Show I UNIY Of TE PEOPLE Roosevelt Talks on Solidarity of Americans I PROSPERITY COMES TO ALL I Adversity Comes All Will Suiter Moro or Less on Account of ItThe Country is United 1C the Wage Worker and Farmer Prosper Business Busi-ness Men Do Likewise f They Go Down All Interests Go Down With I ThemThe Governor Delivers Two I I Speeches in St Louis I j I St Louis Oct 0St Louiss vast exposition ex-position Coliseum was crowded tonight I In honor of Gov Roosevelt who spoke a little more han an hour The Governor Gov-ernor was I tlrcd having ridden In the parade in thc afternoon Afterward he i was tho guest of honor at a luncheon1 given by the Su Louis club He was escorted from the Planters hotel in the evening by Mayor Zicgenhclm National Na-tional Conimlllccman Kerens and other oth-er prominent Republicans of Missouri a mounted regiment of rough riders and several thousand citizens in carriages or on foot The route of the night parade pa-rade was illuminated with flambeaux and colored fire Arriving at the Coli seum the Governor was greeted with tumultuous applause He was Introduced by the Mayor of the city and was cheered cnthusias llcaUy throughout his speech a the conclusion of which he was escorted to the union station where he took his special train for Chicago whence tomorrow to-morrow morning he will start on his Indiana tour WHERE DOES BRYAN STAND If any of you are fortunate enough to know whether Mr Bryan If elected will pay the obligations of the Nation in gold or in silver I wish you would divulge this knowledge for Mr Bryan wont There Is no doubt about where we stand We arc for the gold standard stand-ard and we are for it on the Atlantic seaboard and in the Rocky mountains alike We stand for It everywhere for we are fortunate enough to have issues which do not wear thin in any part of the country SILVER ISSUE NOT DEAD Now gentlemen some people say that the silver Issue Is dead Silver cannot be dead when the people atc uncertain a to how a candidate of one of the two great parties would pay the obligations of the Government No issue I Is-sue Is dead when you cannot tell whether wheth-er a creditor or a pensioner whoever he may be is to get 4S cents or 100 I cents on the dollar I Is dead to the extent that nobody ventures to argue In Its behalf But if they paid our debts In Scent dollars we would care little as to the precise arguments by which the reached the conclusion that warranted war-ranted that conduct All I want you to do from n material standpoint is to exhume Mr Bryans prophecies with their signal nonfulfll meaL DOMOCRACY AND PROVIDENCE Gov Roosevelt then enumerated some of the predictions which he declared had been made four years ago by Mr Bryan which event proved erroneous He continued Mr Bryan said mortgages mort-gages would go up and they were the only things that went down Mortgages have diminished In amount nearly 10 per cent When the things were pointed point-ed out to Mr Bryan the other day and it was shown to him that we were prosperous pros-perous ho answered that it vas not the Republican party but Providence that made us so Now I am perfectly willing to admit that there has been a fusion between Providence and the Republican Re-publican party The Democracy has fused with about everything else but somehow or other II has never managed man-aged to connect with Providence ONLY TRIES IT ONCE Now gentlemen I do not wonder that in tho hard limes when thIngs were looking pretty black men turned to strange gods I has always been so since the day that MoseS broke the decalogue I do nol wonder when a man feels sick and does not know what is the mater with him and he cannot find out thai he should Irya quack medicine once bul If he tries it again I must question his intelligence If the people of this country want togo to-go back Into the slough ot despond out of which we have so painfully emerged If they want to do that wh clClec the Constitution ItlH their inalienable right But when they get back there do not lei them advance the Idldnot knowItwasloadcd excuse SPENT QUIET MORNING Gov Roosevelt breakfasted late at thc Planters hotel A number of prominent promi-nent t Loulslans called and paid their respects the remainder of the morning being devoted to ret At 1230 oclock the Governor was escorted lo the Merchants Mer-chants exchange where he resppnded to a hearty reception with a short speech A carriage drive that had been planned by the local reception committee commit-tee with slops at various places of Interest in-terest was vetoed by Gov Roosevelt who Instead took n horseback ride through the boulevards and Forest park with D E Garrison Jr of SL Louis a member of the rough rider reg iment in Cuba In his speech at 1eg Merchants Exchange Coy Roosevelt saidAMERICANS AMERICANS TO THE WORLD Here the hum of Industry never ceases and also I will have to talk against it I am usually talking for it One feature that Is peculiarly pleasant to me Is in coming to 1 city lee St Louis which has among Its citizens BO many of the men who wore the blue nlso many of those who wore the gray and of their sons I think that if the Spanish war had done nothing cine it would have been from our standpoint tantpolnt well worth while because of the yeah lug sense that It gave un of the fact that all the nations ore thinking of the past and that wo stand before the rest of the world as Americans and nothing else anr nothlnl LESSON FOR YOUNG MINt MIN-t served under Gen Joe Wheeler Fighting Joe Whcelcr and there was one very amusing Incident which occurred oc-curred while we were at Kettle hill Gen Joe got very much Interested In the fight and addressed a group of UK of whom I suppose fourllfths wero Northerners He said Wade Into them wade into the Yankees wade into them We said All right General Gen-eral we will wade Into them I a Indeed a lesson for nil of the younger men to see soldiers like Gen Butler of South Carolina Gen Wheeler of Alabama Ala-bama and Gen Lee Vir bama and 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