OLD SERIES, XL. NEW SERIES XXI1. THE CENTRE REPORTER. | - ry FRED KURTZ, ~-- EDITOR VELAND, vy YAUE PRESIDEN] NG, THURMAN the Repuhbji- War grandson 8 will re-| ard cider barrels oy reel KOOW s nomination for President was wl] here, a Republican asked inated on ti 1830), n wirtv-sixth 1e seven! Garfield was named on the ti can ninating Sherman Ve ! THE CHICAGO FAILURE. The Patriot says the nomination of | Harrison was made in sheer despair by the w worn out delegates who baye been strugeling "ary, for a week against the i juggling of the Blaine con- outcome of a It sitherate choice; it was the pirators, was not the only alter. | While | ve of theanti-Blaine element, had it dared, there etermined minority was a compact and d and the more prudent of leaders feared that if their avorite were nominated by a simple he could not | the of the par united support ty I'ne Bl: man go to Sher and Alger available men would not wd Allison at atl ine r Gresham ar were not persistency io his candidacy prevented a concentration mn McKinley and the convention was ing Har in the torrid ced tothe alternative of tak ir days Harris rt of Hobson's ice of evi the Re i the reader wi “dark horse, iS » DET. pel i ASK. 1 DIO Ag coldl mu N whatever. i he be aring. Sherman, is h more withont personal following i fail to provea weak candidate six yearsfservice in the United Stas s penate showed him originated 1 his personalit He has hee men of bh AS stim ling He was bea HALL. PA. BEN HARRISON NOMINATED, The agony at Chicago ended on Mon, | day, by the nomination of Benj. H. Hars| for President, Harri- fair man, better than odds as He bel Bourbon faction of Indiana Repub Ca son is a pretty Sherman, but by no good as nis to ti who have been trying to knife so g man as Judge Gresham, for a number of vears because of his purity of cha and because he wonld never len elf t bogs no | beer LI ies in Lhe DR y American work mer m ft and the praise a Urmant administration was r. He was defeated memners o uch a man - Ig over some tariff in Congress in 1870, it is astonishi 3 i far ? anda she Lone of the speeches made by "=e f sb taadio 3 nnmber of ie leading Repu They could be made by Democrats ill with scarcely hange Many of the same gentlemen Ale 8 in Congre #8. and they and their an colleagues make speeches of on, whom he gets to a national finds there Quay make Sherman's pt WoRing g right were knocked ESTE". Hasti i that Pennsylvania bad enongh yd We k ngs opened his speech by saving of Grover | didn't r he is half-ioelined £0 Grove r Howe now Diniel winding np of ver, at th Dan sheef on Sherman by saying, party erman. ———————— wo eirens, iel might fittingly out the ean either the Republican nor | wanted John 8i the | Labor, havi anproved ¢ Department of n is indulged in just now head represent the canse be appointed at ita th 0 Wil | interests in the Cabinet, | 1 natarally there are any number of | idates for the place, The New York | World says: “What is needed is a skilled | statistician, and a i man who not only | knows the condition, needs and wants of the working people, but is capable of | patting that i 2 formation before Congress and the country in a manner to enlight- en our Legislators and to help the canseof labor.” I ETT. Johnny Sherman dido’t make it at Chicago, after all. Dan Hastings most certainly is not to blame for it. Among all the nominating speeches, Gen. Has- tings mage the best, which is the verdict of all the Jeading journals, John Sherman is not to be the Repub lican Moses, and he may now view the white house fromthe dome of the capi- tol. Sherman picked vp his grip sack and left Chicago for home, very much down in the mouth, He will get off the train the next station before reaching Mansfield at midnight, and foot it for home, a distance of 2} miles, #0 as not to be eeen and for the nextthree weeks will be reported to all callers as “not at home,” Good bye, Jchony Sherman. Good bye, Eliza Pinkston, you won't to be chief cook in the white house kitchen. v is noder discussion. Even 80 recently | 53, a man could abiican Church be a member of the favor nding, and p IWeriog a good still many duties whose redactic Serions laty 0 aly wrt, without fF i EXoomms on Louisis | nication, is the duty gar, which is protective only in ana, though some sanguine admirers of | it in other | Ithink it is beyond dispute that | 18 prospectively protection ton. ‘1 he Republican has for several vears heen consolidating into n party ive tariff party, pare and simple. Every | i year there in less and less potency in the | war issues and they most be replaced. have tariff, | n's expressions are not what the protedtive Mr. Sherr ££ ns ey were twenty yoarsago: Mr, Allison's fif< teen years ago; Messrs, Long and Lodge expressions are not what they were do not talk in Congress now as they talked to the Republicans of