on him sharply, ‘‘ask my brother, ask him what he thinks.”’ Then, as he left the car, he added, ‘the lodge decided they wounldn’t expel him af- ter all.”’—By Richard Henry Post in The Pilgrim for May. The New Road Law of Pennsylvania. A Matter of Interest to Every Taxpayer—The Road Law Passed by the Last Legislature.—An Act Establishing a New Department and Building Pub- lic Roads Under State Supervision. Below we publish the entire Act of As- sembly which is designed to revolutionize public road making in Pennsylvania. The change from the old system is so radical that we publish the law in toto so that every taxpayer may be conversant with it. AN ACT. Providing for the establishment of a State Highway Department, by the ap- pointment of a State Highway Commission- er and staff of assistants, and defining the powers and duties thereof; authorizing the State Highway Department to co-operate with the several counties and townships, and with boroughs in certain instances, in the improvement of the public highways and the maintenance of improved high- ways; providing for the application of coun- ties and townships for State aid in high- way improvement and maintenance; pro- viding for the payment of the cost of high- way improvements, made under the provis- ions of this act, by the State, the counties, and the townships, and making an appro- priation for this purpose. j Whereas, it is of great importance to the people of this Commonwealth that the pub- lio highways should be systematically im- proved, and that the several counties and townships should be given the aid and en- couragement of the State in the building and maintenance of improved highways; therefore : ; Section 1. Be it enacted, &o., That im- mediately upon the approval of this act, a State Highway Department shall be estab- lished by the appointment, by the Govern- or of the Commonwealth, with the advice and consent of the Senate, for a term of four years, of a State Highway Commission- er, who shall be a competent civil engineer- and experienced in the construoction and maintenance of improved roads. Said State Highway Commissioner shall receive a sal- ary of three thousand five hundred dollars per annum, and shall be allowed his actual traveling expenses, not exceeding five hun- dred dollars, while officially employed. He shall furnish a bond in the sum of twenty- five thousand dollars for the faithful per- formance of his duty, said bond to be ap- proved by the Governor, and he shall give his whole time and attention to the duties of his position. The State Highway Com- missioner may appoint, as the work of the department requires it, and subject to the approval of the Governor, one assistant, who shall be a capable and competent civil engineer and experiedoed in road building, who shall receive an’ annual salary of two thousand dollars, and shall be allowed his actual traveling expenses, not to exceed five hundred dollars, when on official busi- ness; and he shall alsoappoint a chief clerk, at an annual salary of fifteen hundred dol- lars per annum, and may employ an addi- tional clerk who shall be a competent ste- nographer, at an expense not to exceed one thousand dollars per avnum. The State Highway Commissioner may require the employes of the Department to give bond for the faithful performance of their duty, in suitable and reasonable amounts. Section 2. The State Highway Depart- ment shall be provided with suitable rooms in the State buildings at Harrisburg, and its offices shall be open at all reasonable times for the transaction of public business. The State Highway Commissioner shall carry into effect the provisions of this act and all acts of Assembly providing for the co-operation of the State in the construe- tion and maintenance of public highways. Pe shall have charge of the records of the State Highway Department; and shall each year submit to the Governor of the Com- monwealth a full report of the operations of the Department, the number of miles, cost and character of the roads built under its direction. detailed statements of the ex- penses of the Department, and such other information concerning the condition of the public roads of the State and the progress of their improvements as may be proper. Section 3. Whenever the county com- missioners of any county shall represent by petition to said State Highway Department that any principal highway in said county, outside of corporate limits of any city or borough, is not in a satisfactory condition for comfortable or economical travel, and ought to he reconstructed under the pro- visions of this act, and shall farnish to the said Department an accurate plan of the layout, lines, profile and established grade of such highway, it shall be the duty of the State Highway Commissioner to examine such highway, or instruct one of his assiss- ants so to do; and if in the judgment of the State Highway Commissioner said represen- tation is well founded, he shall determine what changes should be made in said exist- ing highway, what portion of it should he improved and in what manner, and shall prepare accurate plans and make careful de- tailed estimates of the expense of the work which, in his opinion, should be