FREELRRD THOSE,I ESTABLISHED 18S8 PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY, j nv THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY. LMtcl OFFICE; MAI:; STREET A nova CENTRE. LOHO DISTANCE TI^UPNAA®. SB I JSC It IFT IOX KATE*, FR EEL AND.— rheTHinuNß is delivered by carriers to subscribers in Fro jlan.'l at the rate of 12V6 cents per month, payable every tw* months or $1 60 .% year, payable in advance- The TIVI IIUNE may ho ordered direct form tho carriers or from the office. Complaints of Irregular or tardy delivery eervice will re oeive prompt attention. BY MAIL —Tho Tut IIUNE is sent to out-of town subscribers for $1.60 a year, payable in advance; pro rata terms for shorter periods. The date when tho subscription expires is on the address label of each paper. Prompt re newals must ho made at tho expiration, othor wise the subscription will bo discontinued. Entered at tho Postolllco at Froelaud. Pa., 1 as Socond-Cla.s? Matter. Make all money order.-, checks, eto. ,pc.yabli to the Tribune Trm'.ing Company, Limited. THE BOGEY, IM like to know what's 'round to make The floors go "creak" at night, 80. suddenly, I'm wide awake And stare with all my might. I sort of 'spect It's looking ou 4 ' To get some little tad— A tad the size of me, about — Because that he's been bad! And first I hear It "in the hall. With " r< ky, creaky, crcak" — Ma'd come, you bet, if I should call; But I'm afraid to speak! And then It's in the room—and then It's coming at the bed! I pray; "Please help me. God!—amen/' And cover up my head. I think of all flip things T did I hadn't ought to do. And wonder if perhans I'm hid, Or if It sees right t hrough. And. Oh! I promor. hope to die, A hundred linn s, or more, I'll be a better boy than I Have ever been before. I dasn't even strike a match To see if It is there— For ff I move It's close to catch And how 1 wish for morning light! Bu- Someth ng about by night That isn't 'round by day! —Edwin L. Sabin. in Puck. mm te as* "What is worse than a giraffe with a sore throat?" "A centipede with chilblains."—Christian Register. "Sportleight is bound to be in style, isn't lie?" "Oh, yes. He'd rather be in style than out of debt!"—ruck. "Pa, what's the first requisite of a patriot?" "That he belongs to your party."—Chicago Record-Herald. What's in a name? It is to laugh! The thought inspires a burst of it, A wife is called the better half, Yet often gets the worst of it —Philadelphia Record. Charles—"Did the tailor take your measure?" Algy—"l think he did. He said I'd have to pay in advance."—Tit- Bits. "There's one good thing about an automobile." "What's that?" "li doesn't try to run up to every watering fountain it comes to."—Puck. Chide not the man who talks too much, I But let him have iiis way. His own endeavors will achieve What he deserves, some day —Washington Star. I "Charlie I Minna is awfully sweet, j don't you think?" "Yes. They say lie I was shot at twice in the Adirondack** ! because he looks so much like a deer." ! —Cleveland Plain Dealer. Willie Bookworm—"Matnma, I feel so queer." Mother—"You've been eat ing some of those rich, indigestible recipes in the cook book again, you naughty boy!"— Chicago News. "After all, you'll find the man who always tells the truth is the nicst suc cessful in business." "Huh! Ho isn't in it with the man who is beli ved in everything he says."—Philadelphia Press. Mamma—"What's the matter, Wil lie? Didn't you have a good time at the party?" Willie—"Naw!" "Why? Didn't you got enough to eat?" "Yes; but 1 didn't get 100 much."—Philadel phia Record. "My lime," said iln- i.i wl i i million aire, "is worth a hundred dollars a minute." "Well," answered the friend, casually, "lets's go out this afternoon and play ten or fifteen thousand dol lars' worth of golf."—Washington Star A new boy had come lo school fresh from the country, and the ready "Sir" and "Miss" of the city child were quite unknown to him. "What's your name?" queried the master "George Hamilton." "Add 'Sir' to that, boy." "Sir George Hamilton," came the uu expected reply.—Boston Courier Mrs. A. (before the full-length por trait of a girl)—"Oh, if 1 only knew the painter of this!" Artist (stepping for ward, joyfully)—" Permit me, madam to introduce myself as the painter" Mrs. A.—"What extraordinary good luck! Now you will tell me, won't you, the address of the dressmaker who made this girl's frock?" —Tit-Bits. Theodore—"it's all right, darling. I have met your father, and we took to one another at once lie even went so far as to borrow $lO of me. Surely he can't refuse me your ha ul after that." Edith—"Dory I'm afraid you have made a muss of it. Pa told nie about the $lO, and told me I'd better let you slide; that you were to) easy."— Boston Transcript. 'HEROES AND HEROES. We give unstinted praise to the mac Who is brave enough to die; But the man who struggles unflinchingly Against the currents or destiny And bears the storm of adversity, We pass unnoticed by. We've plaudits and tears for him who falls, Borne down in the shock of strife; But a word of cheer we neglect to say To him who plods on his dreary way And tights in silence from day to day The unseen battles of life. There's courage, I grant, required to face Grim death on the gory field. There's also courage required to meet Life's burden and sorrow; to brave defeat; To strive with evil and not retreat; To suffer and not to yield. IN LOVE WITH A WIG. I HAVE sometimes felt that I was constant by the merest chance, and as my marriage has CY* turned out happily lam grate ful for the interposition, though tak ing no credit to myself. I ought to say that I have never told this story to my wife and she would scarcely be likely to appreciate it If I did. but I mean to set the truth down here, though I shall not give the real names. I will cull myself George Grey, and my wife I will call Amy—nee Farrers. Well, I was engaged to Miss Ferrers, and I loved her passionately, the more passionately perhaps, because my position held out no prospect of making her Mrs. George Grey for years. She was the second daughter of R rector in the shires, and I had met her when I was in the neighborhood fish ing. An acquaintance took me to the house, and it was a very pleasant one. The rector was a charming man. his < daughters were worthy of him; as to Amy, she was the loveliest and sweet est girl I had ever seen in my life. 1 stayed down in Threegates, fish ing, for nearly a month, though I had origi nail* intended to limit my visit to a week, and I think Amy was sorry when at last I told her I had decided to go. * "I shall r.*ver forget this holiday of mine," I feaid; "but now I must bring it to an end and get back to the dust and grime of the Temple. Stewing in chambers, I shall often think of Three gates and the trout stream and—my friends." Unconsciously I adopted the tone of a Q. C. at least. I spoke as if I were returning to a legal treadmill, though If I received a couple of briefs a year I held myself extremely fortunate. We were in the rectory garden, and she was wearing a broad-brimmed hat of straw, and held a bunch of daffodils in her hands . Was it my fancy, or when she bent over them did she do it to hide the regret in her face? "I am glad you have found it so enjoyable," she murmured. "It's a pretty place, I think." She had never looked so beautiful. I was saying "good-by" to her, and I was twenty-five. The result might have been foreseen. I took her bands in mine, daffodils and all, and told lier that I loved her; that I had never loved before, and could never love again. I cried to her that I had not the right to ask any girl to be my wife, but my passion was stronger than my self-restraint. She was my world, my all. I adored her. Life without her was an agony too awful to contemplate. Would she, could she, reconcile herself to wait for a beggar who to-day could offer nothing but the wildest devotion that had ever been laid at a woman's feet? Words altogether unpremeditated broke from me in a torrent of fervor. My heart hounded furiously; my ex citement seemed even to communicate itself to tho rooks among the houghs overhead, who cawed so violently that they appeared to be drowning my speech. When I ceased her head drooped, and my darling was all smiles and tears at once. The daffodils lay scattered on the lawn, and I was engaged! Well, I postponed my departure for three days, and those days were de lightful. Her father—least mercenary of men—consented cordially. We were ■ both young enough to wait, lie said, and I was adopted as one of the fam- I lly without demur. The girls were warm in congratulations—no fellow ever had nicer sister-in-laws—and Amy was the divinest little fiancee that it was possible for a human im agination to conceive. Yes, those three days were ecstatic, and so were 1 tho weeks that followed, when I wrote and received a love letter per diem, and it was only as the weeks merged Into months and the mouths Into a year that I begun to ask myself how and when I expected to be able to marry. I was depressed by degrees. My prospects, as I have sahl, were of the vaguest. I was still doing nothing to speak of at the bar, and even when I ran down to sec Amy, and she did her best to cheer me up, the futility of her encouragement was not to ho blinded by a man possessed of toler ably clear sight. "We must be patient, George," she would say. "Everything will come right at the end. I am sure of It. and when the briefs are rolling In we shall lcok back at this time and laugh." I though it very possible that I should laugh under those conditions, hut there was a gulf between the present and the opulent future which her words did nothing to bridge. 