E COPYfiiiatit btxmi "^ S-71^S^-A BIOCa-H-A-MIIES OF Pres. GROVER CLEVELAE -A.IsriD Hon, ALLEN &. THURMAW, WITH FULL PROCEEDINGS OF THE ST. LOUIS CONVENTION AND AUTHORIZED TEXT OF THE NATIONAL PLATFORM. Number 14, July, 1888. Copyright, i8S8. ^V '^ /^NTHiy. Entered at the Post Office, at Philadelphia, as Second cUss Matter, r THE FRflJJRLIH LIBRARY, PUBLISHED MONTHLY. 25 CENTS PER COPY. $2.00 ft YEftR. America's Distinguislied Statesmen, Soldiers, Diplomats, And men of mark in all ranks. They are of large ""^'^^/Jf ' P^^^k^l^P^^ heavy paper, handsomely illustrated and neatly bound. One new book is puD lished each month, making 12 BOOKS R YEftR FOR ONLY $2.00. THUS GIVING FOUR BOOKS FREE to all yearly subscribers. Subscrib«rs may remit p oo at once f^f *^f J'^/' """.^S cents each for one or more nu.nbers, as c""*«"'='^ *'^^'"L'"t=l„ paid for at order U on a yearly subscriiption. '1 hen when eight books have been paiQ lor ai 2c; cents each, the other four will V-e sent free. a^cW^A Sub- ^ Each book is complete in itself. a«d may U ordered '^"^ '^ f ^^''^/.^^^^^ scripiions may begin at any time, but those who want the complete Biographical Series should begin with No. 13. No. 13. A bright and exceedingly Interesting Biography ot HON. ROSCOE CONKLING, A man surpass^ by none in mental attainment, noble aim, pure officialrecord. honorable polSmet'kod and st.rlirg character No Amenoan should fa^ to reaTthis attractive and thrilling volume. HandsOlTiely iniiStrateC^ The Frontispiece is a specially engraved portrait of iir. ^-""'^'^'^/^"^"s^ ^^en^t^ tograph. A correct likeness. *^ » No 14- contains the Lives and Public Services ot PRES. GROVER CLEVELAND AND HON. ALLEN G. THURMAN, the Platform, making it a popular campaign volume. Paper, ^H ceniS. No 15 conUins the Life and Public Services of HON. BENJ. HARRISON, His Ancestry. Early Life. Education. Ambition Earlr P^'iV^J.^if^. R« ^. _< r»_ The Franklin l^cixts Co,, P. O. BOX 1402. PHILADELPHIA. PA. 8. GROVKR CLEVELAND LIFE AND PUBLIC SERVICES OF PRESIDENT S. GROVER CLEVELAND. jARENTAGE. — President Cleveland sprang from an old and distinguished New P^ngland ancestry. It is a line which is plentifully interspersed with specimens of thor- ough culture, high intellectual achievement, and true American instinct. His father, Richard F. Cleveland, was a Connecticut clergyman of the Presbyterian denomination, and different branches of the fomily held prominent pulpit places in the Presbyterian, Congregational and Episcopalian Churches. They were all alike public-spirited men, intensely loyal to their convictions, and firmly attached to our free institutions. The President's immediate ancestors formed a Connecticut branch of the large family. His great-grandfather was Aaron Cleveland, v/ho lived and died in or near the town of Norwich, though born in East Haddam. He was a clergyman of consid- erable power and reputation, but with a turn for political life. A large and admiring constituency gave him opportunity to indulge his inclination by sending him to the State Legislature. The two sons of Aaron Cleveland who are most conspicuously mentioned were Charles and William. Charles Cleveland, great- uncle of the President, had a daughter who married Samuel y Coxe. Their son, Alfred Cleveland Coxe, is now the Bishop of Western New York. The other son, William Cleveland, lived in Norwich most of his life, where he carried on the business of a silversmith. At a late period he went to Buffalo, N. Y., to live, that he might be near other members of his family who resided there. He died there in 1837. (1) 2 STEPHEN GROVER CI.EVERAND. William's son, Richard F. Cleveland, and father of the Presi- dent, was born in Norwich, Jan. 19, 1804. He entered Yale College at the early age of sixteen years and graduated in 1824. He then went to Baltimore to teach school, in the meantime car- rying on a series of studies designed to fit him for the ministry. In 1828 he was ordained a minister in the Presbyterian Church, and immediately took charge of the congregation at Haddam, Conn. While teaching in Baltimore he made the acquaintance of a Miss Neal, whom he married after he had been preaching about a year. The Rev. Richard F. Cleveland was a man of high intellectual attainments, and a most devoted student. Study was a love be- yond any thought of worldly advancement. In the course of his ministerial work, and soon after his marriage, he accepted a call at Caldwell, N. J., where he officiated for some years. Thence he removed to Fayetteville, Onondaga co., N. Y. After a time he moved to Clinton, Oneida co., and thence to Holland Patent, in the same county, where he died, Oct. I, 1853. His wife, the President's mother, lived till July 19, 1882, almost long enough to see her illustrious son elected to the highest office in the gift of the citizens of the Empire State. EARLY LIFE. — President Cleveland was born in Caldwell, Essex CO., N. J., on March 18, 1837. He was therefore in the forty-eighth year of his age when he was elected, and one of the youngest of our Presidents. He was named Stephen Grover Cleveland, though popularly known as Grover Cleveland, the first part of his Christian name having fallen into disuse. He was the fifth in a family of nine children, the others being Mrs. Hastings, William N. Cleveland, Mrs. Wm. E. Hoyt, Rich- ard C. Cleveland, Mrs. N. B. Bacon, Lewis F. Cleveland, Mrs. L. Youmans, and Rose Elizabeth Cleveland, the latter unmar- ried, a lady of strong intellectual ca^pacity, and a prominent woman suffrage advocate. The two-story-and-a-half white house in which the President ■tvas born is still standing. At the age of three years he left the scene of his birth to accompany the family to their new home in Fayetteville, N. Y. Here he grew to stout and active boyhood, STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 3 amid the advantages then common to village life, not the least of which was good common schooling. At the age of fourteen he desired to supplement his common school education v/ith an academic one. His father was some- what averse to this step, on the score of expense, and because he desired his boys to become self-supporting as soon as possible. Accepting the parental verdict as final, the youth started out to earn his own living, and push his own way in life. He entered the village store at a salary of fifty dollars for the first year, Avhicli sum .was to be made one hundred for the second year, in case he proved efficient. The boy's pluck and energy did not fail him. His record in this humble position bespoke the coming man. It was one of simple, unswerving integrity and untiring loyalty to the interests of his employer. In public place, and in mature years, it has ever been one of faithful ad- herence to deep-rooted conviction and much-admired devotion to the interests of the people who honored him with their confi- dence and support. The testimony is unimpeachable that what- ever the boy found to do in the capacity in which he was first called to serve he did with all his heart, and that in the earlie-t chapter of his history of self-helpfulness and business independ- ence there is indelibly written down a reputation for bravery of spirit, fidelity to trust, and candor of character, which has out- lived the intermediate years. A STUDENT. — The quality of courage, inherent in his com- position, and of ambition to acquire a broader education, were seconded by economic habits ; so that after a year or two spent in the Fayetteville store, and when his father moved to Clinton, the youth rejoiced in a realization of his dreams by being per- mitted to attend the academy in the village. Here he made rapid progress in learning, for his purse was meagre, and oppor- tunity long coveted was to be turned to speedy account. His father, with a large family to support, and only a limited income to rely upon, could not supplement his efforts to acquire a higher education. The path to success must be cut out of the hard rock of limited circumstances by the boy's own ingenious and perse- vering hand. Right well he held the chisel, and right well di- 4 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. rected the stroke. Acquisition with him was easy, and his aca- demic career profitable, thout^di brief. Education under such circumstances may not be so full as when plenty of time and money is at command, but it is better appreciated, and often far more practical. Moreover, it is an incentive to higher endeavor, for both youth and manhood are at their best when it is under- stood that the price of victory is hard blows with the weapons of one's own earning. A TEACHER. — The breaking up of the paternal home in Clinton, by the renaoval of his father to Holland Patent, a village of some five or six hundred people, fifteen miles north of Utica, htici.ui to eniich himself and friends. It wa.s a type of the jobs which had impoverished the city and brought its administration into discredit. It was, morco\-er, the kind of enactment which cemented municipal influence am.! made it hazardous to his popularity for an execu- tive ofhcer to crush it with his veto. But the veto came, and in this instance promptly antl with telling effect. It was as if a bomb h.ul suddenly burst in the midst of the plunderers. "This is a time," said he, in his veto message, " for plain speech, and my objection to }our action shall be plainly stated. I regard it as the culmination of a most barefaced, impudent and shameless scheme to betray the interests of the people and to worse than squander the public money. We are fast gaining positions in the grades of public stewardship. There is no middle ground. Those who arc not for the people either in or out of your honor- able bod)', arc against them, and should be treated accord- ingly." The people, who knew their man before, now knew him better. In fact, his political enemies knew him quite too well. His w.is not the stuff that tricksters and cowards are made of, but the sterling metal which enters into men coined and stamped for great occasions. His action was received with the greatest favor by his party friends, ' and by the friends of purity and decorum throughout the county and State. It was a harbinger of other victories far more significant, and an earnest that muni- cipal reform was at last within reach of a long aggrieved people. He was heralded far and wide as the strong, incorruptible, in- vincible hero of an emergency before which others had quailed and fell. The results of this single veto to the city were of incalculable benefit. Its moral effect was felt in every depart- ment. The political atmosphere was freshened. From an eco- nomical standpoint, the saving was immense. Under a subse- quent ordinance, and the contracts based on it, the work was done for ^100,000 less money than at first proposed. It is hardly necessary for the exemplification of Grover Cleveland's fortitude, integrity, and w^onderful executive ability, 14 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND.' to go into painstaking and tedious details of his mayoralty. We understand \vh}' lie was chosen and what was expected of him. A thousand instances of heroic and timely application of the power with which he was vested would not magnify the impor- tance of the \'erdict of approval which awaited th© closing hours of his administration. Nor would such serve to further illumi- nate those qualities of manhood he was now seen to possess in a degree wliich astounded and overawed his opponents. Yet mention must be made of his second struggle with the powerful and corrupting influences about him. This was a job to build a large connecting sewer. The issue was sharply joined, the con- tention bitter. The mayor's pluck and earnestness won, and his second victory was far more significant than the first. It saved ;^8oo,ooo to the city. Altogether the first si.K months of his administration saved to the city an amount estimated at Si,000,- ooo. This magnificent aggregate might be safely doubled, if the entire term of his mayoralty were to be considered. True, the rings were daunted and never rallied to other audacious attacks on the treasury, yet the mayor found frequent uses for his veto power in order to preserve the position he had won and drive home on his opponents the wholesome effects of his reformatory teaching. Not a single ordinance was ever passed over his veto. His veto messages were models of directness and exact- ness. We search American political annals in vain for an example of municipal administration so vigorous, effective and productive of permanent good, as that which Grover Cleveland gave to Buffalo. His comprehension of a delicate and difficult situation, his mastery of details, his development of an executive polic\-, his firm yet dignified command of the powers at his disposal, hi's persistent following up of every advantage gained, and finally his turning of the government back to the people, washed as to its shame and purified as to its corruption, constitute a chapter in his life whose reading is inspiriting to both old and young, and whose contemplation ought to be a source of pride to any man, no matter with what high honors his after life was crowned. Let it not be forgotten that he had made no quest of the honor^^ STKrilKN r.ROVER CLEVELAND. 15 of office. No election fanfaronade attended his candidacy. No single act of self-glorificati* n or self-advancement entered into his ministrations. A good and true man found a trust to be executed in a plain, honest, faithful, industrious \va}'. The way was that of the people, and the}' neither failed to remember nor to thank and honor. While a local constituency were ringing the plaudit, " Well done, thou p-ood and faithful servant ! " the people of an entire State were getting ready to say, " Come up unto higher places and honors." While yet mayor, and in the spring of 1882, he had occasion to testify to the American spirit regnant within him as presiding officer of a mass-meeting called to take action on the case of Irish-Americans then aggrieved by English tyranny and actually suffering from imprisonment in Ireland. As is well known, our foreign polic}' was regarded as too feeble to reach these cases and to make American citizenship respected abroad. Our min- ister to England seemed to be indifferent to the fate of those naturalized Irishmen who, on a visit to their native land .?.nd on natural expression of sympathy with their long-suffering coun- trymen, had fellen into the category of suspects, and had been, without hearing, deprived of their liberty by incarceration in British bastilcs. Neither did there seem to be a sentiment at home sufficiently pronounced to demand the rights indubitably attached to the name of American. The Bufflilo meeting was one of protest against a policy of weakness and timidity on the part of our government. It was directly in the interest of our citizens of foreign birth. One who had not their cause at heart, a mere politician with selfish aims, or w'ith fears for his popularit}-, a trimmer for place and without character or substantial convic- tions, might have remanded such a matter to the Secretar)- of State at Washington, or complacently declined to interfere with a question which concerned only a fraction of our populace. But Mayor Cleveland was as ready to stand as the representa- tive of American citizenship in its broadest and fullest significance as to throttle corruption in his adopted city. As chairman of this meeting, he pointed out, from a strictly legal and constitu- tional standpoint, and with a clearn'=>ss and precision which always 16 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. characterized his presentation of pleas, the common right of native-born and adopted citizens of this country to protection from the Government at Washington the world over. Then, proceeding in a strain of earnest and impassioned eloquence, which captured every hearer, he enunciated the following doc- trine, which, if incorporated as an American citizen plank into a political platform, any candidate for even so high an office as President might be proud to stand upon : It needed not the statute wliich is now the law of the land, declaring that " all naturalized citizens while in foreign lands are entitled to and shall receive from this Government the same protection of person and property which is accoriled to native-born citizens," to voice the policy of our nation. In all lands where the semblance of liberty is preserved, the right of a person arre;,ted to a speedy accu- sation and trial is, or ought to be, a fundamental law, as it is a rule of civilization. At any rate, we hold it to be so, and this is one of the liglits which we undertake to guarantee to any native-born or naturalized citizen of ours, whether he be im- prisoned by order of the Czar of Russia or under the pretext of a law administered for the benelit of the landed aristocracy of England. We do not claim to make laws for other countries, but we do insist that whatsoever those laws may be, they shall, in the interests of human freedom and the rights of mankind, so far as they involve the liberty of our citizens, be speedily administered. We have a right to say, and do say, that mere suspicion without examination on trial is not sufficient to justify the long imprisonment of a citizen of America. Other nations may permit their citizens to be thus imprisoned — ours will not. And this in effect has been solemnly declared by statute. We have met liere to-night to consider this subject and to inquire into the cause and the reasons and the ju.