Show PEAKS TO THOUSANDS Quarter of a Million PeopleS People-S Applaud President DELIVERS EIGHT SPEECHES Talks to His Countrymen in Three Slates and Ends the Day With nil Address From the Old Home of James G Blame in Augusta Greeting Which Marked Chief Magistrates Mag-istrates Progress Through New England Has Been Flattering in tho Extreme Crowds at All Stops Augusta Me Aug 2G President Roosevelt today passed through three States delivered eight speeches and received re-ceived the pjaudltn of a quarter of a million people The greeting which has marked his progress through New England Eng-land has been flattering In the t extreme and todays experience demonstrated his popularity perhaps more than ever before Everywhere at the regular stops and the smaller stations along the road the people were utrcnuous in their efforts to catch a glimpse of him or to hear him speak and ut Ilavcrhill Mass tills desire assumed such a form that the crowds completely overrode the police and surrounded the Presidents carriage making It difficult for It lo advance PROFITED BY ROOSEVELTS ADVICE AD-VICE The dayw journey was not without its incidents As the President was about lo board his car nt South Lawrence Law-rence hat after delivering his address ad-dress the leader of the band stepped up i to him and 1 made himself known to him He said his name was Banan a former cow puncher and barber at Medora N D where the Presidents ranch Is located The President immediately im-mediately recognised him and greeted him as an old friend The man evidently evi-dently desiring the President to know that he had profited by h his advice given sonic years ago said to him You told me to get married and settle down andI did I have got six children chil-dren myself which afforded the President Pres-ident no little amusement GREETED BY LITTIEPIBLD Conspicuous among those who hoarded the train at Old Orchard lo extend a welcome to the President was Congressman Llttlenold of Rockland Ills visit was brief and the conversa lion turned on other subjects than trusts Mr Lltlleifield declined lo comment com-ment on the Presidents last nights speech pleading that he had not finished fin-ished leading It When Danville Junction was reached the President was greeted by Postmas lerGeneral and Mrs Payne Mrs Garrett A Ilobart and Mrs Charles Emory Smith Mr Payne accompanied the President to Lewlslon STOPS NOT ON ITINERARY Some slops were made which wore not on the Itinerary At Lisbon Lisbon Falls and Brunswick Me immense crowds gathered and the President In response to their clamorous calls was obliged to appear on the rear platform and say a few words WILL VISIT EACH DISTRICT Before the Presidents departure tomorrow to-morrow night he will have visited every Congressional district in the State of Maine the principal city in each district and the home city of each of Maines United Stales Senators At every slopping plac along the line a great crowd had gathered and the President was accorded a genuine downeast welcome AT OLD ORCHARD At Old Orchard where the special train made Its first slop after crossing Ihc State line thousands of persons from allparts of York and Lower Cumberland Cum-berland counties had gathered The halt was a brief one only twenty minutes min-utes but the President after receiving a tumultuous greeting spoke briefly before the Journey was continued The President addressed his opening remarks to several Grand Army veterans veter-ans who were present and spoke of Maines record In the Civil war MAINE LESSON FOR ALL In those days he said Maine was a lesson for all for the way her boys bore themselves In war Since then and now she Is a lesson to us because of high average of citizenship that shows In her borders and I think II Is the same reason 5n the one case as in the other The fact Is that here you have remained on the whole true lo the old American theory of treating each man on his worlh as a man without with-out regard lo the Incidentals of his position APPLIES TO CIVIL LIFE NYiw you over there pointing He WIH In the great war Yes AVhen you vent to war and moved into battle you took auMmmcnse Interest In what the man on your right hand and your left did but you did not care In the least whether they won bankers or lumbermen or farmer or what t If I they t stayed That is what you wan led I Whfu you wanted wnslo know that the mnn had the right stuff in him and If I he had you wore for him and If i he did not you were not for him You have got lo I have the same principle in cliircnihlp You have got to apply time same principle In civil life that you mnde successful In the days when you fought because the nation called lo you In her direst need The President tonight Is the guest of Cloy Hill I who met him at the station sta-tion and escorted him to Ills residence where Hit1 I President In response lo urpent requests spoke for fortyfive minutes from a platform erected near the front of the Blame residence He said In partS part-S PEA KS AT BLATNE HOME It would be dllllcult for any man speaking to this audience and for anyone any-one In front of the house Blalne once lived In to fall to feel whatever of Amcrlcanlsm there was In him stirred to the depths I knew Mr Blalne quite well when ho was Secretary of State and 1 1 have thought again and again during the past years how pleased he would have been to ace so many of the principleit for which he had stood ap prouch fruition 1NTKP1CST IN THE TROPICS Ilo fell that this republic must take a great part among the great nation of the earth The lust four years have Kluiwn how true that fueling of bin wan lie hail always hoped that we would have a poeuliarly Intimate I relation wIth the country south of na HP I multI hardly have anticipated no ono could have the Spanish war and Its ffeets In consequence of that war Americas Interest In the tropic Islands to our south and the seas and coasts surrounding those Islands In far greater great-er than ever before MONROE DOCTRINE Our interest In the Monroe doctrine Is more concrete than ever before Tho Monroe doctrine IH simply a statement of our very firm belief that on bits continent the nations now lsling here must he left to work out their own destinies among Ihcmselves and that the continent Is no longer to be re crardcd as colonlvlng ground for any European power The one power on the continent that can make that doctrine effective of course is ourselves for in the world as It Is gentlemen the nation na-tion t which advanced a great doctrine likely to interfere In any way wit ii other nations must possess power to haclc It I up If I shu wishes the doctrine lo he inspected S S ISTHMIAN CANAL Vc stand Irmly on the Monroe doctrine and time events of the last nine months have rendered It evident that we shall soon embark on the work nf cxcIva t lag iho I isthmian canal tn connect con-nect two great oceans a work destined to he probably the greatest engineer In guf cat of the twentieth century a groaler engineering feat than has been ever successfully attempted by the im flons of mankind and as it Is the bIggest bIg-gest thing t of Its kind to be done I am glad It Is the United States that is doing II The Governors house has become historic because of the fact that It was the home of James a BlaIne and time President occupies tonight the Identical bedroom used by that statesman PLEADS FOB RECIPROCITY Urges Reciprocal Relations With the Cuban Hspublic Lowell Mass Aug 26For twenty live minutes today lila city entertained Lime President of lie United States On the run from Boston the towns nC West N cd ford Winchester and North Blllorlca turned out Immense crowds who gave a rousing cheer asi the train I paused by At 1 each place time President appeared on theplatform t and acknowledged acknowl-edged the I greetings The special train arrived here at 0lfl a m and Its arrival was signaled by the Ilriiifr of a Presidential salute by the locnl I militia and the G A R performed per-formed guard duty The sidewalks about the I station were thronged and the common which was time scene of time real reception was uhulc with humanity riling Mayor Pedger and a committee of the city government met the President and party at the sin llon and were presented I by Chin iIts M Allen former Governor of Porto Rico Afler a few words of welcome hue party took carriages and drove rapidly to the t common through streets arched with bunting and lined wllh t cheering people peo-ple Arriving at the speakers stand the President and party were presented to the people by l the Mayor The pen try a Spanish war veteran stood on either side of the President us he rose lo speak Cheers anel applause greeted him The President said PRESIDENTS ADDRESS Tho President first said ho wished to lay special stress upon the greeting of the men of time G A R and to his comrades com-rades of the Ninth regiment beside whom hu said I myself servjil at Santiago San-tiago When 1 got on mime train this niornlni the President continued siht nt time first to creeL mo was oxGov Allen Al-len of Porto Rico your fellow townsman Now you dont hear much about our government gov-ernment ot Eorto Rico because there Is nothing Hcnsntloaal In a complete success suc-cess Under Coy Allen and since under his successor Porto Rico has been governed gov-erned ao well that it la not entitled to any space In the newaiiuplra OUR FULL DUTY DONE Now ireiHlomen we have done our full duty by Porto Rico We have done our duty by Cuba Hut I want to auk thcae jiuoplo to act further limn under a sense of bare duty To act In a spirit of generosity such aa bellts a great republic repub-lic In deulluc with a now and venhor republic re-public which Itself has started on time career of self government And 1 want furthermore that our ioo > > lo should bo awake to their own Interests In the seas and hands south of our country Are drove out those who hail been oppressing Cuba and we cleaned houso for them Not an easy task for many of those cities had never been cleaned before In their entire history Vo Introduced a school system We made juiUlce In fact IK well as In name We stamped out the plague of yellow fever a plague which was a menace not merely to Cuba but to our own Southern Stales and hen we left them Independent RECIPROCITY WITH CUBA But from time very necessities of the case we arc bound to have Intimate relations re-lations with them Cuba has got lo be In a sense a part of our Internal policy system sys-tem and 1 ask more earnestly that In return re-turn we make her a part of our cuonomlc system by oHtabllshing reciprocal trade relations with her I ask It In her In tercut and 1 ask It la ours There Is a crest marKct In Cuba and 1 wish to see It controlled in the Interest of our own people APPEALS TO PEOPLE I am speaking In one of the oldest Industrial In-dustrial centers of the country and one of the places In which modern Industrialism In America took Its rise I am mi > nklug hi a > licu which In I addition to being an Industrial center has always been willing will-ing to dvote its best blood and Its effort on behalf I of any moral antstlon that touched time consciences of UH citizens 1 think men and women of Lcwill that yon are in these two points typical nf the best American citizenship t Von have bullded up this city through the development develop-ment of your factories through the business busi-ness uklll and enterprise and the manual man-ual 1 labor both hard and skillful of your soan You have done that and when the country called you sent your oiis to an WIT tin call You have bit the need of doing the I practical business work necessary neces-sary lo be done and you have also responded re-sponded to every cull to do more than that work Now I ask lhat you show ioh IiI raILs Ii-I In doallnc with Die countrys Isl i ands and the Islands smith of us with which we have been brought Into such close relations au the I result of the Spanish Span-ish war UKGES RECIPROCITY We did well In Cuba we did well In Porto Rico That wan because wo could count on the I services of men like Cot Allen services which should be both In lereated and hit II Igemit Mind you both You have met to have morality first but morality tins nol got common sense with It the result will IHJ unlmnpy and now In dealing with Cuba In dcillnc with the Isthmus across which we me now to build the iireut Jntiroceanlc caniil I wo must romembir j tluit I we can do good with ourselves permanently only If we do good lo thoao with whom wn ao brotiKht Into contact Unit we must keep both facts well In mind We must Jc ep our own Interests In-terests iml well us the Interests of the weaker iicnulos whose destiny IB now Inextricably In-extricably Interwoven with OUHJ J nsk you then to see to It that wo clve Cuba reciprocity with this i country primarily In Cubas Inlciosln but also for our own treat bcnciU 1 thank you GREETED BY VETERANS At the close of hla speech the President Pres-ident passed to his carriage At the rear of the platform he found tIme local camp of Spanish war veterans drawn up at Present The President smiled and standing up In his carriage spoke a few words lo them Including1 Im mighty glad to see you He wan then driven back to the station and In ten mlnutci the I train I Hlarled out WORD ABOUT TilE NAVY President Speaks About Our Flight ing1 Machines on Sea Ilavcrhill 1 Mass Aug President Roosevelt was creeled here by a crowd which packed the route through which he was driven from time station lo Washington Wash-ington square uharo ho delivered a twon tymlnute addrosis and tilled all available minuet around the tin net from which he spoke Time decorations along the route were the mosl elaborate ever seen In this I vkluliy I I Cnniiam u cheering prevailed from the tim that time President arrived until lie bosun his drops and InUrrrup Uons while he npokc vcic frequent The President said PRESIDENTS ADDRESS Naturally at the hon ° of Secretary Moody 1 slioahl like lo say a vonl or two about the nav You ice that when a Masnhiiflutto mun would leave tho I Navy department 1 J had to find another Massachusetts mnn lo take his place I think that I whenever we touch un the navy wo are sure of such a jesponuc out of the 3 mnmnta ins and gntt pin hmu of Iho Wisl as upon the Atlantic or Pacific seaboards sea-boards Tho entire coimlrv Is vitally lu leroslrd In the navy bcpniae an efficient navy of an iilcrpialc sIze Is not only lie betil iriiurniUce cf peace but It Is alno the JJurost means fur soclns that If war 1oes Nuome the result shill be honorable lo our irood name and favorable to our national ntem erta ertaNATION NATION IS SENSITIVE Any really great nnllon must bo po elm I lii uly Kiiislllve I to two I things slain on the national I honor nt I home and dlnprnco to the nullonal arms abroad Our honor at home our honor In domestic nnd In icrnul affairs Is at nil times In our own keeping and depends simply npon the na LitHIum I jioHSKslon of an awakened public conscience nut the only way to make our honor as affected not by our own deeds but I by the I deeds of othcra In by mcthIumcss In advance lEEDS OP THE NAVY In three great crises In our history during the nlneteenlh century In the war of ISIJ In lie t Civil war and again In the Spanish war the navy rendered 10 thu t Nation services of literally Incalculable woilh In II lie Civil war we had to meet ntuagonliUH even more propand al sea Ihtn wo were On both the other occasions occa-sions we encountered foreign foes and the lightIng was demo eiuholy by ships built long In advance and by officers and crows who had been trained durhur I years of semm acrvlcu for the supreme day when their lualliles were put to the Una tent SECRET OK OUR SUCCESS It was this uroparcdncss which was the true seciet of the enormous difference In efficiency between our navy and Unit of the Spanish nation There was no luck of courage and devotion among time Spaniards but on our side In addition to the h couriKo and devotion there was also that training which comes only na tIme result re-sult of years of thorough and painstaking nrucLiuc STANDS ON MERIT Annanolls Is with the sole exception of ils sister academy at West Point the most typically democratic amid American school of learning and preparation thut there Is In the entire country Then each man cut era on hfa merits stands on his inerlts nnd graduate I mu Into service where only his uifrit will enable him to he of value The enlisted men are of fnio type as they needs must he to do their work well and out ol the Hue material thus provided the finished mnnoiVvarsinan la evolved by years of sea service MUST HE PREPARED It Is Impossible after the outbreak of war lo Imuiovlse either DIM 9bli > r or time men of a navy The Hhbjhulldcrs and cunmnkcrs must keep over on the alert no that no rivals pass thorn by and the ofiljicra and enlisted men on board the shins must In their t turn by h the cxcrcluo of unflagging and Intelligent zeal keep themselves nt to get the best use out of tho vuuiions of war entrusted lo their care The Instrument Is always import cnl hut the man who uses It Is more Important Im-portant still stillMAN MAN BEHIND GUN Wo must conslaiuly endeavor to perfect per-fect vour navy In all Us duties In time of ueaco and above all In maneuvering In a sea way and marksmanship with the grout guns In battle the only shots that count arc those Hint hit and marksmanship marksman-ship Is a mailer of long practice nntl of Intelligent reasoning A navys efficiency In a war depends mainly upon Its preparedness prepar-edness at the outset of that war We arc not to bo excused ns a nation If there 13 nol such preparedness of our navy No nation has a right to undertake a big task unless it Is prepared to do It tn effective ef-fective and masterful style It would bo an Intolerable humiliation for us to embark em-bark on such a course of net Ion aa followed fol-lowed from our declaration of war with Spain and nol make good our words by deeds not bo ready to prove our truth by our endeavor whenever time need calls BUILD UP THE NAVY The good work of building up the navy must KO on without ceasing The modern warship cannot with advantage bo allowed al-lowed to rust In disuse It must be used In