T THK NORFOLK WEEKLY NEWS-JOUKNAL , FRIDAY , Spl'TEMHEU 9 , 1910. The Norfolk Weekly News-Jouma/ / Vnc INOWH , F.stnbllHhed 1881. me Journal , Established 1S77 THE HUSE PUDLI8HING COMPANY. W. N. fliiHu. N. A. Huso , 1'resldcnt. Secretary Every Friday By mall per year , tl.60. Rnlnri'd at the postolllco at Norfolk , Nob. , as Hi-coiid class nmttoi. Telephones : Hdlturlal Department No. 22. Business Olllce and Job Room's I No. H 22. Hoko Smith of Georgia has demon strated his ability to "come back. " A few more cool mornings and we shall hear the annual cry of coal short age. Dr. Crlppen says ho has no time for Americans. The dislike Is thor oughly mutual. No man who Isn't hard nt work when there Is work to bo done is ever entirely happy. Governor Draper of Massachusetts lias won n golf match , which may coat him about Ei.OOO votes. Boston and St. Louis are neck and neck for fourth place In the census. Which 11 shall win , Beans or Beer ? Kaiser William says he rules by divine right , ballot boxes being a mere toy such as the girls play dolls with. New York Is now the second largest city in the world. It is as large as nny two foreign cities , excepting Lon don. If Roosevelt so much as mentions the ten commandments , Wall street shivers and says It Is no fair twitting on facts. Before you try to make a man eat his words be sure that ho is not one of the kind who would rather light than eat. Governor Haskell of Oklahoma wants to succeed Senator Gore. That would certainly bo putting the clock backward. A Missouri court says it's the duty of the pedestrian to dodge automo biles. Not only his duty , but his only salvation. Men of strong individual character with positive views on subjects and with decided habits , are the mon who do things. It is said that counterfeit $1,000 bills are in circulation. The greater num ber of the people are not alarmed , however , about getting them. Eight million acres of tasseled wav ing corn Is a part of Missouri's con tribution to the muscle and wealth of the nation only a part , mind you ! The customs men are searching for diamond smugglers , and it's rumored that such gems as truth and honesty are not common among our tourists. Probaly T. R. never looked so much like n supreme court judge in all his robes , ns at Marshaltown , In. , when lie came out In pajamas and raincoat. Emerson well said , "A man passes for what he is worth. What he Is engraves itself on his face , on his form , on his fortunes in letters of light. " A New York doctor says the nose and throat are affected by motoring. But he failed to say anything about the pernicious anaemia produced In the pocketbook. The sultan of. Sulu supports fourteen wives on a salary of $125 a month and there are lots of men In this country who. on the same amount , find it dilll- cult to keep one. Oiled roads are said to lessen the mosquito nuisance in New Jersey. Probably they only drive the skeets out from the roads to bite the farm ers ip the hay fields. When the big corporations cancel orders merely because someone goes around the country saying "Be honest , don't steal , " it looks as if something was wrong somewhere. Now that hypothetical bombs are dropping on theoretical battleships from presumable airships , it is time to invent some supposttlonous chicken wire to ward them off. If women want to wear trousers , why don't they do so , Instead of the hobble skirt , a garment with all the ugliness and none of the convenience of the masculine apparel ? i Although there is a strong agita tion against bosses , political machines 1 are not easily sent to the scrap heap. | However , there nro frequent changes in the fellows who handle the lover. In one of the very strong democratic districts of Missouri , the republican nominee for congress received three votes nt the primaries. Ho declares ho did not vote for himself , either. Scientists nro becoming harder and harder in their denunciation of the house fly. They give It nn Increasing ly bad character. It is hold responsi ble for thousands of deaths annual ly and the slogan "swat the fly" Is be coming IncreaBlngly popular. Fashionable dressmakers and wo men's tailors say that women are In creasing In size and will soon bccomo the physical equals of men. In fact , they already average a greater weight. Great snake , 100.000,000 people In the United States territory ? Uncle Sirm will have to place a limit on membership and have a waiting list If he wants to keep this a select club. The newspapers waste altogether too much space on the activities and adventures of some men who have nothing to commend them except money. F. Augustus Helnze Is one of these men. There Is said to ho about one cow for every five people In the United States , but many of them must give a very small allowance of milk or the lacteal fluid and its products would not bo so scarce. Maryland enjoys the distinction of having the youngest member of the sixty-first congress , In fact , the young est person ever elected to congress , In the person of Harry B. Wotlf , who Is called "Baby of the House. " Milwaukee has just como to the con clusion that its policemen should be provided with cool garments for hot .weather. It Is late In the season for this decision. Overcoats and car muffs will soon be the necessary equipment. Eight hundred thousand have sign ed the C. W. Morse pardon petition. Most of them would sign a petition for