-- ! I JUMBmood is able, Tiforous, wide-awake I oapOTimeuueuf, uxm mom .K. TURNER Sc OOh ttaonwnjidy weU informed ae to the .? offldlB who h" beea objected to that it was hoped the fraadwomkLei vfr' a roate All li ."at) 1 .cajgLjlsteCPoii. a naranhla Tirintadiaii 5T?VSJ ill a-- a a ii ip JVIECCfl - -- -ms -irii ; MTTHE Op PflTlIOTIS JI- r'al ro district oat that Canton, O., Oct- 17, 1S3G. Canton, the home of William McKinley, has en many marvelous events in this campaign, but none which eaaaled that of today. More men and women, more special trains, more delegations, more assur ances of loyalty to aatioaal honor, more addresses and more responses by Maj. McKinley than on any previous day, were the record of this seventeenth day of October, 1816. From morning until night the number of special trains, the bouts and cheers of delegations, the music of bands,' the glitter of uniforms and the addresses of spokesmen and n ponsea of Maj. McKinley 'were heard. Nearly 500 cars brought perhaps 30,000 Itcople from nearly half the states of the union. Mr. McKinley. who left his home early for a short walk in the crisp October air. found an anxious throng at his resi dence on his return, and from that moment until long after darkness he was the center of attraction, the recipient of honors innumerable and tlu dispenser of patriotic sentiments which were received with marks of the highest approval by tj.o thousands who heard them. MARYLAND'S FIVE BATTALIONS. They Pledg that State to the Party or Ileaoot Mosey aad Protection. The Maryland delegation, consisting of five battalions, a total of 3000 men, were the first to get attention. To them Maj. McKinley said: "Nothing has given me, in all this campaign, so much pleasure and satis- " We have just pride in our glorious ', record tii favor of free speech, free soil, J Jjrte press, free men ana jrec conscience, j J but J ItcJiere that the great majority of our j countrymen are neither in favor of free j X trade, free silver or free lawlessness, nor 2 of cliiating people in the sacred name of j freedom." Maj. McKinley to Com- j t mkkcialTuavkle88. Oct. 17tli, 189G. T faction as to feel that the wage-earners of this country are for the most part enlisted in the cause for which we stand. (Prolonged cheering.) I know something of thu.jworkiugmen of the United States. I know something of the potters. (Great applause from the potters.) I know something of the wage-.'amers in the great cotton and woolen mills, and that all they want is an opportunity to work; and to secure this all they ask is pro tection against the products of other lands, made by underpaid labor. (Great applause.) This, my fellow citizens, you can reg ulate by your own ballots. Petitions, as one of your spokesmen has already said, count for naught. Protests to the Amer ican Congress count for nothing. The time when the citizen's voice counts most is on that supreme day the elec tion day. What you want to do is to elect a Congress that represents your views; then you won't need to resort to petitions to regulate them, or to keep them from injuring your industries. Let the voice of Maryland this year re-.-onnd :is the voice of Maryland did lat j ear (enthusiastic cheering and erie of We will') for honest money and protec tion. The tariff question is a question wholly of labor. "We will manufacture with the world, if the rest of the world will pay as good wages as we are paid in the United State; but as long as it does not. patri otism. gcuuiuc Americanism, and every industrial interest demands that we should make our tariff high enough to measure the difference between the low cost of labor in foreign countries and the cost of labor in this. (Cheers.) "Then, sou are interested in honest money. You don't want any short dol lars. .You have tried short hours in the last fiwir years, and haven't liked them. (Laughter and applause and cries of You bet we don't.') When you give a full day's work to your employer you want to lie paid ia full, unquestioned ana uiutiierauie aouars. (tiroat ap plause.) This is the kind of money we have nov. Ami the kind we propose to continae if the American people sustain us this year." THE FARMERS ATTEST LOYALTY Assurances that They Are for Sound Money and Soand Principles. One of the earliest parties was made up of farmers from Monroe county, Midi- to whom Maj. McKinley said? "1 have never believed, as some poo- pic have been sayiug, mai mere was ever any danger about tae state of Mich igan. There has never been a moment when I had the slightest doubt about wherw the electoral vote of your