done, and report the same to the county commission- ers of the county and the supervisors or commissioners of the township or townships in which the said highway may lie. If the said county commissioners and town- ship supervisors or commissioners then de- cide that it is advisable to go on with the work as hereinafter provided, and make the required agreements as hereinafter specified, the State Highway Department may, if the funds at its disposal permit of so doing,con- tract jointly with the county and town- ships, in which said highway lies, to carry out the recommendations of the State High- way Commissioner; the cost of the same, including all the necessary surveys, grad. ing, material, construction, relocation, changes of grade, and expenses in connec- tion with the improvement ‘of said high- way, to be borne in sixty six and two thirds per centum by the State, sixteen and two thirds per centum by the county, and six- teen and two thirds per centum by the township or townships in which the por- tions of said highway, improved as herein provided, may lie : Provided, That the State aid shall be apportion among the several counties of the Commonwealth ac- cording to the mileage of township or coun- ty road is each county, but the said amount shall remain in the State Treasury until applied for under the provisions of this act; And provided, That any county construct- ing county roads under the provisions of the act of June twenty-sixth, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-five (Pamphlet law, three hundred and thirty six) and supplements and amendments thereto,shall be entitled to receive the same amount of State aid as if said roads were constructed under the provisions of this act : And pro- vided farther, That if the appropriation, go apportion by the State, shall not be so applied for a period of two years after it has become available, the amount so apportion- ed and seb aside for that county shall be re- turned to the State Treasury, and added to the appropriation for the current year, and distributed anew under the provisions of this act : And provided further, That noth- ing herein contained shall prevent any county and townships from agreeing to ap- propriate a larger amount for such road improvement than the amounts specified in this act : And provided, That counties and townships may agree among themselves to contribute their combined proportion of the thirty-three and one-third per centum of the total expense of construction, herein provided to be borne by them, in different proportions from that hereinabove specified ; but in no case shall any township or county pay less than five per centum of the entire expense of such improvements : Provided, That the county commissioners shall far- nish, under oath, to the State Highway Commissioner the total number of miles of township or county public roads, by town- ships, to the State Highway Commission- er. Section 4. All bighways improved unn- der the provisions of this act shall conform to the standard of construction established by the State Highway Department, as best adapted to the locality in which they may be located, with due regard gto the topog- raphy and natural conditions and the availability of road building materials, and shall be constructed according to the best engineering practice. No section of high- way improved under this act shall be less than one fourth mile in length, nor shall the improved portion thereof be less than tweive feet in width. So far as is consist- ent with the just and equitable adminis- tration of this act, the State Highway De- partment shall encourage a general system of highway improvement. Section 5. All work done under the pro- visions of this act shall be by contract, ac- cording to plans and specifications to be prepared by the State Highway Commis- sioner and approved by the county com- missioners of the county and the supervis- ors or commissioners of the township or townships, as hereinbefore provided ; and in awarding said contracts the work shall be given to the lowest and best bidder, with the option upon the part of the State High- way Commissioner, the county commission- ers the township supervisors or commission- ers, to reject any or all bids if they consid- er the same unreasonable, or if the prices named are materially higher than the esti- mated cost of the work as provided for. Every person, firm or corporation, before being awarded any contract for the con- struction or improvement of any highway under the provisions of this act, shall fur- nish a bond, acceptable to the State High- way Commissioner, in a sum equal to the contract price of the work, conditioned up- on the satisfactory completion of the same and to save harmless the State, connty and the township or townships, in which the work may lie, from any expense incurred through the failure of said contractor to complete the work as specified, or for any damages growing out of the carelessness of said contractor or his or its servants. Section 6. Any township may. through its supervisors or commissioners, be author- ized to bid for the construction of such por-- tion of any highway improvement, under- taken under the provisions of this act, as may lie within its limits; and any town- ship submitting such bid shall have the same consideration as other bidders, and, if awarded the contract, shall fulfill the same and be subject to the same regulations as are laid down for other bidders. Section 7. Upon the completion of any highway, rebuilt or improved under the provisions of this act, the State Highway Commissioner shall immediately ascertain the total expense of the same, apportion the said total expense between the State, the county and the township, or townships; in the proportion hereinbefore provided ; and in case the said improved highway shall ex- tend into or through two or more town- ships, he shall apportion the proportion of the expense, aforesaid, to be borne by each township among the several townships, in the same proportionate parts at the cost of the improvement within each township shall bear to the whole expense of the im- provement which has been made according to the provisions of this act; and the State Highway Commissioner shall certify the total expense of said improvement to the county commissioners and to the supervisors or commissioners of the township, or town- ships, in which the improved highway has been constructed, respectively, specifying the amounts to be borne by the State, the county and the township, or each township, as provided by this act. Section 8. The State’s share of the ex- pense of highway improvement or main- tenance, under the provisions of this act, shall be paid by the State Treasurer upon the warrant of the State Highway Commis- sioner, attested by the chief clerk of the State Highway Department, out of any specific appropriations made by the legis- lature to carry out the provisions of this act; and the share of the county in which said highway improvement, as herein pro- vided, has been made, shall be a charge upon the funds of said county,and shall be paid by the county treasurer upon the or- der of the county commissioners. The share of the township or townships in which the said highway improvement, as herein provided, has been made, shall be paid by the township supervisors or com- missioners, as other debts of said township or townships are paid. The State High- way Department, the county commission- ers of the county, and the supervisors or commissioners of the township, or townships, in which any highway is being improved under the provisions of this act, may, with the approval of the State High- way Commissioner, make partial payments to the contractor or contractors performing the work, as the same progresses; but vot more than two-thirds of their proportionate shares of the contract price for the work shall be paid, in advance of the fall com- pletion of the same, by either the State Highway Department, the connty, and the township or townships,so that at least one- third of the full contract price shall he withheld until the work is satisfactorily completed and accepted. and the exact pro- portions of the cost thereof apportioned to the State, county and township, or town- ships : Provided, That a cash road tax be levied by each township, where such road improvement is: being made, to meet the cost of such permanent road improvement as is provided in this act. Section 9. Every contract authorized to be made by the State Highway Depart- ment, under the provisions of this act, shall be made in the name of the Com- monwealth of Pennsylvania, and shall be signed by the State Commissioner of High- ways and attested by the chief clerk of the department,, and shall be approved, as to form and legality, by the Attorney General or Deputy Attorney General of the Com- monwealth. No contract for any highway improvement shall be let by the State Highway Department, nor shall any work be authorized under the provisions of this act, until the written agreement of the county commissioners of the county and the supervisors or commissioners of the township, or townships, in which said pro- posed improvement is to be made, agree- ing to assume their respective shares of the cost, thereof, as hereinbefore provided, shall be on file in the office of the State Highway Department, and shall have been approved, as to the form and legality, by the Attorney General or the Deputy At- torney General of the Commonwealth. Section 10. The county commissioners of any county may, upon the presentation to them of a petition from the supervisors or commissioners of any township, or of two or more adjoining townships, represent- ing that any principal highway or section thereof, lying within said township or townships, is in need of reconstruction, and setting forth that said township or townships desire to take advantage of the provisions of this act to improve said high- way, pass a resolution petitioning the State Highway Department to undertake the improvement of the highway or sec- tion thereof specified in the petition from the township or townships aforesaid, and authorizing the assumption by the county of its share of the expense of said improve- ment; accompanying the said petition to the State Highway Department with a map or plan showing the layout, lines, profile and grade of such highway, as hereinbefore provided : Provided, That where