Colleges & Schools. ¥ YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, A Teacher, An Engineer, A Lawyer, An Electrician, A Physician, A Scientic Farmer, A Journalist, n short, if you wish to secure a training that will fit you well for any honorable pursuit in life, THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. TAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, nish a much more varied range of electives, after the lish, French, German, 8 ing History ; the En tures Hfaveholosys adapted to the wan [ of Teachin , or a general College Edueation. The courses in Cl thics, Pedagogies, and best in the United States. Graduates have no the General Courses have been extensively modified, ~o ax to far- Freshman year, than heretofore, includ- Latin and Greek Languages and Litera- anish, There courses are especially olitical Science, ts of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profession emistry, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very difficulty in securing and holding position. YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. THE WINTER SESSION enenx January 12th, 1902. 7 ; For specimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information repsecting courses of study, expenses, etc., and showing positions held by graduates, address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Ps. Coal and Wood JLoWARD K. RHOADS. | Shipping and Continxion Merchant, | Vd ' i ai N— ANTHRACITE AND BITUMINOUS [Tein — CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS,— sad other grains. eee COALS. / _.BALED HAY and STRAW— BUILDERS and PLASTERERS SAND — _KINDLING WOOD oy the bunch or cord as may suit purchasers. pectfully solicits the patronage of his Res io A and the public, at Central 1312. "Telephone Calls { Go Tereial 682. aear the Passenger Station. 36-18 Prospectus. NES AND OPINIONS em (Jee NATIONAL IMPORTANCE : state. It was early discovered that he ' had cut some queer capers, in a liter- ! jously asked the meaning of it all —~T HE SU N— ALONE OONTAINS BOTIL Daily, by mail, , Pa., October 31, 1902. mom Is He Fit to be Governor. AS tne Quay machine candidate for governor, Ex-Judge Pennypacker has been the hardest riddle to solve ever presented to the voters of the Keystone ary-political way, while a judge; but the day he left the bench he tumbled into the ring and ever since his ex- traordinary performances have amaz- ed, amused and disgusted by turn the onlookers. Former friends have anx- | Meanwhile the ex-judge has waddled | around the political tent utterly uncon- ' scious of the effect of his self-revela- tion. He has sometimes tried to crack jokes, but his hearers couldnt see the | point. Upon one ludicrous occasion he had to explain where the laugh ought to come in, but the effort was a dismal | failure. He tried to flirt with the] | women and said he was better looking | than his pictures in the newspapers. | They didn’t agree with him. Ordinar- ily his personal demeanor has been that of a man conducting his own fu- neral. The icicles drop off him and give reception committeemen a chill. | He stood straight up one night and: after abusing his dignified and manly | opponent, cried out, in querelous tones: | “Why not try another?’ The answer | | everywhere heard was, “Well, if we . swapped Bob Pattison for you, we'd be | dreadfully cheated, sure enough.” The | oth f . $6 a year. | other members of the Quay aggrega Daily and Sunday, by mail, - $8 a year. THE SUNDAY SUN Price 5c. a copy. By mail, $2 a year. 47-3 Address, THE SUN, New York 50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE TENTS. rr: TRADE MARKS, DESIGNS 9’ OOPYRIGH'I'S, ETC. Anyone sending a sketeh and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an in- vention is probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. pandbook Liens sent . Oldest agency for securin o oe Fat oh Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cireu- lation of any scientific journal. Terms $3 a year; four TD, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & CO. 361 Buoapway, NEW YORK. BRANCH orricE, 625 F Sr, WASHINGTON, D.C. 46-43 ——————— Plumbing etc. YOUR PLUMBER as you chose your doctor—for ef- fectiveness of work rather than for lowness of price. Judge of our ability as you judged of his—by the work already done. Many very particular people have judged us in this way, and have chosen us as their plumbers, R. J. SCHAD & BRO. No. 6 N. Allegheny 8t., BELLEFONTE, PA. 42-43-6t . Goes Like Hor CAKEs.—‘‘The fastest gelling article I have in my store,’’ writes draggist C. T. Smith, of Davis, Ky., ‘is Dr. King’s New Discovery for Consump tion, Coughs and Colds, because it always cures. In my six years of sales it has nev- er failed. I have known it to rave suffer- ers from Throat and Lung diseases, who could get no help from doctors or any oth- er remedy.” Mothers rely on it, best phy- gicians prescribe it, and Green’s Pharmacy guarantees satisfaction or refund price tion have talked about everything but | their candidate, but he has to flock by | | himself, between stumping stations. Trial bottles free. Regular sizes, 50c and $1. he | { The “Pennsylvania Dutch” were ex- | is the greatest Sunday Newspaper in the World. | pected to enthuse over their vote-seek- ing kinsman, but they have repudiated the relationship. The soldier racket couldn't be worked, for the candidate was only on the edge of the great con- flict. When he posed as the friend of the workingmen, some inquisitive peo- ple looked into the record and quickly discovered how he was in the habit of tumbling helpless labor plaintiffs out of court, when they sued for damages. He awkwardly made love to the farm- ers, but the men of the soil said it might be the hand of am amateur squash raiser, but it was the oily tongue of a political green-goods man. ‘When he proudly talked of his illustri- ous ancestry, impertinent critics made side remarks about Darwin's evolu- tion theory and asked what had become of the organ grinder and “the other member of the family.” In his forlorn swing around the cir- cle, Ex-Judge Pennypacker has not re- ceived one good, hearty, encouraging welcome.’ The frost has been on the pumpkin every time, and nobody is to blame but the hapless creature him- self. Before starting out he ostenta- tiously put on the collar of Quayism, and the people took him at his word. ‘Voters who want an odious and cor- rupt ring to remain in power, will vote for its candidate. Those who do not will turn him down, and his condemna- tion at the polls ought to be over- whelming. The honor, dignity and welfare of Pennsylvania imperatively demand it. Over 100,000 Democratic and Re- publican voters who were led off by Swallow, in 1898, are this year in line for Pattison. The issue between good and bad government is clearly drawn and every hour adds to the strength of the great reform movement of 1902. i Hensel knocked out the silly le about the coal trust. The former at- torney general promptly showed that the second Pattison administration did its whole duty with regard to this as in all other matters. ——Suabscribe for the WATCHMAN. ‘ on from a distance. | fully discredited himself with intelli- ! question now before the freemen of the | What do you suppose the amazed boss | Rise and ¥Fall of Pennyquackerania. | Why Homest Republicans Are in Revolt—A Conf- dence Game That Failed to Work. A Shield for Bad Men. Speeches Which Have Driven Away Voters and Strengthened the Cause of Reform. From the Bench to the Ring. 1 | Philadelphia, Oct. 27.—The most sin- | gular and suggestive development of | the present campaign is the fact that | almost every intelligent and self-re- | specting Republican one meets, either openly and indignantly repudiates the | candidate of his party machine for gov- | ernor, or.sharply refuses to “talk poli- | tics,” and turns away in transparent | disgust when his name is mentioned. | In the whole history of Pennsylvania | politics there has never been such a monumental failure, as his own advo- cate, as Pennypacker. Had he remain- | ed upon the bench, kept his mouth | shut, looked wise and destroyed or se- | curely hidden, every copy of the stupid i and abusive Quay book he is respon- sible for, he would have polled thous- | ands of votes, even as the pliant crea- | ture of the boss, that will now be turn- | ed indignantly against him. This is | the sentiment everywhere expressed, | even amongst those who have looked What the People Think. Face to face with the people the ex- judge has chilled his would-be sup- porters, driven away the doubtful, fear- gent men, and unconsciously revealed his absolute lack of tne. qualities de- manded in a high executive office and shown his pitiable subserviency to everything representing Quayism and all that it stands for. All sorts of ex- planations have been given, but the true one simply is, this man had been placed upon a pedestal where he did not belong. Self-stripped of the mask he has worn he now stands before the people, where he should be, feeble in intellect, destitute of high principles. Is such a man fit to be the chief magis- trate of Pennsylvania? This is the | commonwealth. A brief retrospect wit make this clear to the dullest mind. His Devotion to the Machine. Having, if he so desired, a life posi- tion of honor, at large remuneration | for a man of his social surroundings, ' there was no excuse Judge Pennypack- | er could offer for demeaning himself as the defender and eulogist of Quay- | ism. There is not another member of | the Philadelphia judiciary who would have done this thing. Mind you, the first offense was the editing and ful-| some endorsement of Quay’s venom on ! the stump in 1900, when he was so des-' perately = seeking re-election. The striking similarity, upon many sub- jects, between those discreditable de: liverances and Pennypacker’s ‘own speeches, is extremely suggestive. It | shows a sympathy of ideas and pur- poses that makes the twin authorship’ apparent. It shows how thoroughly the creature of Quay is saturated with the virus of Quayism. Next, the mag- | azine article, ostensibly in defense of Pennsylvania, was written expressly to defend the writhing boss, who was | skinned alive in the publication so | weakly and insincerely replied to. | The judge thought to hide his real purpose through devoting the post-' script only to Quay glorification. Why He Was Chosen. : Such slavish service, with intimate, | confidential, personal relationship for | many years and constant support of the machine, made Pennypacker an ideal candidate for the wily boss. He lifted his old cock-eye and gleefully | murmured: “He’s just the decoy I| want. We can. fool the people with him. We can rely upon him every | time. Yes, if I should want to repeat | old Winnebago's trick, he will put Dick in my place. Ah, Sam is the man for 02.” Then the word was passed along and the deed was done, with picturesque grand larceny of EHi- kin delegates, as the needful finale. Pennypacker would not have had a! single delegate, even in Philadelphia, | without “orders.” He knows this, yet | he stands up and shakes hands with ! himself as the “choice of the Republi- | can party.” Therein he shows what manner of man he is. i A Significant Omission. There was no formal notification of | the Harrisburg nominee, and why? This would have required the candi- manner, concerning public questions, | He dodged, slid off the bench, inter- | viewed himself again on the glories of Quayism, and prepared to exhibit! himself as the prize antiquarian—the | only real survivor of the flood. When ‘the celebrated “Quay-is-a-greater-man- than-Webster-or-Clay” talk was brought in by a grinning Ledger reporter the city editor nearly fell off his chair. -He braced up and determined to let the man who seemed to have shoveled out his brains when he hung up his judicial robes, commit political suicide. would have given for that “copy?” His attack of “indisposition” the next day was one of the closest calls he ever had. There was silence that could be felt for a month; but the risk had to be taken, the judge had to be let loose. And what a mess he has made of it! A review of these extraordinary “gpeeches” is enough to give one the nightmare. In no instance has there been a plain, earnest, sincere, truth- ful discussion of the questions at is- gue. Instead, a series of rambling talks that would discredit a candidate for justice of the peace in Schwenks- ville, where the judge raises chickens and bonnyclabber. Let us run rapid- ly over some of the points raised in the great case of the people against the machina. Dodging Vital Issues. It was charged that Quay set up Pennypacker because of the latter's personal devotion, past, present and future guaranteed. Not a word is said, test, no manly declaration of personal independence, no denunciation of the ise of clean hands and honest govern- ment. It was charged that the last session of the legislature was corrupt beyond all others. In reply, Judge Penny- packer quotes perfunctory approval of the routine work of a legal commission which codified laws and simplified practice, and then drops the curtain, saying: “We have nothing to do with the past.” It was charged that legislative can- didates were largely set up by a cor- rupt machine for selfish purposes. In reply, it was declared that these men represented the virtue and intelligence of the people, a statement that shows mental and moral obtuseness of an extraordinary degree. It was charged that the legislature was organized through open bribery. No reply. : It was charged that the last sena- torial election was shamelessly cor- rupt. No reply. It was charged that the machine kept itself in power largely through control and misuse of the public funds. It was claimed, in reply, in the words of Quay, in a public speech, that no public money had been “lost.” of course not; defalcations having been made good by unhappy bondsmen. No Censure of Wrong-Doing. It was charged that crooked appor- tionments were made to keep the Quay ring in power. No reply. It was charged that public institu- tions had been robbed of part of their appropriations. Iarst, in reply, proof was demanded. When that was prompt- ly furnished, silence. It was charged that the machine fought against true ballot reform. Re- ply, when “the organization,” that is the machine, made a new ballot law, to suit itself, it would be approved. It was charged that public franchises had been unfairly bestowed upon ring favorites. No reply. It was charged that the state and municipalities had been greatly wrong- ed by these combines. Reply: “The state is no peddler,” an absurd piece of pettifogging, in violence of the rul- ing of the supreme court, and prevail- ing practice in all other states. It was charged and clearly proven that Judge Pennypacker, upon four dif- ferent occasions, grossly misquoted. Governor Pattison’s speech of accept- ance and falsely accused him of slan- dering honest legislators. No reply. It was charged and clearly shown that the machine promotes monstrous frauds at the polls. Reply, again fol- lowing Quay: “You exaggerate. I never saw any.” It has been charged from the be- ginning that the Quay candidate, if elected, will be a subservient tool of Quayism. No reply. Rejoicing Over Injustice. When a mob of armed ruffians, shouting for Pennypacker, broke up an assemblage of peaceable citizens, the machine candidate was urged by | shame-faced friends to denounce the outrage. No reply; instead, when told that the mob’s purpose was accom- plished through legal quibbles, Judge Pennypacker forever discredited him- self in the eyes of fair-minded men, brought additional shame upon his state and gave final proof of his un- worthiness of public trust and confi- dence, by gleefully exclaiming ‘“That’s good news.” \ So it has been all the way through. This great state has never witnessed such a humiliating spectacle ag that presented by the candidacy of Samuel W. Pennypacker. His course has been such that patriotic citizens, in greater number than ever before, and with in- creasing indignation, while declaring their continued loyalty to the Republi- can party under honest leadership, have openly announced their intention to repudiate him at the polls and to cast their ballots for the honorable | opponent whom he has vainly sought to belittle and misrepresent. He has emphasized the supreme issue of the hour in Pennsylvania. He has made . date to go on record, in some explicit it clear to all that Pennypackerism and Quayism are one and the same thing; that a vote for him means the indefl- nite perpetuation of the malign power which has so long and so grievously afflicted the people of the greatest in- dustrial state in the Union. Earnest effort all along the line will ensure an honest legislature. Look bo the fight in every district. That big ball the Republicans were going to roll from Erie to the Dela- ware broke down at the start; typical of Pennypacker’s dismal failure on the stump from the beginning to the end. Look to the legislature. Let there be active work in every district for can- didates who will smite the machine and help to restore decent government at Harrisburg. . Boodle, the last refuge of political villians, is the only hope of the ma- chine. Let the conspirators be over- whelmed by the honest voters of Penn- sylvania, When Guthrie presides in the sen- ate at Harrisburg the political auc- tioneer will go out of business. Brib- ery will become a lost art. ——Subsoribe for the WATCOMAN. however, in reply. No denial, no pro- manifold crimes of Quayism, no prom-- Quayism Doomed. The baffled Quay combine has run out the mud machine and raised the black flag. This is a sure sign of coming defeat.