their own Incarceration before tak ing the bother to read It. Business is hanging on the ragged edge for the anti-trust decisions , but It would be a blow to Industry to have the senators quit fence repairing three days while confirming the new justices at Washington. Even the Kansas Insurgents indorse the protective system. The issue be tween republicans Is thus not one of principle , but merely to determine a fair rate of protection , a difference easily adjusted In due time. Colonel Roosevelt tells New Mexico and Arizona to have their constitu- j lions easy of amendment. This is a radical departure from the United States constitution , which Is amended only by killing off several hundred thousand men. The automobile has proved an un- equallfled success as a dog discour ager. The canines find little satis faction in running in front of an auto and barking at It , and not Infrequently one ends his earthy career in this un satisfactory way. The hydroplane bids fair to rival the aeroplane for speed. The passion pfor speed for recreative purposes is in direct contradiction to the constant preaching of the day for deliberation as the characteristic temper of noli- ' day keeping. Last year the building enterprises in the large cities of the country con sumed about a billion dollars , most of which went for fire resisting struc tures. This rate of progress ought to reduce our fire losses perceptibly In the course of a few years. Senator Tillman , who was in very poor health , went back to farming and Is now decidedly better. Look out for a boom of the "farming euro" now among the distinguished invalids. Everything seems to bo coining the farmers' way even the sick. One mean turn deserves another. A few years ago William Corey , the Plttsburg steel magnate , left his wife who had been devoted to him for years , got a divorce and married the actress Mabelle Oilman. Now Mabclle Is to leave him and again go on the stage. Our flag Is a rare specimen to be found on a merchant marine ship in the mid Atlantic and under present policies it will not flap numerously in the mid Pacific breezes either. We are digging a canal to admit European vessels Into the Pacific and Japanese vessels into the Atlantic. Copper cents are not easily destroy ed , and , inasmuch , as they are money one would expect them to be fairly well taken care of , but they disap pear In a most mysterious manner. 1 The United States has to put 80,000- 1 000 of them into circulation annually ' and the majority of them never comeback back for redemption. A country bred man who found In n stationery store in New York City a box of little pine sticks about six Inches long , labeled "whittling sticks" and sold them for a penny , decided promptly to return to the country where boys could have whittling sticks of respectable dimensions without the money and without the price. Since the race tracks of the past nro no longer much used for the pur pose for which they were designed , it has been found that they nro especial ly adapted to the use of the flying ma chine. The stands accommodate the spectators , the stalls are usually for storage purposes , and they are usual ly found on good transportation lines. Everything finds its use If you give It time. \Ve do not \ouch for the truth of these statements , but nn exchange In one of the western states , writing of n cyclone which recently occurred there , says , "It turned a well inside out. a cellar upside down , moved a township line , blow the staves out of a whisky barrel and left nothing but a bung hole , changed the day of the week , blew a moitgase oif a farm , blew all the cracks out of a fence and knocked the wind out of a politician. " There have been \vonuuriul changes In the Dominion of Canada since it last extended hospitality to British loyalty , and the coming of the duke of Connaught. uncle of Great Britain's king , to Canada , ns governor general , calls bpeclal attention to the fact that there are more thriving towns whore a barren frontier formerly frowned , a rich and progressive nation where not long ago were many separate pro vinces. The Canadians possess a fine school system and broad and compre hensive government. The new gover nor general will find a most progres sive people inhabiting this largest of I all the possessions of the British em pire. A Columbia university statistician has been comparing the census fig ures thus far announced at Washing ton with those of the previous enuin- < oration. lie figures that the average ' gain thus far shown is 29.7 percent. j If a similar percentage applies to the 1 rest of the country the net gain for I the whole country will bo about 27- i 000,000 , making the total population of the continental United States over $93,000,000. I Farmers have been complaining for years against the high charges for railroad transportation. Their com plaints may have been justified , but or- I ganlzation among them and the ship pers promises to bring a satisfactory adjustment of the railroad rate prob lem. It would appear to be high time for the farmers and shippers to co operate In nn effort to Improve the i roads and thus reduce the freight | charges over the country highways. Their delay in doing this is responsi ble for one of the greatest of the na tion's economic wastes. i NORFOLK IS HEALTHY. Norfolk Is In a healthy condition. There isn't an available house to rent ' in the