the coun- ty commissioners petition to State High- way Commissioner for the improvement of a public road or parts thereof, they shall state the kind of material to be used or available for such road. Section 11. The supervisors or commis- sioners of any township in any county of the Commonwealth may petition the coun- ty commissioners of said county to make application to the State Highway Depart- ment for the co-operation of the State in the reconstruction or permanent improve- ment of any principal highway within the said towoship, or any section thereof which is much used as a thoroughfare by the peo- ple of said township and the neighboring townships, cities and boroughs, agreeing by resolution to assume, for said township, the proportionate share of the expense of said improvement; as hereinbefore provid- ed. It shall he lawful for any township to incur indebtedness or to issue bonds, in the manner authorized by law, for the pay- ment of the said township’s share of the cost of any highway improvement under- taken under the provisions of this act. If within thirty days after the receipt of any petition for highway improvement in any township, under the provisions of this acs, a petition, signed by the cwners of a ma- jority of the assessed valuation of real estate in said township, is received by the county commissioners of the county in which said township is located, protesting against said proposed expenditure upon the part of the township, then the county com- missioners shall take no action on said peti- tion for improvement, but shall return the same to the supervisors Jr commissioners from whom it was received. Upon the receipt of a petition, signed by the owners of a majority of the assessed valuation of real estate in any townehip, requesting the — application by said township for the im- provement of any highway in said town- ship for the improvement of any highway in said township according to the provi- sions of this act, is shall be the duty of the supervisors or commissioners of said town- ship to petition the county commissioners in the manner hereinbefore described. Section 12. In case the county commis- sioners of any county shall neglect or refuse to act upon the petition of any township or townships for highway improvement, as herein provided, or shall refuse to petition the State Highway Department for State aid in such proposed improvement,after said town ship or townships shall bave complied with the conditions of this act in petitioning said county commissioners, the supervisors or commissioners of said township or town- ships may, through their proper officers pe- tition the court of quarter sessions of said county for the appointment of a jury to ex- amine into the necessity of said proposed highway improvement; and upon the said jury of view making a report favorable to said improvement, and with the approval of the court, it shall be the duty of, and thecourt may by order require, the said county commissioners to petition the said State Highway Department for the co-oper- ation of the State in the said proposed high way improvement, in the manner herein provided. Said jury of view to be appoint- ed and compensated in the same manner, and to have the same powers, as juries of view for laying out or changing public roads have by existing law. Section 13. The supervisors or commis- sioners of any adjacent townships, in the same county, in which any portion of a principal highway running into or through said townships may lie, may by resolution jointly petition the county commissioners of their county to make application to the State Highway Department for the co-oper- ation of the State in repairing or rebuilding said highway, as herein provided. Section 14. Advertisements for propos- als for the reconstruction or improvement of highways under the provisions of this act shall be given by the county commissioners at least thirty days before the contracts may be awarded, by public notice in at least two newspapers of general circulation in the county in which the highway to be improved is located ; such advertisements to designate where the plans and specifications may be had, and the time and place of the reception of bids and the letting of the con- tract. Section 15. Ten per centum of the amount available for highway purposes, under the provisions of this act, shall be set aside for the purpose of maintenance of highways, as hereinafter provided, and shall be apportioned by the State Highway Commissioner among the townships or coun ties applying for the same, in proportion to the mileage of improved highways made under the provisions of this act, or which bave already been made or may hereafter be made, at the expense of such townships or counties, and which are of the standard prescribed by the State Highway Depart- went for improved highways. Section 16. Whenever the supervisors or commissioners or any township or coun- ty shall desire State aid for the purpose of maintenance of improved highways, wheth- er State highways improved under tbe pro- visions of this act or otherwise, it shall be the duty of said supervisors or commission- ers to file with the State Highway Depart- ment, on or before the first