^tice of the imprisonment of certain of our fellow-citizens now held in British pris>ns without the semblance of a trial or legal examination. Our law declares that the Government .shall act in such cases. But the people are the creators of the Government. The undaunted apostle of the Christian religion, imprisoned and persecuted, appealing centuries ago to the Roman law and the rights of Roman citizenship, boldly demanded, " Is it lawful for you to scourge a man that is a Roman and uncondemned ?" So, too might we ask, appealing to the law of our land and the laws of civilization, " Is it lawful that these our fellows be imprisoned who are American citizens and uncondemned ? " AS GOVERNOR. — In 1882 the political situation in New York State was peculiar. The Republican managers had nomi- nated a ticket from Governor down, which did not reflect the sentiment of their party. It was believed to be directly in the interest of President Arthur, and to be his attempt to assume, or rather retain, control of the party machinery in the State. Fur- ■ STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 17 ^lier, the methods resorted to in convention, in order to secure the nomination of favorites, were regarded as unfair and dishon- orable. They were tricks, whose results were bound to recoil on their jierpetrators. There was a revolt all along the line, and a determination to rebuke a procedure which savored of corrup- tion and punish the principals who expected to find preferment in a resort to it. Democratic candidates were not wanting who were anx'ions to take advantage of the situation. They saw in Republican schism an opportunity for triumph which was tempting to every adven- turer. But the wiser heads of the party saw further than this. And without disparagement to the older, it must be said that the younger elements of the party composed to a large extent these wiser heads. They saw that the Republican candidates — especially Mr. Folger, candidate for Governor — were personally unobjectionable, and that the protest was not so much against men as against the ring methods which secured their nomination and the objects to be gained by such nominations. They also saw that a weak and frivolous Democratic nomination, one made on the pretext that anybody could be elected, would onh* serve to drive back the protesting Republicans into the deserted ranks and endanger the entire situation. Again, they saw that in order to add emphasis to the protest they must present in their candidate an assurance that, if elected, a perfectly pure State administration would ensue. The opportunity they saw was not one for a mere man ; but for their party, the people, the entire State. They knew full well the difficulties attending gubernatorial administration in New York, the traps and pitfalls laid for honest men, the temptations to go astray, the impossi- bilities, one may sa}', of a perfectly straight official career, unless the incumbent should come clad in tried armor. In looking over the interesting situation, the eyes of the party naturally turned to Grover Cleveland. In many respects the State outlook was like that which preceded his call to the maj'oralty of Buffalo. At any rate, they saw in the man who was winning the encomiums of both parties for his straightfor- ward impartial, and business-like municipal administration, the ]8 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. candidate they wanted for the highest office in the State. His was a character above suspicion at the start, and one which would bear closest scrutiny even under the calcium light of a campaign. He had been tried in the severest of crucial fires, and no element of a successful executive had been found wanting He was known, too, within and without his party. All in all, Cleveland presented in himself and in his record the very guar- antee the Democracy desired for themselves, and also to offer to the Republicans. So he was placed on their ticket as candidate for governor against Mr. Folger, one of the best known men in the State, and one of the ablest. The campaign was an interesting one from the beginning. The missiles of the enemy flew thick and fast, but failed to wound or even hit the Democratic nominee. He grew stronger and stronger from the very day of his nomination. The enthusiasm his name kindled in his own party held it to a strict allegiance and drew an overflowing support. Study of his character by the protesting Republicans, and favorable knowledge of him, both as a man and official, attracted thousands directl)' to his standard and led other thousands to show their preference for him over their own nominee by silent acquiescence. Both par- ties, in the State and nation, were astounded at the result. It could hardly be called popular election — it was rather popular revolution. Never was the wisdom of a nomination so emphati- cally vindicated. Never did the American people voluntarily tender so lavish an ovation to one whom they honored and trusted. His vote was 535,318, as against 342,464 for his oppo- nent, leaving him a plurality of 192,854, and a clear majority overall opposition of 155.097. The height of the wave which bore the new Governor from his home in the extreme western part of the State to the capital in the extreme eastern part, and which strewed hills and valleys with Republican wreckage, was unprecedented in political history. The movement which made him governor, like that which had made him mayor, was not of his origination. The office had in both instances sought the man, as it should do in a republic, and as it ever will do where purely unselfish adminis- SlKl'llKX GROVER CLEVELAND. 19 tration is expected. Nor had he stooped to favor his chances of election. He was in the hands of the people, and his caus» was their cause. He was inaugurated, without any ostentatious display, on the first Tuesday of January, 1883. He thoroughly understood the political situation, and speedily addressed himself to the reforms which he knew were expected of him. His inaugural was brief, forcible and happy — the duplicate of the man in vigor and sin- cerity. It meant business. Touching the civil service of the State, he said : Subordinates in public place should be selected and retained for their efF.ciency, and not because they may be used to accomplish partisan ends. The people have a right to demand here, as in cases of private employment, that their money be paid to those who will render the best service in return, and that the appoint- ment to and tenure of such places should depend upon ability and merit. If the clerks and assistants in public departments were paid the same compensation and required to do the same amount of work as those employed in prudently conducted private establishments, the anxiety to hold these public places would be much diminished and the cause of civil-service reform materially aided. The expendi- ture of money to influence the action of the people at the polls or to secure legisla- tion is calculated to excite the gravest concern. When this pernicious agency is successfully employed a representative form of government becomes a sham, and laws passed under its baleful influence cease to protect, but are made the means by which the rights of the people are sacrificed and the public treasuiy despoiled. It is useless nnd foolish to shut our eyes to the fact that this evil exists among us, and the party which leads in an honest effort to return to better and purer methods will receive the confidence of our citizens and secure their support. It is willful blindness not to see that the people care but little for party obligations, when they are invoked to countenance and sustain fraudulent and corrupt practices. And it is well for our country and for the purification of politics that the people, at times fully roused to danger, remind their leaders that party methods should be something more than a means used to answer the purposes of those who profit by political occupation. The first acts of an executive calculated to invite attention and criticism, as well as to foreshadow the policy of his administration, are his appointments to office. There is no public duty so delicate, none in which mistakes recoil so quickly. It is set down to Governor Cleveland's credit that his first appoint- ments were made with rare good judgment. Political friend and foe indorsed them as the wisest selections possible, and saw at once in them an earnest of the kind of administrati^i they had hoped for and been led to expect. 20 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. Two places were of peculiar importance — that of Superintend- ent of Public Works and Commissioner of the New Capitol. Public money had been running through these like water through a sieve. They were centres of immense patronage and power, and were consequently much coveted by those who would use them for political purposes. Both offices employed hundreds of men. For each of them Governor Cleveland selected a man fitted by practice and .special knowledge to do the required work. They were both outspoken, square-dealing experts in the business they were called upon to conduct. After their appointment the ugly rumors of corruption which formerly centred about their places were hushed, and the people were sat- isfied that order and economy prevailed where once all was con- fusion, extravagance and distrust. All other appointments were characterized by the same inde- pendence and close discernment of fitness and character. In so far as these acts could contribute to energy and purity of admin- istration, it was manifest that Governor Cleveland was bound to prove an exceptional executive, that he had within him a pro- bity, fearlessness and business address before which the better sentiment of the State must bow with respect. It must not be supposed that he escaped the vulgar criticism of those who could not use him for their ambitious and corrupt purposes. No great, unselfish, direct, single-purposed man can act either his business or political part without incurring the opposition, and even inviting the censure, of the smaller and narrower herd who delight in detraction and feed on enmities. The measure of admiration for Governor Cleveland, while a can- didate before the Chicago Convention, was well expressed by a prominent delegate who said, " I love the man for the enemies he has made." It is not complimentary to our political society U) feel that true greatness is often an invitation for envious dis- crimination and malignant attack. Yet we fear it must be ac- cepted as true that those virtues which we most seek and prize in public men are the very ones whose persistent e.xercise pro- voke the bitterest hostility of the tricky and unconscionable few. Out of the million voters of the Empire State, only a modicum STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 21 of more trading politicians chose to withhold their admiration for Governor Cleveland's energetic and business-like policy, as foreshadowed ami proved by his executive appointments, lie showed in tliem all a keen analysis of character and a knowledge of official fitness w^hich were in the highest degree complimen- tary. In e\'ery instance the result proved the wisdom of his choice, and in no respect has his administration been more pow- crfiilly vindicated. In attention to the details of legislation Governor Cleveland proved himself constant, guarded and thoughtful. His mes- sages, models of terseness and vigor, were laden with clear-cut, practical advice, so that even the most wayward could not mis- take his spirit and meaning. It may well be questioned whetiier any State administration ever crowded into so brief a space so many substantial and far-reaching reforms. And what is more worthy of note, this monumental work was marred in but few places by idle, irrelevant and impracticable legislation, owing to his watchfulness and free use of the veto power. Perhaps his administration was expected to achieve most in the way of reforms in the government of New York city. If judged by their extent and importance, it was wonderfully successful, and too much credit cannot be given the executiv^e through whose agency they were effected. In urging and fostering them he had to combat an element in his own party, which had all along been defiant of interference. But the seven reform bills relating to the city went through and received his approval all the same. The autocratic power of the old Board of Aldermen was smashed, the princely incomes of county officers were cut down to respectable salaries, the political atmosphere was puri- fied, a freer and better ballot v/as promised. No more difficult task ever lay before an executive. He was compelled to brave an opposition at once political and personal, clamorous and slanderous, malignant and threatening. He never swerved for a moment, but went right on. Let it be written that what fifty years of effort on the part of a score of governors fiilcd to achieve for New York city was accomplished by Governor Cleveland in a single year of energetic^ fearless and consistent cidministration. 22 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. The general features of his administration were no less accept- able to the people and creditable to the man and the official. The parts which have been most criticised were those which on thoughtful examination, or left alone to be judged by their results, tended most to his honor. A few of the acts must be mentioned here because their merits provoked discus- sion, and attempts were then made to turn them to political ac- count. They should be understood lest, peradventurc, some thoughtless person might jump at wrong conclusions respecting them. The first one of moment wv^s the Five-Cent Fare bill. It was deemed important as a blow of the laboring people of New York at the Elevated Railroad, or, as the cry was, at monopoly. This bill the Governor, with characteristic moral courage, and after an exhaustive examination of its provisions, vetoed. His action provoked the unreasonable hostility of those who thought them- selves aggrieved. As to the merits of the bill the veto showed that it was clearly in violation of existing contracts, and uncon- stitutional. Approval would therefore have been a wrong. The bill would have righted nothing, but would have resulted in endless lawsuits and the expenditure of thousands of dollars of public money. Moreover it would have jeopardized the right the workingman already had, to ride, at the only hours possible for him to use the railways, at a five-cent fare. The veto was one wholly in his interest, as the sequel proved. Referring to his message, the Tribune editorially said : "The message containing his reasons for so doing is straight- forward and forcible, and we believe will be pronounced sound by most of those who have been strenuous in their demands for a reduction of fares on the elevated roads. His objections to the measure are of a serious nature. He argues that to suffer it to become a law would mean the impairment of the obligation of a contract, involving a breach of faith and a betrayal of con- fidence by the State." The second was a Mechanics' Lien bill, which was claimed to give workingmen greater security for their wages. It was a thoughtless and carelessly drawn act. The veto in this instance STEPHEN GROVKR CLEVELAND. 