Sra chen an Bemorrai? atc. Bellefonte, Pa., July II, 1902 RANK WEEDS AND RARE PLANTS. The rank weed grows in a single night, While the rarer plant takes years, An evil name will leap to fame ‘While a good name scarce appears. But the rank weeds dies in a single night, While the rare plant still blooms on, And the evil name will sink to shame While the good name’s in its dawn, The way that is won without any work Is not worth winning at all— A sudden light—a meteor flight— A sparkle—a trial and a fall. Fear, not brave heart, whate’er thy lot, Like the coral build deep in the sea, And a beautiful land with a glittering strand Shall owe its existence to thee. And if failure be thy part. O heart! What compensation shalt thou find For thy weary years and bitter tears, And thy mission half divined ? But this can comfort bring to thee, That like a sounding bell, Men shall say on thy judgment day, “This little work is done well I’ —Ella Sterling Cummins in Sanfrancisco Town Talk. WHEN GREEK MEETS GREEK. John Walsh had red hair. If his hair. bad been brown, this story would probably never have been written. He bad, besides the bair, a pair of blue eyes and a quick temper. An Irish ances- tor who had come to America brought with him a spade and a brogue, a keen wit, the red hair and the quick temper. The spade and the brogue had disappeared ; but the temper and hair sarvived. Sometimes they skipped a generation, and flashed out in the next keener than before. John Walsh bad them. He was teacher in the Burleighville high school. There were three rooms in the school building. The room in which John Walsh taught was called the High school room. The highest class in it was fitting for college ; and the lowest—in whioh were Annie Day, and Dennis Quinn, and Edgar Button—was studying decimals. They were in the up- per room only because the lower rooms had overflowed and floated them up to the front seats in the high school room. They sat there very much awed by their fate, and thankful when the flash of John Walsh's blue eyes overleaped them and landed on the big boys in the back seats. The master’s temper was no secret. ‘‘As quick as John Walsh’s temper’? was a town proverb. It had been the same in the boy as in the man. As a pupil, he had made his way through the school flashing and fighting and excelling. There had never been such a scholar in Burleighville. The town was secretly proud of him; and when, on his return fiom college, he had applied for the position of teacher in the high school to help him carry on his law studies, they had welcomed him back. The life of the school had quickened and broadened. He imparted enthusiasm and knowledge in the same breath. Every pupil in the room be- came alert. They loved the fiery, impetn- ous master ; and the fact that they stood a little in awe of him did not diminish zeal. It was the last week of the spring term. John Walsh had been teaching in Burleigh- ville two years. He was planning to go,at the end of the term, to study with the well known firm of Marsh & Blakewell, of Bos- ton. His old mother was comfortably pro- vided for, and there was money ahead to carry him through. The last weeks of the term promised to be balmy—indoors and out. Three weeks before the end of the term a change had come. Word had been receiv- ed from Marsh & Blakewell that there was doubt of their being able to receive a law student this year. They would write again in two weeks. Meanwhile they ‘remained regretfully, ete.’’ The sky clouded in the Burleighville high school. Signs of a storm were on the horizon, The school took in sail and steer- ed very close to the wind, with cautious glances at the blue eyes flashing and dart- ing above them. The front seats quaked and worked on decimals. *“There he goes !”’ ‘‘Hurry up, Annie!” “We'll be late !”? ‘‘Let’s go ’cross the island !"’ The group broke into a swift, jogging run. Books and slates and dinner pails bumped in swinging hands, and panting breaths escaped. Haurrying feet rattled the Joose boards of the bridge and thudded on the soft grass as they crossed the island. Tommy Day was last in the race. He had a round face and fat legs, and his little brown trousers were too wide. He lumber- ed along, holding fast to his. sister’s hand, and wailing now and then at the flying . group. They gave no heed till the other bridge was reached. There they paused, glancing at it a little donbtfully and nudg- ing each other to.go on. - Two signs were across it : ‘‘Danger.—Not a Public Way.” It was a swinging bridge—two parallel cables with boards across and a stout rope for band rail. It had been thrown across for the operatives of the mill on the island. But the island was a handy cut when one was late and the last bell ringing. ‘Go on, Will.” Sammy Talcott gave the boy in front a little push. : ' *‘G’on yourself !”’ {gr “Hurry up! We'll he late.” . The boy hesitated, Then, with a little ran, his feet touched the bridge and sped swiftly across. He swayed lightly to the motion, and barely touched the hand rope swinging beside him. : With a whoop and a chase, they follow- ed, big and little, speeding across one at a time, and landing with a flying leap. ‘Come on, Annie.”’ ‘Oh, leave him there 1’ ‘‘He’s a baby !' ‘Come on 1” Tommy pluniped himself on the ground, his legs extended, and raised a round wail - $0 heaven. : The gronp across the river regarded him with eager disgust. ‘Come along !’— “He'll come if you leave him !"’—*“Hurry up: Gili Hobe ‘placed ‘one foot on the bridge and glanced down at Tommy. Then she look- ed at the bridge. .. The group waited. ‘Coward yourself, Annie Day I’ called Mary Bell, tauntingly. ““1Fraid cat! ’Fraid cat I” She looked over ‘‘He’s too little,”’ she called back. Her voice was high and squeaking, and her small face was full of anxious care. ‘Oh, leave ‘ems alone I”’—‘‘Come on !”’ —*‘There’s the bell I’ They turned with a wild scramble. Their voices floated back as they ran, and grew faint and fainter. The air was very still. The boom of the mill on the other side of the island hum- wed softly in it. A sparrow, hopping in a at them appealingly. | pered loudly. bush by the water, looked up at the pair and gave a little trill, and hopped away. She bent over him sternly. ‘Get up, Tommy ; I'm going back round the island with you. Now don’t ery any more.”’ Tommy’s mouth, which bad opened to emit a fresh sound, closed suddenly. He snuff- ed and looked at her—resentfully and hope- fully. ; She wiped his eyes on her apron and held out her hand. “Come along,”’ she said swiftly. They disappeared through the bushes, Tommy’s fat legs wagging fast. The gray stockings and flying shoe strings, seen from behind, had an air of renewed courage. The door opened timidly. It was Annie Day—fifteen minutes late. She squeaked respectfully and hurriedly to her seat. The first cless in arithmetic was reciting. The master looked up with a frown. ‘‘Wait !’? he said sharply to the boy who was reciting. The boy paused. A hush was on the room. Annie squeaked miserably through is, the freckles on her small face lost in the rush of color, and her little turned up nose, with its anxious, deprecating look, glancing hastily now and then at the master’s face. The blue eyes were fixed on her sternly. When she bad subsided into the front seat and had bent her face to the desk to look for her book and slate, the eye turned again to the class. ‘‘Go on,’’ he said shortly. The silence clicked, and the boy went on reciting. : The class in arithmetic was dismissed and the second reading class had been called. They sat erect in their seats, their hooks clasped motionless, in front of them, wait- ing the signal. Into the silence fell a muffled clatter and a crash—Dennis Quinn had tipped over his dinner pail. He did it once a week on an average. His feet were large. His scared face disappeared under the desk. i The master glared. ‘‘Come here,Quinn,”’ he said, sharply. There was no response. Dennis, under cover of the desk, was grappling with a rolling tea-cup, cold boiled cabbage, and doughnuts and pie ; and he was deaf to the world above him. A big, swift hand reached down and seiz- ed him by the collar, throwing him half across the open space in front of the school. He stood quavering, the broken cup in one hand and the sugared doughnut in the other. The master’s face was white with rage. “I'll teach you to come when I call ?’’ he said between his teeth. He reached ous and seized the collar again. The boy’s teeth chattered and the tea-cup and dough- nut flew in two directions as he shook, like a rat, in the strong hands. The master threw him from him, with a force that sent the boy sprawling under the table. Then he stood staring down at a white, freckled face at his elbow. Little Annie Day, shaking with fright and anger, had him by the coat. Her hands shook and her white face worked helpless- ly. “Don’t you touch him again, you mean old thing,’’ she piped shrilly. A deep hush was on the room. Breath- less necks craned at the scene. Dennis, from beneath the table, lifted a trembling hand and straightened his collar and groped for his doughnut. A flood of color surged into the master’s white face and out again, leaving it whiter than before. Annie had ceased pulling. She stood with her head meekly bent, waiting for the storm to descend. The master looked at her for a long min- ute. He brushed a quick hand before his eyes and looked again, The rage had gone from his face. No one in the school had ever seen it look like this. The silence deepened. ‘‘Take your seats,’’ he said, quietly. He stepped to the table and touched the little bell. Dennis, from beneath, sped swiftly to his seat. At a second tap of the bell, the class in reading rose from .their seats and filed silently to their places before him. The school had assembled with white aprons and clean collars and shining faces. 