Massachu- setts in 1884. Mr. Blaine was no such protectionist when Speaker of the House or even so recently as when he was Secs retary of State, as he is now. The Re. tection and will not tolerate the sugges tion that any duty can be too high: it has already decreed it to be heresy to believe in raw materials, -» lw At Canton, China, some 250,000 people live continuously upon boats and many never step foot on shore from one years end to another, The young children have a habit of continually falling over board and thus cause a great deal of trouble in effecting a rescue, while in many instances this is impossible and a child is drowned. China is an over.popun. lated country and the Chinese have pro. fited by this drowning proclivity in re. dacing the surplus population. They at- tach floats to the male children so that they can bé fished out when they tumble into the river. The females are without such protection and are nsaally left to drown, . In the last few days three churches were struck by lightoing—one at Miles. burg, oneat Selinsgrove and one at Wilkesbarre, day « HpIes fostering cars +} Hie ¢ put him where he Omn ished the wn brain, | government t I States w 1 be wasted It is clear that if the pn bitory tariff if outlined in the republicar rm were enacted inevitable rai same Lo the American farmer, Misa ds people now engagad in farming would iged to seek empl olhar avocations, trades and professions already overcrowded would be sopght by farmers children, the present wage-workers in mill and mine wonld find a new compe- tition and a consequent redaction of wa- lab ges, in fact the whole 3 3 4 be revolonti vied, wi r system wonld ¢ ithe farmer and 3 the workman in the factory are the prins cipal sufferers Are the ¢ ready to American peopl commit ao s'upendons an act of folly n der the de n lusion that by stopping impor tation they will “protect home industry?” Let them think twice before they take jet and workingmen study this question farmers of | fo so fatal a step. Eapecially a prohibitory tariff which js boand work them irreparable injary if carried into effect FARMER AND WORKMAN. The value of farm products of the! United States shipped annually to fore! eign countries is greater than the value of the entire product of the highly pro | tected industries, iron and steel and cots ton and woolen manufactores. The vale ne of farm products of the United States for which there is no home market and which must be exported annually over FIVE HUNDRED MILLIONS OF DOL- LARS The national platform of the repnbli- can party just adopted at Chicago favors an increase of tariff doties to prevent im portation, which would most certainly de- stroy the market for American products in Joreign countries 3 : For foreign countries cannot take our farm prodacts if the American people wonld cease to take their products in exchange, - Eliza Pinkston has gone into mourn- ing. IKINGMEN CUT IN THEIR HAT HIS Th From oni average American workman perjor vd one 4} ark as the ave Tnx ar half to twice Workman Wilham M. Evaris, report as secretary rage Aropear state in the Haves administration, 17 f ean operalors if English and MOR rrecler Amer Ire E*THAN EQUALIZED by U ewerney ( { latter and the LONGER HOURS OF LABOR. ~Jams Blaine, re f siate DOrt AS BROretary the 1 : trati Garfield adminis . 44 i 4} want 10 call Lh » that as a WEEMS Ada anoreeated ge : AR | tand ] 3 t attend to the bill i ' picture stores, - -— ft laws nn ore than f wand 1 articles int if ’ Many of these Tie with our own pele nany are hardly worth attentio ects of revenue. « A considerable redace tion can be made in the aggregate by id The taxa- of wdding then 4 nn nfl Jon of 1 to the free list, uxnries presenta no features hardship, but the necessaries of life used 1. . } bho and consume all the people, the daty apon which adds to the cost of living in every home, should be greatly cheapen- ed. —~Presipgxr CLevEnasn’s Mus SAGE - Adolph Loeb at one time James Milliken, of Bellefonte, nominated for vice president, bat it proved otherwise, had It should have been Milliken, however, for he has a bar’l as well as Morton, per- haps some smaller, and that wodld have put Hasting’s, little sum of 100,000 up to big nominating Milliken, 175000 in Pennsylvania. It was a mistake In not wsiasm, MAP Pps - 8. Woods Caldwell, of Lock Haven, is mentioned as one of the applicants the vacant post mastership of that town, Mr Caldwell would make an efficient and popular postmaster; he is a gentleman and a sterling Democrat, one of the best workers in Clinton county, with hosts of friends, and has render ed the party valuable service for years. a WAI The Sun says: The weak point with Gen. Harrison is that he is the grandson of President William Henry Harrison and the great-grandson of Benjamin Harrison of Virginia, who was a member of the Revolationary Congress, Govern- or