day of April in each year a sworn petition requesting State aid, and setting forth the number of miles of highways improved according to the standards of the State Highway Department in said township, and the cost of .the same to said township, together with the condi- tion of said improved highways and the an- nual cost of maintaining the same. The State Commissioner of Highways, if in his judgment the conditions warrant the co-op- eration of the State in maintaining said highways, shall proportion to said town- ships its apportion of the total amount available for the maintenance of improved highways, as hereinbefore provided and the said amount shall be paid to the supervis- ors or commissioners of said townships by warrant of the said State Highway Depart- ment; but in no case shall the amount thus given by the State for maintenance be more than one-half of the amount which, in the judgment and experience of the State Highway Commissioner, the annual cost of maintaining improved highways of the standard of construction prevailing in such township shall be, nor more than one-half the sworn, average cost of maintenance, as ‘set forth in the petition of the supervisors or commissioners of the said townships. Section 17. All highways, or portions of highways constructed or improved un- der the provisions of this act, shall there- after be known as ‘State Highways,” but, so far as the same may be within the limits of any township, shall be kept in repair, so that they may be maintained at the stand- ard of condition prescribed for highways of their class by the State Highway Depart- ment at the expense of said township; but the supervisors or commissioners of any township possessing improved highways may ask for and receive State aid for the maintenance of the same as hereinbefore provided. It shall be the duty of the su- pervisors or commissioners of every town- ship in which said State Highways may lie, to maintain the same generally at a reason- able standard, prescribed for such roads by the State Highway Department. Section 18. The word ‘“highway’’ as used in this act, shall be construed to in- clude any existing causeway or bridge, or any drain or water-course which may form a part of a road, and which might properly be built, according to existing laws, by the township or townships; but shall not in- clude causeways or bridges which should properly be built by a county or counties, or by the State. Section 19. Where a portion of an im- portant main highway, traversing one or more townships, and for the improvement of which according to the provisions of this act application has been made by said township or townships, shall lie within the limits of any borough or boroughs, and where the failare of said borongh or bor- oughs to improve the said highway would leave a break or unimproved section in a continuous improved highway, it shall be lawful for the county commissioners of the county in which said highway is located, to enter into an agreement with said borough or boroughs to bear a portion of the ex- pense of said improvement of the highway within the borough limits, in thesame man ner as is herein provided for co-operation between the counties and townships; and the State Highway Department, may, if the State Commissioner so recommends, bear a portion of the expense of said im- provement of said highway within said bor- ough limits, but in no case shall the por- tion of said expense to be borne hy the State exceed one-half of the total expense of said improvement, and boroughs shall only receive aid from the State as aforesaid in cases where failure to receive such aid would prevent a continuous improvement of an important main highway, provision for the rebuilding of which has been made in the township or township adjoining #aid borough or boroughs. All improvements made in borough highways, as herein pro- vided, shal! be of a character similar to that specified for the township or townships through which the highway to be improved passes in reaching said borough and bor- oughs and the plan and specifications for the work shall be approved by the State High- way Department; and the completed work shall be approved by said department before any warrant shall be issued for the State’s share in such improvement, as herein pro- vided. It shall be the duty of the proper officers of said borough or boroughs, charg- ed with the maintenance of the streets and highways of said borough or boroughs to keep and maintain said improved highway, within the borough limits, in a condition to conform to the standard established by the State Highway Department for the maintenance of similar highways. Section 20. The Commonwealth of Pen- nsylvania shall not be liable to any person or corporation for damages arising from the rebuilding or improvement of any high- way under this act, nor shall the State en- gage to keep such highway in repair after the same shall have been rebuilt or im- proved, except to extend the aid in main- tenance herein provided. In case any per- Son or persons, or corporations, shall sus- tain damage by any change in grade, or by the taking of land to alter the location of any highway which may be improved under this act, and the county commis- sioner and the parties so injured cannot agree on the amount of damages sustained, such persons or corporations may present their petition to the court of quarter ses- sions for the appointment of viewers to as- certain and assess such damage ; the pro- ceedings upon which said petition and by the viewers shall be governed by the laws relating to the assessment of damages for opening public highways, and such dam- ages, when ascertained, shall be paid by the respective counties, and afterwards apportioned by the Commissioner of High- ways, according to the provisions of section seven, Section 21. In addition to his other duties, the State Highway Commissioner shall cause to be made and kept for the State Highway Department a general high- way plan of the State, and compile statis- tics and collect information relative to the mileage, character and condition of the highways in the townships and counties of the State. He shall investigate and deter- mine upon the various methods of road con- struction best adapted to the various sec- tions of the State; and establish standards for the construction and maintenance of highways in the various sections, taking into consideration the topography of the country, the natural conditions and the character and availability of road-building material, and the ability of the townships and counties to build and maintain roads under the provisions of this act. He may, bt all reasonable times, be consulted Ly county, city, borough or township officers having authority over highways and bridges, and shall, when requested, advise and give information to such officers rela- tive to the construction, repairing, altera- tion and maintenance of the said highways and bridges. He shall at all times lend his aid in promoting improvement through- out the State, and shall prepare and dis- seminate useful information relative to road building and improvement. Section 22. County commissioners or county engineers of the several counties of this State, and the officers of all cities, boroughs and townships in the State, who now have, or may hereafter have by law, authority over the public highways and bridges, shall, upon the written request of the State Highway Department, furnish said Department with any information relative to the mileage, cost of building, and maintenance, condition and character of the highways under their jurisdiction, and with any other needful information relating to the said highways. Section 23. All highways improved un- der the provisions of this act shall require the construction of a macadamized road, or a telford or other stone road, or a road constructed of gravel, cinder, oyster-shells, or other good materials, in such manner that the same, of whatever material con- structed, will, with reasonable repair thereto, at all seasons of the yeai be firm, smooth and convenient for travel. The county commissioners shall have the au- thority to select the kind of materials to be used in improving any road under the pro- visions of this act. Any difference of opin- ion that many arise between the county commissioners and the township road au- thorities as to the kind of a road to be built, shall be decided by the State High- way Commissioner. The State Highway Commissioner shall furnish to the county commissioners and township road author- ities information as to the probable cost of improved highways, as defined in this sec- tion. Section 24. The sum of six millions five hundred thousand dollars is hereby appropriated to carry out the provisions of this act during the next six years. Of this sum, an amount not toexceed five hun- dred thousand dollars shall be available in the first year after the passage of this act, not more than five hundred thousand dol- lars shall be available in the second year, one million two hundred and fifty thou- sand ‘dollars in each of the two next follow- ing years, and one million five hundred thousand dollars in each of the two years next following. Section. 25 All acts or parts of acts inconsistent herewith are hereby repealed : Provided, Thai the provisions of this act shall not be construed to repeal any of the provisions of the road acts approved June twenty-sixth, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-five (Pamphlet laws, three hundred and thirty-six), and June twenty- three, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-seven (Pamphlet laws, one hundred and ninety four), and July ten, one thous- and nine hundred one {Pamphlet laws, six hundred and thirty-six). : Approved—The 15th day of April, A. D. 1903. SAML. W. PENNYPACKER. The foregoing is a true and correct copy of the act of the General Assembly No. 141. FRANK M. FULLER. Secretary of the Commmonwealth. A Quaint Epitaph, The following epitaph is from a mona- ment in a cemetery in Newark, N. J. Here lies the body of John Black Aged 46. That cherry tree of luscious fruit, Beguiled him up too high; The branch did break and down he fell And broke his neck and died. Also three infant children. ——President Loree announced that the Balsimore and Obio railroad bad authoriz- ed the ordering of 100 or 150 new locomo- tives, to. accommodate the transportation demands.