23 showed that the liill was wlioUy in the interest n( lawyers and hangers-on of courts ; that it largely increased the fees and costs of entering and enforcing mechanics' liens; and that either through atcident or design it repealed several existing mechanics' lien laws, including one specially applicable to the city of New York. The security of workingmen's wages was evidently the last thing thought of by the franiers of the bill, and workingnien themselves are clearly indebted to the Governor, in this instance, for the measure of protection they enjoy. The Governor's memorandum, in which fatal objections were noticed, read as follows : " The bill repeals in distinct terms a number of mechanics* lien laws, including one specially applicable to the city of New York. I notice two features which I think objectionable enough to warrant me in declining to sign it. First, it gives all parties having claims four months after performance of work or furnish- ing of material to file a lien. Second, it allows on proceedings ' to enforce the lien the same costs as in foreclosure cases. This would be quite onerous, and, I think, should not be allowed." A third was the Twelve Hour bill, limiting a day's work for employes on passenger railways to twelve hours. This bill was vetoed because it was a buncombe enactment, too loosely drawn to be effective, and violative of the sanctity of contracts made as well as the freedom of those to be made. Strict justice required the step he took. His reasons were cogen.Iy and clearly stated, and every lav/yer recognized their force at the time. The Governor's memoraiulum, on which the veto mes- sage was based, read as folKnvs : " It is distinctly and palpably class legislation, in that it only applies to conductors and drivers on horse railroads. It does not prohibit the making of a contract for any number of hours' work, I think, and if it does, it is an interference with the em- ployes' as well as employers' rights. If the car-drivers and conductors work fewer hours they must receive less pay, and this bill does not prevent that. I cannot think that this bill is in the interest of the workingman." The Public Worship bill was one granting permission to the 24 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. Catholic clergy to hold services at the House of Refuge, on Randall's Island. This bill he never vetoed. It only passed one branch of the Assembly, and therefore never reached the Governor. Of the Catholic Protectory bill, his failure to approve which was harshly used against him, there can be but one opinion. It appropriated ^$30,000 to improve the sewerage of the Catholic Protectory, built by the church in Westchester county for the reception and reform of young men and women sent there by magistrates of the surrounding counties. The laws of the State prevent the use of public moneys for sectarian uses. The fate of the bill would have been the same had the institution been Presbyterian, Methodist, Baptist, Episcopalian, or that of any other denomination. He was merely keeping his oath to observe and execute the laws. The unseemly attempt to force a religious issue into a political campaign, based on the Governor's action respecting the above bill, has already been deprecated by leading spokesmen for the church. Of this very bill, Mr. Henry L. Hoguet, president of the Pro- tectory, says: ^. "We never doubted the sincerity of the motive which induced Governor Cleveland to withhold his signature to the appropria- tion to the Protectory. We thought then, and think now, that he was not actuated by any feeling of bigotry or of hostility to Catholics or the Catholic institutions. On the contrary. Gover- nor Cleveknd is liberal in the extreme, and we are of the firm belief that he was led to withholding his approval of the appro- priation solely by a sense of public duty as he viewed it." Ex-Senator Kernan has well said, " Is it to be supposed for a moment that the Catholic Church of this country is in the hands of a pack of politicians ? Is its power and influence to be bar- tered away by any man or set of men ? That sort of campaign bosh I consider malicious, and a direct insult to every Catholic in the country. During Mr. Cleveland's administration as Gov- ernor of Nev/ York he has acted judiciously in distributing his appointments. He has favored no class or creedi He has given ^ ^^ir share of his patronage to Gathelies»" STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 25 And SO the Buffalo Catholic Union : " Catholics, as such, have asked nothing of Governor Cleve- land, and they would be very foolish to do it. Catholics have no right to expect from Governor or from President anything as Catholics, or on the score of religion. But we have a right to be treated as citizens on a perfect equality with all other religious denominations, and that no discrimination shall be made against us because we are Catholics. Justice, fair play and equal rights are all we claim ; and we were not worthy of the high privilege of American citizenship were we content with less. " Catholic citizens should hokl to strict account at the ballot box those who would refuse or deny them perfect equality and equal rights with all other denominations. In general we are proud to say that our fellow-citizens do recognize, practically acknowledge our equal rights before the law; and when * Gov- ernor Cleveland treated Catholics and Catholic interests pre- cisely as he did the members of other religious bodies and their interests,' he only acted as an honest American executive." It was also loosely charged that he vetoed an important bill which prevented contract labor by children under a certain age. As to this we quote his own language: " I am sometimes afraid that at least a iQ\^ of those who pose as friends of the workingmen do not keep themselves fully informed as to what is done for them by way of legis* lation. As an illustration I see it stated in the papers as com- ing from one who professes to be especially the friend of the workingmen, and claiming to be a leader among them, that I vetoed a bill preventing contract labor by children in the re- formatories and institutions of the State. In point of fact, this bill was promptly signed by me, and no other measure touching this question has been presented to me." Much account was also made of his veto of the Tenure of Office bill. But his veto message in this as in all other instances came to his rescue. The bill was glaringly defective, and the Governor gave his reasons for his course in a message which left no doubt of it at the time. The friends of the bill agreed with him in belieVirtg thit the measUre as it reached him was defec* 26 • STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND, tive and ought not to become a law. Mr. Francis M. Scott, who drafted the bill and worked most earnestly for its passage, pub- lished a letter in which he said that the Governor was perfectly right in vetoing the measure, because as it reached him " it was a very shabby piece of legislation, quite unfit to find a place on the statute book." Altogether his use of the veto power proved discreet and was sanctioned by intelligent popular approval. His mes- sages were all well-.studied, clear-cut papers, evidences of ex- haustive analysis of measures and deep research respecting them, and assurances of the most impartial motive and deepest recti- tude of intention. Judged by his vetoes alone, which were necessarily frequent, his administration not only attracted the widest approval but stood unparalleled for its vigor and consist- ency. A feeble man, one without the true executive instinct, would have quailed before corrupting pressure or unreasoning clamor, and often given sanction to measures which his inner conscience disapproved. But Grover Cleveland moved on a highly conscientious plane, regardless of partisan appeal, brutal threat or slanderous arrow, never counting the bearing his con- duct might have on his personal or political fortune, apparently bound only to the discharge of a duty he owed to the whole people. There is observable at every turn of his executive career stern adhesion to the cardinal principles that preserved and honored his youth and gave him a firm foothold among his fellow-citizens as an humble attorney. His scrutiny of every bill w^as close, and attended with a sharp legal insight. As he had been his own counsellor while mayor, so he was really his own Attorney-General while Governor. His vetoes stood every test applied to them, and not one rejected bill was passed over his protest. Many bills were returned because improperly and loosely drawn. These, when amended so as to be no longer in- consequential or mere deadwood accumulations on the statute books, he afterwards approved. Whether in signing bills or re- jecting them he bestowed a diligence, patience, and competent inquiry which have elicited the warmest esteem of the fair-minded people of the State, They looked upon him as a strong, deter- STEIUIEN GR0VP:R CLEVELAND. 27 mined, unselfish man in wlujni, as executive, there was full security. It was this very sense of security that put him in the minds of the people as candidate for President, and made hini so successful a nominee. It must not be imagined that his tenacity of principle and dis- regard of consequences made him indifferent or conservative. On the contrary he was ever alive to surroundings, watchful of the mo\ements of public sentiment, and at the front as a pro- gressist, whether the coliunn was political, social or moral. The Civil Service Act for the State of New York, a miniature of the system recently adopted by the General Government, received his unqualified sanction. Of the same spirit were the Reform bills for New York city, and numberless others to mention which would be tiresome. EXECUTIVE HABITS. — The business of Governor Cleve- land's office was conducted with the regularity of clock-work. Method prevailed everywhere. He came and went at stated hours, if we except the long hours of evening when there was pressure of work ; then he stayed till far into the night in order to keep his executive business well in hand. His industry did not permit him to load others with responsibility. The burden which was his own he bore with alacrity. The judgment which was his own, and which always carried such convincing weight, was based on his personal examination of public acts, his actual inquiry into public affairs, his direct knowledge of public events. As to equipment for carrying on the business of State, perfectly modulated department machinery, systematic direction of energy and consumption of time, intelligent control of whatever concerned the common weal, his office was a model and its directorship a profitable study. PERSONNEL. — Governor Cleveland was called the " bache- lor Governor," and he was not a rich one as some maliciously averred and too many supposed. At his home in Buffalo, he boarded at the Tifft House, and lived in easy style amid a group of bachelor friends who enjoyed comfortable incomes. An ex- amination of the assessor's books shows that he paid taxes on ;^5,000 of personal property, and owned no real estate. His figure is tall, broad and commanding, with a tendency to 28 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. corpulency, which, as yet, does not interfere with great activity and incessant industry. His face is regular, clear-cut, and hand- some. It is what might be called a parental face, being reserved yet genial, firm yet kind, dignified yet not distant. His business manner is brusque and simple, precisely that required for des- patch. His social mood is pleasant and assuring. He is, when not pressed with business care, open to all comers, and all, from the rag-picker to prince, find his hand extended, his hearing patient, his demeanor cordial. Though of nervous temperament he is easy in society, and reserved in emergency. His com- plexion is light, his hair brown and thin, his full, square and shapely head inclined to baldness. He delights in association with his own sex, but does not incline to mixed and fashionable society. The executive residence at Albany is a half mile dis- tant from the capitol. This distance he always walked both ways. His bosom is full of the milk of human kindness and his heart big enough to take in all mankind. An anecdote, while he was Governor, is apropos The crier in one of the courts of Albany was a blind man, who lived in the same part of the city as the Governor. He was somewhat aged and had become so familiar with the road from his home over to the court-house that he generally went alone. But one morning he missed his way, and the Governor coming along took hnn by the arm and brought him along with him as far as the capitol building. As they were about to separate, the old gentleman asked the name of his considerate guide. " My name is Cleveland," said the Governor. " Are you in business in the city ? " " Yes. I have an office up here in the capitol." " Oh, you are not the Governor ? " " Yes. I am. the Governor." The poor old fellow was almost beside himself, and went on his way with a story to tell as long as he lived. A well-known correspondent, writing of an interview with the Governor shortly after his first nomination for the Presi- dency, says : — " When the Governor gets well settled in his chair, takes a good STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 29 long breath, and adjusts his glasses on the lower part of his nose, he looks as wise, as mellow, and as sunshiny as Benjamin Frank- lin. He looks as though it would take a very considerable shock to knock him off his balance. I asked him the other day if he read the papers that abused him. " ' Sometimes," said he, with a smile that broke out all over his face. '* ' Do you ever get disturbed over anything they say ? ' " ' Not much. Every man has a right to enjoy his own mind, I remember an old fellow who was a neighbor of my father and we would sometimes try to get him to come over to our church. He was a strong Baptist, and he would always say: " No; you folks are Presbyterians, and if I go over to your church I couldn't enjoy my mind." Of course, that was the end of the argument.' " ' What was the most annoying slander they have ever published about you. Governor? ' " ' Well, I have been more surprised (and then he did twist just a little in his chair) at the way I have been misrepresented as to the laboring men than anything else. I don't see how the idea ever got out in the first place that I have been opposed to the interests of laboring men. I cannot remember one single act in my life that could be reasonably construed into anything inimical to their best interests. It has been just the other way with me. I ha\"e always taken particular pains, whenever it was in my power, to sec their interests well guarded. But I ha\'e no fear as to the outcome. I have observed that laboring men have minds of their own as well as political principles, and when there has been a full investigation of my official life the facts will be made known, and I am not uneasy as to the result. They talk about the workingmen as if they were a lot of sheep to be cor- ralled or scattered by this man or that. Most workingmen are natural Democrats. Democracy means the rule of the people, and the Democratic party has always been the natural friend of the workingmen. I do not think any great number of those who are in my party will fail to vote for me, first, because they are naturally disposed to go with their party, and second, because they will learn long before election day that my attitude toward them has been misrepresented.' 30 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. " The Governor had grown .serious enough to lay his glasses on the desk and wipe his face with an immense white handker- chief." THE TAMMANY QUESTION.— Ihe Tammany attitude toward Governor Cleveland has been so much commented upon, that it is well to know his status respecting it. It was never one of hostility, except in so far as Tammany chose to make it such; and, as was proved after the Chicago Convention, it failed to pro- ject its hostility into the campaign. That organization did, at first, undertake to wrestle with the Governor through its sena- torial spokesman, who made the mistake of forcing the measures of a society rather than honestly representing the people of a district. Feeling that he was agent for a clique, and responsible to its head, by whom he was selected, the Governor sent a mis- sive directly to headquarters, which, in a fearless, straight-for- ward way, made known his sentiments. It ran thus : Executive Chamber, Albany, October 20, 1883. — Hon. John Kelly — My dear Sir : It is not without hesitation that I write this. I have determined to do so, how- e»'er, because I see no reason why I sliould not be entirely frank with you. I am anxious that Mr. Grady should not be returned to the next Senate. I do not wish to conceal the fact that my personal comfort and satisfaction are involved in this matter. But I know that good legislation, based upon a pure desir« to promote the interests of the people, and the improvement of legislative methods are also deeply involved. I forbear to write in detail of the other considerations having relation to the welfare of the party and the approval to be secured by a change for the better in the character of its representatives. These things will occur to you without sug- gestion from me. Youis very truly, Grover Cleveland. No comment on this is needed, except that somebody mistook Governor Cleveland's unalterable purpose to have " good legis- lation" and " improvement of legislative methods" in New York city as well as elsewhere. AT CHICAGO. — Long before the meeting of the Chi- cago Convention indications pointed to Governor Cleveland as the proper Democratic nominee for President. The political situation was such as to make New York a pivotal State in the Presidential contest. His fame as an executive had gone abroad in the land. He had the prestige of unprecedented majority in STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 3I his favor when he carried off the honors of Governor. He, more than any other man spoken of, was the embodiment of all the great qualities which combined in the formation of an ideal leader. He typed the instincts and sentiments of a younger Democracy who loved his independence of character, his ster- ling methods, his sublime mastery of circumstances. He stood for what the older Democracy most cherished, adherence to patriotic tradition, plain, common sense devotion to principle, economic and businese-like execution of high official trust. There was onl}' one ripple in the current running toward his nomination. That was occasioned by the Tammany pebble at the bottom of the stream. There the stream murmured, but ran rapidly on, its murmur a laugh. The Convention was thoroughly representative of the Demo- cratic party. As the