l2J ONE DAY AT CANTON, Forty Delegations with Fony Special Trains Meet at the Home of Major McKinley. PRONOUNCED "THE GREATEST EVENT IN POLITICAL HISTORY" Eleven States and Three National Organizations Scud Greetings to the Republican Candidate. Uountless Thousands Throng the Streets of Canton and Listen to His Words of Patriotism. Canton. O.. Oct. 10. "The proa test political demonstration ever known" was the verdict of the veteran observers of the events which occurred here today. For weeks there has not been a day, except the Sabbath, in which Maj. Mo Kinlev has not been greeted by numer ous delegations, but today was the great est of them all. . Before daylight the special trains bear ing delegations of voters from both the old political parties began rolling into the denot. and ns early as 8 o clock the impatient visitors began forming in line to march to the modest home which is now the Mecca for citizens of all states and sections, and for men of all past party affiliations. All day long delegations of cheering, shouting men from all the walks of life workiugmeu, merchants, ministers, workers in irou and clay and brass and steel, commer cial salesmen, miners, farmers, planters, railroad men and grain dealers. marched to Maj. McKinley's home, and with huzzas, speech-making and hand shaking testified their regard for him. tnd the fealty of their states and sections to the cause which he represents. Forty special trains were required to bring the forty separate organizations from twelve different states- who sought in this single day to do honor to the candidate of the Republican party, the representative of sound money, sound financial principles and sound govern ment. TWENTY CAR LOADS. Pennsylvania and Michigan Join in Early Honors. Twenty car loads of people from Fenn ivlvania and Michigan were the first to pet Maj. McKinley's attention. They were at his door nt !) o'clock and to the brief addresses of their spokesmen Mr. McKinley responded by saying: "Your early call is an example of promptness which I trust will be fol lowed on the ad of November in every part of our country. The best Thing in this world next to liberty is labor, and the best thing for labor is an opportunity to work. This is the opportunity for which we are all striving this year ind which we hope through a change of policy in the administration of the gov ernment of the United States to enjoy to a larger degree than we have done in the past three and one-half years. What we want more than anything else iu srder to give this opportunity to labor is a restoration of confidence. With con fidence shaken, money seeks its biding place and goes out of the channels of business and legitimate investment i.nd iway from farming, manufacturing and mining enterprises. 1 do not know of a better illustration of the value of con fidence to the country than is found in our own experience during the last twenty years. 8orae Financial History. "Ton will remember that this .oitntry resumed specie payments January 1, 1879. We had outstanding then, is we have now. $34(i.0OO.0OO of what is com monly known as greenback currency, livery dollar of that from that date was redeemable in gold upon presentation nt the treasury of the United states. So great was the confidence of the people in the ability of the country that from 1S79 to 18U3 but 4(UMH).(HH) of doll.irs were preseuted for redemption, and the Sold was taken out; $40,000,000 in four teen years, and yet in the last three and a half years, since confidence has been disturbed, more than $200,000,000 of greenbacks have been presented to the treasury of the United States and the gold taken out. Now. if confidence had existed, if the holders of these greenbacks had not been fearful, and they were only made so because the treasury of the United States was not collecting enough money to pay ta bills, that the revenues of the treasury were inadequate for public ex penditures, and alarmed, as they were, they would not have sent their green backs in for redemption. The gold re serve was encroached upon, and from time to time we have been compelled to sustain it. to borrow gold to put into the treasury of the United States. Now. the Republican party believes it is the duty of the government first to raise enough money to run the government. We don't want any deficiencies iu the public treas ury, and if we have no deficiency we win have no debts, and if we have no debts we will have no bonds, and when we have no deficiencies everybody will have confidence in the solvency of the treasury of the United States. Necessity for a High Tariff. "Then; my fellow citizens, we not only believe in raising enough money to run the government, but we believe in having a tariff upon foreign competing products high enough to protect American labor and American manufactures. We be lieve it is the' first duty of the govern ment df the United States to protect and defend its citizens. It is the poorest policy on the part of ithe government to give work to the laborer of other na tions while we havei idle men in the United States. Now,' when we have once accomplished that, we propose to continue the good money we have in this country. We do not want any short 1 States Represented at New York, Pennsylvania, Maine. . Ohio. Maryland. West Virginia, Kentucky. Missouri, - dollars any more tnan wo want light weights. We are in favor of good, round 100-cent dollars with which to pay the labor of this country and measure the exchanges of the American people and we will have no other kind. lOOO COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS. Three Great State Spurt Their Traveling Salesmen. The second body of visitors was made np of commercial travelers from New York. Ohio and Indiana, and to their tumultuous greeting Maj. McKinley re sponded by saying: "Xobody knows sooner than the com mercial traveler whether timen are good or bad. Xo class of men so registers the waves of business as the men who stand before me here today. You are interest- ed in your occupations and in having prosterity extend from one end of the country to the other. You are interested in having nil of our workshops running: all our niiiK'S in operation, and all our workingmen constantly and profitably employed. Yon are. therefore, this year possibly more than ever before interested in the triumph of the political principles which envelop the well-being and high est prosperity of the American people. "You know (letter than anybody else that you cannot sell your goods to your customers unless your. customers can sell goods to the people. You know that the people cannot buy unless they have some thing to do at which they can earn mon ey, that they may buy them. That's what is the matter with the country to day. That's the diagnosis of our condi tion at this hour. Business has been stopped: the.wheels of industry are not running: idle men are on the streets. Many of the manufacturing establish ments are closed and yon are not doing as well as you were in 1802. No Need for 3 "The best thing I can wish for each and everyone of you is a return to the splendid prosperity of four years ago. The money of the country, happily, is all right; the Republican party made it all right, and Grover Cleveland's administra tion has kept it good. We proiwse to continue that good, sound, unquestioned, uudepreciating money with which to do the business of this great country. (Great cheering.) A Glance Into History. "What a nation we are! Why. in I860, when Abraham Lincoln of blessed memory, the immortal hero of emancipa tion and the war. when be took control of this government, our entire wealth was Jflti.000.000.000. When Benjamin Harri son went out it was .fUS.OOO.OOU.t '((), and more than two-thirds of the great war debt had been wiped out. Since that time we have been ilo.ng little else but make debts for the government and debts for the people. I am greatly honored by this call. '1 00 many delegations are visiting me today to permit my longer detaining you. 1 appreciate this visit. It is inspir ing to the cause which I represent, and will encourage the Republican spirit ev erywhere. I know the value of the commercial traveler. When he is against you. look out." (Great laughter and ap plause.) IRON WORKERS AT THE FRONT. They Testify Their Featty to Protection and Prosperity. No delegation of the day was more cordially welcomed than the baud of iron workers from Cleveland, whose sturdy figures and frank faces were seen as soon as the commercial travelers hail given place, and to them Mr. McKinley said : "I welcome you to Canton and my home. I am glad to learn from your banners and your spokesman that you stand for the great purpose of the Repub lican party and the American union, that gives to every citizen of every race and nationality equal chance and opportunity in the race of life a Union that knows neither caste nor classes, nor creeds nor nationality, hut gives equal protection to all. I ain glad to see from your ban ners that you are in favor of protection to American industries. So am I. I believe it is the duty of the American people to vote for that policy which will protect American "industry, defend Ameri can labor, and preserve the old scale of American wages. 1 thank you heart- ily for this call. 1 am always glad to meet the workingmen. and there is noth ing in this campaign that gives me more ; encouragement until in nave neiiinu me the men who toil." (Great cheering and cries of "Hurrah for McKinley.') EVANGELICAL MISSION BOARD. Bishop Thomas Bowman Introduces His Associates to the Nominee. Bishop Thomas Bowman introduced the missionary board of the Evangelical Canton, Oct. 10th. I Michigan. Indiana. Illinois. Iowa. association to Maj. McKinley. who ad dressed his callers briefly, saying: "It gives me extreme pleasure to meet the representatives of the board of mis sions and of publication of the Kvangeli cal Association of the United States. It is indeed to me a very high compliment to have a body like yours turn aside from its business sessions that call it together to make a visit to my home to give me assurances of your support anil of the devotion which you have for the prin ciples for which I stand. I appreciate this call. I would expect from a body of religious men that they would stand by public honor and public honesty as your bishop has described. I would expert froih you that yon would stand by public law. public tranquillity and public secur ity, and the honor of the country to which yon belong. If is the proud boast of our American institutions that every citizen beneath our flag can worship God according to the dictates of his own con science in every corner of this great country, and I am always glad to meet a body of men who have dedicated their lives to the improvement and betterment of humanity, for as you better its condi tion you elevate citizenship, and when you elevate citizenship you have exalted country. I thank you for this call and bid yon all good afternoon." (Great applause.) SOUND MONEY RAILROAD MEN. Kinployes of Cleveland, Akron and Co- lmnbus Company, The employes of the Cleveland. Akron and Columbus Railway company and sound money clubs of Akron, O.. were introduced by Mr. Sampson, and were addressed by the Republican nominee as follows: "I am glad to have the assurance through your spokesman that yon be lieve that the triumph of the principles for which the Republican party now stands will be best for yon. and so be lieving that you intend to vote the Re publican ticket. I think you all for this greeting. I feel that you are not strang ers to me. I have been riding over your I )j11PS for morP than twenty years, and I know many of your employers: and I do not know of any business in the country where its employes can so definitely know the condition of the business of the country as the men who are employed by the railroads. You know it in the shop, you know it in the ticket office, you kuow it traveling on the trains: every switchman, every brakemau, every con ductor, and every engineer knows the condition of the business of the country and of the railroad by the amount of business that railroad does. He knows when the country is prosperous and when it is in a state of depression, and he does not have to wait for the report of the di rectors of the railroad to know whether there have been any dividends declared or not. He knows it from the amount of work and the amount of wages he receives. "Xow. my fellow citizens. , yon are prosperous when the country Is prosper ous, anil the country is prosperous when it takes care of its own people, its own manufacturers, its own mines, and prod- McKinley "to Swing 'Round the ..- nets, and its own labor. Tb couutry is prosperous when we have plenty of labor, if we are paid iu good money. We be lieve in sound money, and we are going always to have it." (Continuous cheer ing.) POTTERY AND IRON WORKERS. They Greet the Champion of Protection to American Industry. The next visitors were from West Vir ginia and included pottery workers, iron workers and a club known as the Tariff Champions of Wheeling. To these con solidated delegations Maj. McKinley said: "Gentlemen: Republicans seem to be on all sides this year. (Great laughter and applause: a voice: "Ami Demo crats.' ) And many Democrats are with us. (Applause.) 1 am honored by this call of tnis large assemblage from the state of West Virginia. 1 urn glad to meet the t!-footers. (Cheering from the Six-Footers' Protective and Sound Money club of Wheeling.) They ought to be. and I am sure wili be. giants in this contest for national honor. I am glad to meet the potters of West Vir ginia. I am glad to meet the iron and steel workers of the Riverside mills. I am glad to meet you all and glad to feel that the mission you are uere upon is to make Republican principles triumphant on the 3d day of November. "There is inborn in every human lireast a sentiment that moves him to strive to better his condition. The humblest, those born with least fortune, those with most unfavorable surroundings, all of them aspire to better things aud all have a right so to aspire. The genius of our free institutions exalts ambition and most men want to lift themselves up, to elevate and improve the condition of their families. The thought in every man's mind here today is: 'How can I better my condition? How can I improve the condition of my family?' The an swer comes almost with one voice: 'The way to do it is to protect American in dustry and defend American labor.' (Tre mendous cheering.) Let us do our own manufacturing here iu the United States. Let us make our own iron and steel, our own pottery, our own glass and when we do that, then we will employ every idle man in the United States and bring hope and happiness to every American home. I believe in that jiolicy of pro tection to home industries and to the en ergies of American people. 1 do not believe anything is cheap to the Amer icon people that imposes idleness upon a single American citizen. Y hat you want is work and wages. Do you believe free trade will aid you ? Do yon believe protective tariffs will do it? ("Yes, yes, every time.") Then vote that way. (Loud yells and cries of "You bet we will.") "Protection never closed an American factory: protection never shut an Amer ican mine; protection never put Amer ican labor out on the streets. I wish I could say as much for partial free trade, such as we have experienced iu the last three and a half years. "More than fliat. my fellow citizens, we not only want an opportunity to work, bnt when we get that opportunity we want to be paid iu honest dollars worth" 100 cents each. (Continuous cheer ing.) We believe neither in free trade nor in free silver. The one debases the labor, and the other the currency of the couutry. and more than that, you gentle men, 1 know, are in favor of the main tenance of law and order. .Now, I thank you for this call and I trust that the little Mountain state will in 1890 repeat the verdict of 1894 by giving the Repub lican party a grand and glorious tri- nmph. (Loud cries of "Wo well: we will." followed by three rousing cheers for the "next President.")" STEEL COMPANY EMPLOYES. A Delegation of Three Hundred AVork inginen. Concluding his preceding address to the miners, Maj. McKinley had to but ( face about to find patiently awaiting an I audience of some :t(M) steed workers, em- ployed by the Otis Steel company of Cleveland. This party was introduced l by Otto Grahicn, and Maj. McKinley i responded briefly, saying: j "I am honored by this visit and en ; couraged by it because I know that you j bring to me assurances of loyalty to the 1 great principles of the Republican party and of your untiring zeal to make these principles, victorious on the ."d day of j Xovember. This audience fairly repre ! sents the conditions with which the bitsi- ness of this country is done. The men ! on the other side of me mine coal. The men on this side use coal iu their mills. and liecause you so use it the others mine it. If you created no demand for it there would be no demand for the miner. "I use this illustration to show you how dependent we are upon each other: how every thread of business is interwoven with every other thread of business, and when yon snap one thread you injure ail. When the employer does not liud it prof itable to manufacture he ceases to do so. and when he does not manufacture you do not have employment. When he finds it profitable to manufacture you have steady employment at fair wages. Xow. what we want to do in this country is to favor whatever policy will encourage American industry and promote Ameri can manufactures. That which will build more factories and give more em ployment to workingmen should be the true, genuine and universally accepted American policy. "I am one of those who believe that we should look after our own people be fore we look after the people of other lands, who owe no nllegiance to the gov ernment of the United. States. I believe the right policy is the one which pro tects the American workshop by putting a tariff upon the products of the foreign workshop. My fellow citizens. I do not believe that we ought to have a- tariff policy that will let the products of cheap er lands and of unpaid labor come into this country and destroy our manufac tories and impoverish and degrade our labor. The protective policy is my pol icy. It is the doctrine I have always believed in, and I make no neology to anybody anywhere for holding that view, and" if on the ;!d day of Xovember the American people in their sovereign ca pacity shall decree that a protective pol icy shall he restored and sound money continue, I hope and fervently pray that we will enter upon an era of prosperity that will give happiness and comfort to every American home. (Tremendous cheering and cries of "Hurrah for Mc Kinley.") I thank you for this call and bid you good afternoon." ing.) (Great cheer MINERS OF ANTHRACITE COAL. Three Hundred Workingmen .from the Pennsylvania Coal District. The little reviewing stand was brought into requisition at this point, when the crowd had become so dense that the porch could no longer be used, and Maj. McKinley faced some 300 miners from the anthracite district of Pennsylvania, who were introduced by Prof. W. P. Gregory. Maj. McKinley responded as follows: "You have all found in your own lives that if yon get