VOL.ILXV. The worst feature about the {to proted tive system is its tendency - . lt The average heig the vf of 1 i eter beginning of the week, in thi state was about 94, -~ * - A terrible explosion York colliery, near the death of fifteen day. Monday ther from sunstroke at ports of similar eas cities, ~~ inday thermometer 93 t for 3 1 : 1 or a litile iceberg a lodge in SON - The the the President made n Cane appointment Supreme bench, ron is mad ove Philadelphi their homes, maining millions from plore’’ i the Home Den using this stron is ne that hi ng of The naughty 1 * er gi Lari fraud guilty erimina upon a witness should Ix positive of his guil — It is interesting to the soeoteh new papers that Mr. ( juipped uf Ares 'u “handsomely wr-in-hand conch’ in which the Pittsburg million- aire has been making a tot Highlands is he of the fied (ite a The ir very elegant a gay turnout,” and has created sensation” in many Homestead lockout places, i= not so gay ax the Highland turnout, but it has erea- ted quite as mueh of a sensation. - > When steel billets go down in price Carnegie reduces his workmen's wages. As steel billets represent a small item of the Homestead production, all Car negie need to do is to lower the selling the more important products up, and reduce the workmen all around. Carnegie is bound to gain price of steel billets go down, Thus when the He loses he loses, - i i fy By challenging Governor McKinley, the famous exponent of high protec. tion, to a public discussion of tarift systems Colonel MeClure, of the Times, has driven him to the embarrassing and picturesque position of the boy who “dassent fight’ because his moth- er said he shouldn't, Fear of personal interests is a poor onuse for obedience to the powers that be, Ug wy <r o = BER DEMOCRACY'SDAY Cleveland and Sleyenzon Formally the Standard of the Chicago Con vention t magnificent political pec in this was presented at the Madison I'he PI 1ass me President ( Postmaster 20th. Democracy of the nation Wt leveland and ex-As Cieneral Stes v OTIS, ing them as » Democratic leaders 1 } ti ie Presidential battle begun The confidenci HOW candidates responded words, 1Rnner, audience of 20.008) pe HK elect Hk pressing moved CLEVELAND'SSIPPEEC NH, ull Wherein te Outlines the the P Volley of arty. them burdened * + tariff system that 1 i i i Fy cientliessly demands from Jrure Ras: OF Liu GOOLE ries and comforts of an amount iife scarcely met by the wages of hard and steady toil-~while the exactions thus wring fire crease the wn them build and in- up fortunes of those for benefit this injustice w hose is perpetuated We see the farmer listening to a de lusive story that fills his mind with visions of advantage while his pocket is robbed by the stealthy hand of high protection. , Our working men are still told the tale, oft repeated in spite of its demons strated falsity, that the existing pro- tective taritl is a to that under beneficent their wages increase, boon them, and operation while, as they listen scenes are enacted in the is ust that mock the hopes of toil and attest ceives from those made selfish and sor- {HT laws, mission or legislative power, possible grounds when we that, in present conditions, its opera- and unfair, Ours is not a destructive party. We are not at enmity with the rights of any of our citizens. All are our coun trymen. We are not recklessly heed less of any American interests, nor [will we abandon our regard for them; | but, invoking the love of fairness of justice which belongs to tr | canism, and upon which our Cones tion re i t iff legislation shall he has for its obj contribution income of the ma swell directly the favored few: tended =olicitude for or any other ] for others, of the ; to th those equal t unreasonable pense of their We have Hani will have a : Moreover, must l Dard je country victory of that awaits us tude exalts the and should intensify tion (0 Win suceess, This sucess by systematic and intelligent « the part of all enlisted in Let us tell the Joe ople HY estly what we bel pose to serve the interest it country, and then manner of true Demociacy, pa fein upon triotism of the thoughtfulness and our fellow countrymen. It only remains for ne to say toy in advance of a mors ou, formal to your message, that I obey the com- mand of my party and confidently an- ticipate that an intelligent and est presentation of our cause will sure a popular indorsemaent of the | tion of the body you represent. response Carn- -. - In point of fact the present session of | Congress, with many