presiding officer, Col. William F. Vilas, said, " The Convention was the greatest and most magnificent council of freemen ever assembled on the face of God's round globe. For three days it listened to a ' profound debate from the greatest speakers in the country' upon the various candidates, and the point of order was justly raised that it was contrary to the rules governing the Convention to thus discuss the candi- dates, but it was unanimously \-oted by the Convention that the freest discussion should be permitted, in order to develop all the facts obtainable. The debate of three days left no doubt in the minds of the delegates as to whom the choice of the Convention should be." It was particularly noteworthy that amid all the caucusing for rival candidates, amid the arguments educed for favorites from respective States and sections, amid the formal presentation of names to the Convention, no Democratic orator of high and unquestioned standing'in his party ever spoke a derogatory ^^•ord of Governor Cleveland or expressed a doubt of the propriety and fitness of his nomination. It is equally noteworthy that the magic of his name was such as to hold his State delegation as a unit and turn every malignant attempt to break it into an argu- ment and inspiration in his behalf At 3.55 p. M. of July 9th, 1884, Mr. Lockwood, N. Y., took 32 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. the platform to place in nomination the name of Grover Cleve- land. He did this in an eloquent speech, in which he said: The responsibility which he felt was made greater when he remembered that the richest paiges of American history had been made up from the records of Demo- cratic administrations, and remembered that the outrage of 1876 was still unavenged. No man had a greater respect than he for the honored names presented to the Con- vention, but the world was moving, and new men, who had participated but little in politics, were coming to the front. Three years ago he had the honor in the city of Buffalo to present the name of the same gentleman for the oflice of mayor. Without hesitation the name of Grover Cleveland had been accepted as the candi- date. [Applause in the galleries and delegations.] The result of that election and of the holding of that office was that in less than nine months the Slate of New York found itself in a position to want such a can- didate, and when in the Convention of 1882 his name was presented for the office of Governor of the State of New York the same class of people knew that that meant honest government; that it meant pure government; that it meant Demo- cratic government, and it was ratified. Now the State of New York came and asked that there be given to the Independent and Democratic voters of the country — the young men of the country, the new blood of the country — the name of Grover Cleveland. Tlie nomination was eloquently seconded by Harrison of Illi- nois and Jones of Minnesota. The first ballot was had on the night of the loth. The friends of Governor Cleveland had computed his strength at 397 votes. Their count proved to be exceedingly close. To show how his strength was diversified as well as its chief sources a view must be taken of the ballot itself: THE FIRST BALLOT. States and Cleve- Thur- McDon- Car- Territories. land. Randall. man. Bayard. ald. Hoadly. li>>le Alabama .. 4 14 Arkansas .. 14 California 16 Colorado Connecticut .. 12 Delaware 6 Florida .'.' 8 . . . . Ge<)r<^ia 10 2 I ■ • 12 2 II 30 Illinois ... 28 Intliana Iowa • • 23 . . I Kansas ... II • • 2 5 .. Kentucky •• .. •• 26 STEl'llKN (;RU\ER CLEVIil.ANlX 3*3 Cleve- land States and Territoriei. Lduisiana 13 Maine . 12 Maryland 6 Mas'^acluiscUs 3 Michigan 14 Minnesota 14 THE FIRST BALLOT — ConHnued. Thur- RanJall. man. Miss:Sfiij)pi Mis^imri Xcbiaslca Xcvaila New Hanipsliire. New Jersey New York Norih Car.'lina . *Olii() Oretjon Pennsylvania Kli.)de Island. . . South Carolina. . Tennessee 2 Texas II \'eim')nt 8 Virginia 13 "West Virginia 4 Wisconsin 12 Total Bayard. I 10 23 IS McDon- ald. Ho.-idly. I Car- lisls. i: 55 24 27 392 7S 88 170 56 3 * P.eforc the announcement of the result Ohio's vote was changed to following : Thurman, 23 ; Hoadly, 2 ; Cleveland, 21. West Virginia : Randall,!; Eayard, 2 ; Cleveland, 7 ; Thurman, 2. Sr.\Tri:RiNG. — TihU-n received I vote in Tennessee, Hendricks i in Illinois, I'lower 4 in Wiscon-^in. At 11.20 A. M. of the iitli.the second ballot began, and ended at I p. M. }^very face and movement in the vast assemblage be- trayed the nervous anxiety with which the result was looked forwar^l to. The withdrawal of Mr. Randall's name was at- tended wilh great excitement, as it seemed to be clearing the Pennsylvania delegation for determined action in some new direction. The withdrawal of McDonald's name was to make way for that of Mr. Hendricks, upon whom all the opposition to Mr. Cleveland thought they could consolidate. The balloting proceeded amid intense suspense, and with satisfactory gains for Cleveland until Pennsylvania was called. Forty-two of her votes went to Cleveland. This broke the spell that held the Convention. Amid exciting cheers and enthusiastic bustle the States began to rearrange their votes as if on final ballot. The 34 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. result was Cleveland's nomination by 683 votes, or 136 more than the necessary two-thirds. THE SECOND BALLOT. States and Territories. Cleve- land. Alabama 5 Arkansas 14 California 16 Colorado 6 Connecticut 12 Delaware Florida 8 Georgia 22 Illinois 43 Indiana ^o Iowa 26 Kansas 17 Kentucky 4 Louisiana 15 Maine 12 Maryland 16 Massachusetts S Michigan 23 Minnesiita 14 Mississippi 2 Missouri 32 Neloraska 9 Nevada New Hampshire 8 New Jersey 5 New York 72 North Caiolina 22 Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island 7 South Carolina 10 Tennessee 24 Texas 26 Vermont 8 Virginia 23 West Virginia 10 Wisconsin 22 Arizona 2 Dakota 2 Idaho 2 Montana 2 New Mexico 2 Utah 2 W'ashingtnn Territory. ... 2 Wyoming 2 Dist. of Columbia 2 4(3 6 42 Mc Bayard. Don- Id. Thur- man. Randall. Hen- dricks I 2X 7>^ Total 6S3 81 y^ Necessary for choice, 547. 45>^ STEPHEN GRUVER CLEVELAND. 35 The general result was announced as follows: Whole num- ber of votes cast, 820; necessary to a choice, 547. Cleveland received 683 ; Hendricks, 45^ ; Bayard, 8i^ ; McDonald, 2; Randall, 4 ; Thurman, 4. The question was then put on Mr. Menzies' motion to make the nomination unanimous, and it was carried triumphantly. It may be profitable at this point to glance at the Democratic conventions of the past. The nominations made therein for the last fifty years are as follows : 1836, Martin Van Buren, ist ballot. 1840, Martin Van Buren, unanimously. 1844, James K. Polk, 9th ballot. 1848, Lewis Cass, 4th ballot. 1852, Franklin Pierce, 49th ballot, 1856, James Buchanan. 17th ballot. i860, John C. Breckinridge, 56th ballot. 1864, George B. McClellan, 1st ballot. 1868, Horatio Seymour, 23d ballot. 1872, Horace Greeley, endorsed. 1876, Samuel J. Tilden, 2d ballot. 18S0, Winfield S. Hancock, 2d ballot. 1884, Grover Clcvelantl, 2d ballot. 1888. by acclamation. The i860 convention that nominated Breckinridge ballctcd fifl)'-five times at Charleston, S. C, then adjourned to P>altiinon.', June 18, when Breckinridge was unanimously nominated on the first ballot. The " bolters " met the same day and nominated Stephen A. Douglas on the first ballot. In 1852 Franl^lin Pierce's name first appeared on the thirty-fifth ballot, when Vir- ginia gave him her fifteen votes. Lewis Cass and James liu- chanan were the leading candidates on forty-five ballots, but at no time did cither have a majority of the convention, while a two-thirds vote was required to nominate. RECEPTION OF THE NEWS.—T\\q news of Governor Cleveland's nomination was received with demonstrations ol delight by the Democratic party and by the independent clement of the Republican party. Part)' newspapers in general spoke of it as a ho[)eful and proper political step. Large ratification 36 STKPIIEX GROVER CLEVELAND, meetings were improvised in city and village, at which great enthusiasm prevailed, and from which proceeded hearty endorse- ment of the Convention's action. What is known as the inde- pendent, or bolting Republican press, was, if anything, more encomiastic than the regular Democratic press. The sentiments of a few of these will t}'pe tb.e whole: Governor Cleveland will be supporte.l by a united and aggressive Democratic party. He will have the votes of tens of thousands of Independent Republicans. He will have the support of the larger part of successful newspapers of the country, both secular and religious. He will have the contidence and votes of ilie business men of the land. It will be shown that tliis poor boy who has worked his way up to the proud position which he now liolds knows what it is to work day in and day out, and that he is a true friend of the toiling masses. — Boston Globt (Butler's organ). The nomination of Governor Cleveland defines sharply the actual issue of the Presidential election of this year. He is a man whose absolute official integrity lias never been questioned, who has no laborious and doubtful explanations to undertake, and who is universally known as the Governor of New York elected by an unprecedented majority which was not partisan, and represented both the votes and the consent of an enormous body of Republicans, and who as the Chief Executive of the State has steadily withstood the blandishments and the threats of the worst elements of his party, and has justly earned the reputation of a cour- ageous, independent, and efficient friend and promoter of administrative reform. His name has become that of the especial representative among our public men of the integrity, purity, and economy of administration which are the objects of the most intelligent and patriotic citizens. — Harpin-'s Weekly. It is not only in what he clearly represents but in what he distinctly opposes that Grover Cleveland is strong before the .American people. His career has made him the exponent of clean and honest politics. In the administration of public trusts he has shown that he is superior to partisan bi.ns, indifferent to such party ntcrests as are in contact with official pioliity and the public welfare. He has been severely tried in the important and rcsjionsible post he now occupies. He has resisted the importunities of designing politicians, he has defeated the purposes of selfish schemers. All those members of his own party who are not absorbed in private aims which are in conflict with the public good are outspoken in his praise; and he has won the good opinion of all Republicans who are not so far gone in partisanship as to have lost the power to commend upright conduct in a political adversary. — N. Y. Times. Of the kind of experience which the present .situation in national affairs most imperatively calls for, experience in administration, Cleveland h.as more than any one who has entered the White House since i860, more than any man whom either party has nominated within that period, except Seymour and Tilden — more than Lincoln more than Grant, more than Hayes, more than Garfield, more than Arthur. STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 37 He laid at the start that best of all foundations for American statesmanship by becoming a good lawyer. He began his executive career by being a good county sheriff. He was next inUawted with the adminisuation of a great city — as severe a test of a man's capacity in dealing with men an<.l affairs as any American in our lime can undergo. In botii ofUccs he gave bounilless satisfaction to his fellow-citi- zens of both parlies. His nomination for the Governoiship of this Slate came in due course, and at a cri.->is in State alfairs which very closely resembled that which we are now witnessing in national affairs. His election by an unprecedented majority is now an old story. It was the beginning of a revolution. It was the first thorough fright the tricky ami jobbing element in politics ever received here. It for the first time in their experience gave reform an air of reality. But it might, had Cleveland proved a weak or incompetent man, have turnctl out a very bad blow for pure politics. Luckily, he justihed all the expeetatiuns and even all the hopes of those who voted for him. No friend of good government, who, in disregard of party lies, cast his vole for liini, has had reason to regret it for one moment. We owe to his vigorous support a large number of reformatory measures, which people in this State for forty years had sighed for with little more expectation of seeing them enacted than of seeing the Millennium. In other words, he has arrested the growth of political despair among large numbers both of young and old voters in this State. His messages, too, have beeft models of sound common sense and penetraiing sagacity, clothed in the terse and vigorous English which shows that there is a man and not a windy phrasemonger behind the pen. Though last not least, his best work has been done in utter disregard of the hostility of that element in his own party which for so many years has made it an object of mingled hate and fear to the best part of the American people. He is, in truth, a Democrat of the better age of the Democratic party, when it was a party of siniplicity and economy, and might almost have put its platform into the golden rule of giving every man his due, minding your own business, and asking nothing of government but light taxes, and security in the field and by the fireside. No one who has entered the White House for half. a century, except Lincoln in his second term, has offered reformers such solid guarantees that as President he will do his own thinking, and be his own master in the things which pertain to the Presidency. — N. Y. Evening Post. Governor Cleveland has shown through the whole of his life, private and public, from boyhood to his present distinction, that he has the sterling qualities befitting the exalted office of Chief Executive of the United States. It is the highest func- tion of that office to administer the laws with an eye single to the public welfare. Our Government has been tersely described as " of the people, by the people, and for the people." No eminent public man has exhibited a better understanding of that definition of the American government than Grover Cleveland ; none has ex- emplified it better than he has in his performance of public duty, and but few, very few indeed, have exemplified it so well. His guiding characteristics have been loy- alty to duty, courage in the discharge of it, and the best and most faithful perform- ance of it within his power. These are strong words; strong because ihey are true. — Philadelphia Lcdi^er. The Governor himself received the news of the nomination 38 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. with entire equanimity. He had not shown himself ambitious of the honors, had done nothing directly to secure them. They came as a free-will offering, and by virtue of a record made in the path of duty. He would not have been disappointed had the Convention in its wisdom seen fit to similarly honor some one else. Yet he did not shirk the responsibilities which he knew were inseparable from candidacy, nor fail to announce himself as gratified with his political preference. During a serenade at the Executive mansion on the evening after his nomination he delivered the following tasteful and timel)- .speech : Fellow-citizens — I cannot l)ut be gratified with this kindly greeting. I find that I am fast reaching the point v.here I shall count the people of Albany not merely as fellow-citizens, but as townsmen and neighbors. On this occasion I am of course aware that you pay no compliment to a citizen and present no personal tribute, but that you have come to demonstrate your loyalty and devotion to a cause in which you are heartily enlisted. The American people are about to exercise in its highest sense their power and right of sovereignty. They are to call in re\ icw before them their public servants and the representatives of political parties, and I'emar.d of them an account of their stewardship. Parties may be so long in power and may become s> arrogant and careless of the interests of the people as to grow heedless of their responsibility to their masters. But the time comes as certainly as death when the people weigh them in the balance. The issues to be adjudicated by the nation's great assize are made up and are about to be submitted. We believe that the people are not receiving at the han'ds of the party which for nearly twenty-four years has directed the affairs of the nation the full benefits to which they are entitled — pure, just and economical rule, and we believe that the ascendency of genuine Democratic principles will insure a better Government and greater happiness and prosperity to all the people. To reach the sober thought of the nation and t<' disl.xlge an enemy entrenched behind spoils and patronage involves a struggle which, if we underesti- mate, we invite defeat. I am profoundly impressed with the responsibility of the part assigned to me in this contest. My heart, I know, is in the cause, and I pledge you that no effort of mine shall be wanting to secure the victory which I believe to be within the achievement of the Democratic hosis. Let us, then, enter upon the campaign now fairly opened, each one appreci:iting well the part he has to perform, ready with solid front to do battle for better government, confidently, courageously, always honorably, and with a firm reliance upon the intelligence and patriotism of the American people. The nomination of Governor Cleveland for the Presidency was fittingly followed in Convention by the nomination of that ster- ling old Deniocrat, Thomas A. Hendricks, of Indiana, for the Vice-Presidency. These two made a ticket which proved a, STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 39 source of inspiration to the party. Even if it at first failed to awaken the enthusiasm prox'oked by the RepubHcan leaders, Blaine and Logan, it had better sta} ing powers. Geographically it was a tower of strength, fi)r ?