glori ous X&va would go iu the presidential contest of 185MJ. No state iu the Union is more deeply interested in the genuine American policy that will protect your property, your interests, your labor. S'our mine-, the products of your forests, from undue competition than the state of Michigan. (Applause.) And there is mo Mate that is more deeply interested tn having a protective policy than the state of Michigan. (Applause.) "There is one thing that the Repub lican party is dedicated to, and that is to .abor first; then to law and order. These ire indispensable to the welfare of man kind and indispensable to the prosperity and the permanency of the republic. I am glad to know from your spokesman that jou believe not only in a protective tariff, but that you believe iu honest money. (Great cheering.) When yon do your work, whether it be on your farm or iu the factory, or in the mine, you want to receive in iiayment dollars that are good every mouth and every where in every part of the civilized world. That's the kind of money we have now, and we have more of it than we ever had ia our history before. To enter upon the free and unlimited coin age of silver would be to commit this country to silver alone and deprive us of the gold we have. Instead of increasing 55 One Day's Record at Canton. Micfcigan Sends West Virgiaia sends . . . Maryland seads Kentacky scads . . , . . OMa seads Other States send .... All sections, all creeds, all nationalities, all colors, all classes, all in terests, and all parties unite in honors to William McKinlev. aad Bryaaiem. Chairman Wil-1 daacy of the popalist Democrats a Vie with Republicans in the circulation it would decrease the circulation of the country, and instead of giving as good, round 100-cent dollars, which we have now, they would ask as to do our business with a 53-cent dol lar and bring ourselves to the financial plane of Mexico and China. We decline to do it." (Great cheering.) COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS. ilarge ftolegatloas from Oblo and Other States Greet Maj. McKinley.. Another large and interesting delega tion was made up of commercial travel ers, mostly from Ohio and adjoining states. They were addressed by Mr. McKinley as follows: "You have discovered in the last four years that it is a good deal safer to con sult markets than maxims. You have discovered that prices current and actual experience in trade and commerce are a better guide to business prosperity than anything you can find in the text books. Your coming together. Democrats and ICepubucans (a voice: No Democrats in this crowd') well, once Democrats, but now preferring country to party. Com ing together as you have is an act of sterling patriotism hitherto almost un known in American politics, and pro moted only by considerations of the pub lic good. But these are characteristic traits of the business and commercial men of the country. "I do not attribute your call to any per sonal concern for my success. You look beyond the candidate to the great princi ples he represents, and upon that ground and in that spirit you are here today; and in the same spirit I address you now. No people in the country can be more interested in the result of the elec tion two weeks from next Tuesday than the commercial men of the United Suites. (Applause.) What you want is business, and you have discovered that you cannot sell if there is nobody to buy. You have suffered greatly the last three years under the withering touch of par- tial "re iraue, ami me insiaouiiy oi l "There is one thing that tlie Republican k party is dedicated to, and that is tolabor I first, then to law and order. These are l indispcnsablt to the welfare of mankind and indispensable to the pros erilg and l tlie permanency of the lie public." Maj. l McKinley to Michigan Farmebs, Oct. 17th. 1SSW. . Inisincss. and above all. the absence of confidence. Shall these commercial men now embark in the vastly more disas trous and destructive jiolicy of free sil ver, which is tlie party shibboleth, not of honor but of dishonor? "A great many people find peculiar pleasure in the word 'free.' It is a grand, glorious word when properly ap plicd. I do not know what you may think about it. but I do not believe in de stroying cither the business, the prop erty. r the credit of this country under the cry of free silver. (Tremendous cheers and cries of Xcver. never.') We have just pride in our glorious record in favor of free siicecb, free soil, free press, free men and free conscience, but I be lieve that the great majority of our coun