OLD SERIES, XL. NEW SERIES XXII. THE CENTRE REPORTER, FRED KURTZ, EDITOR National Ticket. FOR PRESIDENT GROVER CLEVELAND. FOR VICE FRESIDENT, ALLEN G, THURMAN, County Ticket. FOR CONGRESS, J. L. SPANGLER. FOR ASSEMBLY, JOHN T. McCORMICK. J. H. HOLT FOR CORONER, JAMES NEFF, M. D. FOR JURY COMMISSIONER, GEORGE BOWER. True to the undeviating course of the Democratic party, we will not neglect the interests of labor and our working- men.—Cleveland’s Letter of Accept- ance. The continuance, upon a pretext of meeting public expenditures, of such substance of the people 8 sum largely in excess of public needs, thing which, under a government based upon justice, and which finds its strength and vsefulness in the faith and trust of the people, ought not to be tolerated.— Cleveland's Letter of Auceptanc e. The value of the Pennsy vania wool crop is now about $1,250,000; woolens consumed by State is about $60,000,000; would reduce the price of woo'ens about 20 per cent., and 20 per cent. reduction in woolens consumed in Pennsylvania would be about $12,000,000. In free woo 19 bay $12,000,000 annually to protect $1,250,000 of wool, in the production of which there is practically no labor. assemblies contempt Three labor showed their Harrison on Monday ter the big over. principal streets the men saw ajHarrison for warch under it until the band a dirge. Nearly all fused to struck up the men they know that Harrison is the enemy of organized labor and and they did not feel justified in walk- ing under bis banner with flying flags bcc IRISH - ~AMERIUANS FOR } § CLEVE The Irish-Americans of New York city who supported Blaine four years ago are now enthusiastically advocating | the election of Cleveland and Thurman. Edward J. Rowe, president of the Irish- American Independents, and other prominent leaders of patriotic Irish or- ganizations, are whole-souled support- ers of the Democratic ticket, and ata re cent meeting highly ealogistic speeches in favor of the anti-monopolist ticket were made, The Democratic party is before ‘he people with able and honest candidates and sound and pure principles, and vies tory is certain. The monopolist must take his band from the tax-payer’s CLEVELAN O's LE LEITER OF ACCEPT ~ President Clone letter of accept ance, which was made public Monday has the merit of being consistent. He sounds no retreat in his position on the tariff assumed in his message at the opening of congress, but rather repeats it, and emphasizes it with illustrations which every voter can easily unders stand, He distinctly draws the issue be- tween the reasonable tariff reduction from a protection standpoint, which he advocates, and the free trade attitude which is charged against him by the war tariff Republicans, He assures the business men of the country that the Democratic party has no fatention of sacrificing their interest and to the workingmen he gives the as- surance that no reduction in the tariff will be made without retaining to them their protection against the panper labor of Earope, As additional protection to labor he strongly advocates restricted immigration and a carefal selection of immigrants who will make good citizens of their adopted country. Mr. Blaine's support of trusts he characterizes in a « few sentences and he denoun- ces the Republican disposition, not only to keep up prices to consumers by a war tariii. but to advance them farther by these unjust combinations. He repudiates the charges {hub he sympathizes with England and shows SD the whole of the document the i of the CENTRE PENSION REPORT. ANNUAL RECORDS BINCE EVER MADE COMPARISON OF THE 1861, LARGEST INCREABE The Commissioner of Pensions in his annual report shows that there were dar. ing the fiscal year ending June 30, 1888, added to the pension rolls, names, (the eargest annual increase in the hisiory of the bureaun,) making a 2 557 pensioners on the rolls at total of 452 the close of the The amount of 00,252 new VEar. pensions paid during the 770, 862, an year o f $5,308,280 increase A new feature of the acts and their relation to the administras tion of the general pension laws, It shows various stages through which a special act passes from its receipt the addition a table is the total have In furnished showing which the certificate. pension acts become laws since 1861, as follows SPECIAL PENEION ACTH SINCE 1561 Lincoln, 1 —Johuson, OF 4g 400 il 186510 1 1869 to | Grant, RET 4005 1877 to 1 Hayes, fire ALT 1881 to 1885, 736 Garfield and Art otal, 2.001 8 1.360-C1 1885 to 188 eveland, am Grand total, 3.370. 3 pe NG FACTORIES, talk -»> KNITTI Because prominent'y land aad his 1 at Miliheim Dail ] Nev 4 It would be ¢ for the same reason, free trade nlged in by the hosiery factory down, ~ of iE art Ys has 1 Yorn closed snaistant to rotund ton for an immense hos- at factory and Lewisburg the Mus recently destroyed {Lon expect 0 ser knitting by fire is being rebui scale. They evidently heap w their From what ment referred to at Millhel : , and ship We oan earn, 343; properly manage ind SOREN: erected iu d liberal sted other much i ding, ant but bas never Ways / OC , and to is respon $1 «4 ¥y BLiLY Pak au Lhe now the blame oun Grover sible tion of ting factories nd creci ad je for the ¢ koi for the new establish- conntied aod he is Pat the Millheim r control of ments in ining one ahead anyhow, je go yd busis yarish also, Give with busis will fi it free wool and it will boom Walter Aiken, of Franklin, N. H., owns