1t was the last day. To-morrow would be vacation. To-day they would speak pieces avd have prizes. A row of complacent mothers and a scattering of fathers lined the walls and gave glory to the day. The pieces had been spoken and the last prize distributed, when the master rose to speak, His blue eyes swept the room. In his hand he held a small object that shone in the light. ‘I have another prize to give,” he said, slowly. ‘Is was not offered, but it has been earned. The school looked on, breathless. ‘‘There is in England,’’ went ou the mas- ter’s voice, ‘‘a reward that is given only for bravery. It is known as the Victoria Cross. No one can wear it who has not been very brave. It is a great honor to have it. I have here’’— He glanced at the bright ob- jeet in his hand—*‘a cross that I should like to give in the same way.’ i He paused. A flutter ran through the school. Pia Blige “To-morrow,” said the master, *‘T shall leave you. I may never live here again. But I should like to think that you do not forget me.”’ . WE Some of the girls blinked very fast. The boys looked ons of the window, *‘I should like to send every year a cross like this’’—he held it np—*‘to be given to some one who has shown special courage.’’ They gazed at it respectfully. Envious glances stole toward Willie Flint, in the back row. He sat very straight, his eyes fixed on the master’s face, a serene look on hisown.: © = "0 There was no doubt as to who wonld haye it. Willie Flint’s. name bad been in all the local papers. He had become a hero ‘since the day ‘he rushed out and stopped old Mose: Beokman’s . runaway horse. It had all been done in a minute—old Mose swaying: ‘drunkenly on the seat—a swift plunge atthe horse, a turn toward the fence, a blocking of the wheel against the post, before the horse could plunge away— any boy would have done it. Willie had been very modest about it. But one or two of the other boys longed to pummel him as he gazed serenely at the master— after the droop of an eyelid toward the lapel of bis coat. ; The master looked at the cross thought- fully, and then at the school. He opened his lips. “I give this cross,’’ he said slow- 5 ‘because of special bravery, to—-Annie y.' : The room stirred swiftly and shifted its gaze to a small girl in the front seas. : She sat with dazed countenance, blink- ing at the glittering cross. Her anxious little nose was upturned to it. Dennis Quinn bent over and gave her a labored punch. ‘It’s your'n,”’ he “whis- “Bring her here Dennis grinned. He reached out a hand and, taking her by the elbow, shoved her The master smiled. “Dennis,’’ he said. gently to the front of the room. The master bent and pinned the cross on the plaid shoulder, and she tiptoed back amid breathless silence. Then the school broke into cheers and clapping. She looked up for a swift, doubtful mo- ment, and her head fell forward on her arms. She burst into tears. They ran down her face and fell on the cross, and took the starch out of her white apron. Not until recess, when the older girls gathered about her in the yard, fingering the cross and admiring it, did she begin to understand what it was all about. Tommy, surrounded by a group of cronies from the primary room, pointed a short, fat finger at the cross. ‘That’s my sister!” he said, proudly. Years later, when John Walsh was a leader at the bar, and his patience and skill and swift wit and even temper with baffling witnesses and opposing counsel were the wonder and admiration of his fellow law- yers, he was accustomed to say, with a shrewd glint of the blue eye, that a little girl in the upper room at Burleighville had taught him to keep his temper.—By Jen- nette Lee in The Outlook. The Great Hood Farm Auction Sale. Largest and Best Sale of Jerseys in This Country for Years. The recent auction sale at Hood Farm, Lowel, Mass., dispersed 154 beautiful Jer- seys to breaders and farmers all over the country from Maine to Oregon, it being the largest and most successful sale of Ameri- can bred Jerseys that has been held in this country for years. There was an attendance of over 500, there being 58 different buyers comprising the best known Jersey breeders in the country. The sale was conducted by Peter C. Kellogg of New York. The 48 cows sold brought $9165, an average of $190, 67 heifers and calves sold for $5890, and 39 bulls and bull calves brought $2895. Thirty bead by the great show bull Hood Farm Pogis sold for $3810; 19 by Torono for $2907; 8 by Sophie’s Tormentor for $2296, an average of $287; 8 by Brown Bessie’s Son, $1200; and 8 by Chromo, $824. Three young heifers by Hood Farm Pops 9th, brought $655, an average of 18. The remarkably good prices brought by the young heifers of Hood Farm Pogis 9th show that breeders appreciate the great breeding represented in this young bull and his progeny. None of these heifers are in milk, their average age being about 14 months. One of them brought $330, this heiug the highest price paid for any. female not in milk. Hood Farm Pogis 9th is retained at the head of the Hood farm herd He is a son of the famous cow