trymen are neither in favor of free trade, free silver, or free lawlessness (great ap plause), nor of cheating people in the sacred name of freedom. "The question of honest money against free and irredeemable paper money, both unlimited aud both unsound, has been so thoroughly argued that I do not wish to occupy your time in discussing it. Suffice it to say that no valid or suffi cient reason has yet been given, or can be given, for the United States adopting either. Some things are so plain, some things arc so clear and distinct, some things are so palpable and self-evident that, like day and night, every man must sooner or later recognize them. If hu man experience has proved anything, it is that no nation was ever benefited bv poor money or injured by good money. and that no man ever suffered from be- ing honest, and no man ever nrofited br Itoing dishonest. (Great cheers.) Good, honest dollars hurt uoliody. If we have not as much good money as we ought to have, let us get more, and we will get more- whenever the country requires it. But we will not get it as long as we are proposing to adopt the financial policy of China or Mexico. Give business confi dence a chance to be restored. Start our mills, factories, mines, quarries; restore good prices, good home markets for our fanners, good wages for our working men, and then, if the law of supply and demand requires it. coin in honest dol lars. AH the good. 100-eent honest dol lars will succdily come for be uses of the people." STUDENTS AND TEACHERS. Representatives of Colleges Pay Their Respects. A large delegation of students and professors of the Ohio Wesleyan univer .ity. the Ohio Medical university and others were the next callers. Maj. Mc Kinley said in response to their greet ing: "If there was anything needed to dis pel that false and dangerous doctrine which some people are now teaching, it is dispelled here today a doctrine that would array class against class and one I section of our country against the other. We have had on these grounds today men trom more tnan a dozen states wage-earners, miners, millworkers, farm- 2,000 .2,500 3.000 .4,000 5,000 20,000 Saturday, October 17th, 1896 ivuges ett- .""I w-eotion pon his excellent ad-lnis- I "cheap" foreum vvh and . G&William McKinlev. ,; A SlNffl DAY V- -' ers, professional men, commercial trav elers, old folks and young (folks, college bred men and men of every profession and walk in life. This great day dean onstrates that this ia jaation not of class but of equal and tenorable citizen ship under one constitution and govern ment. (Prolonged cheering.) "I am glad to know that the students of the universities are enrolled -Jau our ranks. Every newspaper of the conn- try. East and West, tells us t! great colleges of the East, as the great colleges of the West, and pupils have enlisted under ner of the Republican barty in numbers than they have 'everdoa fore. (Great applause.) Tfary si this year 'for country and conscience. They stand for nublic honor and morali and supremacy of law. We will settle for all time this, year that this -la a government by law and a government that rests upon laws made by its own free and equal citizens." (Great ap plause and cries of "Good, 'good.") DEMOCRATS AND REPUBLICANS. Citizen or Kentucky Join in Sapport of McKinley anil Honei Money. A large delegation from Kentucky, composed of both Republicans and sound money Democrats, was one of the most demonstrative in honoring the Repub lican candidate. To them Mr. McKinley said: address you not as Republicans nor Democrats, but as countrymen and friends. Your glorious old state has al ready registered a verdict in favor of one of the principal issues involved in this campaign., I do not believe that in the past twelve months the Kentucky people have changed their opinions on the questions of honest money and public honor. (Great applause and cries of 'Xo, no.') Kentucky has usually been a Dem ocratic state, and in 1S76 gave that sturdy Democratic statesman. Samuel J. Tilden of New York, an unprecedent ed popular majority for President. His memory is doubtless revered by many of your Democrats today, and I venture to send bv you this message to them in Mr. Tildcn'a own words. "In his celebrated joint debate with Horace .Greeley, in 1840, Mr. Tilden said: An unstable currency produces instabil ity of prices and is peculiarly injurious to the farmer. He ought not to be sub ject to the tremendous agency of an un seen cause, which may disappoint his wisest calculations and overwhelm him in constant ruin, but he ought to be se cured in the tranquillity of his fircsido from the curse of an unstable and con flicting currency.' (Great appla"se.) "These were wise and hom,f. wonls then; they arc true and honest words now, and commend themselves to the I " submit to you, men of toil, all I I around and about me, icho is the better f friend of labor, he who giro, you work i that bring contentment, or he who I breathes only words that create discon- tentt There cannot be, there ought never Z to be, any enmity between labor and capital. The interest of the one is the 1 ' interest of the otlier." Maj. McKinley I ' to Ohio WoiikinumenOct. 17tb, 1896. careful consideration of every citizen in the land, who, if he would be spared further distress, should allow this coun sel t guide him at the approaching na tional election. "Another issue, my fellow citizens, in this campaign is the tariff. (Applause.) That is to say, whether we shall laise sufficient revenue to pay the current ex penses of the government instead of bor rowing niouey for that purpose, and whether we shall do our work at home or have it done abroad. (Great applause , . r M..l .! oi it inse anu cries oi uu, gou. j ouuu we nlare duties high enough on foreign . we j goods to protect our labor against the i fiSHnte m1gnificeSnWu3sSesanodf 1 the United states : .- . - "l do not Know, my teiiow citizens, when it will be possible to bring back the prices of 1892; that is only conjectur al. The only way I see toward accom plishing that is to restore the great na tional policy, which your own citizen, Henry Clay, so well maintained; a policy that would encourage and promote American development, build up Ameri can industries and employ American labor. (Applause.) "It pleased me to bear the generous words of your venerable lientenant gov ernor. I was glad to hear those splendid sentences filled with patriotism, which must have thrilled every heart, from your German editor, and my comrade who puts the flag of his country and the in terest of his country above that of anv political organization. (Tremendous cheering.) "This is the hour and the era for the exhibition of the highest patriotism. We have put the past behind us. We know no North, no South, no East, no West, but a perpetual Union of indestructible states. . (Enthusiastic applause and cries of 'Hurrah for McKinley.') I welcome the men of the boutb as allies iu this ...Mm wnf1t..t 4ti" tint'iinnl ttjknrk.. T. ..o ivc notice to au the world that there are no longer any sectional lines to divide us (great applause) and that we have but one flag the glorious stars and stripes (great cheering), the same our grnndsires bore upon many a field. When we stand for that flag we stand by all that it represents, by national integrity, finan cial honor, the supremacy of government -by law, and the sacredness of the federal I S aBvlaaivl mtm eM AHrtltAS n( A To. JUUlCiar), uim w iu wuivi ui miiij iu every hour of trouble. (Great ap plause and cries of 'McKinley is all right.')" CROWDS FROM WEST VIRGINIA. Cotored Vtr Are KepveMtatod ia the aonwi Deputation. The Central, Eastern and Western counties of -West Virginia were all rep resented in the next audience addressed. These people filled to the platforms fortr I railway coaches, coming in a train of 1 live sections. aj. .uctvinicy spoke as 1 follows: wauMLIn tiffiR t. AT THE HOME SHOUTING THOUSANDS THRONG THE "This is the year when people all want to vote. They are ready now to vote. (Cries of 'We are, anyhow,' followed by great applause.) They know on which bide .they mean to vote. (Cries of The KcpMUcan ticket.') Why do taey want to Tot that ticket this year? .Because they believe that involved in a Repub lican triamph is public confidence and the restoration of better times. They have NndL some experience in the last ytara ana a nair and tnat expert has been most costly. Not a single tst in the eonntrv hut has snfferetl. Ttovernment has suffered in its" rev enues and the people in their wages and . the prices of their products. In fact, everything has suffered but the glorious principles of the Republican party. (Great cheering.) "Protection, honest money, public mor als, reciprocity, the national honor, the' public credit all emblasoned on the ban ner of Republicanism" this" year, 'and ral lying around that standard are men of all parties, all races, all-sections, all creeds. The white :nan, the , black man. the wage-earner and the employer, the pro fessional man and the business man, all have united and stand Upon a common platform, which platform is for our coun try and its honor. (Great applause