6ome moment? are there in every life When the spirit longs for rest; Wbn the heart is filled with a bleak de spair When the weight of trouble, remorse and Seems really greater than we can bear. And death vere a welcome guest. •But Ave crush it down and we go our way To the duties that lie in wait. From day to day we renew the fight, To resist the wrong and to seek the right, To climb at Inst to the suncrowned height And to climb o'er time and fate. And thus—for my heart goes out to them— My meed of praise I would give To those who struggle life's path along, The host of toil, who are patient, strong, The unrewarded unnumbered throng, VVho are brave enough to live. At length I decided to do what many another fellow has decided to do sim ilarly circumstanced. I resolved to consign lay profession to the deuce and to seek new pastures in America. What I proposed should be my plan of campaign in America is not at this date clear to me, but I remember it seemed to me then a most desirable and practical step to take, and not even Micawber departing for Aus tralia felt more confident of "some thing turning up" on the foreign shores than I. Of course Amy wept and was deso late, but we had been engaged now for nearly three years, and firmly and with a business-like lucidity on which I prided myself—l remind myself most strongly of the Micawbers in retrospec tion—l showed her that it was the only course for us. I said that Eng land—l called it the "old country" al ready—was playing out. In the United •States, I observed, energy and youth had a chance of coming to the front. To cling to a pinking ship—the "sink ing ship" was t bo bar—was a coward ly and disastrou • thing, I declared, and finally I paint( . a picture of my ris ing to dizzy h lits in the United States and her coining across to ine in a twelve months' time to be my wife. The pictures of making her home in the United States did not seem to at tract her, so 1 altered that part, and in the amended version I returned after twelve months with my pile in my pocket and we settled In London. Besides Amy and her people, who regarded me as n perfect hero and gave me keepsakes to think of them by in the distant land, the only person to whom it was necessary to announce my Intention was a maiden, aunt of mine, who lived in Dorking. She told me frankly that I was a fool. As she looked at me with a certain admiration, however, I was inclined to think that in her heart of hearts she was not without a sentiment of approval for my action, and I was firm once more and reiterated the argu ments with which I had favored Amy. My relative gave inc an excellent lunch, and, after wishing her an affec tionate farewell—for she had always been very nice to me—l went back to town and commenced my prepara tions. My furniture, consisting of a desk, an armchair, and a few dilapidated ar ticles which I forget, 1 disposed of "at a saerifice." I ordered a couple of suits of clothes—clothes I had understood were dear In America—and I booked a passage by the Germania. Having put. my affairs in order, and having received to my surprise, a let ter from Dorking repeating that I was a fool, and inclosing a check for £;~0, I paid a last visit to Throegates, folded Amy hi my arms and sailed. I enjoyed the voyage immensely. We had fine weather, sociable people on beard, and I was exhilarated by a consciousness that 1 was doing a noble and resolute thing. I smoked my pipe with satisfaction and looked at the ocean in the moonlight and Amy's photograph with pleasurable sentimen tality. So much for the trip. I arrived in New York with the best part of £IOO in my purse, thanks to my aunt's liberality, and I went to a hotel and thence removed to a comfor table boarding house, in order to give myself time to look around. No immediate prospect of making a very large fortune presented itself, and my money dwindled rapidly. When I had been in New York a few months I was glad to forget my anx- | iety In reading. 1 mention this because it led to an important event. I learned that there was an admira ble public library near by—tbe public libraries of America are better than ours—and one day I strolled in there to see what of the newest fiction I could procure. It was a huge building, and in the upstairs room to which I was directed I found the attendants were all young women. The book I asked for was "out," but I was supplied with another. I read It and returned it the following after noon, when the hook 1 most desired was "out" again. This went on for a week—l always missed it-and I ex pressed my annoyance at last rather emphatically. As I was doing so my eyes fell on one of the girls behind the coYmter, who riveted my attention in the most extraordinary manner for an engaged man. This girl—l cannot find a proper adjective to describe her—well, she was peerless! Her hair was positively the most glorious color 1 hail ever seen on a woman, there was just a soupcon of red In It—only a soupcon, though— and it had a natural ripple hi it all over, from the whiteness of her brow down the nape of her divine neck. Un der this imagine blue eyes, and you have an idea of what she looked like. A veritable goddess! She had heard my exclamation and moved forward with a smile. "What is it you are asking for?" she asked. 1 told her. "Oh," she said, "you see it ta a new book, and, of course, there is a demand for it. I'll tell you what I will do— the next time it comes in I will save It for you." I thanked her cordially, and she proved as good as her word, for the following afternoon when I presented myself she nodded directly she saw me and held it up. "I am awfully obliged," I said. "That was really kind of you. Have you had it yourself?" "Yes." Somebody claimed her and I went 1 away. • It does not sound stable in a I fiance, but I must confess that I read | the work hurriedly in order to have j an opportunity of seeing my goddess I soon again. I changed my books every day now, ! always going to that part of the long J counter where she was standing and j always admirlDg her more fervidly ; than before. I feasted my eyes on the g'rl. If I saw her full face or in pro- I file, or if she had her back to mo, she j was still conspicuous, stately and en- ! tirely adorable. I thought about her when I was at my home. I could not ( banish her from my memory. How this might have ended, who ! shall say? Did Amy's dynasty totter | in the balance? I fear, sorely and ! tremendously, I fear that it did, but It was restored in a bewildering and even disparaging fashion. Who can conceive my astonishment when on entering the library one j morning I saw my divinity with her ' hair cut short—cropped like a hoy's! I was staggered, breathless. Mo- : mentarily I had failed to recognize her, i she was so painfully changed. Gone ! those intoxicating ripples. Gone even the richness of color! Gone the queen- ! liness of carriage! "Why," I gasped—l could not sup- j press the question—"my dear young j lady, why have you had your hair cut since yesterday?" "I haven't," she said. "It was cut six months ago when I was ill. What I have been wearing until it grew on again was a wig." No. I did not break down. I even • stammered a suitable commonplace, i but the shock was terrible. I never . returned to the library. And I married Amy—yes. I did not make a fortune in New York, but my aunt died very shortly afterward and it was found that she had bequeathed me the whole of her property—a very comfortable one. I married Amy, and we are very happy together. Only j sometimes I cannot help wondering j if that other girl had been all 1 I thought her, whether—but then there ! was no such girl. I was in love with | a wig.—Waverly Magazine. A Lieutenant's Clever Jtuse. General McArthur, despite his dis tinction and his many successes, mod estly prefers to speak the praises of others. To a naval officer whom he enter tained at Manila some time ago he told a good story about Lieutenant J. J C. Gi 11more, U. S. N„ who was cap tured with seven men of the York town at Baler, Luzon Island, In April, 181)9, by the Philippine Insurgents and held prisoners for mouths in the moun tains. One of the prisoners, who spoke Spanish fluently, was commanded to translate into English decoy letters ad dressed "To Whom It May Concern," stating that the bearers were warm friends of the Americans, and had failed in aiding them to escape only because of the vigilance of the in surgent guards. "It was the intention," said General MacArtliur, "to have these letters used whenever the bearers might be cap tured by our forces, and also as pass ports for spies. Those superintending this literary coup had sufficient knowl edge of English to make out the gen eral sentiment of the document. "Lieutenant Uillmore insisted," con tinued the General, that as chief of ficer among the prisoners he be given the privilege of looking over what had been written. Nodding approval over each letter lie added to each the word 'Nit,' which the insurgents accepted as an official vise of the papers." General MucArthur showed one of these letters. "You can imagine," said he, "the unbounded admiration it cre ated for the resourcefulness of Lieu tenant Gillmore."—Philadelphia Satur day Evening Post. A Stroke of Bnterpriic. A restaurant keeper in a New Eng land city accomplished a neat stroke of enterprise by offering a prize of $5 to the lady making tlie best-looking pumpkin pie. During the contest the sidewalk in front of his place was piled high with the golden gourds and the show windows held the unique and tempting exhibit. Each pie en tered was numbered, and all patrons of the restaurant bad a vote ou their choice. The result of the contest was most gratifying to the originator of the scheme, as he received nearly 20fi pies and made over twenty-five new customers, and all at an expense of $5 for the prize and $2 for pumpkins. —Printer's ink. II o IT to Kilter the Will to Honw, A new rule of the White House re quires every one who comes in to en ter by the front door. Those who have been accustomed to climb h through the windows and slide down the chimneys, should paste this some j where.—Kansas City Journal. HAWAIIAN SUPERSTITION. j Popular Beliof That. Royal Family ITad Supernatural Powers. "That the former royal family of ! Hawaii had supernatural powers is ' still firmly believed by a very large . number of natives on those islands," ! said Chief Examiner Severn, of the ! Civil Service Commission. "When | Commissioner Rodenberg and myself i visited the city of Hilo when we were 1 on the islands recently, we were told ; the story by Princess Emma, of the ; Hawaiian royalty, of the rescue of ! that city from destruction by a vol | cano. The story was told us by the judge of the city and vouched for by i half a dozen Americans, who claimed j I to know personally, j "The volcano which was doing the j | damage was some thirty miles from j ! the city. It began with active opera tions, and the stream of lava which ; flowed from it. started straight for the ; city of Hilo. covering an area about i half a mile wide. The flow of lava ! was small, as it gained only a small j ; distance each clay. It presented a • j solid wall of red-hot stone six or eight . ] fret high, and remains to corroborate j tho story. | "As the lava approached the city ! ; the natives became much alarmed j j and were en the verge of panic when i j a message came from Princess Emma, j I She said that when there was any 1 : danger of the destruction of the city j | by the lava, if she was informed o' j ! the same, she would come to Hilo and j | stop its flow. This message was just • lin time. The lava had reached to within half a mile of the city, and the i Princess was sent for in great haste. | She came at once, bringing a live ' | white dove, a suckling pig, and a hot- ! tie of native rum. The populace of j the city all followed her as she pro- I cecded to the edge of the lava. When j there she ordered the pig killed, and j ! dipping up its blood with her fingers, i , she sprinkled its blood upon tho lava, ' repeating lbs- while some strange nn- ! ! live lingo. The death of tho dove fol- ! | lowed, and its blood was likewise I sprinkled on the flowing stone. Last i came the rum, and this was poured as ■ a sacrifice to the mystic power. ! "The story ends here, for the lava j j never flowed another foot. The city ! , of Ililo was saved, and Princess Em- I mn, likewise all of the royal blood, can | to this day wield all powerful sway with tho natives of Hawaii."—Wash ington Star. An Inßlillouß Circular. A place to don evening dress without i going home is one of the latest conven- | icnces offered to New York bachelors. | In the Century Eliot Gregory has tbi3 j to say of it: An insidious little circular has of late been calliug the attention of New Yorkers to certain down town parlors where a man may keep evening clothes, an extra top-coat, and other changes of apparel, avoiding in this way the annoyance of going home to drc-ss. As the collitrs of Killings worth, who witnessed the first jour neys of Stephenson's "traveling en giue" did not, in all probability, appre ciate the importance of the experiment going on under their eyes, nor foresee the revolution the little machine was destined to work In the habits of man kind, so the recipient of this circular doubtless fails to grasp its real purport or the possibilities that lie dormant in that innovation. The plan is only a germ as yet, but what changes will en sue when our women have seized upon and elaborated the scheme? With a wardrobe Judiciously dis tributed in different parts of the city and its suburbs, a demoiselle will be able to go through the successive transformations required by her day's amusement, jump from riding habit to golf skirt, into luncheon, reception and boll dress, without the tiresome neces sity of re-entering the family circle. Think what saving of nerves and cab fare will result! Two of New York's largest department stores already pro vide bath rooms where customers can take dips between a tussel at the bar gain counter and a quick lunch. The phrase, "All the comforts of home," will soon be as obsolete as the place Itself, and returning there except to sleep will be eliminated l'rom the list of u damsel's duties. Deposit Money No I'ietiffo. "There was a time," said the woman who keeps boarders, "when, if a per son paid a deposit on a room, I con sidered it as good as rented, but I don't figure tbat way any more. Either peo ple have more money than they used to have or less sense of houor, I don't know which. At any rate, there has been a change, and nowadays when a prospective hoarder comes along and picks out n room that he says he likes und backs up his word by giving ine or ¥3 aa u guarantee of good faith, I have no assurance whatever that 1 shall ever see him again. "To be sure, this reckless expendi ture of salary is not an orery-day oc currence, but it happens often enough to make me waudor how people can be so cureless. I can readily under stand the motive, but I eaunot appre ciate it. The explanation, of course, is that the people like my rooms well enough te taka soma precaution uuint losing the option en them, in (vise tliay should tind nothing more desirable, but that upon looking farth er they see something that suits tliem better, anil they would rather sacrifice the deposit fund than decide in my favor. Now mul then some one par ticularly audacious comes hack and asks me to refund the money, but gen erally sre content to let well enough alone. All told, my unclaimed deposit money amounts to about Sol) a year, which is uot a bad return from the little time invested in showing the rooms."—New York Times. Several Japanese women barbers are employed in Honolulu. Ail Awakening in the South. ONE of the most forcible evi dences of the prosperity of the South, and an assurance that that portion of the conn try has been brought to a realizing sense of some of its needs, is the en thusiasm manifested over iho subject of improved highways. It will he hard to And one point on which the South lias recently experienced a greater awakening. East June, when the good roads train under the initia tive of tho Illinois Central Railroad made a trip, starting at New Orleans as the southern end of the line, it left behind it a trail of leagues and asso ciations, State and local, devoted to improving tho highways of half a dozen States. Tho recent convention nt Buffalo, which attracted delegates from all over tho Union, and even across the Atlantic, had an equally good result, although in a different way. Now. comes the announcement that tho Southern Railway Company lias inaugurated a great movement in Its desire to improve the road sys tems converging to lis tracks. The company is to run a good roads spe cial, fully equipped, along its lines, stopping at various points to build a half mile or a milo of good road, and show the people what can he done and how to do It. This initiative should receive cordial co-operation. Itivers, the natural, and railroads, the artificial, highways, are of little use if the people only a short distance away from their lines are un able to reach them. In many ways the people of the South have been held hack for want of decent transportation facilities by the ordinary highway. In the rulc3 governing tho new rural mail delivery system one of the re quirements is the ability to travel twenty-Ave miles a day, and the im possibility of doing this lias in many eases delayed the extension of the sys tem. This is equally true of business opportunities of all kinds, more espe cially the disposing of produce on a rising market. It has been estimated by a man fully acquainted with mar ket conditions in the South and South west that opportunities for more than a million dollars increase in proAts have been lost to farmers in the last two years through inability to get to market quickly at a critical time. And this not alone of the South and the Southwest. Eight here in New York State farmers have been kept away from proiltoble markets by roads which were hogs or quagmires instead of paths At for a man to ride over or ' a liorse to travel in. But New York hns seen the light, anil to-day the im provement of the highways is a ques tion which is seldom allowed to drop out of sight. It is an omen of good for the Southland that the people are demanding of their 'legislators more and more attention to the 'Highways, and that the cold business part of tho proposition is seen in its right light. Road building, although of -national importance, is .a iocal work, and must he carried on under local conditions. It is in this regard that the good roads trains are doing well. They strike all sorts of soil and all kinds of difficul ties, and show tho people how to im prove their travel facilities at tho least possible expense, In tiie shortest possi ble time and with the smallest amount of trouble. That the railroads have an eye to the main cbauec in developing the lands along their lines in no way de tracts from tiio ultimate benefit of their work to the farmer in the imme diate neighborhood, as well as to tlio dweller in the city which the farmer wishes to reach with what iie has to Bell.—New York Tribune. Good Roods Save Money. One of the most important and en couraging cf the many conferences held at the Pan-American Exposition "was tho good roads congress. The questions of mutual concern which brought together delegates from thir ty-nine of the States, and from -Mex ico and Canada, is one upon which much has been spoken and written, and had the congress merely met to continue the advocacy of improved roads it would have been of little note. The delegates, however, were not limited to the discussion of what ought to be done; they were able to compare notes upon what lias been done. ' Particularly gratifying reports eiuno i from the South, where highway im- I provemeut lias been needed greatly. There was a general agreement among representatives of all parts of the country that the rise of public interest in good loads was steady and promis ing, and there was a general belief that much progress would be made in the next few years. Maryland has not overlooked this question. State aid has he a enlisted in the worthy cause of road improve ment, and public sentiment will proba bly he found in sympathy with a de termination to keep up with sister States lit this Important work. Moreover, good roads, aside from convenience, are of great money value to any community. Business is aided, as well as comfort or pleasure. The price of hauling produce over a had road far exceeds the cost of keeping the same highway la good repair.— Baltimore Herald. A Snlmtitntx. Money may not buy happiness, but it is often capable of purchasing an acceptable substitute.—Chicago News. *