active service oven in time of peace This means thai there must be a constant con-stant replacement of the Ineffective by the effectIve Time work of building up and keeping up our navy Is therefore one which needs our constant and unlUiERlng vigilance Our navy Is now efficient but wo must be content with no ordinary deirreo of efficiency Every effort must be made lo bring It nearer to perfection In maklm such effort tho prime factor Is to have at the head of the navy such an ofllclal as your fellowtownsman Mr Moody and the next Is lo brlntr home to our people as a whole tim ntod of thorough thor-ough and ample preparation In advance this preparation to take the form nol only of continually building ships but of keeping keep-ing those ships In commission under conditions con-ditions which will develop tIme highest degree de-gree of efficiency from the officers and enlisted men aboard them IT WAS A WHOOPER Returning to lie statIon the President took leave of Secretary Moody amid Senator Sena-tor Lotlce who remained In this city Just boforo ho loft President Roosevelt when asked rewarding IlivcrhllPs welcome wel-come declared that it was a whooper TRIBUTE TO SOLDIERS President Talks to Lawrence People About Triumph of Brave Men Lawrence Mass Aug President Roosevelt and his party amid the boom limE of a salute wore received here by Mayor Leonard amid members of the cIty government today The President was escorted to a temporary stand erected nt tIme station where he addressed one of the lUrscst crowds that ever gulhored In this city Splendid weather conditions favored the event Tho 1rcsldcnt was creeled wllh enthusiastic cheers when he uroac to make his address He I said PRESIDENTS ADDRESS Tilts Is the section of the country In which the first blood WHSI ahcd in lie Revolutionary war that u mndo UH a nation ami It was here also Hint the two citIes ot Lowell and Lawrence save their eons to pour out their life blooil the first of time ocean of life blood poured out from fil 1 to Vi to keep this Nation one nml great and free And so It was characteristic of your cIty which sent these men hero to the cicnt war when a lesser war en me up my comrades men of the Ninth regiment regi-ment with whom I nerved before Sanllnfo In your turn sprang to the countrys call when once afiuln there was war In the land TRIBUTE TO BRAVE MEN And oilier comrades of yours men whom we knew men of the Nlnlh rcil niont other men In Ihe faroff Philippines Philip-pines have undergone three years of un sicakntilft hardship and toll against a cruel iclentless and elusive foe finally wlnnlns victory to the American fins Our people owo the greatest debt possible to you who fought lit time great cities In the srrcnt war but there Is a debt owing also to time men who sq gallantly did their duty during the pant three years to way that thom honor of the flair which you hniulcd to them unstained should bo kept undlmmcd S TRIUMPH OF AMERICAN SOLDIER And now they havo fought and tholr success Is meant what the success of time American soldier has always meant You triumphed and your foes arid detractors said that tin mlhly nn army as yours meant the oaiabllahment of a despotism In this ceumlry and the minute that the war was over you went back to the plough to I the factory and the farm and the oftlco and became citizens again PEACE TO THE ISLANDS And now In tho Philippines our sol Mlera have fought and won To do what To leave thft t country and eslabllsh the rule of civil authority under tho American Ameri-can flnz And now we have brought peace to the Iblnmis they are bettor off iContinued on Pate 20 SPEAKS TOTHOUSANDS Continued from Pace 1 than ovor before Never In their history his-tory IIIIB ouch mim hnil ns ho haw now suiJi a goOd chance for life liberty untl the pursuit I of happh ness Yon liavn brought bVlfKuvernmy Individual freedom free-dom to the Filipinos of u i Iclnd that they t cnuld nevrr have knrnvn iui1cr Jin anarchistic an-archistic tyranny ot their own WILL C1OVI5UN UKbL Now we will govern the Islands well Vp will uovirn thorn prlnmrlly Inthrlr t InturcKtw lint in our liii test dlMO Vhvthor wo will or nut wo ats a NLl loll wrouaht n icrcat ikstlny Wu eannnt liolii ilolnp It NVi havo KdL to do It I somehow and 1 asU hat all rmn Htainl shouliler tu shouHUr aa Amrtilcans lo I SeC thut they do U well After amakln the Pixshlent topped InieU to tlu > train As Iv licipin to nmvc vhist lea frmn u dozun unulnon were blown and I lie buttery guns hoonuul asuln Thu train loll nx 1O0 on schedule I line for llavcrhlll |