anything that is val uable yon have to work for it. Yotf have found in your own experience that there is no way to earn a living or at cumulate property except by labor and toil, energy and industry, and by frugal savings, and knowing that all that you are interested in at this moment is how you can best use what you have your labor, your farms, your products: in a word, all you want is an opportunity to work, and when that opportunity is furnished you you will perform the la bor, and there are not enough mints in the United States or iu the world to give employment to the miners of Penn sylvania. Theref ore, my fellow citizens, yon must not be looking to the mints for the money which you need. You must look to the mines, to the mills and the factories. (Great applause.) You do not mine coal unless somebody wants to use that coal, and the more users of coal there are, the more miners there will be and the better will be their em ployment and their wages. ACries of 'Right, right.') "Xow. that is the whole philosophy of this business. (Applause.) When "you have an opportunity to work you want to be paid in dollars that are. as good as any in the world: when you have given your good, hard blows in the mines or in the factories, given the mini owner or the factory-owner a good, hon est day's work, you want to be paid iu good,, honest dollars that will not de preciate over night. (Tremendous cheer ing.) So what the country wants is work and the continuance of the good money we have, ami the prevalence of law and order. We want peace ami tranquillity in this country; we want to preserve the honor of the government of the United States, and we will re nounce repudiation in every form. I am glad to meet my fellow citizens from the state of Pennsylvania. We have in this country miners by the hundreds. I know something about thein. I kuow that the only aim they have is an honest one, to stand by honest things, and I know how the farmers of Stark county Iron Workers, Pottery Workers, JVIine Workers, Factory Workers, Railroad Workers, are benefited when the mines of Stark county are running. "I thank you over and over again for this call. I must now turn to the other side of this stand and address another delegation, the members of which have the same purpose in their hearts that you have victory for the principles of protection. Honest money ami good gov- i eminent. (Great applause.! I thank ! you and bid you good afternoon." I VETERANS FROM MARYLAND. Major McKinley Delivers to Them an I'nnsually Earnest Address. The Maryland !. A. R. dub. one of the delegations of the day. was lioiimcd with one of the most earnest addresses Maj. McKinley lias yet delivered. In res louse to (Jen. Theodore F. Lang, who snoke for the Maryland visitors, Maj. McKinley said: "The spectacle which we witness in Canton today is most encouraging and inspiring. There are delegations here from Xew York. I'etiiisylvaniii. Ohio. Indiana. Michigan. Illinois and Mary land. (Great applause and cries ,, "Iowa.") Yes. Iowa and Kentucky, and on yesterday we had delegations from the Old Dominion state of Virginia and from the state of Tennessee. All are welcome to my home and city, for all of them are moved -by a common purpose, and that purpose is to save the rontitry from repudiation and dishonor. "This visit on the part of my fellow citizens from Maryland indicates their concern at the present condition if the country, and manifests a belief on their part that the sooner it comes to an ml the inure gratifying it will be. It is an unmistakable expression of your belief that the change most to be desired :in only lc secured through n Republican triumph; and that you are zealous i ml alert to do your full part in bringing about the result. This campaign V.ns many peculiar phases. It involves the most vital interests to country. It is unique in American wilities. One of the old and most honored political parties of this country is very much divided this year. A part of it has united with the other parties, and in some of the states the alliance has been rejected, and the fusion repudiated, so that the condition is not altogether and everywhere har monious. The old leaders of the Demo cratic party, those who carried its bur dens mid fought its battles iu the p.'st. framed iu the city of Indianapolis a few weeks ago an indictment against their old party associates who met at Chicago, which iu severity lias been uiiequaicd. They pronounced the declarations if the Chicago convention, which was Demo cratic in name, as nil attack upon in dividual freedom, right of private con tract, the independence of the judleciry and authority of the President to en force the laws of the United States. Chicago Convention Arraigned. "They charged the Chicago convention with a reckless attempt to increase the price of silver by legislation to the de basement of our monetary system, and threatened unlimited issues of paper money by the government. They pro claim in view of f Iieseand other grave departures from Democratic principles that they cannot support the candidate of that convention, nor be bound by its acts. They declare that the Democra'ie party has survived many defeats, but could never survive a victory won in be half of the policy proclaimed in its came at Chicago. On the money question tbry Circle" T affirm that the experience of mankind has shown that by reason of their pi" fili al qualities gold is the necessary money of the large affairs of commerce and busi ness, while silver is conveniently iidapf ed to minor transactions: and the most beneficial use of both can be insured .n!y by the adoption of the former as the standard of monetary measure and ihe maintenance of silver at a purify ith gold by its limited coinage under suitable safeguards of law. Thus the largest pos sible employment of both metals is gained with a value universally accepvd throughout the world, which constitutes the only practical bimetallic curreucv. assuring the most stable standard i lid especially the best and safest money for all who earn their livelihood by labor or the produce of husbandry. They cannot suffer when paid in the best tuoiiev known to man. but are the peculiar anil most defenseless victims of a debased and fluctuating currency, which otters continual profits to the money ..-h'liigcr at their cost. "What 1 have read, my fellow citizens, is not the statement of the Republican convention, but of a Democratic con vention, the most representative which primarily ever assembled in the country, Senators and representatives in public life today, leaders of the Democratic party in their respective states, thus de nounce the Democratic convention held in the city of Chicago. They speak words of truth and soberness. You can not debase the currency of the United States without degrading the public hon or. They speak the voice of patriotism. .They repudiate their own party conven tion and characterize its resolutions as unsound, injudicious, unpatriotic. anJ revolutionary. They are to be coin-' mended by every lover of his countrv everywhere for their courageous stand and for their bold denunciation of doc trines which, although adopted by a con vention representing a large body of Democrats, are a menace to the pence and tranquillity, the credit and the cur rency of the couutry. The Crisis is liravely Met. "It falls to the Republican party this year, as in many other years of the past, to carry the standard of national honor, and it shall never lie lowered in its hands. It meets the crisis with the old time courage, ami if it is given power the whole world will know that it will never jiermit the currency of the country to be debased or its financial honor stained. Our adversaries talk fluently about the "money of the fathers." I want to say for the fathers that their money was always good and honest. They insist that gold and silver alike constitute the money of the constitution and the currency established by the early ONE DAY'S VISITORS AT Jtferehants, Commercial Travelers, Bank Employes, Commission JVTen, Manufacturers, statesmen of the country. They woul? have us believe what history does not support that gold and silver eujoyed equal privileges in the mints of the United States during all our history down to IKT.'i. They assert that the slopping of the free coinage of silver in ISTIi was "the crime of the century." and is the cause eif the present deplorable business condition of the country. They must kuow that prior to 17:5 we had less than O.OOtl.lMKI of silver dollars in circulation. We have coined since that time nearly ."WMI.IMMI.lHMI of silver dollars, mid they constitute a part of the cur rency of the country. They do not tell us that when the coinage f both gold and silver was free in the United States the per capita circulation in this country was less than it has been since the so called "crime of 187.'!." Why. under the free coinage of both gold and silver in the days of the fathers we had in 1800 a per capita of .S-l.'.t'.l; in 183:1 it was .$.s.(io: in 18.12 it was SH.ti.!: iu 1872 before the resumption of specie pay ments, am) when we were doing business with unlimited paper currency, it was !1S.1!): in lS'.H. twenty-one years after the suspension of free coinage of silver, we had a per capita of !fc4.NS. and every dollar was as good as gold in every part of the world. We have a greater per capita in the United States than has the United Kingdom of Great Britain and a greater per capita than has Ger many. The per capita of the whole world is about S5.15. The per capita of the gold standard countries is $18. while the per capita of the silver standard countries of which they want to make us one is about $4.:iO. Kven iu the gold standard countries we have more silver per capita than they have in the silver countries of the world. The gold standard countries, having a popula tion of less than one-third of the world'e population, have nearly two-thirds of the circulation of the world's currency. The United States has about .V-i per cent, of the total population of the principal countries of the world, yet it has .'52 21-100 per cent, of the banking re souri and nearly 10 per cent, of the total money supply of the world. France has a higher per capita than the United States, but the banking deposits in the United Slates are !77.7I! per inhabitant, or S4" greater for each inhabitant than the banking deposits of France. Per Capita Kate Would Decrease, "It must never be forgotten that the free coinage of silver at the ratio of 1(! to 1 would not increase, but would decrease our per capita circulation. It would add nothing to it. but would rob ' us of the good money we . now have and put us where the silver countries of the world are today upon a silver basis alone. There is nothing in our present currency status, therefore, to disturb us, except to defeat the party which proposes to de base it. It is the proposition to debase our currency standard that has created consternation in every business center of the country: has made times hard, has driven money from active industry, aud put it behind barred doors, where it will be kept until confidence is restored. "The people will not consent to a de crease of their circulating medium, nor e debasement of that medium of exchange. If by your votes this menace lo the mon ey and credit of the country be dispelled, and by the same votes you restore the American protective policy, that will stop deficiencies in the treasury, and will pro tect American industry, and courage and coiifiilence will come back again. Open the mills and the mines of our country by a judicious protective tariff and you will stop idleness and distress in the ranks of labor, and you can't stop it in any other way. What will lie the voice of .Maryland on the :!d day of No vember? tCries of 'McKinley. McKin ley." I What will lie the voice of the great city of Baltimore? (Cries of 'Mo Kinley.'l How will that old conservative city speak for national honor? (Cries of By voting for McKinley and nortec tion.') "I thank my old comrades of the war for their presence here at my home to day. I thank my fellow citizens of every vocation for having paid me this visit, and I beg to thank them in the name of the Republican party for their assur ances of loyal support to the principles of public honor. protective tariff, sound money, reciprocity, which will bring t us, I trust and firmly believe, good times. ""in nuicu . we wildly rail 1SU2." awuy jo MAINE HEARD FROM. longressmnn Roulrlle Speiiks Tut the . Stale or Hlaiue and Jteed. j One of the distinguished visitors of tbe day was Congressman Bontelle of Maine, who was iut:oilnced to one of the visit- ; ing delegations by Mr. McKinley. with such inripy words that he could not es- i it ic participating iu the speech-making : which Gov. McKinley was cxiicctcd to alone iierfoiin. At the close of one of I the addresses Mr. M .Kinley, turning to air. nouieiie, who stood near him. said: "We have present with ns (Jen. Bon telle of Maine, and while the delegation is marching up the hill (another delega tion was then approaching) I am sure you will be glad to hear a voice from J the state of Blaine that has just, given us nearly .st.OOO majority." (Applause and cheers.), Mr. Bontelle said: "The governor has taken a slight ad vantage over me iu bringing me before yon. but I desire to say to you that there is no Republican iu the state of Maine who would not deem it an honor and a privilege to stand here, at the residence of William McKinley of Ohio mid thank you for the splendid manifestations of loyalty which you have exhibited here. We Have got through with our little piece of work in Maine; we have set the mark. ."iO.OHO high, for the other state! of the American Union to go by. We want to see Ohio more than double it. We want to see Indiana come up with tiO.000. and we are going to see, my friends, on the .Id day of November a de feat of free trade, free silver, and repu diation more disastrous than has ever' before overtaken demagogism in this country, and now, gentlemen, I propose three hearty cheers for the next Presi dent of the United States." (They were given with vim.) THREE STATES ABREAST. Delegations from Illinois, Iowa and Pennsylvania Crooped. Scarcely had the .preceding crowd va cated the lawn when the shouts and cheers of another coming up the street were heard. This was composid of the Hardware Men's Sound Money club of Reading. Pa., and railroad men and Continued on Second Page, CANTON. Clergymen, Teachers, liauiyers, Editors, Statesmen.