Figgis, by the great show bull Hood Farm Pogis. Figgis herself was the great plam of the sale and was booght hy the well known banker and copper magnate, Mr. Thomas W. Lawson of Boston. The price paid was $875, This sale reduces the Hood Farm berd to a more convenient basis for busi- ness, and young stock from the producing sires and dams at Hood Farm will continue to be in demand among progressive breed- ers. Besides others, the herd now contains 30 daughters and granddaughters of Hood Farm Pogis, 36 daughters and granddaugh- ters of Sophie’s Tormentor and 10 daugh- ters:of Hood Farm Pogis 9th. The famous imported Berkshire boar Sambo, which Mr. Hood himself bought in England two years ago, was purchased by Charles F. Millis of Springfield, Ills., for $150, and about 50 other choice Berkshires were sold at average prices which showed that the demand for this breed of hogs is good. Making Fine Furniture. Woods Named fiom Their Grain and Cutting—No Bird’s-eye Maple Tree. Most of the people who hear the furni- ture man talk glibly of bird’s-eye maple, curly walnut, and quartered oak, imagine that these are the products of some par- ticular kind of tree in each species. But all that is pure delusion. The names are simply invented by the workers in fine woods to distinguish particular ma- terial. The terms refer entirely to the graining shown by the different methods of cutting oak. walnut, and maple. Bird’s-eye maple is a veneer set upon a body of solid wood. The bird’s-eye fig- ure is produced by cutting around the log, beginning immediately under the bark and continuing till the log is used up. The thin sbaving thus obtained is smoothed and polished to show the grain and then mounted upon rougher material. Furniture made in this way, though beau- tiful, is therefore somewhat perishable. To cut up the log a huge knife and not a saw is used, the wood being peeled off in thin strips each many yards in length. Few species of maple trees produce the beautiful grain necessary aud many logs are spoiled in cutting, so the furniture is naturally expensive. The veneer obtained from the sugar maple tree is the finest produced. . . Qnuartered oak iz made by sawing a fine oak log into quarteirs—hence the name— and theo sawing the quarters into boards, working from the circumference to the cen- tre. Thus the flake, as the wood workers call the beautiful figure in quartered oak, is brought out. E 2 : Curly walnut is the root and that part of the trunk of the walnut tree just above the ground. The logs are sawed in the or- divary way. Curly walnut is obtained from all the species of the trees. Curly birch is the same kind of wood ob: tained from the birch tree. And so it mighs go on through all the illustrations of trees which under the skillful hands of the trained worker, produce totally differ- ent kinds of woods for the attractive fur- niture which in these days adorus almost every home. ——The Pennsylvania company has built and is furnishing a ‘‘rest house’ for the men at Conway, twenty-two miles west of Pittsburg, on the Fort Wayue route, at a cost of $30,000. Preparationsare now being made to. bave a opening of the building about July 1, when a number of the Penn- sylvania officials will be prevent. The improvement is in direct charge of W. C. Cushing, superintendent of the East- ern division of the Fort Wayne. However, it was a pet scheme of the former Superin- tendens, A. M. Schoyer, now general super- intendent of the Pennsylvania lines. The purpose is to erect and maintain a sort of railroad hotel at this divisional point, where the men may receive good accommodation at a nominal cost. Conway is a freight di- visiopal point for the Cleveland and Pittsburg, Alliance, Crestline, Astabula, and for Pittsburg, Virginia and Charleston. About 500 railroad men collect there from time to time during a day. —The strawberry harvest is about over in this section. Cut down the weeds and mow the rows with a lawn mower. The rows may be hoed or the old bed left for another year in the matted condition; but all weeds must be kept down. Robert Emory Pattison. Sketch of the Career of the Democratic Stand- ard Bearer in the Approaching Gubernatorial Contest. Robert Emory Pattison, the Democratic candidate for Governor, was born-at Quan- tico, Md., December 8th, 1850. His fath- er, Robert Henry Pattison, a native of Maryland, graduated from Dickinson col- lege in 1843; entered the Philadelphia conference of the Methodist Episcopal church in 1846; filled a number of promi- nent appointments in Philadelphia and else where; was presiding elder from 1869 to 1872; received the degree of D. D. from Dickinson in 1867; was for several years chaplain of the grand lodge of Masons, in Pennsylvania,and at his death in Philadel- phia February 14th, 1875, was one of the ablest and most popular ministers of his church. His mother, Catherine P. Wol- ford was a granddaughter of Colonel Thom- as Wolford, of the Maryland line in the Revolution. When Robert was six years old his father was appointed to Asbury church, Philadelphia. He obtained his ed ucation in the public schools of that city and was graduated from the Central High school, delivering the valedictory address. In 1869 he entered the law office of Lew- is C. Cassidy,then one of the most brilliant advocates of the Philadelphia bar, and was admitted to practice in 1872. He had good prospect of success as a lawyer. but his ca- reer was destined to be political, rather than legal. In 1877 he was named as a candidate of the Democratic party for auditor genzral of Pennsylvania, and oun first ballot in the con- vention stood next to William P. Schell, who was nominated and elected. A few months later, at the suggestion of Mr. Cas- sidy, he was the Democratic nominee for city controller of Philadelphia. The people were ripe with revolt and he was elected by a majority of 2,000, although the Re- publican candidates on the State ticket car- ried the city by 6,000 majority. Mr. Pattison entered upon his duties January 1st, 1878, and recognizing the fact that he was elected to reform the office and its methods, he set about the work with a determination to honestly administer its affairs. He found the credit of the ocity impaired; its paper at a discomot in the money market—but by adopting a funding plan, order was brought out of chaos; and such was the appreciation of hisservices by the people that at the expiration of his three-year term he was re-elected by a ma- jority of 13,593 over his contestant, one of the most esteemed citizens and successful merchants of Philadelphia. This was not a trinmph of party, but one due to the per sonal and exceptional abilities with which Mr. Pattison had discharged his office for it was at a time when the Republican candi date for President carried the city by over 20,000 majority. This popularity placed him in 1882 as an available candidate for Governor. After a close and vigorous con- test in the state convention he was nomi- nated, and in November of that year was elected by a plurality of 40,202 over his Republican opponent, General James A. Beaver, although for thirty years previous- ly his party had been in a minority in the State. This result was due more to his vig- orous and independent personality and to his successful administration of the finan- cial affairs of the metropolis than to the dissensions in the Republican ranks at that particular time. During his administration the finances of the State were economically managed and the State debt steadily reduced. Although hampered at every step by the legislative branch of the government, which was in | the control of his political opponents, he was patient and persevering, setting his face against extravagant appropriations, and holding the corporations of the State to a strict obedience to the constitution and the laws. His success was a phenomenal one. Upon returning to private life he resum- ed the practice of law in Philadelphia. Three mouths later he was elected presi- dent of the Chestnut street National bank. He had previously declined the auditorship of the treasury tendered him by President Cleveland, but afterward accepted an ap- pointment as Pacific railroad commissioner and was elected president of that commis- sion. His report on the relations of that corporation to the government is one of the ablest and most valuable papers in the fi- nancial history of the land-aided roads and on the existing status of their debt to the government. On the completion of his work as the head of the commission he re- turned to Philadelphia and devoted his at- tention to the bank. He was a lay delegate to the general conference of the Methodist Episcopal church in 1884 and 1888; in 1890 fraternal delegate to the general conference of the M. E. church south, and in 1891 a delegate to the Methodist ecumenical coun- cil held in Washington, D. C. In 1884 Dickinson college conferred upon him the degree of doctor of laws. In 1890, owing to the errors of the Republican party, the Democracy seized the golden opportunity and again nominated Mr. Pattison for the execative office. His campaign was a vig- orous and agressive one, and his speeches were presentations of the real issues of the people. ‘ For a second time he carried Pennsylva- nia on a platform of reform, being elected by a majority of 16,554,although the Republi- can candidates for lieutenant governor and the secretary of internal affairs were eleot- ed by majorities above 20,000. His victory gave him a position of national importance. He was inaugurated January 20th,1891,for the term of four years. GEORGE WILKINS GUTHRIE. George Wilkins Guthrie, who was nom- inated as Democratic candidate for Lien- tenant Governor in the Erie conven- tion, is about 50 years old, and one of the leading lawyers of the State. For a quarter of a century he has been an unfal. tering opponent of one of the most oppress- ive city rings that evercursed an American city municipality. During much of that time he has seen this ring increase in pow. er, impudence and audacity; but while many who hated the ring were driven in despair toaccept its rule asa permanency, he never once ceased his struggles against is, or lost faith that eventually the people would crush it to fragments. He has lived to see the realization of this faith. In the municipal election of February 18th, 1902, the ring, which was thought to be invinci- ble, was so routed and demoralized that the regaining of its old-time supremacy is seen by its leaders and all those opposed to it to be an entire impossibility, and Mr. Guth- rie,as chairman of the Democratic city com mittee, and a member of the citizens’ com- mittee of twenty-five, managed and led the forces of the people which achieved that notable victory. : Mr. Guthrie was educated in the West- ern university of Pennsylvania, Pittsburg, and, after reading law with the late Judge Wilkins of that city, gradnated from the Columbian law school, Washington, D. C. He began practice in 1869. Mr. Guthrie, as a young man, was more active in Democratic State and national politics than he has been of late years, bis RR e. work in the cause of municipal reform con- suming all the time which could be spared from his law practice, and there is one in- cident of his work at that time which is worthy of particular notiee,and which con- stitutes, perhaps, his most notable service to the Democratic national organization. He was one of the attorneys who, in 1876, on behalf of the national committee, went to Florida to represent the Democratic elec- tors hefore the returning board of that state in the Tilden-Hayes electoral contest. Mr. Guthrie, in company with Malcolm Hay, George W. Biddle, David W. Sellers and John R. Reed, all men much older than himself, was sent to Florida to act as counsel for the Tilden electors, and re- mained through the protracted proceedings which were also in dispute. Mr. Guthrie, who was then only twenty-eight years of age, was probably the youngest of the lawyers engaged upon this important work. Upon only one occasion in his life time has Mr. Guthrie been a candidate for pub- lic office. That was in 1896, when he was the nominee of the Democratic party and the Citizens’ municipal league for mayor of Pittsburg. The fight which was made on that occasion for the redemption of the city from machine control caused the at- tention of the whole country to be fixed upon Pittshurg. Mr. Guthrie was defeat- ed by a small majority, upon the face of the returns, but the character of the can- vass he had made, and the attention which was attracted to his great knowledge of municipal affairs, and to his long and de- termined fight for their improvement in his native city, gave him a wide reputation all over the country among men who were devoting their talents and euergies to the solution of the complicated question of mn- nicipal government. Mr. Guthrie bas had a very active part in all of the movements to secure ballot re- form which have been instituted during the past several years. He has participated in ‘many conferences of the men who were laboring to bring it about, and, at their request, has appeared often before commit- tees of the House and Senate of the State Legislature and urged the adoption of the various bills which had been presented and introduced. There has not been a session for several years during which he did not visit Harrisburg at least once in the inter- est of some measure of this character. Mr. Gathrie’s labors in behalf of better government for cities have, since 1897, tak- en in the entire scope of his country, he in that year becoming a member of the exeen- tive committee of the National municipal leagne, and as such giving connsel and assistance to the reformers of many cities who were struggling for the improvement of their local conditions. He also served in this national organization as a member of a special committee of ten, which after two or three years of labor and investiga- tion, prepared a program which has since been the text hook of reformers of city gov- ernment throughout the country. The characters of many cities have been recon- structed or modified upon lines which this program snggests. JAMES NOLAN. James Nolan is one of Reading's best known citizens. He is nearly 60 years of age and lives with his family at 236 North Fifth street. He has been a resident of Reading since a young man. He is one of five brothers who came to America from Ireland early in life—William, James, Charles, Thomas and Ed ward—all of whom bave been leading citizens. The last two named are dead. James was for many years a member of the firm of William Nolan & Bro., railroad contractors, which did a large business in all sections of the eastern part of the Unit- ed States. He retired several years ago and at pres- ent has under construction a magnificent residence in the northwestern section of Reading. Mr. Nolan never held any public office, but has always taken a deep and active in- terest in the success of the Democratic party, and among the leading politicians of the State is well known. He has been closely identified with the business inter- est of Reading for many years, is a director of the Farmers’ national bank and of other Reading corporations. He is a public- spirited citizens, a man of fine intelligence and deep learning and possesses one of the best equipped libraries in Reading. Hes entirely a self-made man. The nomination came to him as a com- plete surprise, hut was received with much enthusiasm hy his friends. Mr. Nolan is a widower and his family consists of two charming and accomplished daughters, who recently made their debut in society. The Democratic Platform. The Republican Organization of Pennsylvania In- dicted for Crimes. The platform adopted by the Democratic convention at Erie on June 25th, was as fol- lows : The Democratic party of Pennsylvania repeats and reaffirms all of the. statements, promises and declarations of purpose con- tained in the platform of its state conven- tion of 1901. i We repeat that every department of our state government is honeycombed with prof- ligacy, dishonesty and reckless disregard of constitutional and moral obligations; that the powers of government are prosti- tuted to the purposes of public thieves; thatconstitutional restraints and commands the sanctity of the law, the obligation of official oaths and demands of common hon- esty are thrust aside by the substitution of a higher law—the demands of an insatiate greed of public plunderers for money, mon- ey,more money; that shamelessly and open- ly the votes of legislators are bought and so persistently and constantly that market values for legislators have been established by settled custom; that the apparent in- difference of our people to these outrages emboldened the corruptionists to suchan ex- tent that the last session of our legislature out-Heroded Herod in ite infamies that all men pronounce it the most corrupt legisla- tive body that ever convened in any State in the Union; that its very organization was founded on the purchase of venal leg- islators with money aud place and that it closed its session with the crowning infamy of that most stupendous franchiee steal, shocking the moral sense of the entire conn try; that the selection of a United States Senator was accomplished in a carnival of corruption and bribery ; that in the reckless determination to punish enemies and re- ward subservient tools, established munic- ipal governments were ruthlessly overturn- ed and the chosen servants of the people expelled from their offices to make places for the creatures of a corrupt machine while the faith of the people in the sancti- ty of the judiciary was broken by its halt- ing efforte to find plausible excuse for the crime; foiled in its efforts to rob the State of millions of dollars of valuable coal de- posits, the legislature proceeded to that other and greater robbery of the railway franchises of the State worth millions to the plunderers and stripping every city, town and township in the commonwealth of the proper control of its streets for trol- ley improvements; that even the public charities of the State--its hospitals and asy- lume, and the comfort of their unfortu- nate inmates were made the sport of . polit- ical greed and their appropriations measur- ed and determined hy their use and serv- ices to the machine; that no possible field of corruption was left uncultivated by the crew of public plunderers who have seized upon your State—plunderers, who, in the name of a great politica! party, have pros- tituted all the purposes and powers of gov- ernment to their own enrichment. REPUBLICAN ORGANIZATIONS INDICTED. For these crimes we again indict the Republican organization of Pennsylvania as it is now controlled. To the absolute extirpation of all these evils we hereby pledge our party and its nominees. We promise an administration absolutely clean. incorruptible and pledged to a ded- ication of the powers of public position to the public weal, We aim at the banishment from the pre- cincte of the legislature of the lobbyist, the vote broker, the bribe giver and taker, the franchise robber and the hordes of party dependents locking to the public treasury for pay for corrupt party service. ’ We assure the business interests of the State absolute exemption from “pinch leg- islation;"’ from threatened enactment of oppressive laws designed only to invite bribery as the condition of peace and pro- tection from annoyance. Corporation lobbyists, no longer needed for protection against the schemes of plun- derers, will cease to exist,and thas will dis- appear the temptation (so often yielded to) to use their power to improperly influence legislation affecting public interests. An honest administration will insure the business interests of the State absolute ex- emption from the forced levies of political parties and leaders. . : Officers