Show It OVATIONm ROOSEVElt t f Buffalo Accords Governor a I Splendid Reception ° I P if i I ME I J MAKES THREE SPEECHES j I In One Address He Cites Placard j Which Democrats Had Posted I Alleging an Advance in Hard Coal to 725 Per Ton and Claiming This Was Due to Anthracite Cqnl Combine Governor Showod that I Price is Only 575 Per Ton About I Same as Usual This Season of Year i I I Buffalo N Y Oct SIThe train bearing the Republican VicePresi t dential candidate arrived In thIs city i 1 shortly after 1 oclock after making n loJ at Black Rook an Industrial I 1 c j sulnirl of Buffalo and the northbound railway center of the city Tho Governor Gov-ernor was accorded a splendid reception recep-tion at this place and addressed a few remarks to the laboring people From I I the time or hia arrival until the time O retirement there was one continuous 1 ovation The streets through which ho i hadto passQn his way from the sta I I ion were crowded with people 1 1 I It 1ms been planned that the Governor t Gov-ernor hold n reception this afternoon t because of the early hour of his arrival ar-rival but he was so fatigued with the days work that he compromised by addressing I ad-dressing the aasembJod people as a whole explaining that he was deeply I touched by the magnificent reception I which had been accorded him and that I he desired to thank them for It THREE SPEECHES IN BUFFALO fiov Roosevelt spoke at three meet t higs tonight One on the east side the industrial portion o the clt > which tj watt an opfunir o hand where so many people were gathered that less t ii than one half of them could hear the I speaker Another followed In a small I hall where the major part of tho audience was composed of Italians and the third and last It the immense convention I con-vention haiL which was IHIcd to the doors In addition to touching upon the I many subjects which he has exploited j I at oilier places the Governor said DEMOCRATS ALTER FACTS AL7ER I Our opponents having no case on r the facts are constantly obliged to i alter facts In order tb make a case I p have not ed placards in your city put up by them st lns that the cost of coal was 725 per ton and that this was due to the anthracite coal trust As 3 matter oC fact the retail price dollvcred 195iil just about what it always has been at this time of year Bourke Cochran spoke here the other night UQ presented Sir Bryans Issues rather bettdr than Mr Bryan could present them yet I confess It Is incomprehensible to me how Mr Cockran can now champion Mr Bryan In view not only of what he said four years ago but bt > what he said as late as lust February when he stated that no matter whether there was imperialism or not in the campaign I could c-ould have to pursue the course he did In 1SOG bcause he said I regard the Chicago platform a destructive to I all government and I should prefer I some government t to no government COCKRANS REASONS Well what arc the reasons JiG pivea ns his excuse In thet1rit place Imperialismj I In the second militarism By militarism lq moans pur expansion Into tile Phiirpplnesan I an 13itpJlnes expansion con ducted on exactly the same basis rs r I f I Jeffersons expansion into the country west of the Mississippi Mr Cockran and Mr Bryan have both affected to feel great horror from the afected that polygamy and as alleged slavery exists in Sulu in the Philippine archi pelago which Is now under our Hag 1 I should like to ask them If they think that it will help their policy in the event of our withdrawing the Hag Of course nsn matter of fact the only chance oC getting rid of either consists in keeping the fag up We cannot do I everything in a day Messrs Bryan and Cockran would be the first to rave against President McKInley If he rVe now added to the war with AguSnaldo an other war wItli the Sultan of Sulu BUT oNE THING TO DO Half century ago there were many abolitionists sincere but absolutely ro hlHliaiid t l 11a wionghcaded people who wanted the free States to secede from the Union because there was slavery in I the Union Had their advice been fol lowe slavery would exist to the pies ent day In the Southern States The only tiling to do was what we actually did that is to keep the flag fng flying and when the fullness of time l ulness arrived abolish slavery tme ar1ed So It Is In Sulu 1ln We shall keep the 8hal I flag flying and therefore in the end polygamy and slavery will both dis appear i I might mention ppp lien Incidentally that President McKInley Inc ental jfcKlne h18 already declined to recognize tOlcognlze slavery In the island and therefore has taken steps toward Ha abolition1 steJs I BRYANCOCKRAN PLANS I 1 And what arc the plans of Messrs Bryan ami Cockran Cocrn Why of all things In the world Mr Bryan ni poses to establish a etablsh protectorate protectolntc over the Islands including Sulu oel and there fore to perpetuate slavery and pol polyg amy by guaranteeing to the islanders these among their other Jsllrlcs and IntltUtons protecting them tlgalnst all Interference In other ni outsMe words Mr Bryans platform for the erpeluallon deliberately provides < erJ tuaton of the very evils which ho and Mr Cockian < ls dno Cocleln affect to i denounce Aa n matter oC fact I mater they CSn Onlv ho Inn n u u IIgo r tmr Uuy WHn L folo BRYANSM MENACE TO COUNTRY f The Urt stop tbl morning iss was nufde at Br e 13rekporL Helelhe OOVCCflor said Govetor Mr Bryan Invokes the Declarationof Declaraton o Independence as applying to the PhlhIl ines Nebraska Fhll wa Thomas Jeferson without alqulrCd the bj concn oC have the Jmown Indians how Iii to It and he COUsen oapY the ton of Indepen enc aui he Declar role H elluS We cannot afipru to lot 2Jr n9rto r I3ryani principles and tIie present BryanIzeT Democracy DrynnlzL peal danger to 1 to you American not ContInue merely political to a beat formidable life H I but tp to lamp Itun I under fOot 80 that similar appeal wll tat no w1 ever be made In our tIme While we eah Whie cah alYord differ aford to meel on questions of poHey we afford as cannot ntOld good Americans the underlying to dlffcr Oli prInCIples the Jack oC which makes any part whntver it a standing danger to the country I Is EFFECT OF BRYANS POLICIES At Holly it was raining Neverthe less the Governor rrnnoZ rthe Goyerormo1e to a great crowd He said We do not a cut Into the want to natlonaihotior nalonalhonor by cutting i I In two the national debt cuttng nalonal it 1Ir Bryans I policies E polcies ever should be CflftCtOc into nwth y would Jear with r 1 lh an especIal weight of woe woe upon the very people concerning whom thcer bo most interested ho rrrecta to ANSWERS TWO QUESTIONS While tho Governor was U lailclnir Medlnee a man In trio tlclng a II audience iiid Governor I would like iohai voS I Plain the trust question What about ex the coal employees In Pennsylvania Asked another PennsJvanla On ar I Mm H11 th Ovtnnr I f I j 0 L As lo t the coal employees in Pennsylvania Pennsyl-vania they have won a strike for an o increase 0 wages Do you think they would have won that strike four years I age No no shunted the crowd The Governor ticn dlscusccd the Lust I qucstton at length l referring to Mr the tariff oft Bryanlsremedy oj takingibe tele I articles used by the trusts and the remedy of the Republican party to get I at the evil by constitutional amendment I amend-ment J AS TO MILITARISM the Governor I In speaking of inllilarlsm ernor reform to the posts located near 1 I OswOgo and Buffalo and said the scntl I i mcnt there was rather for an increase of the soldiers stationed there Ho II oiled the fact that regulars had been I stationed at the forts around New York for 113 years and mid4 Some little I I time ago number of our citizens got up a petition to the War department to Increase the number of soldiers in these forts because the xlsllng number num-ber was not enough to keep the blS I guns clean I want t ask said heat I hE-at the < conclusion of hly remark li i any of you have ever seen a single Imperialist Im-perialist 1 I have not found one from I the Rookies to the Atlantic L hat met lots of expansionist I am one myself i BRYAN AS A PROPHET At Lockport the Governors address I was devoted In large part lo the question ques-tion of asperity Now as to Mr Bryans prophecies said the Governor here is exactly what Mr Bryan said In his Minneapolis speech The gold standard menus lear > r money cheaper property harder limes more people out of workmore people destitute more people doHperateand more crime Now look around In your city In YOUI own State and compare with those prophecies prophe-cies their fulfillment I pr nYrTTNr 1rrTflTgTJ Mr Bryan conHnurd I the Governor j says he id the champion of the people I think It Is a mighty poor man of I whom Mr Bryan Is elmnlpion Mr I Bryan nayJ the trusts nourish more than they did four years ago He is I quite right Everything flourishes more than tour years ago A good year for crops Is a good year for weeds Hoc out the weeds but dont plough under the crops Here in this city you have bag factories and your mechanics are all employed Dont try to help the I workmen by shutting up the fattones QUESTIONED BY CIRCULAR I The Gqyornor for the ilrst time during his New York State trip was besieged with circulars asking J why ho had signed certain i locallegislation particularly particu-larly amendments to the Lockport charter and If he had not I refused to grant it heaving tothlabor unions The questions were not asked In the assemblage place but merely thrown in the streets In printed form The Governor Gov-ernor said he did not feel that he was compelled to answer thee questions At t NIagara Fils thc Roosevelt train was greeted with the Governors salute of nineteen guns and the Governor was taken to the operahoust where he addressed a large audience The I chairman yf the audience Introduced him ns the friend ot the workingman and a workingman himself The Governor Gov-ernor said i BELIEVE IN WORKINGMENT 1 1 do not believe that in this campaign cam-paign have been Introduced In a manner man-ner that pleases me so much because I do not believe any American Is wQrth his salt unless he Is a workingman Work comes In many different ways I and I honor every form of honest work in i others and I claim in return the right to be treated as being as much of a workingman myself as any of my fellows I a man does not work he cannot anything for his fellows and he l cannot do anything for himself If there exists a class In the community which instead of regarding with envy we ought to regard with that pity which Is akin not to love but to contempt con-tempt it Is the Idle class and I do not care whether the Idle class is the gilded butterfly at the top or the tramp below in either case the man who will not work but who sits down with the purpose of making his work the pursuit of pleasure or the absence of effort In oithfcrlnot only IS the man useless to his neighbors but he js not even able tQ paUthl dwri mean ambition for I mind youa manwho deliberately l de votes his life to the pursu1 I of pleasure gets Infinitely less oCit than the man who tries to do hisiuJork and then finds that the grcatestrppssible pleasure comes In the sense of work well done When the Governpj finished his re arks a graywhlslfered man in the audience arose and bald that in all respect re-spect and all sincerity and all honor to the Governor of the Empire State he would like to have the J5rlvllcge of ask lag him a couple ujuestlons The Governor immediately arose and nodded his ascent I INTERRUPTED BY QUESTION Do you believe In taxation without epres nlallon askediUie man What do you mernt asked the Governor Do you believe In tasrallo without jepresehtatlon agaiiiui L PEn ted the questioner You tale the censuR slalcinienls which have been published In the pa jiera and I think oulJIl find the In dians are the only ones not taxed Jjald thu Governor which reply was followedby i a hol of applause We are not Indians Two years ngo but the interrupter got no fur ther Cijies of Shut up Put him I out came from different parts of the I hall from those who seemed Impatient i at the Interruption of the meeting I |