city nor is there an empty business building or room. The de mand for both exceeds the supply. This In itself is a good sign of the city's condition. And on top of that , there's progress on every hand. Busi ness houses have made notable im provements during the summer. The 1 street paving is at hand. A Carnegie library is just finished. A. Y. M. C. A. building is on the way. New business enterprises are com ing to town and the city's growth is going on with a steadiness that is pleasing to the people of Norfolk. I Back to the farm ? The census re turns which come dribbling out from day to day indicate that all the talk we have had on that subject must look to the present decade for results , not the one just past. Michigan , for example , shows a population of S.S'J- j 191 or 1C.1 percent for the past ton I years ; while the city of Detroit alone gained over 180,000 , and 265,000 of the state's total increase can be found in seven of the larger cities whoso fig ures have so far not been publish ed. The other cities will doubtle.s lo cate most of the remaining increase , I leaving to the agricultural little or no ' gain at all.nd a fairer farmirg re gion than Michigan does not exist Michigan's population gain from 1)0 ! ) to 1900 was 15.0 percent against thu present 1C.1 percent , while In the decades of 1880-1890 and 1870-1880 the gain -was respectively , 27.9 and H8.2 percent. 1 Rigid economy In governmental de partments will be one of the first subjects taken up in the president's message to congress In December. The preparation of the message has already begun. Other recommenda tions which he has in mind are for reform in federalsclvll and criminal : court practices , on which ho was unable - ' able to get nny action during the last session ; employer's liability and work- Ingmen's compensation nets ; changes In the government of Alaska , giving the territory a strong voice in its'In ternal affairs ; an appropriation for the work of the tariff board ; anti-in junction laws ; legislation affecting stocks and bonds in case the commis sion of investigation makes its report ' in time ; nn appropriation for further work of the tariff board ; appropria tions to carry into effect the postal . savings bank law ; a centralhed bu : reau of health , bringing all government - ! ment olllclnls who look after sanita tion and public health into ono bu reau and such now conservation laws as developments may show to bo ne cessary. The fortification of the Pan ama canal and the building of two now battleships will also bo among the fourteen principal subjects to be covered by the message. THE SMUGGLERS. In the old days smugglers were out law folk , who hid In caves by day , and who risked their lives by night to land their contraband booty In dan gerous harbors under the guns of watchful ipvenue olllcers. Most of them cnmc to nn untimely end. Today the smugglers arc directors of our lending social clubs and bust- ess < ori oiatlons. Often they sit in he front seats r' church.Ve may ' ondomn them privately , but most of us feel ll.itteied if they condescend to ofTer us a lift In their automobiles . olng down town. 'Yet is theie any essential difference in the quality of the act at these two different peilods ? There may be two opinions on the justice or fairness of the duties that are Imposed , but there should be but one on the meanness of those eva sions , so many of which have been exposed this past year. It Is not fairer or right that Mrs. Newly rich , who can spend her spare time about the boulevard shops of Paris , should be able to bring home low priced furs and jewels , while the great body of middle class people are forced to pay the same price plus the duty. It is a notorious fact that our national revenue could be greatly increased If duties could be fairly collected. Eva sion of the customs robs every taxpay er and Impairs the efllclcncy of our machinery for collecting public funds. ROOSEVELT IN OMAHA. Omaha did things in its usual en thusiastic manner when Colonel Roosevelt visited that place last Fri day. The day opened with lowering clouds which shortly after developed into a downpour of rain , so that the early portion of the day seemed rather spiritless , but by the time of the luncheon of the Field club at 120 : ; ! , the sun was shining brightly and the enthusiasm of the 400 guests who broke bread with the colonel was warmed up to an intense pitch. Fully two-thirds 01 the guests had been in vited from all sections of the state , by which act the Commercial club of that city again put the people of the state under obligations to the enter prising hustlers of the metropolis. From the gathering of the hosts nt the Field club until late at night Colonel Roosevelt's time was more than filled. A monster meeting at the Auditorium nt 4 o'clock listened to one of the colonel's strongest speeches. Then came an elaborate dinner at the Omaha club , followed by a session at the Aksarben den that was full of interest to Colonel Roosevelt velt as well as the guests. All in all , the festivities were of such a charac ter that Omaha may well feel proud of the efforts put forth to make the day a success , and it was an event in the colonel's trip that will long be remembered by him. AROUND TOWN. Now for fall business. Do your Christinas shopping now. Well , Julia , do you love your teacher ? Notice how much shorter the days are getting ? Still three straw hats running wild in Norfolk. Swat "em. Be up early , Johnny , if you want the back seat. Isn't there any kind of bait that the sun will nibble at ? And we didn't have but ono circus this whole blooming summer. Winter's on the way. The mice are crawling back into the house. By tomorrow there'll bo a full Hedged crop of teachers' pets. Get your ears tuned up in anticipa tion of the jolly jingle of the school bell. We'd have n better corn crop than most parts of the United States , If it were to frost tonight. Labor day in a country town is a day when everybody labors but the banker and the postoffice force. Madame Housekeeper has a Just cause for complaint. Here are three Mondays in succession that it has rained. Norfolk has a better ball team than it had last year , and the one last year got paid for playing while the one this season plnjo for the love of the sport. It's always the same bunch that gobble up the back seats , year in and year out. They'll bo gobbling up the front seats In the band wagon when they're out of school. If you should see n young woman stepping briskly along the street , her head high and her hair done up with line attention to detail ; gowned in n brand new fall suit and with brand now shoes , and wearing eyeglasses she's n school ma'am back from her vacation. ATCHISON GLOBE SIGHTS. Leave booze alone. Booze oven beats prize lighters. Success is a good thing to climb for , but It has its worries. It Is probable that every pretty man thinks of going on the stage. "If n man can't give you news , " said the city editor to the reporter , "don't let him waste your time telling you funny stories. " This year , and last year , there has been a newspaper war on files. Have An old man loves rules ns much as a boy hates them. Militiamen itoirt lenr back so far when they stand * , tlll as regulars. Throe-fourths of what n woman does , her husband calls puttering. Nothing makes a thin man so mad as to tell him he Is getting thinner. i A sore corn can do a pretty large job of soreness , considering Its size. You can't make a fox terrier out of n cur by cutting off Its tall. i A hammock loafer may not bo nny .lazier . than other vniletles , but she I looks lazier. In every business failure , there are a lot of "funny" things that people dissect and discuss. The people seem to be improving a little They care less for political meetings than formerly We know nn Atehlson man who could get along pretty easily , If the gold In his teetli drew Interest. It looks as though there would be money In a lady baseball club , but thcio Isn't. Did you over .notice that the woman on a silver coin wears a pompadour and a turban ? r A woman's Idea of economy "is to name another woman who paid a higher price for her new hat. When you do a thing that pleases i o one but your enemies , it is safe to &ay that you have made a mistake. When you go to a country picnic , you ai-p not much good unless you get more than one invitation to dinner. At a country picnic when an excited man comes up and inquires , "Where is the sheriff ? " the people wonder what is up. "I don't believe , " said a man today , " 1 would take much pleasure in wear ing the biggest mustache in town , or the longest finger nails. " We try not to become excited , but we do every time we see poster In Atehlson advertising a circus per formance in another town. Some chauffeurs seem to think they are showing the walk public ample consideration by not going up on the sidewalk after them. The football rules have been worked over again to make the game more sane , but nothing has been done to eliminate the terrible college yell. Some men think their right to be in > an to their wives and newspaper reporters is inalienable , like right to life , liberty and the pursuit of hap piness. A woman can't decide that she likes a strange woman , until she has found from her husband's opinion of the strange woman that she could never steal him away. What little satisfaction there must be in getting drunk to a deaf and dumb man ! He can't sing , and he can't settle great problems by talkIng - Ing to sober men. An Atehlson woman makes $2 a week by keeping a cow , and supplies the family with milk , cream and but ter. She is so proud of her cow that she compels her husband to take off his hat to it. When a man remains a bachelor , his mother is very proud of him. "He is too smart , " she will say , "to be caught by any woman. " But , when her daughter remains a spin , why that's different. An Atehlson girl is so modest that when she goes to the store to try on shoes , she takes her mother along. She doesn't propose to have a man handle her feet without a protector within hailing distance. The boys are not the only ones who remain up Into nt night , thinking that something Important Is liable to hap pen , which they will miss if they go to bed at a reasonable hour. Every night , in the lobster palaces of New York , may be found regularly thou sands of men who spend their money like fools , and look for excitement that never happens. We have known a certain Atchison man thirty-three years , and during all that time ho has been working for a noble purpose. And with all fairness - ' ness and candor , we cnnnot see that j he has ever accomplished anything , j although we have heard many talk i mean about him , because he takes' ' up so much of the tlmo of busy men. ! If