>Ir. Cleveland represented the fighting-ground in the East, while Mr Hendricks represented it in the West. Both candidates were thus at an advantage which it would require more than personal magnetism and campaign clatter on the part of opponents to overcome. THE CAMPAIGN. — The Convention backed up these able candidates by an admirable platform, and the memorable Presi- dential campaign of 1884 was duly opened. Cleveland and Hendricks had not only to contend with the Republican nom- inees, who were both strong and brilliant campaignists, backed by a party which had v/on victories for twenty-four years and with all the patronage of the government in its control, but with that veteran campaignist, B. F. Butler, who headed the Labor ticket, and St. John, who headed the Prohibitionists. The cam- paign at first took a vicious, personal turn, but this diversion soon spent its force and the more serious questions involved came to the surface. At this point Cleveland's ref)rni record in New York came mightily to his aid His career had been brief, to be sure, but it had also been one of consistency and persistency, and admiration for it proved a wall which could not be shaken by the enemy's batteries. He held his party throughout one of the most heated campaigns known to American history, and his strength was constantly augmented by accessions from the Re- publican ranks, all of whom claimed to see in him the embodi- ment of the reform spirit which seemed to be abroad in the land. In the very last stages of what every political observer felt to be a desperate battle, when the scales of victory were tipping now this way and now that, the Republican candidate tried the effect of his powerful pcrsonalism directly on New York State, to which the contest had, by common consent, narrowed. It is not worth while to inquire how much this attcm}:)t was worth, nor whether it lost or won the battle. Speculation is out of place in the face of figures. The official returns of New York showed a plurality of 1,047 ^'otes for Cleveland and Hendricks, which as- 40 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. sured them twenty out of the thirty-eight Slates, a majority of thirty-seven votes in the electoral college and a popular vote of 4,911,017, as against 4,848,334 for Blaine and Logan. It thus passed to the credit of Grover Cleveland that he headed the ticket which won the first Presidential victory for his party in twenty-four years, and that, too, against the one man whom the Republican party claimed to be invincible. Not only this, the victory was a political revolution which even enthusiasts of his own party thought to be impossible a few months before, so strongly were the Republicans entrenched in power and so skilful were they in party manipulation. But while the national election brought to Cleveland, Hen- dricks and the Democratic party a great victory, it brought also a responsibility which the party had never before been called upon to meet, for not only parties, but the nation had made great strides forward since tlie days of President Buchanan. How would the new President and Vice-President meet this responsi- bility? Would they prove safe guardians of the greatest and gravest public trust in the world ? Would they honor themselves, their part)', the people at large, our American institutions? Un- fortunately, the Vice-President did not live long enough (he died November 25, 1885) to contribute much by counsel to the suc- cess of the administration of which he was an honored part. But, fortunately, the elections of the year 1884 gave to the lower house of Congress a majority of Democrats. The new Presi- dent could find in this fact a source of encouragement. With or without these, however, he would move boldly and confi- dently f(jrward in the line of duty, as he had moved before, and trust to the honest sentiment of his countrymen for appreciative support. AS PRESIDEA^T. — Mr. Cleveland was not carried away with the high honors conferred upon him by the American people. A few modest responses to the many congratulations showered upon him marked the extent of liis exultation. He had not, owing to official duties, plunged actively into the campaign, and he felt that his success was due to his record rather than his personalism. Moreover, he had a keen sense of the graver ob- STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 41 ligations soon to be assumed and could not afford to" indulge in the lighter play of feelings which simple victory might have war- ranted, lie was President now, and this distinction meant, to one of his temperament, adhesion to duty, desire for reform and full sense of responsibility, far more than to the ambitious and ostentatious politician. He could see ahead of him mighty questions which pressed for attention and solution, and towering above all was the problem of a policy which should meet the terrible exactions of party and at the same time address itself to the judgments of that intelligent Republican contingent which stood by him through the fierce flames of the campaign. No President ever came into office with a greater prestige for independent thouglits and sound business methods, and none with more freedom from the trammels of partisanship. He had tlie best wishes of the nation at his back, and in every respect was in an enviable situat(t)n for mapping his future plans without haste and with the least possible interference from party busy- bodies. When officially notified of his selection he wrote an admirable letter of acceptance, in which he took high ground as to the nature of public office, looking upon it wholly as a public trust, to be administered for the benefit of the people. In view of the dangers Vv'hich attended administrations whose chiefs sought re- election, he deprecated the seeking of second terms on the part of Presidents and the turning of party machinery to personal ends. The letter was well received by the country and proved an earnest of what was to come when the new administration should get fairly on its feet. President Cleveland was inaugurated on I\Iarch 4, 18S5, amid ceremonies which were truly national. The throng of \isitors at the National Capitol was estimated at half a million. Inaugura- tion day was auspicious in its spring-like brightness and balm. Flags floated from all the public buildings and the spacious avenue.a, stood 200,000 people, who received the President-elect with deafening applause. As soon as silence could be commanded he delivered his inaugural in such a rich, clear voice that it was heard by nearly all in that vast assemblage. When he had finished he turned to Chief-Justice Waitc and said: " I am now ready to take the oath prescribed by law." The Chief-Justice held in his hand a small Bible which had been given to Mr. Cleveland by his mother when he had started to seek his fortune in the world. Placing his right hand on this he received the oath of office and then kissed the sacred book, his lips touching verses 5-10, inclusive, of the Ii2th Psalm. Then those on the platform congratulated the President, the STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 43 multitude made the welkin ring with cheers, a hundred bands played " Hail to the Chief," and the cannon at the navy yard and arsenal thundered forth the " Presidential salute." The pro- cession re-formed, with President Cleveland at its head. It marched to the White House, where the President took the grand stand and reviewed the inunense procession as it passed by for three lon<^' hours. In the cvining came fireworks and the inauguration ball, participated in by io,000 jjcople. This was regarded as a fitting close to the brilliant ceremonies of the day. In the President's brief and chaste inaugural he pledged himself and his administration to a close observance of the Constitution and laws; to peace, commerce and honest friendship with all na- tions and entangling alliances with none; to care for the public domain and fair treatment of the Indians ; to rigid enforcement of the laws against polygamy and the immigration of foreign ser- vile classes ; to strict execution of the civil service laws on the principle announced in his letter of acceptance, that public office is a public trust ; to limitation of public expenditure to actual needs of government. The document was a plain statement of the President's views, and was satisfying in every respect. It gave pronu'se that he would launch his administration on broad and safe waters, and would not dare that which was entirely novel, brilliant and startling. He preferred to be reposeful rather than dashing, sure of his ground rather than take chances in a sudden rush for notoriety over surfaces which had not been sur- vej'ed and mapped by political pioneers. During his first months in office President Cleveland pro- ceeded quietl}' and cautiously toward the adoption of a policy and purpose. He examined every situation with care, and per- haps gave closer personal attention to routine work than any predecessor in the high office. He was j'oung, vigorous in mind and body and a lover of detail. He had surrounded himself with the following admirable Cabinet, which was regarded as happily chosen and thoroughly representative of the best in- terests of his party and the country at large : Secretary of State Thomas F. Bayard, Del. Secretary of Treasury Daniel Manning, N. Y, 44 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. Secretary of War Wm. C. Endicott, Mass. Secretary of Navy Wm. C. Whitney, N. Y. Secretary of Interior L. Q. C. Lamar, Miss. Attorney-General Aug. LL Garland, Ark. Postmaster General Wm. F. Vilas, Wis. This was a body of counsellors in which any administration might place the utmost confidence. He was no less fortunate in having- for his private secretary Colonel Daniel S. Lamont, who had served hiin faithfully in that capacity when he was Governor and who had such a comprehensive knowledge of public men and political life as is vouchsafed to few. The pos- sessor of great personal urbanity, always clear-headed, very reti- cent, especially concerning executive affairs, he was emphatically the " right man in the right place." At the Cabinet meetings held at the executive mansion, the President sits at the head of the council table and the members occupy positions on either side, the Secretary of State coming first at his right and the Secretary of the Treasury first at his left. The Secretary of the Interior occupies the end opposite to the President. In some administrations — notably those of Taylor and Pierce — the members of the Cabinet assumed a power they did not really possess in law and became almost Venetian in their oligarchical spirit. But Mr. Cleveland has not chosen to act the part of King Log in these councils, and his voice has ever been that of a leader when questions touching the policy of his administration arose. His habit of assuming responsi- bility was not remitted in the least amid higher honors and more imposing place, and he came to be known as the most untiring worker and closest student of affairs in the grand councils of the nation. FIRST MESSAGE. — From the date of inauguration to the opening of the Forty-ninth Congress, Dec. 7, 1885, the admin- istration of President Cleveland moved smoothly and satisfac- torily along. His message to that Congress was waited for with anxiety by the country, as his first opportunity for presenting in detail a plan of administration. The document proved to be a lengthy but very worthy State paper, embracing in the main STEPHEN GROVER CI-EVEI.y\Nn. 45 three distinct points — the silver question, the tariff and ci\il service, with brief discussion of the Indian problem, commercial treaties, Mormonism, the navy, and other current subjects. He disapproved of further coinage of the Bland dollar, advised con- servative action respecting the tariff, gave much dignified and courageous advice relative to civil service. The nation was pleased with such outline of administration as the message piomised, and it was especially lauded by the independent Re- publicans who had supported him for office. He found in the House a Democratic majority which was in thorough accord with him, and man)' special champions in the Senate, among whom were the eloquent Arthur P. Gorman, of Maryland, and Senator Kenna, of West Virginia. However smoothl}' a new administration may run while the Congress is not in session, it cannot expect to escape criticism and antag- onism when brought into close contact with the legislative bod\' of the land, especially if all, or a part of it, be of the opposition. The Senate was Republican, and its first duty was to pass on the numerous nominations of the President. A hitch occurred almost at the start, \\hen the Senate asked for .sight of the recommendations on which the President had based some of his important appointments, and also of papers on which he had based his removals. He regarded them as personal papers, and the Attorney General sustained his refusal to show* them. The Senate took an opposite view, but the affair was so adjusted as not to interfere greatly with the serenity of either the President or Senators. The first session of the Forty-ninth Congress lasted till Aug. 5, 1 886. It accomplished but little to affect the country or the status of parties. Looked in uj)on criticall)', the administration of President Cleveland had thus far been plain, straightforward and unmomentous. Peace and prosperity reigneil, and the polit- ical re\-olution of 1884 had brought none of the disasters so freely prophesied by croakers. It was to some extent true that Mr. Cleveland's own party had not profited as much as it desired from his administration. But he could well afford to face this situation, for the utmost that could be laid to his discredit was 46 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. the exercise of prudence in changing from one set of office- holders to another, and the bringing to bear severe discrimina- tion in making up his mind as to the quahfications of those who should represent him. If the resolve to have a safe administra- tion did not suit a few hot-heads who would have overturned everything and brought disgrace on the party, he was not greatly disturbed about it, but went on his cautious way, sure of the fact that the end would vindicate his procedure. The second session of the Forty-ninth Congress, which met Dec. 6, 1886, gave the President another opportunity to present his views to the country in an annual message. The interim had been signalized by nothing of political moment except a more pronounced desire on the part of Democrats who favored tariff revision to accomplish something in that direction during the pending session. The Congressional elections had been held and, from whatever cause, there had been a diminution of the Democratic majority in the House. President Cleveland deliv- ered a message which was much more vigorous and pointed than his former one. In it he urged upon his party the neces- sity for taking a decided step in favor of tariff revision, and a reduction of the surplus. He was as emphatic as before in his objections to compulsory coinage, and the longer continuance of internal taxes. He had been harshly criticised by his op[)o- nents for numerous vetoes of bills conferring pensions in excep- tional cases. These vetoes he ably defended, because the class of legislation against which they were aimed was one which was dangerous in prmciple and calculated to open the doors to ex- travagance and corruption. The message evinced a determina- tion on the President's part to secure, in so far as he coultl, a greater amount of legislation than the first session of the Forty- ninth Congress had given to the country. He was now well grounded in popular regard, had a full understanding of national and party wants, and felt that he could afford to make his advice emphatic. The result was that at this short session tlie Con- gress did an immense amount of work, and settled many press- ing questions. The Anti-Polygamy act was passed, one redeem- ing Trade Dollars; regulating the Electoral Count, and repealing STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 47 the Tenure of Office law. But for the flict that the Democrats in the House were divided on the questions of tariff revision, internal taxation, and reduction of the surplus in the treasury, all the important measures urged in his message would have been enacted into laws, and their beneficial results given to the country. ■ Thus ended the first two years of President Cleveland's ad- ministration. He had been singularly successful in reconciling the countr\^ to the political change which came about with the advent of his party to power. Antagonisms had been avoided by a wise use of his functions. He had made no foolish haste, had done everything conscientiously and for the best, had met on every hand the expectations of those who contributed to his electijDn. Better than all ke had not lost the best wishes of his political opponents to see him successful in his administration of national affairs. At times it was felt on all sides that he was bigger, braver, and more advariced than his party, and that this would, in the end, prove a greater source of danger to his suc- cess than attacks from without. But he iiad the sagacity to ward off all harm in this direction by choosing his grount] well, taking bold and firm stands without appearing to be arbitrary or dictatorial, and then patiently waiting for the sober, second thought of his follou'crs. He thus grew upon them, as it were, and without an)^ spirit of assumption or attempt at cross-purposes, came to be recognized as one abundantly worthy of entire confidence and admirably equipped for safe and victorious lead- ership. As party lines began to shape up for the contest of 1888, President Cleveland's administration naturally passed under closer scrutiu}' by his political opponents. He could hardly e.K- pcct to escape that small, invidious criticism which every trilling official error and every slight departure from the usual course of things are too apt to provoke in this country, and which is none to the credit of our newsmongers and partisan writers. Thus his veto of what was known as the Dependent PensicMi l^ill, though based on grounds whicii every impartial man will, ;dmost at a glance, regard as tenable, was heralded as evidence of his 0*0 ' 48 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. opposition to the soldier element. This was both unfair and un- just, and it did not take long for the better second thought of the country to come to the President's vindication. There was another outburst of the same sentiment when the order to " re- turn the rebel flags " was issued. But when it appeared that the order was really that of a subordinate, and that it was counter- manded b}' the President as soon as its true nature became known, full credit was given to him for rectitude of intention. But with all these annoyances, there was a broader and fairer field of criticism to encounter. This he did not fear; this, in- deed, he would invite, in so far as a perfectl)' straight and fear- less course proved an invitation. Aggressiveness w^is never a part of President Cleveland's organization, yet he was not a man to stand still. He saw the political situation of 1 884 as j:^lainly as any man could. The things which contributed to his own and Democratic success in that year — the mistrust of the party in power, the personal antagonism to its candidate, the general desire for political change — could not contribute to the same end again. Party success a second time must depend on a record made, on something done, on confidence inspired, on a grand affirmative position to be stoutK' maintained. Plow could this standpoint be reached? Clearly not by the reposeful, negati\'e methods which were so well adapted to the first two years of his administration. There must be a change, more action, for, as the legend on the ruins of Dcndera hath it, " action is life." It was to this end that he almost scolded the second session of the Forty-ninth Congress for its inertness during the first and long session — the session of opportunity. He would not scold, or urge, or plead again, but, as was justly his place, he would pre- sent a clear issue, would father a central thought, would ask his party and the nation to take something definite in hand for its own good. In writing the life of President Cleveland it is not necessary to go into an analysis of parties. It is sufficiently understood that the doctrine of Protection is fostered by the Republican party through and by means of the tariff laws, and that such doctrine has become cardinal with the party. It is just as well under- STEniEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 49 stood tliat the Democratic part}- has never accepted this doctrine in its entirety, but has acquiesced in it as a means of raising revenue when necessary, and has always claimed that, the neces- sity past, the tariff laws should be revised and tariff rates reduced, the same as with an)' othtr tax laws. In the opinion of many Democratic leaders of thought, which opinion Mr. Cleveland shared, the excess of income over expenditures, and the accu- mulation of ;m unnecessary surplus of public money in the na- tional treasur}', afforded an excellent argument and made the time propitious for declaring a policy which looked toward both tariff and internal tax reduction, and which should at the same time answer for a more definite declaration of party principles than had been the custom in National Conventions and platforms. While.the desire to do this had long existed on the part of many prominent Democrats, no one seemed bold enough, or felt him- self sufficiently strong as a leader, to take such an initiative as would impress the people. There was a small but resolute fac- tion within the party which antagonized any such step and re- mained as firmly attached to the Protection school of thought as Republicans tlicmselves. They were chiefly responsible for the failure of tariff legislation in the Forty-ninth Congress, and were still more hostile in the Fiftieth Congress. Mr. Cleveland had, of course, full)' tliscountcd their strength before he concluded on his step forward. He felt also, no doubt, that he, of all men, was the one to place himself in the van of what bade fair to be the most important political movement since the civil war, for he was not onl)' the most conspicuous man in the countr)', but the one b;st calculated, by reason of his sturdy character and wcll- establisJK'd official record, to inspire confidence. This was ihr logic of that situation which President Cleveland presented to the country when, on December 5, 1887, he de- livered to Congress that brief message of only 4,500 words, which touched upon onl}^ that branch of finance involved in taxa- tion, customs duties and the treasury surplus, which awakened his part)' as if from a long dream and which electrified the nation. It was an indication of a departure from the hesitating and shuffling methods which had so long prevailed and was 4 50 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. equivalent to a new declaration of principles for modern De- mocracy, or rather to a broad and emphatic announcement of those principles which had made statesmen of the Democratic fathers and given them repeated victories. The message was hailed by his party as a step in the right direction, and the Presi- dent was made the recipient of congratulations which showed he had struck an immensely popular chord. So earnest was he in his presentation of the financial situation, and so candid and fearless in his statements respecting high and unnecessary taxa- tion, with its dangerous concomitant of an overflowing treasury, that not even his enemies failed to applaud his utterances as the very essence of frankness and his step as Napoleonic in concep- tion and importance. The Democratic majority in the House promptly responded to the President's advice and presented a bill 'vhich looked toward the reforms indicated in the message, and they made strenuous efforts to pass it over the Republican strength aided by a factious Democratic minority. This heroic step on the part of President Cleveland con- tributed greatly to his reputation as a broad-minded thinker, and a statesman capable of seeing in advance of his time and preparing for victories on a basis which should admit of no misconstruction. But there was one thing about it which he may not have fully considered, or if so, then it should be care- fully weighed by every candid mind, in order that misapprehen- sion may not arise respecting the future which it opened to Mr. Cleveland, and also in order that the criticism which his nomi- nation for a second term called forth from his political enemies may be met at once. The new policy of the administration placed Mr. Cleveland so clearly in the van of his party, that it would have been cowardly, if not suicidal, for him to have shrunk from the responsibility imposed, no matter what form that responsibility assumed. Thus, without intent or volition on his part, but by sheer force of political circumstances, he found his leadership of that pronounced and momentous kind, which impelled him directly and inevitably toward a renomination by his party. There can be no doubt in the world of his sincerity, when, in his letter of acceptance in 1884, he made known his STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 51 conviction that a President shoultl not be an aspirant for a sec- ond term. His reasoning was that such ambition might lead to misuse of the power and patronage at his disposal. The reason- ing was just as potential in 1886, or 1888, and there is no need for supposing that his convictions underwent change at any- time. The fact that an emergency might arise, or that a changed set of conditions might come, which could not be fore- seen, but whicli might warrant a second terin for a President, was not one which he combated in his letter, nor did his reason- ing apply to it. He was as much at liberty to stand for a second term, after his letter as before it, unless it became apparent that he was an ambitious seeker after the place, and was using the power and patronage in his hands to secure it. Nothing like this appeared. In shaping an administrative policy which would enure to the good and glory of his party and the country, he acted like a brave, broad-gauge statesman, and as President, or if you please, party leader, he was willing to face every storm and shoulder every responsibility. When events, political and otherwise, shaped up so as to show forth the campaign of 1888, and his position became such as to make battle doubtful without the magic of his name, the wisdom of his counsel, and the force of his presence, there arose spontaneously a situation which rendered his candidacy imperative. Instead of using effort in a personal direction, and resorting to means unworthy of a high official to bring about a desirable result, the course of events, the trend of sentiment, the uprising of feeling, were such as to carry him along, without the asking, toward a second candidature. Always before in our political history such spontaneous results have been regarded as most fortunate for public men, and as evidence of a popular favor and confidence which speak worlds for their character and ability as officials and statesmen. And so it really was in Mr. Cleveland's case. During the first session of the Fiftieth Congress, Mr. Cleve- land reorganized his Cabinet by promoting his Secretar}' of In- terior, L. Q. C. Lamar, to the place in the Supreme Court, made vacant by the death of Chief-Justice Waite, by transferring his Postmaster-General, Wm. F. Vilas, to the Interior Department,^ 52 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. by promoting Charles S. Fairchild to the Secretaryship of the Treasury, and by appointing Don M. Dickinson, of Michigan, Postmaster-General. These appointments were all acceptable to the Senate, and they were confirmed. President Cleveland had on hand from the beginning of his administration the delicate question of the American Fisheries, The treaty of i8i8, between this country and England, has never been satisfactory, and the English made several seizures of American fishing vessels in Canadian v.'aters, contrary to our construction of the treaty. The administration took the matter in iiand, and under the auspices of a comtnission composed of representatives from all the countries concerned, a new treaty was framed and presented to the Senate for confirmation. This action was deemed the wisest on the part of the administration, as it was least likely to provoke hard feeling, and most likely to get at the root of the troubles. It gave a happy relief to his premier, and placed the future responsibility on the Senate. Presitlcnt Cleveland made reform in the Public Land System a conspicuous feature of his administration, and it is safe to say that in this respect he has been the means of correcting one of the most vicious systems in the whole domain of government, and at the same time of saving millions to the Treasury. In the execution of laws he is energetic and persistent, and, it may be, imbued with a good deal of that philosophy which prompted President Grant to say that " the best way to secure the repeal of an obnoxious law was to enforce it to the letter." The brief review of President Cleveland's administration pre- sented to the St. Louis Convention by General Collins is apropos the story of his life. "The day on which Grover Cleveland, the plain, straightfor- ward, typical American citizen chosen at the election, took the oath of office in the presence of the multitude, a day so lo\'ely and so perfect that all nature seemed exuberantly to sanction and to celebrate the victory, that day marked the close of the old era and the beginning of a new' one. It closed the era of usur- pation of power by the P\^deral authority, of illegal force, of general contempt for constitutional limitations and plain law, of STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 53 glaring scandals, profligate waste, and unspeakable corruption, of narrow sectionalism and class strife, of the reign of a party whose good work had long been done. It began the era of per- fect peace and perfect union of the States, fused in all tluir sovereignty into a Federal Republic, with liuiitetl but anipie powers; of a public service conducted with absolute integrity' and strict economy; of reforms pushed to their extreme limit; of comprehensive, sound and safe financial policy; giving se- curity and confidence to all enterprise and endeavor — a Demo- cratic administration, faithful to its mighty trust, loyal to its pledges ; true to the constitution, safeguarding the interests and liberties of the people. And now we stand on the edge of another era, })erhaps a greater contest; with a relation to the electors that we ha\'e not held for a generation, that of responsi- bility for the great trust of government. We are no longer authors, but accountants; no longer critics, but the criticised. The responsibility is ours, and if we have not taken all the power necessar)- to make that responsibility good the t'ault is ours, not that of the people. "The administration of President Cleveland has triumphantly justified his election. It compels the respect, confidence and ap- proval of the country. The prophets of evil and disaster are dumb. What the people see is the government of the Union restored to its ancient footing of justice, peace, honesty and im- partial enforcement of the law. They sec the demands of labor and agriculture met, so far as government can meet them, by the legislative enactments for their encouragement and protection. They see the veterans of the civil war granted pensions long due them to the amount of more than twice in number and nearly three times in value of those granted under an}-- previous ad- ministration. They see more than 32,000,000 acres of land recklessly and illegally held by the grantees of the corrupt Re- publican regime restored to the public domain for the benefit of honest settlers. They see the negro, whose fears of Democratic rule were played upon by demagogues four years ago, not only more fully protected than by his pretended friends, but honored as his race was never honored before. They see a financial 54 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. policy under which reckless speculation has practically ceased and capital freed from distrust. Tiiey see for the first time an honest observance of the law governing the civil establishment, and the emploj'es of the people rid, at least, of the political highwayman with a demand for tribute in one hand and a letter of dismissal in the other. They see useless offices abolished and expenses of administration reduced, while improved methods have lifted the public service to high efficiency. They see tran- quility, order, security and equal justice restored in the land, a watchful, safe, steady and patriotic administration — the solemn promises made by Democracy faithfully kept. It is 'an honest government by honest men.' " Four years ago you trusted tentativel}' the Democratic party and supported with zeal and vigor its candidate for President. You thought him strong in all the sturdy qualities requisite for the great task of reform. No President in time of peace had so difficult and laborious a duty to perform. His party had been out of power for twenty-four years. Ex-ery member of it had been almost venomously excluded from the smallest post where administration could be studied. Every place was filled by men whose interest it was to thwart inquiry and belittle the new ad- ministration, but the master hand came to the helm, and the true course has been kept from the beginning. " We need not wait for time to do justice to the character and services of President Cleveland. Honest, clear-sighted, patient, grounded in respect for law and justice ; with a thorough grasp of principles and situations ; with marvellous and conscientious industry ; the very incarnation of firmness — he has nobly ful- filled the promise of his party, nobly met the expectations of his country and written his name high on the scroll where future Americans will read the names of men who have been supremely useful to the Republic." APPEARANCE AND HABITS.— Tvtsidcnt Cleveland pos- sesses a strong physique, but has so industrially devoted his time and energies to the duties of his oflice as to render care for ] is health necessary. Gentle in strength, unobtrusive in his modesty and unswcrvcd by partisan clamor, he endeavors to do STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 55 what he, from his personal and political standpoint, regards as right. He is above medium height, quite stout and rather slow in movement. His type is Teutonic, blonde, with ruddy color. His head is large, with a broad forehead, deeply set blue eyes, a large, straight nose, with \igorous nostrils, and a firm mouth, parti}' shaded b)- a drooping light moustache. He generally wears a frock coat, buttoned up so high that only an inch or so of his shirt bosom is visible, with a sliizht black cravat encircline a standing collar. In conversation with strangers he generally stands with his 'hands clasped behind him and when he thinks he has heard enough he brings his hands forward. He rises early, shaves and dresses himself and reads the newspapers until breakfast. He then goes to his library on the second floor of the White House and seats himself at the President's desk, which is made of oak from the ship " Resolute," an English vessel sent to the Arctic regions in search of Sir John Franklin, abandoned in the ice and afterwards rescued by American whalers. The desk was a present from Queen Victoria. On it are arranged the President's correspondence in such a shape as that he loses no time in going through it. At ten a. m. visitors begin to arrive, Senators and Representatives claiming prece- dence. At one o'clock the President goes down-stairs to lunch and on his way walks through the East room to see and be seen by the promiscuous visitors to the White House. Those who have " axes to grind " are referred to the various heads of de- partments, while the bridal couples and curiosity seekers are put off with a hand-shake and a complimentary word. Two days in the week, when the Cabinet meets, these receptions are omitted. After luncheon the President returns to his desk and works steadil}' till five o'clock. None of his predecessors ha\'e ever weighed the qualifications and claims of candidates for Federal a{)pointments with such painstaking care as Mr. Cle\-e- land. He has carefully read the recommendations in every case and, after such investigation as it has been possible for him to make into the character and antecedents of the rival applicants, he has made his appointments. At five o'clock the President takes a drive. At seven he 56 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. dines, and by eight he is back at work, often remaining at his desk till midnight. When asked if he ever carried his work to bed with him, as many nervous men do, he replied : " No ! I generally fall asleep without any difficulty, and never wake until nTorningr." The domestic arrangements of the White Plouse were presided over by the President's sister, Miss Rose Eliza- beth Cleveland, until the date of his marriage. HIS MARRIAGE.— VvQs'xdQnt Cleveland was married at the White House at seven p. m. on June 2, 1886, to Miss Frances Folsom, daughter of his former law partner. Though this was the eighth marriage within the walls of the White House, it was the first in which a President of the United States participated as a bridegroom. It was a plain ceremony, after the Presbyterian form, with the Marine Band to play the wedding march and the President's salute from the guns of the Navy Yard to notify the world that the vows had been finally sealed. This marriage introduced into the executive mansion and to public life one of the most charming ladies of the land. She has borne all her blushing honors meekly and contributed greatly to the socia- bility, vivacity and elegance of the Wl,jite House establishment. RENOMINATED.— As iht time approached for the meeting of the St. Louis Convention, and the eyes of the Democratic party began to turn toward the spot whence should emanate a standard-bearer for the campaign of 1888, there seemed to be but one answer to the question, " Who shall the man be ? " And when Convention day dawned, and the great Democratic party sat in National Council, at St. Louis, on June 5, 1888, when an outlook of the situation was had after a compari- son of political views, when grave men had deliberated and arrived at the mature judgment as to what was best for party success and the tr'umph of immutable principles, there was more than ever one voice in favor of the renomination of President Cleveland. All private likes and dislikes were merged in the common thought that he was the man best calculated by ex- perience, by towering ability as leader, by impregnable record, to bear the party standard through the campaign battles of 1888. No other name wa.^ mentioned in Convention, in connection STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 57 with the Pi'csidcnc}', and when his was mentioned it always awakened an entluisiasni which found \cnt in vociferous and prolonged cheers. For President Cleveland, the St. Louis Convention was both endorsement and ovation. It ratified nearl)' four years of admin- istrative work, and pledged a continuance of confidence and support. That public career which, in 1884, had been limited by State lines, was, at St. Louis, bounded by the horizon of every civilized country. In 1884 he was pledged to his country b)- his party for what he gave promise as President to be. In 1888 no such formal pledge was needed, for as one of the orators in the Convention put it, "He had not only won the ap- plause of his countrymen, but the plaudit of the civilized world of ' Well done, thou good and faithful servant.' " When State after State had risen in that grandly representa- tive Convention to shower on the President its eulogies and pledge him anew its support, the climax was reached at the call of Kentucky, whose spokesman, McKenzie, closed his eloquent tribute to Mr. Cleveland's greatness by saying: '■ Air. Chairman and Gentlemen : I move to suspend the rules and make the nomination of Grover Cleveland for President of the United States absolutely unanimous." This was the last step of that superb movement which ci'owned President Cleveland with the honors of a second nomination. There was no ballot, no contest, no dissent. The Convention rose as a unit, and as a personation of a sentiment which was all pervading, and with a voice Vv hich made the immense spaces of Musical llall ring, acclaimed him the candidate of the Demo- cratic party for 1 888. It was a tribute such as is seldom paid to mortal man. That spontaneous accord, that emphatic pronoimce- ment, contained something higher than the lienors of office, something fuller of meaning tlian a crown. It measured not only the estimation in which the man was held, but it showed the heartfelt gratitude of a party whose destiny he had held sacredly in his keeping through its first period of triumph in tw^enty-four years. It was a ratification of the past, and a tender for the future, not of a man in the shape of a promise, as in 1884, but as a happy and splendid realization. NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION, ST. LOUIS, 1888. I HE National Democratic Committee met, at the call of the chairman, in Washington, D. C, on February 22, 1888, with a full attendance. On that date it was de- ^^■5 cided to hold the National Convention on Jul}' 3, but in the proceedings of February 23 the date was changed to June 5, 1888, and St. Louis was selected as the place — Chicago, New York, Cincinnati and San Francisco being other claimants for the honor. On Tuesday, June 5, in pursuance of the above decision and in obedience to the call to the Chairman of the National Com- mittee, the Convention met at St. Louis Music Hall, and was called to order at 12.25 P- ^^- by Ex-Senator Barnum, of Con- necticut, Chairman of the Democratic National Committee. It was a large, enthusiastic and thoroughly representative asseni- blage, embracing not only the regular delegates, but an audience of 12,000 people, which subdued its cheers with difficulty as Bishop J. C. Cranberry, of St. Louis, extended his hands and began the opening prayer. Hon. Stephen M. White, of California, was elected temporary chairman, an honor he accepted in an eloquent address. After a roll-call of delegates and appointment of the various working committees, the Convention adjourned till 10 A. M. of the 6th. On that date a permanent organization was effected by select- ing Hon. Patrick A. Collins, of Massachusetts, chairman, who also accepted the honor by a thrilling speech. Pending the re- ports of committees, especially that of the Committee on Resolu- tions and Platform, which was anxiously looked for, a motion was made that the speeches placing candidates in nomination for 'H STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 59 The Presidency be heard, but that no further action be taken. This gave Hon. Daniel Dougherty, the "silver-tongued orator," former])' of Philadelphia, but now of New York, opportunity to make the speech placing President Grover Cleveland in nomina- tion. He arose amid such an ovation as is .seldom witnessed in a deliberative body, and spoke as follows to an audience of over 1 2,000 people : I greet you, my countrymen, with fraternal regard ; in your presence I Ijow to the majesty of the people. The sight itself is inspiring, the thought sublime. Vou come from every State and Territory, from every nook and corner of our ocean- bound and continent-covering country. You are about to discharge a^ more than imperial duty, with simplest ceremonials. You, as representatives of the people, are to choose a magistrate with power mightier than a monarch, yet checked and controlled by the supreme law of a written constitution. Tluis..impres-;ed, I ascend tiie rostrum to name tlie ne.\t I'resident of the Ur.ited Slates. New York presents him to the Convention and pledges her electoral voles. Delegations from the tliirty-eight States and all the Territories are assembled without a caucus or consul- tation, ready simultaneously to take up tlie cry and make the vole unanimous. We are here not indeed to choose a candidate, but to name the one the people have alreaily clioscn. Ileistlieman for the people; his career illustrates the glory of our instituti'ins. Eight years ago unknown save in his own locality; he for the last four years has stood in the gaze of the world discharging the most exalted duties that can be confided to mortal. To-day determines that not of his own choice, Iiul by the mandate of his countrymen and with tlie sanction of heaven he sliall fill the Presidency for four years more. He has met and mastered every ques- tion as if from youth trained to statesmanship. The promises of his letter of ac- ceptance and inaugural address have been fulfilled. His fidelity in the past insj^ires faith in the future. He is not a hope. He is a realization. Scormng subterfuge, disdaining reelection by concealing convictions, mindful of his oath of office to defend tlie constitution, he courageously declares to Congress, dropping minor matters, that the supreme issue is reform, revision, reduc- tion of national ta.xation ; that the treasury of the United States, glutted with un- needed gold, oppresses industry, embarrasses business, endangers financial tran(|uil- lity and l)reeds extravagance, centralization and corruption ; that high taxation, vital for the expenditures of an unparalleled war, is rol)bery in years of [jrosjicrous peace; that the millions that pour into the treasury come from tlie hard-earned sav- ings of the American jieople; that in violation of equality of rights the present tariff has created a privileged class who, shaping legislation for their personal gain, levy by law contributions for tlie necessaries of life from every man, woman and child in the land ; that to lower the tariff is not free trade. It is to reduce the un- just profits of monopolists and boss manufacturers, and allow consumers to retain the rest. The man wl'O asserts that to lower tlie tariff means free trade insults in- telligence. We brand him as a falsifier. It is fiuthest frum thought to imperil go STEPHEN GROVER CLE\ ELAND. capital or disturb enterprises. The aim is to uphold wages and protect the rights of all. This administration has rescued the public domain from would-be barons and cormorant cor[)orations faithless to obligations, and reserved it for free homes for this and coming generations. There is no pilfering, and there are no jobs under this administration. Public office is a public trust. Integrity stands guard at every post of our vast empire. While the President has been the medium through wiiich has flowed the undying gratitude of the Republic for her soldiers, he has not hesitated to withhold approval from special legislation if strictest inquiry revealed a want of truth and justice. Above all, sectional strife as never before is at an end and 60,000,000 of freemen in the ties of brotherhood are prosperous and happy. These are the achievements of this administration. Under the same illustrious leader we are ready to meet our political opponents in high and honorable debate and .stake our triumph on the intelligence, virtue and patriotism of the people. Ad- hering to the constitution, its every line and letter, ever remembering that " powers not delegated to the United States by the constitution nor prohibited by it to the States are reserved to the States respectively or to the people." Ily the authority of the Democracy of New York, backed by the Democracy of the entire Union, I give you a name entwined with victory. 1 nominate Grover Cleveland, of New York. CARRIED BY STORM.— Vlu Dougherty's speech was de- livered with fine effect, in his best i;t\-le, and aroused unbounded enthusiasm. When he mentioned the name of Grover Cleve- land, or referred to his pubhc acts or utterances, the Convention fairly shouted itself hoarse. The delegates mounted the chairs, waved their hats, their canes and handkerchiefs. The 12,000 spectators joined in the applause, and tlie band in the east gal- lery helped along with horns and drtuns, but their blare and noise could scarcely be heard above the general din. As Mr. Dougherty finished his impassioned speech some one in the west gallcr\' tore aside a curtain which had hid a portrait of Cleveland, upon the face of the great picture of the Capitol building, revealing to the gaze of the Convention the well-known features of the Presi- dent. This incident aroused the enthusiasm of the Convention to a fever heat. The hall was at once filled with cheer on cheer, and the great body of people in the auditorium, balcony and galleries arose and stood shouting until the din became almost deafening. Hats were thrown in the air, red bandannas waved from a thousand hands and white, black and gray hats were" frantically thrust upon the points of canes and waved until the STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. 01 owners became exhausted. Some one on the stage crowned the bust of the President, on the left of the chairman, with a hiurcl wreath, which was the signal for even a wilder burst of shouts and cheers than before. Although the full band of sixty pieces was in full blast all this time, not a sound from its trumpets could be heard. The climax of this great scene was reached when the banners of all the States were borne by the delegates to the New York standard and draped about it. At this the enthusiasm was unbounded. Spectators and delegates tore the red, white and blue bunting from the pillars and from the face of the balconies and waved these improvised banners all over the hall for ten minutes. This remarkable outburst did not cease until everybody was absolutely exhausted. It was ex- actly twenty-four minutes before the chair was able to regain control of the Convention. When the applause had subsided and the Convention was again under control, the States were called u[)on to second the nomination or make new ones. One by one they responded through their best orators, and all seconded in eloquent terms the nomination already made. It being thus apparent that President Cleveland was the unanimous choice of the Conven- tion, Mr. McKenzie, Ky., moved to suspend the rules and to nom- inate Grover Cleveland for President by acclamation. The chair • put the question, and there was returned from the Convention a thundering chorus of yeas. The chair therefore announced that Grox'er Cleveland, having received an unanimous vote, was the candidate of'the Democratic part)' for the office of President of the United States. When the nomination of Cleveland was an- nounced another scene of wild enthusiasm occurred in the Con- vention, but the delegates and spectators were too nearly ex- hausted to sustain so prolonged a scene as that which followed Mr. Dougherty's speech. There being as yet no report from the Committee on Resolu- tions, and the delegates being tired out h\' incessant cheering, the Convention adjourned at 1.58 p. m. till 10 o'clock of the 7th. A VICE-PRESIDENT. — There were three prominent candi- dates for the Vice-Presidential nomination — Ex-Senator Allen 62 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND, G. Th'irman, Ohio ; Pension Commissioner John C. Black, Il- linois, and Isaac P. Gray, Indiana. At the opening of the Con- vention on the zth, it was evident that the current was running irresistibly in favor of the " Old Roman," as Thurman is called. It therefore took only the brilliant nominating speech of Mr. Tarpey, of California, to throw the Convention into the wildest state of excitement over Mr. Thurman's name. His nomination was seconded by numerous delegates, and it would have re- quired but little more effort to nominate him without the formal- ity of a ballot. But Mr. Gray had been put in nomination by an able speech from Senator Voorhees, and there were many friends of Mr. Black who refused to hearken to his letter of declination. A ballot was therefore taken. Gray held the 30 votes of Indiana solid, as did Black the 6 votes of Colorado. A few other States divided their votes, but the result showed 685 votes for Thurman, 104 for Gray and 31 for Black. The nom~ ination was made unanimous amid an applause which had not been surpassed for prolonged vigor in the entire history of the Convention. Everybody produced a red bandanna and every guidon in the hall was decorated with one. THE PLATFORM. — The work of framing a national plat- form of principles had been entrusted to the ablest men in the party, such as Mr. Watterson, Kentucky; Congressman Scott, Pennsylvania, and Senator Gorman, Maryland, and it was re- ported and endorsed by the Convention on the 7th, the last day it was in session. The full text is as follows : PLEDGES. — The Democratic party of the United States in National Conven- tion assembled renews the pledge of its fidelity to Deniocmtic faith .-ind reaffirms the platform adopted hy its representatives in tlic Conventinn of 1S84, and en- dorses the views expressed hy President Clevehmd in lii.s last annual message to Congress as the correct interpretation of that ijlatlorm upon tlie cpiestion of tariff reduction ; and also enchirses the efforts of our Democratic representatives in Con- gress to secure a reduction of excessive taxation. FAITH. — Chief among its principles of party faith are the maintenance of an indissolul>le Union of free und indestructiliie States, now about to enter upon its second century of unexampled progress and renown ; devotion to a plan of gov- ernment regulated by a written constitution, strictlv s[H'cifying every granted power and expressly reserving to the States or peojile the entire ungranted residue of power ; the encouragement of a jealous popular vigilance, directed to all who have STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. CA been chosen for brief terms to enact antl execute the laws, and are chnrged with tlie duty of preserving peace, ensuring ecjuality and establishing justice. PUBLIC PROSPERITY. — The Democratic party welcome an exacting scru- tiny of the administration of the executive power, which four yeais ago was com- mitte,d to its trust in the election of Grover Cleveland President of the United States, and it challenges the most searching inquiry concerning its fidelity and devo- tion to the pledges which then invited the sufirages of the people. During a most critical period of our fniancial affairs, resulting from over-taxation, the anomalous condition of our currency and a public debt unmatured, it has, by the adoption of its policy, not only avoided a disaster, but greatly promoted the prosperity of the people. PUBLIC LANDS. — It has reversed the imjirovident and unwise policy of the Republican party touching the public domain, and has reclaimed from corporations and syndicates, alien and domestic, ami restored to the people nearly one hundred million acres of valuable laml, to be sacredly held as homesteads for our citizens. PENSIONS. — While carefully guanling the interest of the tax-payers and con- forming strictly to the principles of justice and equity, it has paid out more for pensions and bounties to the soliliers and sailors of the republic than was ever paid before during an equal period. REFORMS. — By intelligent management and a juiiicious and economical ex- penditure of the public money it has set on foot the recon.structinn of the American navy upon a system which forbids the recurrence of scandal and insures successful results. It has adopted ami consistently pursued a firm and prudent foreign policy, preserving pence with all nations while scrupulously maintaining all the rights and interests of our own government and ])eople at home and abroad. The exclusion from our shores of Chinese laborers has been effectually secured under the provi- sions of a treaty, the operation of which has been postponed by the action of a Re- publican majority in the Senate. Honest reform in the civil service has been in- augurated and maintained by President Cleveland, and he has brought the public service to the highest standard of efficiency not only by rule and precept, but by the example of his own untiring and unselfish administration of public affairs. EQUALITY. — In every department and branch of the government under Demo- cratic control the rights and the welfare of all the j)eople have been guarded and de- fended ; every public interest has been jirotecled, and the equality of all our citizens before the law, without regard to race or color, has been steadfastly maintained. Upon its record thus exhibited and upon the pledge of a continuance to the people of the benefits of good government, tiie national Democracy invokes a renewal of popular trust i)y the re-election of a chief magistrate who has been faithful, able and inu- dent. They invoke, in addition to tiiat trust, the transfer also to the Democracy of the entire legislative power. CAPITAL. — The Republican party, controlling the Senate and resisting in both Houses of Congress a reformation of unjust and unequal tax laws which have out- lasted the necessities of war and are now undermining the abundance of a long peace, deny to the people equality before the law and the fairness and justice which are their right. Thus the cry of American labor for a better share in the rewards of industry is stilled with false pretences; enterprise is fettered and bound down g4 STEPHEN GROVER CLEVELAND. to home markets; capital is discouraged with doubt, and unequal, unjust laws can neither be properly amended nor repealed. y^A'/Zr/OiV.— The Democratic party w HI continue, with all the power con- fided to it, the struggle to reform these laws, in accordance with the pledges of its List platform, endorsed at the ballot-box by the suffrages of the people. Of all the in.lu^trious freen.en of our land, the immense majority, including every tiller of the soil, gain no a.ivantage fiom excessive tax laws, but the price of nearly everythnig tliey "my is increased by the favoritism of an unequal system of tax legislation. AH unnecessary taxation is unjust taxation. It is repugnant to the creed of De- mocracy that by such taxation the cost of the necessaries of life should be unjustifi- ably increased to all our people. yA" 63' 75.— Judged by Democratic principles, the interests of the people are be- trayed when, by unnecessary taxation, trusts and combinations are permitted to ex- ist,' which, while unduly enriching the few tliat combine, rob the body of our citizens liy'depriving them of the benefits of natural competition. Every Democratic rule ,.'f governmental action is violated when, through unnecessary taxation, a vast sum <.f money, far beyond the needs of an economical administration, is drawn from ll;e people and the channels of trade and accumulated as a demoralizing surplus in ihe national treasury. SURPLUS AND ZV^i^///".— The money now lying in the Federal treasuiy, resulting from superfluous taxation, amounts to more than one hundred and twenty- lue millions, and the surplus collected is reaching the sum of more than sixty mil- h-.ns annually. Debauched by this immense temptation, the remedy of the Repub- lican i^arty is to meet and exhaust, by extravagant appropriations and expenses,. \vhether constitutional or not, the accumulation of extravagant taxation. The hcmocraiic policy is to cidoice frugality in public expenditure and abolish unneces- s.iiy taxation. Our establishe.l dk8ellors. Newsdealers. 0* mailed, postpaid, to dny address. Stomps takca, rUiJtKIilN MEWS C0.« Box UO'i, PUlada.. tf». f SECTION*. ' 68. Pooin! An Atlantic EpJaodo. Py Jnntln H. McCarthy. A iiowerful and thrilliiiK story of life 00 au American liner. The I'lot is LUten?«. 67. U llllani Shokspcurc ; How, When. Wbj and What ho \\Tote. By U. A. Taiiie. A brilllaiil work that will open the eyes of readers. 5G. Uaoseloa. Princo of Abvssinla. By Dr. Baniuel Johnson. One of those writinus by a mastta mind which no one can aSord not to read. Part II. 55. Part 1. do. 51. Money. By Sir E. Bulwer I ytton. Whoevei bas read Shaknpeare'8 " Herchantol Venice" should read linlwer's" Money." 63. I'PR WofHiigton. By Charlee BeAde. This BiastcriiiL'ce is ono of those exquisite niosalca with which great minds omaiuout their work. Pai't II. 62. Part I. do. 6 1 . Mios Toosey's IVrission, and Laddia Tw* of those rarely amoelvod and chamiinifly told Btorles of home and duty which refresh and inspire. 60. I'nul and Vlrelnia. By licmadlu de St Pierre. It is the "story that never dice." Part II. 49. Part I, do. 48. Cardinal nichellea. By Sir K Bulwet Lytton. One of Pulwer's iiissterpiecce. 47. Kuoch Arden, and other itims. By Alfred Tennyson. In this i>oem the pott is ct lils best. 4ti. Ilunico and Juliet. By William BlaclC. An oxuuiiutu ekstch of tvo fuoUfih lovef a. FECnON 8 7 1 . Tlie Comins Rare, or Kcw Utrrla. By Sff E. Bulwer Lytton. A thrllllntr history of life among an ideal i>cotile in the centre of the earth. Part II. •JO. Part 1, do. Gil. Uulldosnnd Butterfly. Ty David Christie Murray. A spicy stoi-y of human character, not a tit overdrawn. BtilldoKS and butterflies are all around us. t>S. JShe; or .^dventurea In thoCavpg of Kor. Br n.Hid^r Hat'ijnrd. The vigor and variety of tlie book ri^xku it especially chRnuiiiK: Its narrative Impart* a tbnil as It Klidea throu{;a wonderful aceues and events. Part IV. G7. Part III., do. GG. Part II. do. 63. Part I, do. Ct. Cnlderon the Courtier. By K. Wulwer I.ytton. Due of the beet of the threat author's his- toric stories. C3. Wtnblied In the Dark. By E. Lynn Lin. ton. A Rtirrinx- story of the old Neapolitan days, by an author who Inventa ingenloua plots. Part iL 62. Part I. do. 61. Tlie Crirkct on the Uearth. By Charles Dickena Ono of the aweeteet things ever ■nrittcn by I>ickenR, All love it for its beauty and pi.thos. 60. The I,ady of Lyona. By f^lr K. Bulwer Lytton. This is the lady as seen in the celebrated play of the same name. It ranks as tho prettiest picture of ricvotion ever placed on the staKO. 59. Jullu and her Uoineo. By David Chriatlo Umray. TUiii author la always iD^eoious and racy. I SECTION 6. beatonlnif MAT Bth. 1888. 84. I..oy«, Lord KerrcMford. By the Durhegs " A chaniiiiiK Hocietv htoiy. Ono of tho author'H best 83. Cloudd mid SuiiHliiiio. By Charles lleada. A hapi>lly t»i!d story of farm life. 82. The Haunted Houhc. By Sir E. BuIwm Lytton. One ol tlie Ki'eut author's quaintest conctlt* and most happily told storios. 81. John illlllon; When whv, and what ha wrnto. liy II. A. Taiue. .\ workfullor (freatsuri'riB<'a 80. Dr. I>Iarlaold. I5y Charl.-a Wckeiis. One ol Dicken'B crinpest and niont anniHiuK sketches. 79. TheKniijhtHbrldxoHIyhtery. »v(h.irle» Iteade. Concealment is the ai list's Kanie till the fear- ful close bursts like au .Mpiiie avalnncho. 78. Allen Quatermain : the latest and b.st novel from thei>enof the popular 11. Itiilcr HaKKard In this Ktory of African adveuture, tlio author sur- pas.ses the (flowing deiicriiitivo \iKor of She. Part IV. 77. Part HI. do. 70. Vartll.do. 7. T.I 'art I. do. I 74. The Trial of I'lok w Ick. By Charles Dick- ■ ens. This is the first time tho entire story ot thecal. laut Pickwick's adventures with the imiircssiouabl* Mrs. Bardell haw appeared in cf>nnect< d form. 73. Uutv I'lito Ucatli. orUleand Wdrkof Ilcv. GtMirifo C. Iluddnek, Apostle of Prohibition In th« KorthweKt By his brother. John A. Huddock. The Work is au ably written review of the hero, and cou. Uins a KTi^iihic account of Uiii acitatisluutior Part IL 72>PartL do. Section 7« ■• '— • 97 Oiilyby Sifflit and Miss Browii. Two spriifhtly, whjlesouio 8tct;itanil triumph of Justice. 94 Sandra's Oath. A spirited story showing: the devotion of worn an under tho lian of 'a heavy oath, and amid trying home snrroundinifB. 93 She Fell in Love wi< h her Hns- lt.\Ni>. Fullofpa-sslon and plot. I'.eplete with hero, ism, tenderness, temptations and triumphs uf ri(;ht. 92 The Price of a Life. The hero is a Nihllst, the heroine an unsuspectlntr lady who Ciicaiies with her life in a marvelous way, A Uilo of mysteries. 91 Worth or Wealth. An exquisito Btory of human character which holds the reader to tho end Thoroughly enjoyable. 90 Eric Bering and Other Stories. by the "DUCHES Bprig'htly and ke< aud description. This iioinih'.r writer is always Bprig'htly and ke<'U, and makes the most o< 'ucideut 89 That Last Rehearsal. By the "DtJCHESS." A racy and catchinjr story, full of osqni- site surprises and hnely turned innnts. Otherstones. S3 On Her Wedding Morn. By nEUTHA M. ClAY. A very stronfr and chaniiinK character-story, abounding in strikiut; situations aud stirring' narrative. 87 The Hannted Man. Bv Cliarles DICKKNS. The action is rapid, i uthos touchlnir. and one reads with lauKhter, Joy aud tears. The moral is sublime. 86 Sweet is True Lovo. By the "Duchess." A touohinvr story of disapnolntment, estrangement aud recoucilUUou. Oueof thcaulhor's bt«t. 85 Jack of all Trades. By Cliarles KE.VUK. Fvill of comical Pitiiatious, fimuy iiicl. dents of travel, aiulthrUliutf odveutured Vof a colossal elephant. WONDERS or the:. Heavens, Earth and Ocean! By JAMES P. BOYD, A. M. In which The Starry Sky reveals its splendor of Orbs, distances and niotio»s. the "Vasty Deep" diseovers its surprising miracles of vegetable, fish ana terrible monster life; and all the Continents of our Globe unfold their secret rolls of curious, startling and awe-inspiring things and events. 832 Brilliant Fagds. 400 Fine Zngravings. A BOOK OF TRUE WONDERS 1 TRULY A WONDERFUL BOOKl Not a line of fiction, yet no glowing outburst c human imagination ever equalled the hand-writing of Nature on the scroll /f the Sky, the parchment of v-iie Waters or the solid surface of the Earth. Really a series of EIGHTEEN BOOKS IN ONE, and each aglow with rare and wonderful sights, surprising revelations, fasci- nating narratives, heroic deed* and thrilling episodes of travel and adventure. 1. STARRY HEAVENS, mecoocs, cooiets, suas aod buruiaif worlds. 2. THE VASTY DEEP. c.w- aU, »u>iio-llowef:i, pearts, 3. ISLES OK THE SEA, fruits, l>ea3U, peuptet, ciu- lomj, iiMauecs. 4. EGYPT fit THE NILE, pyramids, tcfupld, tombs. woaJrouii ruiivs. 5. SOURCES of Ui« NILE, tlie thrilliuK story of Col. aad L.ady Baker. 6. ZAMBESI, Mv^a^e rtuxt, lions, elevltants, rhinoceri and wonderful cataracts. f. THE CONCX3, Journeys of LivinevCoQe aud Stanley, pen U of lood, climat« and 8. CAPE OF STORMS. Zu- lulaud. hunter's p«EadLs«, diamond mines. 9. LAND OF TEMPLES. paUce«, ^ardetiK. rl. JAPAN * THE JAPS, • trip full of beauties and »««rprlse«. la. ANDES AND PAMPAS, Inc« ruins, eartltqualces. 12- OUR AMERICAN EGYP r. grand old palaces, tree-grown teiujjles. 14. AZTECaNUZUNI. con- quests, legends, cities, tem- ples, ruius. 15. GARDEN of the GODS, natural parks, statuary. •6. ICE-hOUND POLE, sladgca, frecsiagt., eacapes, advenlurea of all the Arc- tic ezplorefs. »}. LANDS OF THE MID NIGHT .SUN. peoples, au Kiras, Keysers. »8. SOUTH POLE, frightful bergs, daugen, all the ex- plorations. Superb in every particular. Excites curiosity. Touches every taste. A feast for all reader*. A marvel of cheapness. Only fa. 50 for over 800 pages of brilliant reading and 400 stlrrine pictures. Sells without talking, all the time, everywhere. Agents report V$ sold in five dayi; J70 in first month; 41 in 57 calls; Sf^i In five weeks; 4IS ins days; SO in a week; 60 in 64 calls; 111 bi 25 days. AOKNTS "WANTED in every county. Book at top wave of success. A fine chance to make money. Write us promptly. Don't hesitate for want df experience or capital. We give full instructions, liberal terms and 30 days' credit. Address P.W. 2iij^cJLER & CO., Publishers, 220 Cliettaut St., PhiUdelphia, Pa., or 113 East Adams St., Chlcngo, III I! ■';,:^-i^r,'i'(:';"-!;l"i" ■.■'- :;i:,:':-r.''a.';;;i;";.5^>^^;i