of corporations shall no longer he compelled to use the money of their stock- holders in lavish contributions to the cor- raption fund of political parties, their man- agers and office seekers. ’ EQUAL AND JUST LAWS PROMISED. To the people of the State we promise - equal and just laws; pure, honest and eco- nomical administrations, and an invitation to public positions of pure honorable, and upright men to take the places of the scur- vy politicians who now disgrace them. We denounce those who control the Re- publican organization for their refusal to fulfill their party pledge to give ballot re- form to our people. In its formal platform in 1900 it solemnly ‘ promises this reform. So clear was the pledge that the senior sen- ator from Pennsylvania declared himself in writing that if the Republican organiza- tion failed to discharge this obligation it would “sink finally into merited infamy.’” Yet at the dictation of those who, through ballot frauds, control one of the great cities of the State, all ballot reform legisation was throttled and the ‘‘merited infamy’’ fully earned. Corruption and frauds, either at prima- ries, conventions or general elections, are absolutely destructive of the spirit of re- publican institutions and incompatible with good government. In order to secure to the people the pow- er to govern themselves and secure the per- petuation of republican government, the Democratic party is hereby pledged to the adoption of a uniform primary election law a personal registration in all the cities of the commonwealth and a free, equal, and seoure ballot, assuring to all citizens equal rights and affording the greatest facilities for independent voting, and to make the appointment of overseers and the opening of the ballot boxes obligatory when de- manded by the citizens. We recommend that all Democratic can- didates for the legislature pledge themselv- es, in case of election, to use all honorable means to secure the adoption of these meas- ures. We deplore the existence of the labor trouble now affecting important interests and a large portion of the people of our State, and express the earnest hope that, through concession, moderation and fair dealing, an early adjustment may be reach- ed. While we concede to capital its rights to the utmost protection, guaranteed it by the constitution and the laws, we declare it as the conviction of this convention that labor also bas the right to that protection, which comes through organization and un- ion. We believe that labor unions organ- ized for the betterment of the condition of earners, acting within the limits of the law and not subversive of public order, are not only lawful, but commendable, and should be met, recognized and dealt with accord- ingly. The right of labor to organize with in these limits is as sacred as any righ$ of person or property. For the evils under which Pennsylvania suffers the Republican organization suggests no remedy. Its plat- form is absolutely barren of reference to them. existence and promises no change. : At the dictation of a boss, supported by a machine made delegation representing nothing, but the will of another boss,it has nominated a candidate for governor who offers no promises of reform. This candi- date has solemnly and deliberately declar- ed that the senior senator from Pennsylva- nia ‘fails in no duty,’” that the criticism that has followed him is but further evi- dence of his real greatness; that he fally represents the State of which he is the fore most representative and that ‘‘Pennsylva- ‘nia has no ills that are worthy of mention. Verily this.candidate selected by the senior senator because of his laudations of the men and measures that we denounce as po- litically infamous holds forth no promise of relief to our dishonored State. To the pledges and the candidates of this present convention, and to them alone, can the people turn for deliverance. AID OF HONEST MEN INVITED. We invite the aid of all honest men in this contest. This Democratic Convention waves all expression of opinion oa question of national policy that might divert atten- tion from the pressing problems that con- front the people of our own State or that might distract and divide the army of reform. In the contest about opening we are concerned only as Pennsylvanians and only for the good of Penasylvania. While we act to-day as a political organ- ization, in presenting this platform and our candidates we seek no party advantage or victory. We freely and gladly dedicate our organ- ization and the great body of voters it rep- resents to the work of cleansing cur State from the stain of dishonor that has come upon her. ‘ To a fall union with us in this effort we invite honest men of all parties and ali or- ganizations sincerely intent upon the re- formation of public affairs, assuring to them a complete fulfilment of every pledge now made by this convention. —— Subscribe for the WATCHMAN. It neither affirms nor denies their pa