of Virginia, and, as a delegate in the Convention of that State which ratified the Federal Constitution, gave his vote against ratification, It is a distinguished ancestry, but the American people have not hitherto regarded a man's ancestors as qualifying him to be President. AI A AA In the proceedings of the Chicago son vention will be found the platform. It favors a high protective tariff to help the millionaires and skin the farmers and laboring men. for S THE REPUBLICANS, Work of the National Conven- | tion in Chicago. HARRISON FOR PRESIDENT. Gets on the Ticket. Tippecanoe's Grandson First Place MORTON FOR SECOND PLACE. A Platform Declaring Enthusiastieally For Protection Adopted, Messrs. Depew and Fitler Withdrew Early in the Contest and Were Followed on the Last Day Allisor Two Cal grams From Blaine in Which He He guests the Delegates Not to Vole Him-—William Walter Phelps Mads Gallant but Unsuccessful Struggle for the Viee Presidential! Nomination—The Proceedings in Detall from the Begin. ning to the End. CHAIRMAN JONES Wr wn brick 5, jue thal ie thea } troets way i Tha 4 tral part of tl up on ofthe SUrroun boinaw tater pont Tr Lhe oF a oy rot iad by IMANRAZHTS Ar EaLiers shoes and broad uilt with a 3 . i over that shallow galieries t¢ hang from All three are that viewad HOTT bees rial precipitous , as they wers DELRGATES ENTRANCE, 00 the of buman =. . platform freight, agains to-day with their loads the people seemed like a high sheer wall The fluttering of the i dreds of fans they carried helped out the il lusion by creating the impression of so many wings in futile battle with the air. Flags and the shiolds of the states hid the galiery fronts, and bunting was twined round their supporting columns. The roof was coverad with the same gaudy materials, supported by curved trusses dotted with blaging electric lights of the Edison pattern. Long streamors of os Sh ntnind flies flattened bung from the oeil ing in artistic oon J fusion. In fromt of \ the galleries on the ANI walls were great panels made of flags and red, white and biwe sheeting. Each formed a frame for a portrait, and cach por trait, enclosed in a wreath of lsurel, was signin circled by a great ring of electric lamps, grouped in the form of fivepointed stars. AA A. THE COMMITTEE ON CREDENTIALS, It Gives Wise Fourteen of the Contested Rents and Mahone Hight, After a continuous session of six hours the committee on credentials came to an BETeo ment upon the Virginia contests. It decided to recommend to the convention that the four Mahone nt large, Joha 0. Watts, AH Harris, T. 8 Brown Allen and Gen, William Mahone, be declared the regular delegates and seated nocordingly | that neither the regular nor contesting delegates from the Ninth district bo admitted, and that the Wise delegates in the Becond, Third, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth and Tenth districts be reo ognized as the regularly elected delegates There wore no contests fa the Fleet and Fourth districts, and the Mabone delegates hold their places, The decision gives Wise fowrtess of the delegation and Mabope eight. PRESS ENTRANCE. ew at wenn Addresses hy Temporary Chairman Thors- ton, Gen, Fremont and Fred Douglass, CHICA resect mocratic at. iv to faith it had wiodoed as load ers for the last forty vears They were faithful to the slave holding clase FRED DOUGLARS, during slavery: faithful to them during the war and the time of reconciliation, and they had been faithful to them ever since They were faithful today to the solid south. He be lieved that the Republican party would prove itself! equally faithful to ite friends, and its friends during the war were men with black faces, Mr, Douglass then asked that the ool ored men be remembered in the platform, saying that they were now stripped of their constitutional right, and had to wade 0 the ballot box through blood. Mr. Douglas con cluded: “Gentlemen, I speak in behalf of the millions who are disfranchised to«day." He was liberally applauded. It was then stated by the chair that the national committee had decided to place on the roll the four uncontested Virginia dele. gatos and the four delegates at large, hoaded by Mr. Mabone. Congressman Wise arose and vigorously condemned him, his party methods—overything, in fact, with which Mr. Mahone is now, ever has been or is likely to be compected with, and was followed by Mr. Mahone, who did much the same for Mr. Wise that Mr. Wise had done for him. The debate was raled out of order, The chair then announesd a long lst of socrotarios, assistant secretaries, sergeants at arms, ote, for the temporary organization, After the rending of the lid of officers was completed and the band had played a medley of national airs, Mr, Horr, of Michigan, was recognised, and uoasented a gavel to he peed [Contipued on 4th page.) whom kn ae they were