, Pa., October 31, 1913. MAY REPEAL SPROUL LAW If Bonds Are Not Voted the Townships May Again Be Compelled to Main- tain Roads, Or a Direct Tax Will Be Necessary. If the State is not authorized by the citizens at the coming election to incur the proposed debt of $50,000,000 to improve the main highways of the Commonwealth it is very possible that the next Legislature will repeal the Sproul bill and throw back on the townships the 9,000 miles of road embraced in the present system. The Sproul law places on the Highway Commissioner all of the duties and responsibilities so far as State High- ways are concerned as existing laws placed on township supervisors. Un- der this section of the act the High- way Commissioner has been indicted in two counties owing to the danger- ous condition of the State roads, which he is powerless to remedy, not having the necessary funds. If the people vote down the loan amendment the repeal is more than likely, as the State cannot and should not suffer its officials to be indicted in the local courts for failure to perform a duty when such failure is caused solely by a deficiency in funds necessary to perform that duty. If the Sproul law is repealed its repeal will throw on the townsh’ 8 the maintenance of more than 9,000 miles of the main roads—the roads which are the most costly to main- tain by reason of their carrying 86 per cent of the traffic of the State. The design of the Sproul law which places the responsibility for the re- construction and maintenance of these 9,000 miles of main highways on the State was to secure to every section of the Commonwealth easy access to its markets, and as President Wilson said, “to bind communities together and to facilitate intercourse so that it will flow with absolute freedom and facility.” The President also said, “The development of a great system of roads is a task of statesmanship,” and Pennsylvania's great statesman, Senator W. C. Sproul of Delaware county, has been foremost in meeting that great need. This law has reliev- ed the townships of the State of the care of more than 9,000 miles of high- ways. When it is considered that on these roads over eighty per cent of traffic is of non-residents of the town- ships, who have heretofore paid no share of the cost of construction or maintenance to the township which has been responsible for the upkeep of the road, it is apparent that under the old plan an unfair burden was placed on the taxpayers of all such townships, By means of the loan the State can reconstruct these roads without a burden being placed on any- one. The motor vehicle fee will meet the entire bill and our people will be better off financially, morally and mentally. PRESENT ADMINISTRATION WILL NOT HAVE THE SPENDING OF ONE DOLLAR OF ROAD LOAN In his address at the Good Roads Convention in Harrrisburg, Governor Tener said: “Should the amendment .pass it will be incumbent upon the Legislature of 1915 to consider an enabling act making provision for the tenure, the rate of interest and other ‘terms of bonds, as well @#s providing for their sale, from time to time, in amounts limited to the necessities of the Department as work progresses.” As the people next year must elect all the Assemblymen and one-half the Senators who will sit in 1915 and will at the same time elect the Governor who, in turn, must appoint the High- way Commissioner-—the argument of those persons who are opposing the loan because they are opposed to the present administration {is without weight and not worthy of considera- tion. The road loan is not a question of men, but of principle. Pennsylva- nia had a State Treasurer at one time who was accused of dishonesty, but we did not shut up the treasury and put the State out of business on that account. Railroads have had incom- petent and dishonest officials in the past, but that did not deter the stockholders of the Pennsylvania Rail- road Company from voting for a loan of $150,000,000 (three times the amount sought for road purposes) to enable that corporation to carry its lines into New York city—besides the many hundreds of millions previously voted for extensions and betterments. The argument that there is no necessity for issuing bonds for Road Billding and saddling on the State the payment of interest when the Legislature can each two years ap- propriate the necessary money out of current revenues, is a good one in theory only, for no Legislature has as yet appropriated sufficient funds for this purpose. The income of our State is now greater than ever before but the 1913 appropriation bill set aside only $1,000,000.00 for reconstruction and $1,400,000.00 for the maintenance for two years of our 9,000 miles of State Highways. What progress can be expected under such conditions? ET ——— —“Your hardwood floors are always 80 exquisitely polished,” said Mrs. Jones. “How do it?” you manage “Oh, I just chamois rompers ie ak hamdia Tompe oe house, yesponded: M78, Browse s. RESPONSIBILITY NOT ENDED Good Roads Organization Will Con tinue Its Efforts in Behalf of the People to Secure Proper Ex- penditure of Money Raised. Philadelphia, Oct. 20.—If anyone for a moment supposes that the Pennsylvania Motor Federation which, through its Chairman of Good Roads, has aggressiveiy fought for better highways in this State for the past seven years, will take no interest in the proper expenditure of | the money after the approval of the | $50,000,000 loan for good roads they are greatly mistakea. “Our responsibility to the citizens of the Commonwealth will be a very grave one,” said State Good Roads ES BT A. Very Handy. arts. Herdso-—-But he must be quite handy with his tools now? Closefist— | Yes. and the first job he did was to A Chance. Husband—My colleague is the most , Insatiable man I ever saw. He wants everything he sees. Wife—Can't you introduce our daughter to him?—Lob- don Mail. Real Thing In Settlement. “What did the old man settle on the young couple when his daughter mar ried?” ; “Himself.” —Baltimore American. Search others for their virtues and thyself for thy vices.