and cries of 'Good!') I have heard from vour spokesman today that West Virginia's electoral vote tins year will be for the meiidous cheering.) It gratifies the heart of every lover of his country." OHIO WORKINCMEN. Laboring Men from All Part of the State Are Greeted. No delegation was more cordially wel comed than that made up of railroad men, dock men. farmers and miners from Ohio, to whom Maj. McKinlev said: J Here is a studied effort made in some quarters of this country to teach that the employer of labor is attempting to enslave the workingman. I submit to you uieu of toil all around and about me. who is the better friend of labor, he who gives you work that brings content ment, or he who breathes only words that create discontent? There cannot be. there ought never to be, anv enmitv between labor and capital. The interes't of the one is the interest of the other. You know that the greatest friend of slavery is idleness. They talk about making the workingmen slaves. There is no danger of a workingman ever be coming a slave if he receives American wages, the w.-ges that he had for thirty years, from 1SC0 to 1800. under the glori ous policy of a protective tariff. The best friend to lalior. the best policv in the interest of labor, is that noliev which gives workingmen an ooportunity to work at good wages. Which policy do von minK suuserves tnat interest best? Our policy of protection or their policy of free trade? (Tremendous shouts. 'Ours! Ours!' and 'McKinlcy's policy!') "This great audience f.iirlv represents the diversified industries of the United States. On the one side of me are men who manufacture; on the other side are men who handle iron ore. and in front are men who dig our eoal. One is de pendent on the other, and here in this audience, too. are representatives of the railroads ot tne country, which transport not only raw material, but the finished product, from one" end of this country ! to the other. The one is never prosper ous unless the other is prosperous. Yon f "Protection, honest money, ptddir.i morals, recinrority, the national honor, ? ; the public creiitall are emblazoned on I y r. - t, ..,. . ., . J "" bannrr f Aepubhcanism thit year. T ono! raUting around that standard are f 1 men rties, all races, all sections, t it ..j . jl. z. il ii t m ncrecw,- me venireman, ineoiacK man, i I the wage-earner, the employer, the pro- l feioal man and the business man." Maj. McKinley to Colored Voters, t J Oct. 17th, 1896. know that from experience. There is not a handler of ore at the Ashtabula harbor who does not know that when the great ore and steel'industries of this country are stopped he has nothing to do. There is not a coal miner from Perry county who does not know that when the fires arc extinguished in our furnaces there is no demand for him. Now. the Kepnuiican party is universal. It an- plies to every industry from the man who digs the coal, which they call the raw product, the Republican policy protects ana acicnus tnem'aii. And what do we defend them against? We defend them against the products of a cheaper lalor in the old world. We defend our labor because in the United States evrtry laboring man is an equal citizen with every other man in the coun try. I am glad to see you; glad to meet you: gl?d to have your assurances of an unprecedented victory in Ohio this year. Ohio has never been behind. She led in tlie great Civil war. and she has led in the inarch of progress, and her states manship has been impressed upon the most glorious pages of American his tory." MICHIGAN PAYS HER HONORS. A Larg Delegatlea or Baalnrsa Xea, Farmers and Railway Kmployea. Ten coachloads of people from Grand Rapids. Kalamazoo and Western Michi gan constituted thr next audience ad dressed by Maj. McKinley. -The party was -largely composed of members of the Railroad Men's Sonnd Money clubs, but oum men. professional men and citi- zens generally were represented Mr. McKinley, after discussing the I derfnl resources of Michigan, said: won- & xti-jfuuuuuti tieKcu juries or tiigni you are. ) This assurance gratifies ray heart. (A ice Mine. too. fnllnu-rol W tn. ............. .. ...... j... u iiikiiiK u ior enemy of the rent oest vile.