} food products on the free list. But the i & — — a SOLE AGENT. FOR CHIL D Plow, soit ans THE o> H 4 . ® Ft. hana wis w }. Ga er iE WH me Wil oN Ue NE s i (FY BE ov A. ICKEE & BRO. « NTE WAT shi GAL Sh I 1 AGENTS FOR ALL THE CELEBRATED MIDDLE 0 Ly Ly v v We intend selling. stock largely - which J fie largest in BY “SRL Bi a “keeping up a fire assortment, and have ineredsed our ieiay ¥R UiBe af v0 Bp iE g TINWARE. § gn 8 + 3 Wg WOLF'S HOME MADE 0 o 0 9 0 BELILEEFON" 0 [4] o [*] 7] 0 0 0 TOWN STOVES. I are a Le o 0 0 po S i % ay i 14 large and fine assorted stock of | Hardware, Sloves, Oils, Pains, and everything that is gen- erally kept in a first class Hardware Store, a 3. 4 8 : gt FINEST LINE OF CUTLERY. ~ oE- v Fi % % z THE A REPUBLICAN MANUFACT~ URER'S VIEW. Free Raw Materials Are an Es- sential Element of Protection. Arthur T. Lyman, is one of the larg- est woolen manufacturers of Boston, and is both a protectionist and a Republican, but he regards free raw materials as ab- Solutely essential to the protection of both manufacturers and labor. When called upon by the finance committee of the Holyoke Republican Club for a con- tribution, he answered as follows: “Orrico THE HApLey CoMPAl Ny, “Boston, July 13, 1888, “To the Chairman of the Finance Com. mittee of the Holyoke Republican Club, “1 have yours of the 12th, asking for a | contribution for the Republican Club, | I am, of course, deeply interested in the i tariff as regards the Hadley Company, and also in its bearing on many other | cotton and manufactures in which I am interested, but in my opinion the Republican members of Congress from New England and the ‘Home Market Club’ and the ‘Woolen Manu- | facturers’ Association’ have practically done more harm to the cause of protec tion and to the protected (so-called) in- © dustries of Massachusetts than the Dem. ocratic members of the ways and means committee, > “1 have had occasion to see oma the Democratic members of the ways | and means committee and to hear of the | plans and view of others, and I am con. | vinced that but for the of Republican members of Congress from | New England we could have had in the | woolen action the Mills bill satisfactory schedules for wool- | ens and cottons, “Asit is, at manufacturers the request of i Republic and. One trate through the Democratic members from | Massachusetts, the Democrats of the | ways and means committee altered and | a vanced rates on some important items, | while we were met, I am informed Republican members of the House bY ing: ‘Leave the schedule as it is; better for the election.’ “The Republicans now refuse to by | i - 1 it Is aid ih putting raw materials on the free list, | and certainly in New England free raw material has been considered as an ele. ment in protection almost as essential as the duty on the manufactured arti- cle. “From my business experience in both | importing and manufacturing I am fully aware of the necessity of protec. tion for the maintenance here of certain manufacturers, and I very much regret that the Republican party. with which 1 have acted from its beginning. has, for political success, taken a position which I consider hostile in its practical ef- fects to the protected industries of Mas. sachusetts, “The Democratic members “of the ways and means committee take broad and, on the whole. reasonable views of the tariff question, and while of eonrse they look at the interest of the United States as a whole they do not ignore the fact that many great industries have grown up in this country under the high duties made necessary by the war of the rebellion, and that it is only fair and proper that consideration should be paid their existence and condition. Neither do they ignore thelfact that that the work people in the protected industries are very largely members of fhe Democratic party. “ Besides the consideration that wy manufacturing interests have been put at needless risk by the partisan action of | the Republicans, I must also take into | consideration the interests of the whole | cotintry, in which we are all involved, and I eannot feel it to be right to vote for any one who can honestly stand on the Republican platform—most of the Republicans with whom I have spoken about it have told me that they had not read it, ean readily believe that it would be disagreeable reading to Repub. licans who in the past have, in all hon. esty, desired to have raw materials and exigencies of ed the party int politics have fore. | Pennsylvania Railroad i be run on Thursday, i Bs ruth SEASLOTe Season. i sold from Pittsburg al : necting “There is practically no party in this country in favor of free trade in any reasonable sense of the term, and it is as unfair to call the Mills bill a free trade bill as it is to say that the Repub. licans are in favor of the free of protected articles have for several gears insisted that all internal taxes should be taken off, in order that it should be impossible to alter the duties on imports, “While the Mills bill is not a bill that wholly commends itself to me, it is cor. rect and for the interest of Massachu. setts in many particalars, notably in the matter of free wool, Every uring country in the world of any | sequence, except the United States, has wool on the free list, “The position that party has taken makes it the for well drinking | of whiskey, because the manufacturers | manufact. | COs i Republican | the | country, as it seems to me that it should | not have the control of the for the next four years, Arrnvr T. LyMax. IW AII— LAST OF THE SEASON, Jersey Const, The Pexmsylvania Railroad Conpany’s | coast | ten-day excursions to the Jersey have been enjoved by hundreds of ple this smmmer. The liberal lamnit the resorts from which a ie ra tickets, the wi could Tar made, and the exceptional facilities for to wil This Choe reaching the shore have left nothing The last of the series August Zul. be desired, date covers the high-water mark of the | All the resorts will be in their best feather, and tl { breezes which may be enjoved there dur. torr heat of the dog days 1a fhe tid be suflicwent ation ing, even if the bathing were not at best. the fishing fine, and the other at. tractions numberiess, The { ape May, tickets as heretofore embraces Atlantic City, Sea Isle City, | They will be good for ten days, and will 810.00 and at the rates quoted below from other points, Ths in the main I from following al train « Col. the LR regular trains by branches will ran on weld EH Train Leaves 855 A.M. 9.05 Rate, Pittsburgh. «coe 210 00 East Liberty Irwin Uniontown coer Connellsville ......... : Seottdale Greensburg FORCE RAR vavivians s cnsinn ests Butler 8.535 6.5% - ayy [J 54 inh 10 0 URL jo 7 10% 9, O60 6.30 10M 6.530 0 S25 Latrobe 1000 10.10 Blairsville... a whi ew 9.29 JONUSEOWE oes svsnsvnnsee 11.08 1.57 1.05 1.90 2.08 R.A 8.55 Ban ye 2.43 3.00 3.20 3.24 3.51 Ty rone Huntingdon Cumberland Bedford Mt. Union MeVestown Lewistown Junction Min. coo sisonvine Seisin Port Royal. ..cooiveine Newport ......ce0cn Philadelphia, Ar The party will rest in Philadelphia the night of the 28d, and proceed to the seashore by any regular train of the suc. ceeding day. The tickets will be good to return by auy regular within ten days, except New York and Chicago Limited, Lb —— —— Killed By A Rattlesnake. While two boys, Jackson Move ml John Harvey, aged about 17 years, were hunting squirrels across the river from Memphis, Tennesse, they discovers a large rattlesnake coiled upon a rock | apparently asleep. Moore said he would capture the snake alive. He crept up to the deadly rattler, and, by a quick movement, caught it firmly below the head and held it at arms length in triumph. Suddenly the snake coiled iteelf around the boy's arm, He be came and attempted to throw it off, when the reptile struck him on Peo | We OO0l, TI «h government | Excursions to the | BELLEDF ge of popular | New Advertisements, RB AT NEW BUSSE ARCADE. ONTE, Pa. Owing to the backwardness of the Spring trade, I will sell from the 20th of JUNE until the close of the Season: v0 EEEEETENEE 0 BREEN BERENS SOR ERER SERIE 2 TREES | EERE Leen Parasols at 20 per Cent. Un der Price. po — . Srutma ” " » “ ” r " " ’ # 4 WHITE GOODS AND HERETOFORE 3 : 5 » a * w ds he _— — LAWNS AT PRICES UNHEARD OF. y ‘ - » nearest when friend fled for assistance. The house was two miles distant, and { help arrived the poor lad was past help | {and died in agony. The snake was found colled lose by, and when Killed measur. ed four feet nine inches, and had eigh- | teen rattles, i - ti dl “ | The New York Press is regarded as | the tariff authority in this country and | the special representative of the Amer {ican system. Robert P. Poter, its od litor, was boro in Eagland Harry W. Oliver, of Piushorgh, claims to be | the author of the tariff plack adopled | this year at Chicago. Oliver was horn lin Ireland. teach the “American system” to the workingmen, He was born in Wales, The men are shouting for the “Amer- ican system” and the “American pare ty” are, in alms: every instance, na tives of foreign countries. The adoption of a party emblem in the shape of the American flag is another frand, There were sixteen stars in the flag when Thomas Jeffor son book die seat as President. In its glorious reign of sixty years the Dem- ooratic party placed severiteon stars in the blae field. The Republican pasty has added a beggarly five arrot-like, itimitates the ban lanna by manafactaring flaz handkerchiefs. It is now blowing its nose on Ameri. can flags made out of Chinese silk. —_——— From the New York TV J wo glean the following: a of an t 's repre intelligen gamative od the Sani mor of John Jarrett isthe agent | employed by the manufacturers to] Because it frees from taxation such necessaries of life and materials of | indastry as salt, lumber, tin, and wool. | He believes that the former ought to | be as cheap as powsible, sad of the | latter he says: ‘My personal experi | ence bas taught me that cheap raw | material never reduced wages in a | masufactory, but on the contrary, | had a tendency to raise them.’ Hrd. | Because he does ‘not believe that a | nation can be made prosperous or | happy by taxation, sod a | rge acen | mulation of mooey in the treasury breeds extravagance, and becomes a factor of demorslization in many ways; it is in its action like ma aria; it enters the system slyly cotil the whole body is honed’ And Me. | Smith says fioally: ‘Ia conclusion I will say that between taking the tariff off the necessities of life and the in ternal revenus tax off tobacco and whisky, I shall vote for the former every time I got a chance. Cheap tobaccr and whisky means more de morslization and drankeoness, and I cannot give consent 10 such a mons ure’ There is really no answer to this argument, and the more the workingmen stady the question the more surely they will reach Mr. Smith's conclusions.” ’ —— » Tug Philadelphia Press and perhaps the Pittsburgh Commercial Gasette, will pay double rates for the names oc- cupations residences &c of Democratic floppers. That is not only a strong inducement to local correspondents | bat also to Democratic Fo (at ruth yamthiot New Adve’ tise:.cils, SEASON OF I1SS87-’SS, O) sem W. I. FLEMING, The Fashionable + MERCHANT TAILOR <~ Has just returnen from the Eastern cities with a new stock of the . -rrie Finest « Suitings - and = Overcoatings Ever brought to town. ed | Workmanship the Best and< +>-Prices Down to Rock Bottom | GOODS = AS + REPRESENTED. | Special attention given to +=: CUTTING AND FITTING. | NO FANCY PRICES FOR INFERIOR MATERIAL. The Largest and Best Stock in Ceniral Pennsylvania to WwW | | J pay inflated prices for a suit when you can get honest goods . at honest prices. A well dreesed gentleman is a pleasure © | look at, and every man in Centre county can be well-dresed if he is judicious iv the selection of bis tailor. Call and examine for yourself. It is a plons- ant task for me to show my goods and quote prices I bave the very latest novelties and at prices surprisiogly Low. Before buying a Suit or Overcost drop in snd see my stock. W. I. FLEMING, Crider’'s Block, DIAMOND Select from, Mr. Harnmsox of Indianapolis con- tinues his handseakiog and bis little speeches with apparent contentment, or at least withoat apparent discon. tent. It is already reported in Wash- ington that the action of the Senate Committee of Finance on the tariff bill will largely bebend on the advice that may be given by Mr. Bisine when be arrives next week. But no one has happened to think of consul tation Mr. Harrison on this subject, or, indeed, on any others. For this Mr. Harrison himself is somewhat to blame. He made haste very imprudent. ly to declare his absolute acceptance of the platform. The senate cau d» nothing without spittiog on the plas form. He was rash h to talk apout thesurplos and to declare io effzct that the Republicans need not do jroything un that subject until the, had pos of the goverment. He hae also declared in favor of subsidies In these circamstanoes it is not at all to be wondered at that Mr. Harrison
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers