“THE PEOPLE ARETHE STATE" When a woman grows nervous and money 18 spent every summer by those | : who go from this state to the moun | ITitable, she says and does things which tains of New England or to the Adi- | cause her untold suffering. She says rondacks, or Catskills, or elsewhere. something unkind to her husband, boxes Those states have built roads looking | her child's ears, and then shuts herself {| boycotts and picketings and compul- | sory arbitrations. I'm going to clean you up,’ and I sozzled him under like a wet shirt. to the limit of endurance. The suffer- ing woman is not to blame for lack of self control. The cure of nervous dis- orders which result from disease of the womanly organs, is one of the special features of Dr Pierce's Favorite Pre- = on Good Roads Will Bellefonte, Pa., September 26, 1913 | Repopulate Abcn- “ “This is Chinamen's work, “Oily,” doned Farms, and Bring Prosperity “I drag him out again and coutinues: | | | - u pa— J particularly to the comfort and con- in her room to weep and wonder why scription. It heals inflammation and " Es — | but I lost my pride in the Bidet, | to All Pennsylvania. venience . encouragement of this she is so “ugly.” To an experienced ulceration, cures female weakness and Bitter Root’’ Billings, Arbi- thanks to you. It's tough on St. Louis class of people, and have profited A DhVsician the reason isnot far to seek. the backache, headache, and nervousness . to laundry you upstream this way, but tently ‘iereb . i | There is local derangement of the won- caused by these diseases are cured at the ter. maybe the worst of your heresies ‘ll “The people are the State.” What | & y thereby. { anly organs and the nerves are strained same time. [Continued from page 6, Col. 4.1 | dream. [I cculdn’t see her move none, though, and old mau Badrich blowed | again, expurgating himself of as nob- | by a line of cuss words as you'll mas- ter outside the cattle belt. “‘Soak em,’ I yells. ‘Give ‘em all the | arbitration you've got handy. If she | don’t open, we'll jump her," and I lets | out another notch. so that we went | plowing and boiling toward the draw, “It looked like we'd have to hurdle it sure enough, but the police beat the crowd back just in time. She wasn't clear open, though, and our | barge caromed off the spiles. It was | like a nigger butting a persimmon tree —we rattled off a shower of missiles ike an abornmal hailstorm. Talk about your coast defense; they henved everything at us from bad nomes to | railroad iron, and we lost all our win- | dow glass the first clatter, while the | smokestack looked like a pretzel with | cramps. “When we scraped through I looked back with pity at the Detroit's crew, She hadn't’ any wheelhouse, and the helmsman was due to get all the at- tention that was coming te him. They'd built up a barricade of potato sacks, chicken coops and bric-a-brae around the wheel that protected ‘em somewhat, but even while I watched some Polack filtered a brick through and laid out the quartermaster cold, and he was drug off. Oh, it was re- fined and aesthetic! “Well, we run the gantlet, present- ed every block with stuff ranging in tensile strength from insults tp asphalt pavements and noise. Say, all the racket in the world was a whisper. I caught a glimpse of the old man leaning out of the pilothouse where a window had been, his white hair bristly and his nostrils h'isted, embel- lishing the air with surprising flights of gleeful profanity. “ ‘Hooray, this is living! he yells, spying me shoveling the deck out from under the junk. ‘Best scrap [I've had in years.’ And just then some base- ball player throwed in from center field, catching him in the neck with a tomato. Gee, that man's an honor to the faculty of speech! “1 was doing bully till a cobblestone bounced into the engine room, making a billlard with my off knee. Then 1 got kind of peevish, “Rush street bridge is the last one, and they'd massed there on both sides, like fleas on a razorback. Thinks I, ‘If we make it through here, we've busted the strike,” and I glances back at the Detroit just in time to see her crew pulling their captain into the deck house limp and bleeding. The barricade was all knocked to pieces, and they'd flunked absolute. Don't blame ‘em much either, as It was sure death to stand out in the open under ‘the rain of stuff that come from the bridges. Of course with no steering she commenced to swing off. 1 yells: “ ‘Grab that wheel! Grab it quick! We'll hit the bridge!” But it was like deef and dumb talk in 2 boiler shop, while a wilder how! went up from the water front as they seen what they'd done and smelled victory. * ‘We've got one chance,’ thinks I, ‘but if she strikes we're gone. They'll swamp us sure, and all the police in Cook county won't save enough for to hold services on. Then I throwed a look at the opening ahead and the pes- simisms froze in me, “1 forgot all about the resiliency of i i | i { be purified when they get that far.’ You know the Chicago river runs up- hill out of Lake Michigan through the drainage canal and into the St. Louls waterworks. Sure it does. Most unnatural stream [ ever see about di- rection and smells, “I was getting a good deal of enjoy- ment and infections out of him when old man Badrich ran back enameled “4Qily’ Heegan did a high dive.” with blood and passe tomato juice, the ! red in his white hair making his top look like one of these fancy ice cream drinks you get at a soda fountain. *“ ‘Here, here! You'll kill bim,’ says ever affects one is the concern of all, | in that larger equation that considers | al prosperity. !ed to any line of industry is an ad- | the general welfare. The prosperity of any special class adds to the gener- An advantage extend- , vantage, not only to the community where that industry is located, but to that assemblage of communities which constitute a commonwealth. To repopulate the seven thousand abandoned farms in Pennsylvania will ' add to the material interests, not only . of the counties and townships in which | those farms are located, but of the ' State as a whole. . by that number between The return or re placement of the 100,000 people to the 22 counties whose population shrunk 1890 and 1900, and of the 32,000 people to 19 counties the population of which de- creased to that extent between 1900 | and 1910, will not only mean a larger local production and consequent in- creased local business activity. but will also be indicated in the greater figures of the general welfare of the | | state. Properly cultivated, and with proper facilities for marketing, there is no he, so 1 hauled him aboard, dripping ! and clingy, and thorough--by the neek. a fine mop. “These clippings,” continued *‘Bitter Root,” fishing into his pocket, “tell in beautiful figgers how the last seen of ‘Oily’ Heegan he was holystoning He made wringing him out good | the deck of a sooty little tugboat un- | der the admonishments and feet of ‘Bitter Root’ Billings of Montana, and they state how the strikers tried to get tugs for pursuit and couldn't and how all day long from the housetops was visible a tugboat madly cruising about inside the outer cribs, busting the si- lence with joyful blasts of victory, and they'll further state that about dark she steamed up the river, tired and draggled, with a bony looking cowboy inhaling cigarettes on the stern bits, holding a three foot knotted rope in his lap. When a delegation of strikers met her, inquiring about one D. O'Hara Heegan, it says like this.” And Billings read laboriously as fol- lows: “Then the bronzed and lanky man arose with a smile of rare content. ment, threw overboard the cigarette and, approaching the boiler room hatch, called loudly, ‘Come out of that!” and the president of the Fed. eration of Fresh Water Firemen drag- ged himself wearily out into the flick- ering lights. He was black and drench- ed and streaked with sweat; also he shone with the grease and oils of the engines, while the palms of his hands brickbats and the table manners of | wo. ,vered wilh painful blisters Tots, for there, on top of a bunch of from unwonted intimate contact with gpiles, ea’'m. masterful and bloated with perjuries, was ‘Oily’ Heegan, die- tating the disposition of his forces, the light of victory in his shifty little eyes. “Ten dollars and costs!" | shrieks, seeing red. ‘Lemme crawl up them spiles to you.’ “Then Inspiration seized me, My soul riz up and grappled with the crisis, for right under my mit, coiled, suggestive and pleading, was one of the tug's heaving lines, 'hout a three- eighths size. [1 slips a running knot 1 the end and divides the coils, crouch- ing behind the deck house till we come abeam of him; then I straight- ened, glve it a swinging heave, and the noose sailed up and settled over him fine and daisy. “1 jerked back, and ‘Oily’ Heegan did a high dive from Rush street that was a geometrical joy. He hit kind of amateurish, doing what we used to call a ‘belly buster back home, but quite satisfying for a maiden effort, and I reeled hum in astern. “Your Chicago man ain't a gamy fish. He come un tame and squirting sewage like a dissolute porpoise, while 1 played him out where he'd get the thrash of the propeller. “‘Help! he yells. ‘I'm a drownd- | ing.’ | “*‘Ten dollars and costs,’ says I, letting him under again, ‘Do you know who you're drinking with this time, hey? “I reckon the astonishment of the mob was equal to Heegan's. Anyhow, I'm told that we was favored with such quietness that my voice sounded four blocks, simply aching with satis- factions. Then pandemonium tore loose, but I was so engrossed in sweet converse I never noticed it or noticed| that the Detroit had slid through the draw by a hair and we was bound for the blue and smiling lake. “‘For God's sake lemme up,’ says Heegan, splashing along and looking strangely. [ hauls him in where he , is an extraordinary spectacle. : house but is twisted out of plumb. The | shovels and drawhars. It was soon that he winced fearfully as the cow- boy twirled the rope end. *‘He's got the makings of a fair fireman,’ said the stranger. ‘All he wants is practice.’ “Then as the delegation murmured angrily he held up bis hand and in the ensuing silence said: * ‘Boys, the sirike's over. gan hag arhitrated.'"” Mr, Hee- == Trinidad’s Asphalt Lake. In “The Path of the Conquistadores” Lindon Bates, Jr, tells of the famous asphalt lake of Trinidad. He says: “The straggling village at its edge Not a land is the source of never ending liti- gation, beczuse the slowly shifting cur- rents of the pitch bottom in a few years move yards and gardens on to other men's property, distort bound- | aries into every possible shape, carry landmarks a hundred yards away. “The abomination of desolation is this lake. In spots a palm killed by the asphalt droops disconsoiately. A few tufts of grass have secured a footing in places. But for the rest it is a solid mass of black. dull, evil | smelling pitch, with pocls of water | here and there, in which swim little { parboiled fishes. Against any of the | hot spots in the ‘world, bar none, this can be backed. “A wicked looking blacksnake, six : wouldn't miss any of my ironies. “4 just can't do it, “Oily.” It's wash day. You're plumb nasty with more productive state in the Union than Pennsylvania. With its large cities, its mines, and its extensive | industrial and manufacturing interests the demand for food products from the farms is insistent and constantly grow- ing. All that is needed to bring the producer and consumer together to the great profit of both, is a ready means for the transportation of the products. That means can only be provided by improved highways over which it will not cost so large a per- centage of the value of the produce as is now the case to transport it from | the place of its growth to the place of consumption, The area of farming land in Penn- | sylvania which can profitably be de- voted to market gardening may be trebled or quadrupled when the roads are improved with a hard surface and with easy grades; and market garden- ing is away and by far the most profit able use to which farm land can be put; and land that is available for such use is invariably saleable at a much higher price than that which, by reason of the inaccessibility of mar kets, must be devoted to other pur poses, A close study of conditions in Penn- sylvania, and of results achieved in other states, indicates that the In- crease in value of property caused by the improvement of a road will amount to twenty-five dollars an acre for a distance of a half mile each side of the road so improved. There are ten thousands miles in the State Road system, and by the time that is com- pleted there will be ten thousand miles of State Ald county roads also built, making a total, not counting state aid township roads, of twenty thousand miles of well graded, drain- ed, hard surfaced roads. A strip of land half a mile wide along each side of these roads would make a total of twelve million, eight hundred thousand acres; and the in- crease in selling value, at $25 per acre, will amount to the enormous sum of three hundred and twenty millions of dollars. And the land will well be worth the increase, by reason of the greater opportunities for profitable production and cheaper marketing. Lands further from the main high- ways will also greatly increase in value, according to the distance and the improvement of the township roads. The scenery in he mountains and hilly regions of Pennsylvania is unsur- passed. Wherever it has been adver- tised or exploited, as has been done by some railway companies, it has attract. ed attention throughout the civilized world, wherever raiiway advertise- ments reach, and that is nearly every- where. Put for every single scene that has ever been photographed and exploited there are thousands equally fine which have never seen the lens of a camera, and are unknown to fame. There are trout streams, and water- falls, and forests, and rocky ledges, and canvong, and all the other wild and picturesque elements which are restful to tired denizens of cities, who ! seek solace in summer in sylvan shades. Increasingly, year by year, the peo- ple of the cities who can afford to do so get out for a season into the hills and mountains of recreation and rest. Ther buy land, in large or small tracts as their means and inclinations sug- suggest; they build summer homes; some large and pretentious; some quiet and modest; some bungalows, and some of the shack or log cabin or- der. And some carry tents, and make camps In which to recuperate for the arduous duties they must soon resume, Other thousands go where they can find summer hotels, and boarding houses which are within their means. There can be no finer locations for With improved roads reaching inw and through these sections of Penn- does reach, only waiting improvement, not only will thousands of Pennsyl- vanians take advantage of the oppor- tunities presented, but other thou- sands, from other large cities in sur- rounding states, will also be attracted and the people and state will profit enormously. These and many other planes of de- vedopment are open to the people of the Stale of Pennsylvania by the build. ing of good roads throughout the state, And the people will vote for or against the measure which will accomplish | these results at the November elec tion. NO TIME TO KNOCK. This is not the time for the friends | or enemies of any administration to at- | tempt to ‘‘get even” for any real or | fancied grievance by standing in the | path of progress. Under different ad- ministrations the work of road build- ' ing must go on, as provided by law. There will be other administrations, | and if one does not suit the people it can be changed two years afterward. | But the work of building the roads should not be interrupted. Every interest in