-c?ls or every J a time, however, they would find it was r,,;Jn I would rather hck that doc-1 not so very raw from the man who , f ?. n' J , . I ?. ttaU .,,1 aoCj f mines the ore in Michigan aud Minne- i f irwr 80 Pr"ltnl this year, Aorth and I sota to the man who handles it at our ' "', where none arc for party bid all ? great ports, and to the final finish! i are for aoccrinhcnl Tltis is the true I aZ?7?ls&4JBi tf-!i5JUB9 OF THE NATION'S CANDIDATE THE GREATEST DAY OF THE CAHPAIGN "There is one thing that can be said about the Republican party it can cele brate the anniversaries of all the great American statesmen, no matter to what party they may have belonged, who stood for the country and its honor. We have no difficulty in celebrating, too, with' our Democratic friends, the anni versary of Jefferson, Jackson and Ben ton. We celebrate those anniversaries with the same satisfaction that we cele brate the anniversaries of the early statesmen who were more nearly of our political belief. "When we reflect the development of all this wealth is in a state of less than G0,(KX) square miles, and among people not yet 2.500,000 in number, we can be gin to realize how great is our country. Can it be possible that such a magnifi cent commonwealth will ever lend her iufluence to free silver, free trade, dis honor ami partial or entire repudiation? ('No, no. never.') No, I say, forever no. What the people of this country want, whether they dwell in Michigan or Ten nessee or Ohio, is a policy that will pro tect and defend every American inter est against the outside world, from any quarter. What we want is a tariff put upon foreign goods high enough to not only give us revenue enough to run( the government, but to afford adequate 'pro tection to every American industry and occupation. This is the policy of the Renublican party. "What we want is to restore a policy that will enable us to pay as we go, both government and people. We have not been doing that for four years past. I am sure your great and grand state can be relied upon to enroll itself in the column of national honor as against re pudiation, of a protective tariff, reci procity and the maintenance everywhere of public order, tranquillity and the su premacy of law." WORDS TO RAILROAD MEN. Employment and Good Money Are De fired by All. There were railroad men on all sides of Maj. McKinley when he began his fourteenth address. One party repre sented the Michigan Central. Auother came from Columbus, O., and represent ed the Pennsylvania lines entering that city. Still another party represented the Erie employes of Cleveland. To all these Maj. McKinley said: "There is not a workingman in this audience who would not rather work for a good road than a poor road; and there is not an employe in this great audience ' that wo"hl not rather bo paid iu good money than poor money. (Applause.) "What you want first and above all else is employment. What yon want is to get on the pay roll of a good railroad company, for you have to get on the pay roll before you can get anything out of the pay car. to which my friend has al luded. (Great cheering.) But in order to get on the iuiy roll the railroads must have business. You know when busi ness is poor with the railroads some of you are stricken from the pay roll. (Cries of 'That's right.') Yon have ex- perienced that in the last three years and a half. What you are interested in, therefore, is the general prosperity of the country. We want every factory in the land to be at work. We want every mine in the country to be busy. (A voice: 'Not the silver mines.') My friend says no silver mines. We are willing that our silver mines shall be busy; I hope every one of them, too. will be busy; but if they were all put to work and every mint was at work they would not furnish employment for one third of the idle men in this country who earn their living by toil. "You have to get your employment in the great, active, busy industries of the country. This is where you get your work and wages, and when these great, busy industries are at work your rail roads have plenty of traffic. (Great ap plause.) When your railroads have plen ty of traffic you have constant and steady employment at good wages. Is not that so? (Cries of 'Yes. yes.') "Now. how are yon to get back that prosperity you once enjoyed? (Cries of 'By voting the Republican ticket.') Some I ''The man who would arrau the voor i f aaainst tlie rich, laftor against capital, f class against class, section against section, X i not a friend of the coimtn, but an ijwlicy of sturdy American citizenshio." I f Maj. McKinley to Factory Em- y rwiu, vsii. iiiu, 10.. T t ! people say that the way to get it back is to debase the money of the country. Does anybody believe that? (Cries of 'No, no.') Some people seem to think that the way to get back prosperity is to strike a deadly blow at the capital of the country. Is that the way to do it? (Cries of 'No, no.') Some people