hosiery mill in that State (N. H) Union says Mr. the largest wiery indos having been engaged in sre than thirty years, In a letter to the Union Mr, Aiken discusses the effect of tha tariff on the hosiery in dustry, We make the following extract: We are continnally referred to hosiery Now, what is the reason? How stated, ng, Overproduction, pure and simple. Briefly Years ago, when our high tariff operation, made money and Harry, who were looking “These fellows are making Let us build hosiery mills and help them” They did so, and the re salt is that more goods are made than our home market will take care of. Then we began to cub prices, every ma ufac- tarer wanting to sell his own goods, till prices have reached that point where there is little orno money ino making hosiery, We have even got the prices on someol our coarser grades lower than they are abroad. Last winter I was in a store in Besrmuada where the proprietor was opening a lot of goods, and to my surprise he opened some of the lower grades of hosiery of my own make, I asked him why he bought them, and Le said they were cheaper than the foreign. That was considerable of a nul for me lo crack. 1 knew I was paying as good wa ges as any mill in the State, and here | was competing wilh pauper labor and beating it at that! 1 honestly believe that with free raw material we can beat the world inthe manufactars of most kinds of goods, . This talk about low wages if the Mills bill passes is nonsense, pure and simple To whom do I have to pay the highest wages? Why to the carpenter, the stone mason, the brick mason, the painter and to every other non-protected trade, It secme strange to me that our working people can’t wee thess things in their true light. comes overproduc tion? itis this: went into Tom, Dick on, said money. we - 1t seomn perfectly clear that when the Government, this instrumentality ereat ed and maintained by the people to do their bidding, taros upon and, through an utter perversion of ite powers, extorts from their labor snd capital largely in excess of public » oreatare | : PA. 453 AGAINST 84, be of i Any opinion in another column will nterest veterans and soldiers, oue who ls bors ynder the false that present administration 18 not in sympn- thy with the soldiers of the war and refuses to to who have returned bearing the scars and dis late grant pensiovs those ablements received inthe service need only read this report. Comment is un- necessary; I'he present the facts speak for themselves, passed ae dmigistration in three years 1360 special pousion acts or ¢ Repub- lican administrations from 1861 to The total nnmber passedby ti 1850 ag ’ in twenty-four sears oran sions per year of 453 84 ole An average gpecial per against arly proves that mocracy while ia d ever five times as wh fi the poor deserving soldier asthe an BAYS 8 of the ve mind cannot ¢ louds faced liar eye wil if aking assertion but he who isso lost justice its the truth not IH worthy thousands to day means to draw thoes dier and especiall the Republic This method vicinity and he I8 not wise, foryes iron in 1 t ing that is ARES prociamation tae operal and regulations permitting goods, wares and merch or over the territ Cross States to or from Canada He also recommends t the Canadians discriminag vessels navigating iog tolls mitting tolls upon ¢ our government discrimination sels navigating our By this completely 1eir Own vessels adopt th n game ru towards Canadian lakes and canals messages the Pre eiron ? vith PE itt 34 tin Sloan CAR partisans of the denale the Republican New Eng with the cry t} en from power Lo arouses country Administration is dignity and that it taining the President, in discussing the volved, shows great fami subject in all its phages, of a treaty he th se measures of retaliadon. Naturally there will as a resultant. Canadians ¢ object $0 the application of ritles which they apply int civl intercourse with us, not well refuse to sunply quest of the President, generally i frie jaal to vights of ot igi it ACRIDE 10 LY i Dot main RoR, gestions AvilY with th in the atwence is justified in calling for be soma’ irritati But snnot the sam heir commer withh the re the Repudlican partisans ces the whole coun‘ry will cordially ap prove and justify the action suggested - THE MAINE ELECTION. Portland. Baptember 10--The interest dented, and the result creased vote, i" a4 largely The majority for Govern: TARIFF REFORM. {Continued from last issue | CARPETS roduct 581,702 802 6 885 218 Value of p Pola! wages 824,957 504 increased by wages, 27 per cent, What they bought and what they made is a carious study and worth an ar- ticle by itself; but time and space forbid, [heir lowest protection was 46 per cent, I'lieir tax on both imported and domess tic mills But we will be more than generous, The tolnl value of the wool they used $4.0975,120, f increased 20 per cent, $2,830. 734 in trust Deduct the duty foreign carpet wool and credit their do- mestic with an equal advance in cost and they still stole 23 per cent. of the wages and had their labor for nothing. The York and Pennsyivania carpet. rs, perhaps, are thankful for the which compels out pay in pauper 3 ait extended Value of product, less Wages........... Value wool is included in the woolen was by out for on the tariff then they stole of t he $20,015. 952 received NOW biessiogs of protection them to labor with a here the manager steals of the public charity house w per cent. $41 G23 040 9,146,700 $51 mnt 300 The { ar was $31.264276. It came reign v Miniries believing in protection here the manufacturer is protected giving him his labor free, so that areign pri¢ y exclude any wages. net level with our own and to give ifactarers thei our r labor free of cost ve been taxed £0.006 640, d exactly * DY B market. irk | the 10 stole or 42 American in the American Ameri ik-maker had his we n and workwomen supported by wiple of the United States and | y from the pauper dole, Can 8 per cent. HALT It does not indostries are taken, they These taken bap- ut thought of what any ex- wpt sugar would show. The figur 8 are of course. But no yn will make any change in lesson they teach, and actual figures, we had them or could get them, would mably make a much worse Ifthe refiners should prove only stole $2,000,000 instead of $42 000000 from wages last vear, welcome to, It makes no dif- Why beap up instances? matter what are slike, ail were (d, witho open to correction, strech i [unquesti &h that they Wing. the sed, which are: The employer pays not one cent of wages oul of his own pocket. 2. The workmen aresupported by a private tax levied by him on the general pablic He steals from this public support all thet he can—ranging from 5 or 10 per cent. in struggling indostries to 90 per cent. in the industry that has obtain. ied all that protection asks for—the abso- {lute control of the home market. Can any Protectionist ecantrovert, or even modify, one of these statements? Has any unfair assumption been made anywhere? [fit has, wonld any modifi- cation that might be asked for in any way affect either of these propositions? Ig it not admitted that where an iodose try, like the five little linen mille, is struggling for existence that it charges [the foreign price ruling the market? Can (it be denied that where the country is aooded with the foreign goods, duty add- led as in silk, that the American does {uot receive the market price? Who will ‘deny that the only Northern protected industry that has ever grown to perfect i manhood-——the sugar-refining industry — majority in the off year of 1850 was 13. 700 | «ith others—the woolen indostry with the farmer, for instance-and the tax on Representatives. All four al districts are Republican, the closest fight was made, Reed, however, is elect ed, as everybody expecte |, No Democrat was sanguine enough to believe that the from the Republicans and the onlf ques. tion was that of majority. The Republi. cans have been doing their best to keep 20,000, and Democratic energies have five hundred platforms, pablican plurality is being brought down as the back towus are heard from. As pear us can be estimated to nigh twice over— once incladed with cost of the product and again deducted from wages 7 THE PROTECTED LABORER A PAUPER. Every person sopported by the publie as a public charge is a public pauper. Ev. ery workman in every protected indos- try is a public charge and therefore a public pauper turned over to the tected employer to get what work be can out of him. The pauper is no expense to the employer. The public see to it that an ample sum shall be put into his hands to pay all expenses of support. From this sum the employer usually steals one-half, Por conviet labor the employer must pay the State something, no matter how «ma'l the sum may Le, if only one cent a day. Forslave labor the employer mun {hartge himself with the sapport. of the} lave and is family. |888, nothiog ing it, Truly, the New England manufacturer down slavery to build up protection Imagine a Bouthern planter, the owner of 100 slaves, receiving yearly from his Btate Treasury $460 998 bounty because he furnished them with work—$44,843 being for the support of his slaves and $422,162 being for himself, to pay for his philanthropy, in addition to having the produet of their 31,000 days’ labor, But the sugar refiner of Brooklyn, New York, Jersey City or Philadelphia re ceived exactly thissum yearly, under ex- nctly the same conditions, for every 100 workmen employed. The cotton-mill the woolen- mill owner, the iron master, the protect owner, ed employer of high and low degree re. under precisely similar circumstances for every protected pauper in bis pablie house called a protected industry. SLAVERY AND PROTECTION, ceives a proportionate amount pan per and nail prevent th pauper a ployer is fighting tooth this tariff campaign to slightest encroachment on labor, or even his stealings? It id slavery question revived, but maintain and Northern pauper labor instead | Southern slave labor. his i proposes to interfere with New land's pauper labor, but merely to merely Th é reduce stands, ers” in trust for their workmen. man who proposes in any way to it or interfere with it as it now ted as a crank and faaatic by Jboth ical parties. Every protecied employer shoulder to shoulder, for the interest of one is the interestof all. The “fat,” as they call the stealings from wages, is contributed liberally to subsidize pews papers, hire special advocates and pay enormous printing bills to circulate the mest ouiragecus misrepresenialions con. cerning everything connected with tariff reform. The protected mill~owners are not threstened in any way, but they are more sensitive than even the slavebold- ers were to any discussion that will per haps let light in apon the minds of the workmen whose labor they now bave without paying for it. The slaveholder would pot