Show DECORATED WITH THE GOLDEN ROn Pennsylvania Sends Two Delegations Del-egations lo Listen to Major Ma-jor McKinley i iiTi HAS BEEN WAITING FOUR LONG YEARS Hanna is Proud of the Chicago Organization He Has the Brazen Assurance to Claim Everything in Sight Graml Army Generals to Be Enlisted Corporal Tanner Once More to the Fore General Siclcels Will Shake lat in Order to Procure Votes CANTON 0 Sept Decorated with clusters of golden rod emblematic of the money they favor five thousand Pennsylvanians Pennsyl-vanians visited Major McKinley today to cheer him and to listen to his speeches The first delegation which came on three special trains arrived at the house at noon There were about 2500 persons in the delegation and they were escorted from the station by a mounted escort a club of former citizens of Pennsylvania now living in Canton and by a committee of promiment citizens of this town This I delegation was from Beaver county and I was largely composed of people from the I towns of New Brighton Beaver and Beaver Falls The visitors represented I sixtyfive clubs With the delegation were Representative Charles C Townsend General Gen-eral John S Littell and Hon E H Thomas president of the Lincoln club I Edward A Frethey a molder was i spokesman When he appeared on the porch with Major McKinley cheer after ceer cheer burst from the great crowd in the I yard and on the streets Replying t Mr Fretheys remarks Major McKinley said I greet you at my home a friends and I a allies in the great cause in which the honor of the country and prosperity of the people are Involved You are our nearest I neiJhor on the east and are closely connected con-nected socially and in business relations with the eastern part of the old congressional congres-sional district which for so many years I had tho honor to represent The people of this country NEVER WERE SO EAGER to vote as now t Great uttJUUU last four years have been long year the longest four years since our great civil war Ones of Thats rigtu Everything has suffered bu the Republican can party Laughter Everything has been blighted bu Republican principles applause and laughter and they are dearer more cherished and more glorious than they have ever been before Cries of Thats right The people of the country are only waiting for a opportunity I oppor-tunity to embody those great principles In public law and public administration Applause I I do not recall a time In the history of the country when the question of protection pro-tection was at issue that your state did not declare by emphatic majorities in its favor My fellow citizens I do not forget for-get that this delegation come from the home of that distinguished leader and unrivalled Republican organizer cheer I Ing and cries of Quay Quay whose unfaltering devotion to Republicanism has never wavered and whose splendid services ser-vices to the cause have more than once resisted to achieve the most signal triumphs tri-umphs in both state and bth your ad the nation Great applause J wish he might have been a part of this great delegation geat delegton today but his absence is fully compensated compensat-ed by the fact that on another part of this great field of contest he Is serving I the same cause in which you are engaged engge I and for the success o which so many of the people are striving Applause I is I this year my countrymen a great cause geat cuse for which we contend commanding the support of every patriot for It represents THE NATIONAL HONOR and stands for national prosperity Ap plause and cries of Thats right I Involves in-volves every cherished interest of tho country and embraces the welfare of countr ad embrces tt every ever citizen o the republic A voice You told the truth then I involves the labor and wages of the people and the earnings accumulated and to ho crr > > lated the honor of the country its financial finan-cial integrity Its good name all are at stake In this great and stata geat contest ad every lover of country must be aroused to ever and quickened to responsibility In this crisis Applause and cries of You need not worry about that Our glorious country has suffered no dishonor in the past i must suffer no dishonor in the future The past is secure and glorious The present and future are our fields of duty and opportunity Those who have preceded us have done well their part Shall we be less honest and patriotic and brave in the performance of ou part Cries of No no In America we spurn all class distinc tons Applause and cries of Correct i correct We are all equal citizens equal in privileges and opportunity In power America thank God n man Is born to I has long been determined that the I philosophy of Jefferson Is true and that this the land of the free and tho self governed Is the strongest as well a the i I best government in the world Applause 1 Let us keep it so Cries of We will do 1 our part wi 1 Men of Pennsylvania friends and i neighbors let me Wd you be faithful to the acts traditions and teachings of the I fathers Make their standard fatr Iae standard of patriot ism and duty your own J The audience was one of the most demonstrative that has gathered in Can rjJ ai1 1n I ton since Major McKinleys nomination I applauded with vigor all the emphatic points of the speech and greeted with prolonged cheers the geted wt TRIBUTE TO SENATOR QUAY After Major McKinley finished his speech the desire to get near enough to him to grasp his hand was so general and Iso I-so intense hat men pulled and hauled and jostled each other in a very vigorous vigor-ous and at times alarming manner The second delegation of Pennsylvanians Pennsyl-vanians under the auspices of the Pitts burg Leader arrived on three spcial trains about 230 and marched with their mare bands to the McKinley residence The committee at the head o the delegation aton consisted of Congressman W A Stone Major A B Hay representing the pro fessions William A Carnev represent pr ing the laboring men Samuel Hamilton Hamiton representing the business men J F Burke Captain William F Fulwood and T W Nevln editor of the Leader were I taken Into Major McKinleys study and presented to the candidate In a few minutes when the committee ap peared on the porch with Major ap Kinley there was a demonstration which lasted several minutes Men cheered and tossed their hats In the air women waved their handkerchiefs and applauded applaud-ed and the young men blew tin horns When the noise hud subsided Colonel Stone made a short speech and intro se duced William Carney of the duce Wiiam Care Amalgamated Amalga-mated Order of Iron Workers Mr Carney is a typical workingman and is highly esteemed and trusted by his fe low toilers He made one of the most striking and effective speeches that ha been addressed to Major McKinley He said among other things The Republican party has never been unfriendly to the cause of labor and 1 not < < today Some workingmen may v haven have-n 10 astray by the promises of FALSE PROPHETS but the great body of the laboring men want work and honedt money and be lee that the success of the Republican party will bring them prosperity Mr Samuel Hamilton also spoke in be half classes of tile business and commercial Replying to these speeches Major Mc Kinley said This assemblage thoroughly typifies the national idea of a great American commonwealth In this that it represents repre-sents the equality of all which lies at the at basis of popular government After in Ate speaking earnest terms of labor today and all it typified Major Mc Kinley continued The country by a vote this year will either continue the present industrial and financial policies of the government or abandon them The Republican party stands today a it iran always std opposed to the continuation of an Industrial In-dustrial policy which cripples industries at home robs labor of Its just rewards and supplies insufficient revenues to run the government Cries of Good good I stands opposed to any change in our financial policy which would put us upon a silver basis and deprive de-prive us of the use of both gold and silver as currency Cries of Thats right Involved In the contest too is that fundamental question of whether we are to have a government by law The I The Republican party stands now as always al-ways for the maintenance of law and B < m z I order and domestic tranquimty Great applause and cries of Thats right major There are two things which deeply and personally interest the workIngmen THEY ARE WORK AND WAGES They want steady work at good wages They are not satisfied with irregular work at inadequate wages Cries of No They want the American standard applied to both They are not satisfied with steady work < it poor wages They want regular employment at remunerative wages with steady work they want to bo paid In sound money Cries of Good good They do not want to lose any part of their hard earnings through poor dollars applause and they dont want to b paid in dollars whose value can only be ascertained by the daily market reports Great cheering Whatever work they have now is paid in good money and therefore no complaint is made on that score They are satisfied with the money but they are not satisfied I satis-fied either with the scant work or the reduced re-duced wages Cries of thats right major They are satisfied with the present dollar bill but they ore not satisfied satis-fied with the present bill Tremendous cheering and blowing oC tin horns We have learned from experience that we cannot increase work at home by giving i to people abroad cries of thats I right and it is poor policy to keep ou own men in idleness while we furnish fur-nish employment to those outside of our own country who owe no allegiance to this government and who acknowledge no loyalty to that flag pointing to the American flag Great applause Washington said There is no doubt of the wisdom of the policy of giving protection and encour ement in any proper legislative form to domestic industry in-dustry There Is not a workingman in the United States who ha not learned In the past three years the wisdom of Wash ingtons utterance He appreciates it now more than ever before Now another other experiment is to be tried Cries of We dont want any mere experiments No never I say never Your spokesman gaveTHE gveTH WHOLE PHILOSOPHY I it When ne saux that nr matter now t I < much money was coined you would not get i If you did not have work to earn i i It Great cheering and cries of thats j i right Some people seem to think that j j a cheap dollar is the tfist thing for the workingman The vugeearners are I creditors Their wages are paid today j in money whose puchaslng power is good I j for itO cents on the dollar anywhere in the world I a dollar worth less than 110 cents is a legal tender the workingmen working-men will never get any other kind Cries of thats right Who will raise the worklngmoris wages to meet the rise in workingans waj re I the products he buys cries of nobody no-body give us a Republican administration administra-tion with McKinley for president followed fol-lowed by cheering and blowing 0 horns I The mints If they wore thrown wide open to the coinage of every character i of metal and were multiplied a hundredfold I hundred-fold In capacity would neither furnish the workingman a job restore his exhausted I ex-hausted savings or give him credit Great j applause and cries You are right i major Nothing my fellow citizens will accomplish that but workwork at fair wages and that will only come through confidence restored by a wise financial and industrial policy Cheers and cries of Hurrah for McKinley We canoiit have work if we dont have I wealth somewhere and we cannot have I wealth without work for work is at the foundation of all wealth Great applause i ap-plause The power to get hold of money I dont care what business we are in depends I de-pends upon whether the man who owns the money wants what we have and needs what we have more than he wants or needs his money Applause and cries of Thats right IF WE HAVE OUR LABOR we can get pay for It if somebody wants it who can pay for it and he never wants it unless it Is necessary to have it for his convenience or comfort or to produce something from which he can make profit out of his money Great applause I we want to borrow money our ability to get it is measured by the confidence the possessor has in our ability and disposition dispo-sition to repay it That is true of whatever i what-ever kind of money we have and there is another thing w e ought to remember and I j i that is free silver at a ratio of 16 to 1 oran 1 or-an other ratio will not repeal the great > law of supply and demand Cheers It is a grave error to suppose that you can Pri np vpHpg b diminishing the value i of money that you can increase the value 01 i niiig oy changing its measure I I Garfield uttered a great truth when speaking for the resumption of specie I I payment he said In the name of everyman 1 every-man who wants his own when he has earned it I demand that we do not make the wages of the poor man to shrivel in his hands after he has earned them Applause Ap-plause What Garfield so eloquently I spoke for was executed by the redemption law of 3879 THE DOLLAR OF PROMISE became the coin of fulfillment and every I dollar we have in circulation today ever good a every other dollar in every mart and market of the world Tremendous applause That Is the way it Is now and that is the way It shall b if the people peo-ple decree the Republicans In control of every branch of our federal government Applause and cries of They will do i and blowing of horns And the preserva tion of that dollar Is a indispensible to our national honor and our public faith as it is to the men who work in factories a who toil in the fields Applause At Headquarters CHICAGO Sept Chairman Hanna and some other distinguished Republicans were a the national headquarters part i of the day After his busy day was over Mr Hanna said to a representative of the United Associated Presses I a very proud of my Chicago organization They showed me reports of efficient work and organization in every state I dont believe the crowds which went to hear Mr Bryan in New York state indicate any increase in his following It only shows a more general interest in the issues of this campaign I have no misgivings about cmpag eat go ing for McKinley We havo a good chance to carry Texas if the harmony plan among the Republican factions j goes through and the proposed fusion with the Populists carries A party of I prominent Texas Republicans were in to I see me today on this subject I am well pleased with the whole system so far as I have received reports General E H Terrell w a member i of the Texas party also Ed H R Green son of the famous Hotly Green Mr Green wU bo chairman of the Republican Republi-can state committee if the proposed harmony har-mony plan goes through at the state convention con-vention next week The visitors came to get the good offices of the national committee com-mittee enlisted to bring about peace and assist in electing two or three gold congressmen A PLAN FOR GRAND ARMY generals t make a combination tour of 11 1 Continued on Page i t 1l f |