seem to think that the way to put men at work is to despoil the profits of the men who employ labor. Is that the way to get work? (Loud cries of No, no.') Capital and labor are interdependent. They are not enemies. They are friends, or should be friends.. (Applause.)" WORKINCMEN FROM FACTORIES. . . . , . .. , . Delegation from Tin Plate Factories and I Steel and Iron Work. An enormous delegation composed of workmen from the tin-plate and iron and steel works of Ohio. Pennsylvania and other states was addressed by Maj. Mc- . Kinley as follows: I Honors to; r'i STREETS OF CANTON. Bryan (to depot agent' Where or . all the folks? Depot Agent All gone to Canton. -Louisville Times. "There is one thing that can be said about the Republican party it does -H9t teach the doctrines of hate and prejudice, but teaches the gosiiel of peace, good will, and fraternity between the em ployer and employe. "The mau who would array the poor against the rich, labor against capital, class against class, or section against section, is not a friend of the country, but an enemy of the very best interests of every citizen in the country. I would rather teach that doctrine which is so prevalent this year. North and South, where none ar. fer iwrty, but all for gov ernment. This is the true policy of sturdy American citizenship and civiliza tion. I look into your earuest faces and believe I know what is in your hearts. (Cries of 'McKinley, McKinley.) There is but one aim and purpose, and this is that you may have an opportunity to work for yourselves and your families. This opportunity is best enjoyed when we de our own work iu the Uuited States and not in some other country of the world. This opportunity cannot be reached, however, until we have a re turn of confidence, which can come only when the American people have settled for all time that they will have no de preciated currency and declare that the principles of the Republican party shall he upheld. "When confidence comes, money will come. If you had all the silver in the world in the United States it would not make more business. Business makes money, money does not make business. Every one of you had plenty of work at good wages until the free trade policy was inaugurated in- 1SJKL We want to restore our protective policy. We have good money now, but we have little busi ness confidence. No business man will manufacture if he does not believe that at the end of the year he will make a profit. The business man xrannot plan for the trade if he docs not know what kind of competition he is to have from abroad. The less he has of foreign com, petition the more work you have at homo at better wages and prices. "Nothing" gives me greater satisfaction or calls from me deeper gratitude than to have the wo; ingmen of this country enroll themselvc on the side of good government, sound currency, and the su premacy of law." CAMPAIGN NOTES. We do not believe in wanton cruelty under any circumstances; Mr. Bryan should see to it at once that the ropes of his parachute are in good working order. The best way to deal with a panic is to vote it to death in advance. The Boy Orator has become irritable. He scolds the people and calls names. He started out on his campaign ia good temier and in good voice. lie still has the voice. If Bryan will look at his haad again he will find that there are fear cards instead of five in his flush. The crime of 'ui must be lost, strayed or stolen. It has been conspicuass by its absence in Popocratic speeches far sev eral weeks. William McKinley never advocated the passage or a law which was designed to take money out of the pockets of Ameri can workingmen. Bryan is misled into thinking "tlie eonntrv is going to the dogs" by the snarlfjr of Altgeld and Tillman. The country will go after these dogs on No vember 3 for a brief period, but when J the country returns there won't be any more dogs worth mentioning. Here's a "straw" for Bryan: Out of twenty-nine voters "in trouble" at the Center street police court in New York city Sunday morning, twenty-seven de clared they would if at liberty vote for Mr. Bryan. The other two were unde cided. "Patriotism, genuine Americanism f s7 .mn C,.j7f. 2i.rsv7 iimf gfsvnfT-tf interest demar.d unit nn;f .....i.e.. that we should make our tariff high j enmVh to !""" " difference between f the low coof lalmr in foreign countries k 4 J J mid the coft of ldnr in this country." r i ., ,. ,- i t J- McKinlky to the Mabvla5t- ? ,. 0 17.1, igng i J tKS' KKT' ,'"l, I ; h ed. o-d- m& mi 1b- 'at to ft 4 t- t Mi r 3 a 9 i i 1 to he aambered sectiom