you want to do good , do it by mod est example , rather than by loud talk Ing. This morning wo saw Ward Chat- burn , manager of the Electric thea ter , standing in front of n Commercial street stairway , talking to someone wo could not see. We thought wo had never scon Mr. Chatburn look so strange ; he didn't look like himself. Wo couldn't help thinking : "What has happened to Ward Chntburn ? " When wo cnmo up to him , wo saw what made him look so strange ; ho was talking to his opposition , Leo Gunnlson , manager of the Crystal the ater. No man can talk to his opposi tion , and look natural. Things Essential For Building Rural Highways. lOWAN'S VALUABLE LESSON. With n Small Capital Donated by Fel low Townsmen He Improved Roads In Jefferson Township , Wayne Coun ty Drainage n Dig Factor. An authority on the construction of highways has the foi'owlng ' to say In regard to the construction of country roads. He says : To have n good road in nny country In the first place we must have drain age. You will all agree with me there , because a road must be kept dry or It will bo soft. 1 have n system of road work which I have followed for the last live or six years. We must have a system by wlikh to build our roads or we never can have good roads. I know of no better way to give my system of road work than to tell how I worked half of a township for three years , then tell how I fixed and main tained certain pieces of road. Five years ago 1 took one-half of the road work In Jefferson township , Wayne county , la. , there being about thirty-six miles of road in very bad From Good Iloads MnRnzino , Now York. ailAUINCl THE HIOIIWAV shape , ditched up and culverts In very bad shape and only about forty poll taxes and ยง 3W ) to do this work with , j ' I took two plows , right and left. went all over the roads , plowing fur rows from twenty to twenty-two feet. apart on the side of the road. Sometimes - j times when the road was in trough shape 1 plowed as close as eighteen , feet. And low places and near culverts where I had used scrapers I plowed three or four furrows on n side. By I the time I got over the rends , I knew' ' just what had to be done and how to distribute my work. As soon ns it was dry enough to scrape I wont on the road with a small crew. I fixed the culverts and wherever I felt 1 had time filled in ditches and threw up low places and got it in shape for grader. I mostly put on ten horses donated by the people. In the fall some wanted their roads graded again and donated the work. 1 got S1 V > donation work. Then I went on the roads again with the plows and plowed one furrow on each hide of the road , then fixed culverts - verts and put in the time throwing up low places and tilling large ditches. I then went over the road with a grader , asking a little donation in some places where the roads needed a little more work. I got ? . 0 donation and the roads In line shape. Next year 1 went on the road and fixed culverts and places where water had made some large ditches and scraped In the sand that lodged In the low places and at the foot of the hills. When the ground got | in good condition 1 took two King , ' drags. I hitched to them so they ran ut an angle of forty-five degrees , commenced - ' menced at outside of road , and when I came to a hill \ \ here the banks needed cutting I hitched near the end , so it would cut the bank that was to move the ditch over from the road. Wo would go a few rounds , one drag cutting up hill and the other down. Six years ago a steep hill cast of my house was In n trough shape , and I plowed the sides and throw it In with the pcrapor until I had it highest In the middle and about twenty feet wide. It took about one-half day. Then I commenced dragging it , and quite n large ditch had got on ono side. I widened it by running against the bank with the wagon wheel while driving to the field , using it for n lock and to wear out the bank. A hill west of my place which I com menced to drag some time ago was lowest In the middle. I had ten acres of ground to plow , which took me about four days. I hitched on to my drag with three horses , put the plow j on it and started to the field. I com menced the rend about twenty feet j wide. A part of the way there was ' Bod. I would bring the drag home and take it back every tlmo I went. By the time the field was plowed I had nn impression on the road , so the water took to the side of the road where I bad gone with the drag. Soon the ditches were a foot deep , and , of , course , the middle was a foot the high est. 1 kept on dragging every tlmo 1 went to the field and would set my drag into the bank wherever It would get mellow. The dements did nt least CO per cent of the work. You may sight across the banks and the middle of the road Is no higher than the banks , so you see the water has done the work , and I smoothed up nftcr It. The two miles of road I keep up In fine shape around my farm , and it takes about ono day In the year to keep It np. Pure Food Laws Successful. The uirc food laws of Germany are operating successfully. Dealers now supply products that meet legal re quirements in every way. GOOD ROADS HELP TRADE. Will Increase Population and Oulld Up Business of Local Tradesmen. To no one tnoro than the business man Is the question of good rnndn n vltnl Issue. Thi ! uprcadlng of tlu * doc- trlno of good roads will moan n largo Increase