—T. Fuller. Chairman J. H. Weeks to our cor respondent. seven years ago; through our efforts many pernicious road bills have been killed in the various sessions of the legislature and we have had a hand in the framing and passing of every truly good roads bill in that time. The Stuart boulevard bill, which pro- vided a road with 60 foot width of “We inaugurated the | good roads movement in this State There are some forms of animal life which are nothing but a stomach. All | other parts and organs are dwarfed or . rudimentary; the stomach is the center of being. ach plays a vastly more important part in the life of the highest type of animal life, man, than is generally recognized. Starve him and he weakens in brain and improved surface between Philadel phia and Pittsburgh, and which we | alone showed the people of the State would cost $28,000,000, was so man- gled through our efforts, and reduced Medical. to a 20 foot wide road, Stuart's name stricken out of the act and the pres- | sure so strong in every section of the State due to our campaign against it that it never became a law. “With the passage of the loan amendment our responsibility com- State and will have in all of them within a few days. These commit- tees are largely composed of farmers who are not motorists, but who have | joined hands with us in this great movement for the betterment of every citizen in the Commonwealth, We | propose in the event of the success of the loan, to form all of these county committees into one big per- | manent State committee. Each coun- | ty branch will have imposed upon it the duty of watching all work done in their county either by contract | or by the State Department. It will be their business to see that the State | receives 100 cents in value for every dollar it pays out. brick or concrete road is necessary to carry the traffic, that no short-lived | flimsy road is constructed. Where the | traflic needs only a macadam that no | telford or more expensive type be built. That any advertisement calling for a construction unsuited to the needs of their section be promptly withdrawn and the Department made aware of the requirements of the par- ticular locality by the people who live right on the ground. In other words we will have a great big vigilance committee in the State with a power ful representation in every county and with influence sufficient to enable them to enforce their demands and and we will see to it that every sec- tion of the State receives its proper share of construction and mainten- ance at one time as required by the Sproul bill. With such an organiza- tion of farmers, merchants, manu- facturers, men of all political creeds, in every walk of life, we will be in a position to enforce our demands from any party that might be in power and they would not dare to oppose such a representative organization working solely for the public good. If anyone fears graft in the expenditure of the money, they do not know the charac- ter of the men who propose to watch the expenditure of every dollar of it and are ignorant of the completeness of their organization.” MORE MONEY FOR DIRT ROADS With the Passage of Bonds the State Can Be More Liberal to Aid the Townships. When the State is relieved of the expenditures now made for the Sproul roads it will be in a po- sition to extend more liberal ald to the townships in the maintenance of the local roads. The Jones law now in force provides that the State shall pay to townships an amount equal to 50 per cent of their levy for road taxes up to $25 per mile, but the appropriation by the last Legislature as cut down by the Governor equals but $1.76 per mile and makes of this law a farce. With the loan in force the Good Reads ad- vocates of the State will at once turn their attention to securing from each Legislature the full 50 per cent or $25 per mile for townships. This will not only have the effect of at once reduc- ing road taxes in every township in the State, but it will insure to each township good local roads leading to the main State roads and in fact everywhere throughout the township. Real estate pays no State tax, so no cost of the loan and no part of the cost of these appropriations to town- ships will fall on the real estate owner; but they will actually reduce his road taxes, increase the value of his land, make it easier to secure and keep cempetent help and make life easier and happier for his wife, his children and himself. PATCHWORK ROADS If we depend on each Legislature to appropriate from one-twentioth to one-fortieth the amount necessary to take care of the 2 That where a | Judge for Yourself OR PROFIT BY A BELLEFONTE CITIZEN'S EXPERIENCE. Something new is an experiment. Must be proved to be as represented. The statement of a manufacturer is not convincing proof of merit. But the endorsement of friends is. Now supposing you had a bad back, A lame, weak, or aching one, Would experiment on it? You will read of many so-called cures, Endorsed by strangers from faraway places. t It's different when the endorsement ! comes from home. Easy to prove local testimony. { Read this Bellefonte case. Jame H. Rine, 239 W. High St., Belle: fonte, Pa., says: Doan's Kidney Pills are certainly a wonderful kidney remedy. Ten years ago I first used them and at that time I told in a public statement of the benefit they brought. That statement still holds good. 1 have often urged my friends to try Doan's Pills and in every instance where my advice has been followed, relief has been had from kid- ney trouble. never I hear an complaining of kidney disorders, I advise a trial of Boan's Kidney Pills, knowing that they will have a good effect. The above statement must carry _con- viction to the mind of every reader. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy—ask distinctly for Doan’s Kidney Pills, the same that Mr. Rine had—the remedy by home testimony. 50c_all stores. Fos- ter-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. 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