let his slaves hear of freedom; the protected employer makes like ob jection to his workmen being taught po- litical economy. That is what explains their howling and their screams that a reduction of the tariff from 47 to 42 per cent, means free trade. To make it means discussion that will open the eyes of their deluded employees, Even as the slavehoider declared that every limitation or regulation of slavery, whether the Missouri Compromise or the Nebraska bili, was a direct blow at that institution, #o the Republican party has now taken up the position that every change in the tariff is a blow at Proteo- tion, polit- etands THE DUTY OF THE HOUR. Not an honest argument has ever been made for any inorease in this pauper and unpaid-for labor by the protected mill owner, It is a fouler blot npon civilize tion than slavery ever was, for that did the African savage, while this degrades the white man. It will prove a greater curse, if allowed to spread all over the land without legal control, until 100 000 protected tariff lords own, body and ed by public charity and dependent upon their lords’ nod whether they shall live or be turned out of his pauper house to die of starvation, The arrogance of the slaveholder was as water to wine compared with arro- gance of theses tariff lords and their sub sidized newspapers. They decline to argue. They assert the most ridiculous propositions and denounce as liars and slanderers, paid with British gold, who ever gainsays them. They demand that any false statement they may make con- cerning the tariff shall be accepted as holy writ, and that he who gnestions it shall be deciared an enemy of his ooun- try and of his racé, It isa game of un limited bluff, far beyond the slavehold- ers wildest dream, for none may see or call these players. They will not permit any one to even question the divise na- ture of this doctrine of pauper labor and unlimited theft from wages, There is only one thing to be done, That is steady, persistent, untiring mis sionary work for years to come by every one who loves his fellow-man; by every one who wishes to leave the world a little better for his Baving lived tn th | task, Bat definite and practical prrpose, and that is to secure Federal and Btate supervis- ion of every protected industry under the Federal and State Labor Bureaus. It may be a condition of protection, and without it protection may be withdrawn, This supervision should require from each industry: L. Quarterly reports, showing the ex- act amount of protection received, cost of product abroad, the enhanced American price and what was done with every cent of the difference between the price on the open foreign market and the closed market here. 2. Quarterly reports of wages paid in every branch of the industry, how much was in excess of wages abroad, and how much the cost was enhanced by the difs ference in wages, 8. Quarterly reports from foreign Ministers and Consuls of corresponding wages paid in similar industries abroad, These reports should be compiled and condensed so as to show the exact cost tothe people, as near as it can be ascer- lev ied for protection, tnd this condessation This is not an extravagant demand. It of justice and fairness, It sppeals even to the If every cent paid to collected by the protected mill-owner To obtain It is feamable. All work to acooms factory return, A LOOK AHEAD The protected employers would howl they would object in the nounce it as unjust, inquisitorial; they would combine and defeat measure after measure; but in the end it would pres vail, Then we would have the facts. Then we would bave, if not the exact cost of every item of protestion, at least an ap~ proximation that could not be denied. The bevefits would be shown side by side with the disadvantages, Faith would be eliminated from the discussion. If it should appear that the five linen mills had stolen too much of the money intended for the wages of their employ. ees and refused to make a fairer divis- ion, the protection could be removed, and their workmen could be put on a special pension list at full average wages for life. Such legislation would be followed in a short time by the limitation of every employer to free labor, He would have to be content with public support of his workmen. He would be compelled to pay them the full amount collected for their wages, including that which he now steals. Protection would then make wages in protected industries high. as it cannot now when every iron master like Carnegie can steal $4.26 out of every $6.72 collected from the public for wages and langh at any one who objects to it. Such a millenium is pleasant to think about; but it never will come except by years of unremitting toil by this genera. tion. The next will have come too late. T.E. Wiuson. isin ostincutuin We publish Cleveland's letter of ac ceptance in faollon another page. This letter is considered the ablest document that has come from the pen of a presi- dential candidate for MANY years. Every one should read it and Preserve this ise sue and compare this letter with that of Harrison which is just out, and will like- ly appear in our next issue. MAINE. Maine cut down the Republican ma A FINE FARM AT PUBLIC SALE_THE ase’ will oer wt pf i on She prem or oh saTURD Y OCT. 7, a fine farm Bromine oo ,, Containing 71 sores, more © erected a REDUCTION IN PRICES At Wolf's store you will find a big reduction in Dry Goods, Hosiery, Gloves, ete. etc,