In the rolunii ! of IMIKIIIOSH , will lend to great leaps In the development of this nlroa-1 ; rich country ud will make money tor every innn In morcan- tllo llne.s. While directly the building uf good nmdH will tienollt the fanners and stock raisers perhaps more than nny onu else find will ralHu the vnluo of every farm reached by good roads , still the business men come hi a eloBu second. Good roada will Increase the produc tivity of thu land because It will give Mio farmers n Letter outlet for their marketable stuff and will load to Mich an Increase In population that there will be more workers per square mlle than there are under the old roads system. Oood roads will open for set tlement and cultivation land now lying out of the radius of profitable farming. It will put more square miles of terri tory within trailo distance of your town. The business men of any town are Interested In bringing to thin town trade from greater distances than Is easily covered on our present roads. It Increases the volume of business , and every man In business In the com munity receives his share of the bene fit. The farmer Is able to haul his grain and produce to market at less cost and makes a greater profit per year from his labor. This additional proHt Is represented by the additional amount of cash ho has to spend with the home dealers. When the farms nro made to pay larger dividends moro settlers will come to your neighborhood - hood , and all of them will hare to spend money with you and your fel low business men. Ko , directly and In directly , the business men are benefit ed by the building of good roads. SURFACE DRAINAGE OF ROADS This Is an Important Feature When Constructing Highways. Professor J. II. Davidson of the Iowa Agricultural college , who Is an authority on the drainage of highways to those Interested In the construction of good roads , says that all roads should be provided with surface drain age. The cross section should bo of such a shape as to shed all rain at once to the side ditches. To do this the road must be oval or have a crown and must be smooth. The first of these Is a matter of construction and the lat ter a matter of maintenance. The sldo drainage system should be called upon to carry as much water as possible. Water cannot bo carried away by the tile drains until the water has sunk through the soil and softened It. The crowu of a road should be sulli- clent to shed the water readily. If the road is to be maintained and kept free from ruts and holes less crown will do than If the road Is to be neglected. The Iowa highway commission recommend ed a slope one Inch to a foot for a crown In the traveled way. This In sufficient for most conditions. The crown should not bo too great. A steep crown causes the travel to be concentrated at the center , where ruts will bo worn and washing result. Again , there Is some difficulty In void , cles passing. On the side of the crown the wheels of the vehicles have a tend ency to grind the road down. This action , togi-f or with the swerving or flow action of the lower part of the wheel , has a very marked effect. The steeper the slope of the road the more Important the crown , for there is a tendency for the water to run down the track rather than to the side. If water once begins to run down the center of the roadway it is but a short time until the road Is gullied out. Juvenile Good Roads League. A town In Now Jersey saw the eco nomical necessity of road improvement ns n means of recapturing scholars who had gone to the city schools. AVerment Vermont farmer declares that improv ed roads mean larger districts and n better grade of teachers. But good roads are costly and most costly when lack of timely care allows them to go to pieces. A suggestion comes from Washington that Junior road leagues be formed In country dibit-lets for the reason that country roads are "actual ly patrolled twf-e a day by schoolboys old enough to give the necessary atte'n- tion to throwing out stones , opening ditches and sluices , draining oft storm water , filling ruts and holes and givIng - Ing notice to proper authorities of any thing needing prompt attention on their part. " Harper's Bazar. Good Road Mottoes. Good roads promote rural optimism' . Mudholos are the forerunners of good roads. Many a "good enough" road is not a good road at nil. It takes more than talk to make a good road , though talk is necessary to start It , Dract. Brother , Drag ! [ The rend dras has proved so valuable ti Improving poor highways that oven th poets hnvo turned their attention to Jt Here Is what a Missouri bard advises farmers burdened with bad roads to do. ] Then "If at'first you don't succeed. " Draff , brother ; dran. And once or twice don't nil the need , Dra r , brother : drag. When n shower of rain has passed. And the eun nhlncs out at last , While the roads are drying fast , Drntr , brother ; drag. And Gabo will como alone and nee Drag , brother ; drag- Just how a good road ought to be. Drat ; , brother ; drag. When ho gets homo ho'll take * his pen And wrlto you up the best of mon. And you'll be mighty famous then ( ? ) Drag , brother ; drag. -Putler ( Mo. ) nopublleftn Preas. Wealth In Chemicals. Annual reports of the German chemi cal factories show continued high divi dends and trade activity. Dividends ranged from \2 \ to 32 per cent One concern clalma to have perfected an artificial rubber.