Show BY TELE TELEGRAPH GRAPH FE ren reb n AN UNION UKIO nine LIKE I 1 I 1 A AMERICAN M ae it I 1 CA N CLEVELAND ll II Il endricks arrived from cincinnati this afternoon and was received at the depot and escorted to the hotel by the young mens central democratic club and a large reception committee this evening there was one of the grandest political demonstrations in ohio there was a mass ing meeting eting in monumental park with speaking from two stands by governor hendricks senator bayard governor hubbard of texas col john johnr R fellows of new york ac ilon hon lib II 11 B payne senator pendley pendleton and others general W S rosecrans presided f e at one of the stands and congressman n foran at the other following the she speeches was the largest procession of torch lights ever seen in this section it is estimated thas to were in line on horseback and on foot including the democratic legion of buffalo soo trong the park was gorgeously illuminated the demonstration closed with a mi magnificent display of fireworks excursions came in on every line of railway leading to the c city governor hendricks was seren serena serenaded a ad ded tonight to night 6 by the buffalo Le legion dorl doii I 1 WELLSTON ohio 11 at 9 mr nir blaine left ironton to go up through the hocking valley the workmen in the nail mills cheered as lie he passed at oak hill tv there giere liere was a er crowd of ivor workmen kmen beside the track they had bad erected a platform of pig iron on which mr blaine stood he began his orlef arief speech by saying 1 I standon stand on the same platform on which I 1 stood in congress for 20 yeras the pla pia platform form which enables iron to be made in our own country instead of england the remainder of the speech was devoted to the bearing of the tariff on the iron industry athens 0 il 11 at jackson there vas was tas a large gathering of similar com Iosi tosi position tion to that at oak hill lilli mr nir blaine spoke a few wolds about his interest in the coal land and tile the bearing ol of the tariff upon the iron and coal trade and as the tram train moved off the people cheered him lancaster 0 11 at nelsonville Nel sonville blaine made the following speech gal gai if f lain iain I 1 am atheme at home anywhere it is in a coal region I 1 was born and brought up in a coal region in the valley of the monongahela nonga norum hela heia and I 1 know knew something abbat about coal I 1 have been an owner ot of coal lands near nearly lyall all ali my adult life and the greater part of what little property I 1 have in this world word is in coal lands I 1 I 1 have albo aiho been to some extent en engaged aged in the mining of coal I 1 am now hite nite interested as stockholder and director of a west virginia company I 1 javle janle ae had 29 years a rs experience in connection hixt with the he coal industry and I 1 count it a piece of remarkable fortune that neither myself horany of the companions with which I 1 have been connected has ever had bad a strike or dispute or quarrel lot lof of any kind with any man eur Yur further ther I 1 have to say that within the last 18 months the company I 1 am connected with has been able to pay an average of about 60 A a month to every overy oae of the men engaged you see therefore that 1 I am not talking about a subject that I 1 do not understand bit while I 1 acknowledge I 1 am an owner of coal land in and west virginia I 1 am kindly assured by a number of democrats in ohio that I 1 own also a lar large tract detract of coal land in the hocking valley vany now I 1 think when a canhas manias property attributed to him which he protests he lle does not own I 1 and when the other party insists that II 11 he does own onn it they ought to be compelled by law to inake maee make atgood it good to him they soy say that 1 I am a large owner and holder in the i hocking valley syndicate I 1 say that I 1 do not nol own a single share they say again that I 1 do let them come into the court and make the ownership good to me if I 1 co could uld bring them into court on that issue and under the rules suggested I 1 could bankrupt a great c a many democratic editors and speakers p e a I 1 who insist that I 1 own property prop that I 1 never did own I 1 understand that the miners mi 1 ners in this fe region 1 on have had llad some t trouble rouble with the the operators and oui our political opponents say that I 1 am one of the owners As I 1 said a while ago I 1 have never had any trouble troubie with the men n employed in the mines mints in which lille lilie I 1 am i interested and neva never expect to have any because if I 1 cannot continue the business without difficulties ot of that kind I 1 shall abandon it I 1 think there bispo is no disagreement that arises between an employer and the mene he employs that ought not to be settled by a fair impartial ar arbitration and I 1 think the man who is riot not willin willing to admit such matter to arbitration ought to explain to the public why he is unwilling to do so but because you are in temporary trouble why should you turn your 5 our hacks upon the great protective system imm which has for twenty years improved and secured the development of four your valley are you gong coln to remedy your troubles in that bayr because thase the high tide tlde of prosperity all the time do you therefore say that louwill you will have a low tide of adversity etty ethy aji this world ye faveto take a little bit of lean with the fat you cannot have a stream flow down its ats nned hied without having it eddy now and then you cannot have the flood tide of the ocean without the corresponding ebb these occasional disturbances of the tha the even now how of bf prosperity seem to be ale vie ie vu you want to get vt rid et 91 them ot 01 course but the parties concerned should deal with each other in a patient and conciliatory spirit and in your anxiety to remedy these passing troubles you should not think of bearin tearing away the very f foundation oun dation on which t the hg C prosperity of your state and of your country rests I 1 appeal to you as workingmen as miners because if the protective tariff is not good for the coal and iron industries it is not good for anything it if it does not d develop these it does not develop anything and il ii the protective tariff were repealed tomorrow to morrow these hills would be again wrapped in the silence and desertion in which they rested during the 25 years that preceded the enactment of the protective tariff but on the oth other erhand hand haud if the protective tariff Is maintained I 1 have f full fuli uli uil faitt that your troubles will soon be adjusted and that a new era of prosperity will blawn dawn upon it 11 logan lowin reached the city this afternoon and was met at the tation station by a body of 4 00 veteran soldiers who with a band escorted the general to the hotel upon arriving there the square was quickly billew filled logan appeared and made a brief address at night sight he was escorted to the music hall ge gen I 1 1 no noyes e s ca called lied the meeting to order er a and d announced Gen fhe rh rhe 0 chairman ater introduced gen logan i 1 logan with an evidently worn voice begged for quiet saying this would be the fourth address ht he had made today and could not hope to be heard unless quiet was maintained 11 he e then went directly into an answer of hendricks s speech bech of the night before by askin asking ay if his bis hearers thought there should be a change A change by turning out the republican party because when the life of the nation was threatened the republican party declared that power existed in the gov ernt erni eminent nent to maintain its existence i and that the te power should be exercised cries of noli no lie he continued in the torm lorm of questioning whether it was because the republican party had given the country honest money in defiance of the democrats or that it had given protection to american labor increasing the wealth of the country since 1101 isol thirty thousand million dollars referring to accusation of blaine neglect neglecting in the interests of american citizens abroad road be hald haid gov hendricks forgot to fo say that under democratic rule there never was a statute denning defining the position of the Govern government menton on tills tuis subject it was lett iett to a republican congress to enact a law which is now recognized by the leading foreign powers and by treaty are entitled to protection abroad ile he proceeded to state the acts of the democratic party to show why there could not be a change and then took up the subject ot of tile tiie tariff making the assertion that Hendrick hendrickse ss speech was all an c open declaration of if free trade ile he was bitter against hendricks for trying to array the germans a against ainest blaine find referring to bayaras Baya Ba yards yaras riPs insinuation thattie republicans were about to buy votes in ohio said it came with bad grace from a man from the south to talk to men of ohio about a fair ballot when it was known that if democratic hands and shotguns could be kept off the ballot box in the south t they C cou con could not carry seven states ile he cios clod closed with t an appeal for support of t the e republican CPU it can state and con congressional ti et ile he was followed by b doliver oliver of iowa and others philadelphia il 11 general butler arrived this evening under an escort committee of the peo peoples les ies party by whom he was met at lra ira harrisburg rr isburg ile he was taken in a carriage to the hotel and soon after to horticultural hall where a large dud audience lence awaited him the meeting in the meantime was addressed orl ore ased by tw awu other speakers both were frequently interrupted by calls for fur butler and repeated intimations thattie ile audience I 1 came here liere to see butler butier only after sundry manifestations eions of impatience by the crowd gen butler appeared on the stage and und at the same moment a procession of his supporters headed b by a band of music entered the hall As s gen butler again came forward to speak a large abarge tin spoon was thrown the gallery and fell at ili hi feet apparently patently ly wholly undisturbed turned he picked up the spoon and advancing with it in his hand said sald my friends and fellow citizens it is my first and most grateful duty to thank thanks you sur sor your very kind and may I 1 add enthus enthusiastic latla gre greeting etim having done that it Is my next duty t to present ent cut the only arg argument ament of the leveland cleveland party were here the general held up the spoon and then contemptuously throwing it aside he continued now as the cleveland men have begun and finished the entire work of a cleveland meeting wont they please adjourn go home and let us carry carr on our own meeting after alterre requesting his ins heare s to indulge as little as possible in applause iu in order to economize time he said the platform of the peoples party which was as short as the cleveland clevelan argument was simply this equal powers equal rights equal privileges and equal bur dens duns for all men under the law it wai a platform to live by and unless the pending issues were settled constitutionally tio nally it would be the platform for the laboring men of the country to die dle bv balf if it beca ihie ifie necessary fortham for them to enforce their rights which lul lui might lit god forbid butler butier went vent on to say monopoly while cutting down the wages on one hand was raising the price of the necessaries of life on the other QUEBEC ii 11 about 1 this lifter afternoon noon an explosion occurred at the tile new parliament buildt W destroying destroy destro lus yin a considerable portion of the masonry and windows of the tho new now building which was I 1 just being roofed the explosion was wits at first supposed supposal ed to have been een the boiler of the ell eil engine agine used for hoisting the mate material rihl but this tills proved case neither call cali it be antibu ted to gas the general 1 impressions appears to be that the explosion was caused by dynamite but as none of this ingredient was used on the works the mystery is how it came there an i investigation invests gation gatlon is now being held the workmen all being away at dinner nobody but one mail man was injured and he escaped with a slight cut from a piece of stone the shock was very severe all over the city the windows of if the houses in the vicinity ot 0 the explosion were badly shattered HALIFAX 11 james herne and jas cleary eleary and there wives returning home this afternoon in a sailboat were upset off georges islands all were drowned PITTSBURG 12 A collision occurred this evening near hunkers station on the southwest branch of t e pennsylvania railroad between a louz ion lou train of coke cars und end an empty freight train both trains were badly wrecked one manawas man was killed and three seriously injured the coke train caught fire irom from the me engine and ana was consumed LYNCHBURG W va 12 the to town wn of liberty 75 miles west of this point suffered a partial destruction by tire fire today to day the origin incendiary awen i ty six business houses were consumed loss Lossl COLUMBUS 0 12 state journal special Nel nei nelsonville Nelson neison sonville vuie vUle ohio all the syndicate mines are on fire here today to day with the exception of nos 3 and 7 special efforts arg are arc being made to extinguish the tire anre IV A shoemaker and co s hoppers were burned last night two mines the columbus and hocking coal and iron company were set fire lire to last night been burning all day it is impossible to 10 get to where the fires are to put them out no disturbance of any character reported at this hour p m C AMDEN ajl NJ 13 W A A collision n occurred here between two pennsylvania Peen sylvania trains this morning joseph oarsman engineer of one of the trallis was killed and the fireman of the other was fatally injured having both legs cut off severs passengers C rs were hurt P F 0 it V I 1 G IN K 1 LONDON 11 the british coni commodore m 0 on the australian station has been beeh instructed to proceed to new guinea to procia procla proclaim lm a british protectorate over the southern coasts of that island to i the eastward of the meridian east longitude the protectorate will include the islands adjacent to southern new guinea settlement with within inthe the protectorate will not at present be permitted the decision of gladstone that a protectorate ate should be established over guinea was hastened by reports sent the bri british ish colonial office of of the great 11 increase of the slave trade upon the coast several labor vessels from queensland have been seizing natives native s and one incident in connection therewith ther e is related eol eci in which the crews of some of the bradin trading vessels shot 38 na tives the british gunboat duenger ed coi a slave scho schooner oner and se sent ut the vessel aud and crew to cooktown Cook town where the latter will be tried an ultimatum has been sent to the transvaal government by great britain it alleges repeated violations of the ti treaty eaty and aa acts of violence committed by bk the boers beyond the boundary lines of the transvaal country lade it demands of the transvaal government due satisfaction for these acts a repression of boer filibusters and a thorough gh observance of tile the last convention entered into by bv both countries it is reported the british war office is already preparing an expedition of men to proceed to south africa a portion of which will be drawn drown from the east indian army A withdrawal of the proclamation annexing an nexina the mont clas territory is not expected to alter the position of affairs as the boers continue to hold a grip upon the lands PARIS 11 the french government is negotiating with the owners of several large |