the State, agricultural, com- | mercial, social, educational, demands that highway construction continue until the State and State Aid road sys- tems are finished. Unless the amendment to the con- stitution authorizing the bond issue be carried at the coming election road construction in the State will progress very slowly. Work on the State Road System had to stop on August 1 of this year because of the inadequacy of the appropriations. To relieve the situation, and make such condi tions impossible in the future, all par- ties and interests should work to- gether for the amendment. Only by carrying the bond proposi- tion at the coming election can the work of completing the State and State Ald road systems go forward. And the building of these roads means much to every resident of the State. It means for the farmer an improved road from his farm, or near it, to his county seat or other market-point; it means additional facilities for village and city merchants in the distribution of goods; it means for every class in- creased advantages, increased pros- perity and comfort. SHALL OUR PROGRESS CONTINUE Road Improvement in Pennsylvania Is the Next Step Forward. It is within the memory of Penn- sylvanians not yet too old for active and progressive work, when there were no typewriting machines; no tel ephones; no electric lights; and when letter postage was three cents for a half ounce. They have seen the revo- lution in commercial and social affairs brought about by the installation of these facilities. Now we have the Rural Free Delivery and the automo- bile truck, with the a&uto-bus lines making their appearance to the end | that mankind may be happier, more prosperous, and better. It is all in the line of human development; the growth of ideas, of ideals, and of mor- als. The roads of Pennsylvania must keep pace with the general develop ment. The longer their improvement is delayed the more remote becomes the prosperity which is due the state and the people. sylvania, as the State Road system | Rian Getting a should lead you to models. the most economical. Clothing. New Suit? Considerations of both economy and style inspection of our Fall _ They are distinctive enough for the most critical man—inexpensive enough for They’ll meet your re- quirements in both ways. Store closed Thursday, October 2nd Jewish Holiday. FAUBLE’S The Up-to-Date Store. _— The fe AB AB DM AM MB MA A vote for good roads at the coming election is a vote for progress, for prosperity, for the well being or tue | state as a whole, and of every individ. | ual within it. Let no one be sidetracked by any | side issue. If good roads are defeat. ed this year it will take practically five years to get the proposition again | before the people. There is no other issue. He who is in favor of Good Roads will vote for goed roads. The improvement of the roads of Pennsylvania depends on the votes of the people of the State in November. It is inconceivable that persons of in- telligence should fail to be in favor of the proposition. Carrying the constitutional amend- ment does not create a debt. It only gives the right to create one to get | i | ‘ funds to build roads with, if the Leg: | islature of 1915 and subsequent legis- latures think best to do so. Through our system of electing a new legisla- ture every two years the people have continued control of the debt proposi- tion. i The building of the roads compris- : ing the Sproul State Road System is | essential to the welfare of the State as a whole, and to the people of every section of the State. ! A Little Too Large. | Massillon, O.—D. R. Akey built a chicken cocp in spare hours in his fish market, He worked with hammer and | saw until late at night, and was in- flated with pride, when he exhibited ver the plece of architecture to his friends. They thought it | i Pennsylvania State College. AN. MM. NM Me AA AM Ml. A i The : Pennsylvania : State : College EDWIN ERLE SPARKS, Ph.D., L.L. D., PRESIDENT. Established and maintained wy | | { | erate. { 57-26 — Gasoline Engines. the joint action of the United States Government and the mmonwealth of Pennsylvania FIVE GREAT SCHOOLS-—Agricuiture, Engineering, Liberal Arts, Mining, and Natural Science, offering thirty-six courses of four years each—Also courses in Home Economics, Industrial Art and Physical Education—TUITION FREE to both sexes; incidental charges mod- First semester begins middle of September; second semester the first of February; Summer Session for Teachers about the third Monday of June of each year. For catalogue, bulletins, announcements, etc., address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Pennsylvania. TTY WYTTTOYT YY YT WY WY WY we wv { Jacobson Gasoline Engine For all Power Purposes. THE BELLEFONTE ENGINEERING COMPANY stands back of these machines and guarantees them to give satisfactory service, Cut shows stan- dard engine on skids. Can be furnished or Hand Trucks or Two-Horse Portable. DO NOT FORGET That these engines are Underwriters. Each e Engine ice cream freezers, ice crushers, etc. water service, power spraying, contractors bilge pumps, etc. WRITE OR CALL FOR BULLETIN AND PRICES. to National Board f Fire bone With pumps DISTRIBUTORS The Bellefonte Engineering Co., 58-26 BELLEFONTE, PA. FOUNDERS and MACHINISTS.