millions of in- : | erensed pensions and other deficiencies | of some fifteen millions, appropriates {over eight millions Jess than did the | firet session of the notorious Billion | Congress, and the appropriations are | nearly sixty millions less than those of the session of the Billion Congress, With less pensions and less deficits, i the first session of the Billion Congress { not only appropriated eight millions | more than the present session, but it | carried a deficit of thirty-nine millions { over to be appropriated by the second session, rss Mp» wane Sui bseribe for the REPORTER, r { s ¢) FLY 28, VAGES AT HOMISTEAL, parading earned of yvoung country, and not voting with- Wie men alluded to by the riers regw out the adjunct “fresh complexioned,”’ rosy i act { contained within its hecked,” or “bright-eyed.” The is that New York probably walls thousands of pasty-faced and Life isn't pre- this ix the re Endeavor of the life prepared fo maintain, though, never at one time Sy many bespectacled females, to «tate whether sult of Christian pared or average country diet and mode of It that the Christian tion gave the New York reporters greater opportunity for columns of picturesque lying than they have had for some time. Life, a a Endeavor conven The strikers’ at Homestead disown | and disapprove of the deed of Bergh- man in attempting to assassinate Mr. | Frick, and some demanded that the | Russian anarchist be lynched, This speaks well for the strikers—nothiog could have damaged their cause more than to have the attempted killing of | Mr. Frick laid to their door. True workingmen are not anarchists—an- | archistic doctrines would beggar every | workingman in the land, and destroy our freedom. America can never tolerate anarch- Flats, nor ean the cause of labor be iden tified with assassination. 1892. Jrrecy (1 1 rade to sex against Shiras [| expect his nomina- confirmed this week. Pinker. has only ol. Oates chairman of the 1% £3ive i ¥ Hit $ nvesiigaling commaitioe, enough for i arm. but he has nerve and that Knights a man with a dozen arms, Was not Jol Labor « utive comimni ed to that he Pinkertons in their examination when of werefor surprising tl wl : § 3 in Devlin, one of the 4 Xe tiee, Intimat- the that he should have responded with langu- him had favored age which always means fight in Col. fol- Devlin Oates’ section, and he would have lowed it up with a blow had not been taken away. =o much the among has been said about to Mr. Cleveland those democrats who opposition favor free coin age and of threats being made by them of bolting the ticket, that I went to Bland, of Missouri, recognized as the leader of the silver He sald in “Yes, we silver search of information. secotad defent: but not one of us has ever had the remotest idea of bolting the ticket of our party. 1 expect to take the stump for Cleveland and Stevenson, and, 1 expect that every democrat who voted for free coinage will do the same, : Mr. Harrison succeeded in convines ing the democratic members of the NO. 29. Affair through His « for 14 MOP aR~ mpany. from eX . f Iam’s pun- Bins Deceiving the Workingmen., 0d ci F143 § ur wti nif 1:1 i il Our il told the "4 it 1 v4 {ts demione existing pro- to them and nefloent Op ration wages must wise--while as. the protection yv listen, scen enacted Vi iy abiding place of high it mock the hopes of toil and attest thi ceives from those tender mercy the workingman re- made selfish and sor- did by unjust govermental favoritism, From Cleveland's speech accepting the nomination, July 20 BM ——— The farmers in the complaining that they harvest hands, northwest are cannot find In the meantime there are thousands able-bodied men loung- ing about the tramping slong the rallroads, calling on kind hearted housekeepers to feed them alleging that they can find nothing to do. It may be said these people are many miles from the harvest fields of the northwest, and that is true, but if they were within six feet of them not ten out of a hundred would be willing to do an hour's work. Work isn't what they want. They avoid rather than seek it. ———————— Senator Peflor's cure for Inbor trou bles is certainly comprehensive. He would wipe out the States, and wipe out private property. He might as well have cane further and wiped out government too, for that is what it would amount to. In this wiping out Pefler might serve as the disheloth, and then wipe out himself, a ——-]—— ——————————— weSubseribe for the REPORTER. cities and
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers