THE SORANTON' TRIBUTE FRIDAY MOttNTJSTGr, MARCH 5, 1897. 9 THE MEMBERS OF M'KINLEY'S CABINET Brief Sketches of Those Who Will Over, sec the Country's Business. FEW EVER HELD ANY OFFICE 1'coplo Who Hrivo Attained IUrIi Plnccs from Jiowly Hcsslnninc,' Aided Only by American Push and Pcrsovcronco. Washington, D. C Mnrch 4. Senator John Sherman, secretary of state, who lias been the author, sponsor or de fender of some of the most important measures in our legislation, was born at Lancaster, O., May 10, 1823, and left an academy at 15 years of age to take a position with a government survey ing party. It lacks but one years of half a century since John Sherman was chosen a delegate to the Whit? na tional convention of ISIS. It is more than forty years since he entered the house of representatives, and he may b.e said to have come Into the senate with President Elncoln't first adminis tration, for lie took his seat In that body March 23, 1861. He championed the national banking system when It was deemed an Innovation; he shaped the refunding act and that providing for the resumption of specie payments which he, as secretary of the treusury under President Hayes, put In opera tion. When Garfield succeeded Hayes Mr. Sherman returned to the senate. LYMAN J. GAGE. Lyman J. Gage, president of the First National bank of Chicago, 111., Is per haps the most popular man In that city. Even "Tommy" Morgan, the leader of the Chicago Socialists, approves Mr. Gage's appointment, He says that Mr. Gage Is the best man of any whom Mc Kinley would be likely to appoint. No man in the city Is more approachable than the head of the city's biggest bank. Nobody stops the visitor on his way to see him. Mr. Gage Is willing to seen anybody who wants to talk with htm if lie Is not too busy just at that moment. He is Chicago's foremost citizen, and there never has been n movement In Chicago which was for the good of the city, for the good of the people, or for the good of what Mr. Gage never calls the "common people," in which he lias not borne an active part. As bank president his salary Is $25, 000. As secretary of the treasury he will receive but $8,000. Mr. Guge Is not rich. His private fortune is not In ex cess of $200,000, and he Is very far from being the multi-millionaire which some of the papers have called him. He begun his career as a banker at the age of 1" in Home, N. Y. Then he was ofilce boy in the Oneida Central bank, of that town, to which his pa rents had removed seven years before. Their old home had been De Huyter, in Madison county, N. Y., where Ly man Judson Gage had been born on June 2S, 1836. He stayed In Home two years, and then went west to seek ills fortune. RAPID IUSE AS A BANKER. In Chicago he could ilnd no openings for clerks In banks. Therefore Guge went to work In u pinning mill. He spent only a few months shoving lum ber, when the manager, noticing Ills in telligence, gave him a place In the of fice, where he remained until 1S5S. Then he re-entered the banking busi ness, becoming a bookkeeper for the Merchants' Savings, Loan and Trust company. From that time his rise In the profession of banking was rapid. Within a year lie had become paying teller; thenasslstant cashter.and finally, nt the age of 25 years, he was cashier of the bank. Twenty-eight years ago he began his connection with the First National bank, having been appointed cashier. Even then he was the virtual manager of the Institution, which pros pered greatly. When It was reorgan ized in 1S82 he was elected vice presi dent, and In 1S91 he succeeded S. M. Nickerson as president. He is down at his olllce before the bank opens in the morning. He seldom comes down town In a carriage, unless Mrs. Gage is going to drop him on' on her way to do some shopping, Usually he goes down on a lumbering stage called a "carette." Often he sits alongside the driver, with whom he is quite confi dential. Mr. Gage has never lipid an office. The nearest approach to this was when he was president of the Chicago board of directors of the World's fair. When It was decided that the fair should be held In Chicago there was no talk of any one else for the presidency of the board of directors. It was he who prevented the selection of the lake front as the site. Mr. Gage resigned from the presidency of the World's fair when lie was made presi dent of the First National bank. In 1891. There has never been any public movement in Chicago In which Mr, Gage has not been Interested. The civic federation, the great municipal reform association, which Is directly responsl ble for whatever good there is In the Chicago city government, whb organ ized largely through his efforts, and he has been president of it for two years He lias not been a strong party man, but he has always voted for Republi cans In preference to Democrats, and Blaine is the only Republican he has voted against as a president. He presided over the conferences be tween bankers, socialists, anarchists and single taxers in Chicago, which fol lowed the riots, and often had the meet ings In his own parlor. In social life Mr. Gage is also popular. He is a member of the two leading clubs of Chicago the Chicago club und Union League club. He is a member and former president of the Commercial club, membership of which Is limited to sixty. It is popularly called the Millionaires' club. Mr. Gage was the llrst president of the Hankers' club. In 1S83 he was elected president of the American Bankers' association, and held tills office three successive years, He is a patron of art and has a fine library. 'RUSSELL A. ALGER, The career of General Russell A, Al ger, who will huve the war portfolio In President McKinley', cabinet, Is an en couraging study for those who have life still before them. He has risen to his present distinction and success by controlling circumstances, by attacking and conquering obstacles, by seeing and improving opportunities, by a good un derstanding and careful conservation and employment of gifts and by pluck, energy and honesty. At thirteen years of ago he was left an orphan, with a parent's responsibil ities. He had a brother and sister both younger than himself. That was Ills Inheritance. Of worldly ioods he was absolutely destitute. But lie possessed resolution, integrity and courage, and he went to work. He has been at work ever since. When lie reached the age of twenty one lie was qualified to teach a district pcliool, and took up thut occupation, In a year or two he was qualified for ad - mission to the bar and went to Cleve- land, O., to enter upon ills profession. On the last day of 1860 he set out for Michigan with a little borrowed capital and entered Into the. lumber business ut Grand Rapids with a friend. The following year the young men lost everything they possessed by the fail ure of a Chicago firm, young Alger having In the meantime married, The breaking out of the civil war opened a now and exciting chapter In Ills life, it was during the August af ter Fort Sumter was fired upon that lie enlisted In the Second Michigan cavalry and was soon after made captain of Company C. A brother captain wns Philip H. Sheridan. When Gordon Granger, the colonel of his regiment, was promoted lie sent Captain Alger as an emissary to Governor Blair to induce him to appoint Sheridan, the acting commissary on General Hal leck's staff, to the vacant command. In this service lie was entirely success ful, und thus Identified himself with v n l JAMES A. Postmaster the start that cave the great cavalry officer his rapid rise. Alger served un der him at the battle of Boonville, Mo where lie was wounded and taken pris oner, but escaped the same day. About a year after his enlistment he was made lieutenant colonel of the Sixth Michigan cavalry and colonel of the Fifth two or three months before the close of tile war. Before that also he had been brevetted brigadier gen eral of volunteers for gallant and mer itorious service at Trevllle Station, and the June following the close of the war he was brevetted major general for general "gallant and meritorious" ser vice. It is said that during his mili tary career he was in more than sixty battles and minor engagements. He went through the battle of Gettysburg unharmed, but was seriously wounded nt BoonesborouKh. Maryland, in less than a week after tho more memorable conlllct. The wirr following lie was employed by President Lincoln in con fidential service, and while thus en gaged visited nearly every army In the Held. After the war he returned to Michi gan, and laid the foundation for a for tune in lumber. In 1S34 he was elected governor by the largest Republican, vote ever cast in tho stat?. He has three sons and three daughters, and it has long beer, his custom to buy a suit of clothes for every newsboy In Detroit for Christmas. JOHN D. LONG. Of Hon. John Davis Long, who is to be secretary of the navy under Mr. MeKinley's administration, it may be said that he has a positive gift for popularity. To know him is to like him. His pub lic career lias covered but 22 years. He was 37 years old when he took his seat in the house of representatives, for iff 53$ mm Vi t HIT, Jffiw V i CORNELIUS N. BLISS, Secretary uf the Interior. he was bom in Buekfleld, Me., October 27, 1S3S. Ho was the son of parents who had neither poverty nor riches, but possessed tho golden mean which en ables so many New England rural fam ilies to look forward to sending pans Into the woild well educated. Mr. Long entered Harvard, where lie grad uated in 1857. some months before lie had attained his nineteenth birthday, He was admitted to the bar In 1SG1, but did not succeed In Buekfleld, where he hung out ills sh'lngle, so returned to Boston. In tho house of 1875 lie gained un Immense and Immediate popularity and 'when Its successor met and found Mr. Long a member he was the almost spontaneous choice for speaker. This position he held in 1S76, '77 ami '78. He hud tho great art of getting tho house to work without letting it realize that it was being pushed. He was elected gov ernor of Massachusetts In 1879, 1680 and 1S81, defeating General Butler. Ho was sent to tho Forty-eighth, Forty-ninth and Fiftieth congresses, whero ho confirmed on the stago of natlonul J affairs the reputation he had won in Massachusetts. Greatly interested in temperance work through the agency of mon;l suasion, he bus long been presi dent of the Massachusetts Total Absti nence society. An active Unitarian, ho lias also been president of the Unitarian club. "1 have no especial aptitude for tha nnvy department," said he, recently, "no more than nny well-lnfonucd man who is Interested In all public matters. 11 was simply a question of wanting a man from New England, and when Mr. Dlngloy refused to go Into tho treasury department Major McKinlcy asked If t would accept a cabinet place. As I un derstand it, the work of tho navy de partment is divided aniotigiwoll-organ-lzed bureaus, whoso officers1 understand what Is needed." JOSEPH M'KENNA. "lie is a careful, painstaking, labor ious, honorable and just Judge," snld one of the members of the San Francis- GARY, General. co bar of Judge Joseph McKonna, who will be attorney general. Judge Me Kenna Is not, strictly speaking, a Cali lornian. He has resided in that state continuously since 1855, in which year he came to the Pacific coast. Ho was born In Philadelphia on August 10, 1S43. His appearance today is that of a man of 40, and ware It not for the slight tinge of gray in his hair lie could pass for a still younger man. Mr. Mo Kennn is a member of the Roman Cath olic church, worshipping at St. Mary's Cathedral, San Francisco. In politics James McKenna Is, of course, a staunch Republican.' His ex perience in public life dates back to 1S75, when lie was elected to the as sembly of the state of California. In 1S76 he received tho nomination for congress In the Third congressional district of California, but was defeated, the district being Democratic. He did not despair of being a congressman, however, and, upon leceivlng the nom ination for the third time, was elected In 1SS1 to the Forty-ninth congress. He was successively elected to the Fiftieth, i'ltty-nrst and Fifty-second con gresses, and, while serving in the last was appointed by President Harrison a United States circuit judge. During the period of his service at Washing ton it is known that Judge McKenna was thrown Into contact with Major McKinley to a considerable extent. He was a member of tho ways and means committee, presided over by the presi dent-elect, which reported the McKin ley tariff bill to the house. JAMES WILSON. The new secretary of agriculture is spoken of by Iowans who know him well as a large all-around man. His career in congress was creditable, but perhaps not brilliant. His speeches are substantial rather than eloquent. Mr. Wilson is a practical farmer und ills estate In Tama county is said to be worth $50,000, which signifies a pretty good Iowa farm. James Wilson was born August 16, 1835, in Ayshire, Scotland, of parents belonging to the farming class of the population. His parents Immigrated to Connecticut In the spring of 1852, and began farming In the vicinity of Nor wich. They came to Iowa in the fall of 1S55, buying government land In Tama county, James is the oldest of a family of fourteen children, Boven boys and seven girls. His father, John Wil son, was a stock farmer and began at an early day to fatten stock for the eastern market. The family pursued diversified farming from the beginning, having the dairy feature prominent from the llrst us well as that of meat making. For many years Mr. Wilson was a teacher in the country schools near old Bickingham and West Union, and so poor wuh lie that oven in the coldest weather he was compelled to go barefooted. In the course of time lie accumulated money enough to pur chase the magnificent farm of twelve hundred acres which he now owns, There Is probably not another farm In tho state so well Improved In all re spects. For many yenrs he was a breeder of fancy cattle, and In that business he hns made a competence. He served several terms in tho Iowa assembly.and was elected to the Forty third and Forty-fourth congresses. Ho retired at the end of his second term to ills farm, when lie was appointed by Governor Sherman a member of tho railway commission. After serving one year he resigned to lake his sent In tho Forty-eighth congress. At tho end of tills congiess ho again retired to ills fnrm, when several editors of county papers arranged with hint to write weekly letters for their papers, which ho lias continued until the present time. In 1391 he was elected director of the Iowa srtntlon and professor of agriculture by the trustees of the Iowa Agricultural college, positions lie has held up to tlie present time. The col lege during the time lie has been con nected with It hns had an era of great prosperity. When Mr. Wilson was in the house the other James Wilson was in the senate from tli'e same state, and, what was more curious still, James Wilson succeeded Jumes Wilson McDItl hi that senate. But tho two Wilsons were distinguished In congress In tills way: The senator came from Fairfield, and ills middle Initial was F., so he was known as "Fairfield" Wilson, so that people usually supposed that was Ills, middle name, and there Is nothing In the congressiotu.l directory to show thut It was not. The other Jumes Wil son, now selected fur tho culnot, had now no middle Initial, but ns he came from Tama county, lie wusjkiiuwn as "Tama Jim," and so the twb Wilsons were distinguished. JAMES A. GARY. James A. Gary is the new postmaster general, He wears n heavy beard and moustache, and has all the outward and visible slgn3 of a man of substance. He Is a man with whom politics has been more a recreation than a profession. He Is first a business man, having made ills millions In manufacturing cotton goods, but commercial mutters have never been quite so pressing ,that lie could not find time to take a hand in public affairs when questions of real Interest have arisen. Ever since the Republican party was formed lie lias been working and hoping for a party victory in Maryland. He had accepted nominations for congress and governor when there was no pros pect of success but after each defeat tho Republicans rallied, Mr. Gary con tributed liberally and the fight went on. Now that success lias finally come to Maryland Republicans Mr. Gary re- ueivrs as ms rewuru HIS llrst olllce. For many years Mr. Gary lias held the position of "one of Maryland's fore most citizens." In every list of repre sentative men of Baltlmoio his name is among Hip first, whether in com merce, politics or public reform. But with all this conservatism there is no business man in Baltimore more up-to-date than the millionaire merchant-politician. He works from 9 a. m. to 4 p. m. every day on business. He is a director in half a dozen corpor ations and Is as active as any young man In Baltimore. As president of tho Merchants' and Manufacturers' asso ciation he represents the commercial industries of the city. Mr. Gnry was born in Connecticut in 1S33, but was taken to Baltimore by his parents when live years old. The elder Gary founded the business that the son now carries on. Mr. Gary has one of the largest private residences In the city. Near Coatesvlllo ho has a fine country place. His family consists of his wife, one son and seven daughters, who will take a leading place in official society of the capital. They are beau tiful women, of the queenly Baltimore type. Mr. Gary entered politics In 1S5S, when he was nominated for state sena tor, but was not elected. He was an Abolitionist and strongly supported the Union during the war. He first went as a delegate to a national con vention In 1S72, and he lias attended every one since then. He lias been Maryland's member of the Republican national committee for elsht years. CORNELIUS N. BLISS. Cornelius N. Bliss, the secretary of the interior, was born in 1S33, at Fall River, Mass. He traces his ancestry In this country to the year 1035. He is head of the wholesale dry goods firm of Bliss, Fabyan & Co. In politics he has long been within the city as promi nent as in business. Until now lie has treated politics us strictly an avocation to which he could make no sacrltices which might interfere with his regular business. It was strictly upon the ground of his unwillingness to neglect his business that he based hla refusal for the second time some six weeks ago to accept the portfolio then of fered him. He once, for a similar rea son, declined a nomination for the governorship when the nomination would lie equivalent to election. He was one of the earliest and most un compromising of the promenent antl Plutt Republicans, and down to a re cent period maintained the strife against Iintt. Then, however, there was a noticeable remission of hostility, and so far as any explanation could ever be drawn from Mr. Bliss it was that the necessity of harmony In the party required a non-lnslsence upon factional differences. He has served ills party well In purely organization offices, having often been a delegate to city, county and state conventions. In 1SSI lie was chairman of the commit tee of 100 business men appointed at a public meeting in Cooper Union to at tend the national convention in Chi cago for the purpose of urging the nomination of President Arthur. In 1889 he took an Important part In the Pan-American conference of that year, Mr. Bliss holds In the business world many positions of honor und trust. He has been chairman of the executive committee and Is vice president of the Chamber of Commetce; lie Is vice pres ident of the Fourth National bank, a director In the Home and Equitable In surance companies and the Central Trust company, governor and treasurer of the New York hospital and chair man of the uoaru or trustees of the Broadway tabernacle. He was treas urer of the Republican national com mittee In the last two campaigns. WALL STREET CELEBRATES. rings, n Song mid Cheers on tho 1'Ioor of the Stock Rxclinugo. New York, March 4. The Inauguration of President McKinley means much to those engaged In financial enterprises, and the event wus quietly celebrated In thut part of tho city where the banks, the sub treasury und the Stock Exchange is lo cated. Heforo noon flags began to glvo color to Wall, Nassau, Broad, William, New streets and Exchange Place, Lower Broadway was also dotted with tho Stars and Sullies. It was not until noon that the Stock Exchange celebrated. Just us tho bauds of tho clock pointed tho hour several hun dred brokers gathered on tho tloor und began singing "America." They sang with a will and not unmusically. Then followed thiee cheors for McKinley, und buislnefcs was resumed, THE SUN'S VIEW OF GROVER CLEVELAND Wlia( 4 Charles A. Dana Has to Say About (lie Ex-Presiihul. A WORMWOOD-SBASONED FAREWELL Powerful Searchlight Is Turned Up on the Itutiring President's .11 any N'onknosscs-A Review of diame ter That Savors lif the Proverbial Plain, Unvarnished Tnlo. This is tho Now York Sun's farewell: Tho fairest estimate ot Orover Cleve land's public career would perhaps bo one rm $ l JOSEPH McKENNA, Attorney General. separating rigidly his achlovemnts from his personal charcterlstics, and admitting nplther friendly nor hostile consideration. The question then would be, not what Is he, but what has lie really done for lits party, his country, or mankind In gen eral? Great men are finally measured in that way. If it were now possible to con sider Mr. Clevlnnd's publico career apart ftom the enmities lie tins provoked and the adulation ho has enjoyed, the conclu sions of lilstoty concerning him would doubtless be very accurately prefigured. Hut we are confronted at the outset by tho circumstance, without parallel proba bly, in American experience, that the sell appointed custodians of the twenty-second piesldent's fame demand that he shall bo judged according to another standard tlian that of accomplished re sults. As a citizen, it Is not his deeds that are to be weighed for valuation, but his Indefinite posing as a type and on exemplar. As a politician it is not a question of equivalent rendered for hon ors conferred and confidence bestowed, but wo must constantly remember that ho 1st greater than his party, and that tho fortunes of his party under his leadership are of trilling significance when com pared with his personal fortunes. As a Democrat he must not be Judged by his fidelity to the principles that make the party, and that have marked and moulded Its long line of eminent worthies front Jefferson to Tlldcn; for he is greater than Democracy. As a statesman In suprcm olllce he is not subject to tho tests and limitations established for the safeguard ing of our system of Institutions; for he Is greater than the olllce filled by Wash ington and Lincoln. As an American his personality emancipates him from prece dents and entitles him to promulgate a revised patriotism, and to decide, obiter, what constitutes true Americanism; for he is more patriotic than patriotism, and greater than America. Such is the extra ordinary basis upon which the impartial critic of this day or future days is invited to cons'der Mr. Cleveland's record; and the tr.!tatlon forces the Investigator, in spite of any reluctance which he may en tertain, to take largely Into account the JAHES P. Secrrtury uf heart and soul and cranial convolutions of the limn himself. HIS ANTECEDENTS. Up to tho ago of 45 or thereabouts Mr. Cleveland lived the narrow and not al ways refined or regular llfo of a ismali local politician and uetty professional man; and such uterances on public ques tions as ho wus then prompted to make ueio not heard beyond the Buffalo beer biiops of Mr, Goetz and Mr. Mergenhn gen. He was elected sheiilT. and stolidly executed with his own hands tho most r pulslvo functions of that olllce. He was cho?en mayor, and Industriously wroto communications to tho common counolt charged with ponorous genarallties which sounded lial enough at tho time, but were destined later to become parts of nu Im posing ritual. A political Occident gave him the Democratic nomination for gov ernor of Now York In the year when tho Republican party was lent by the striro of the Stalwart and Half Breed factions; and his plurality of nearly 200,000 ovw iioor Folger was at once characteristically accepted by himself, and by h'.a now in creasing contingent of political adherents, us u special tribute to his individual qual iho.itlans. At Albany he was Industrious, with that minute Industry which consid ers self as an IndUpensablo factor la w!KMk y till f every ndmlnlstrntlvo detail; and he was likewise Independent with that Independ ence which springs from a growing mas nlllcatlon ot the third vowel, At this stage he was described by our neighbor, the Times, as' "a parochial stutesmatij" and the samo Journal ventured to cast un warranted doubts upon his strict honesty as a public olllclal, Hut It happened that Mr. Cleveland's term nt Albany was co Incident with the development in national politics of two general conditions, which ills shrewd senso of pcrsonhl opportunity tho habit of mind which. impelled air. Tlldcu to characterize him ua "tho most selfish politician I have ever known" fastened upon and utilized for nil they were worth, One was tho returning wavo of Democratic success which had pre vailed Ineffectually In tho election of 1876. The other wns tho appearance In our polities of a body of voters of a now school, nnxlotis to Ilnd a hero III to reflect their own Intense sclf-cotisclousncss, ready to turn to any issue branded Re form, and rather Indifferent as to actual performances, If the performances were accompanied by nobly resonant words, These lnlluences, together with his for tuitous majority for governor of New York and tho general obscurity which Is sometimes styled availability, put Mr. Cleveland into the white house twelve years ago today, as the accidental repre sentative of a hundred years of Democra cy, and of Democracy's hopes for a cen tury to come. HIS CONCEIT. All this Is now ancient history, but a brief review of It has been necessary to an understanding of the evolution of the man and the significance of this second term, which the merciful course of Time and tho hand of a beneficent Providence have now happily brought to a close. Ho began as an Accident, he developed as an Ego, and he ends as a Destroyer. Next, as to the development of the Ego, This process has gone on swiftly, as swift ly as in his always sapient judgment tho public forbearance would tolerute. He bus studied and learned in progress not only the extent of the market for solemn didac tics, .but also the danger line for personal assertion and arroiwtlon. The role of his ambition has been that assigned to him by the complaisant Bayard, that of the strong ruler of a violent people, but lie has as sumed It gradually. Between the first of the first term and the second half of tho second term, wherein the period of in trigue for a third term merged into the final phase of utter carelessness of con sequences, there is all. the difference that exists between politic reserve and reck less self-disclosure. He went Into of fice in 1SS5 with the declaration that he knew he had been "chosen to represent tho plans, purposes, and policy of tho Democratic party." His natural vanity, abeted by the entreaties of some incom parable fools, convinced him before long that his mission was to formulate anew the plans, to determine for himself tho purposes, and to dictate out his own in wards the policies of a party that had once been Democratic. Ho crawled like a hermit crab. Into the interior of a great political organization, occupying It, ap propriating It to himself and his own glory and advancement, and constituting WILSON, Agriculture, himself, as far and as fast as ho was able, its living monopolist und Its motive puwer. The conceptions uf political grati tude, representative capacity, responsi bility to Democracy's past and for its future, were speedily eradicated from hU mind, If, indeed, they had ever been im planted there. To Washington he carried amazing Ignorance of every political and economical question, and an unparalelled lack of fixed convictions on any political subject beyond the minor matters of ad ministrative routine; and this absence und this uncertainty he concealed behind words laboriously chosen from the dic tionary. He btudled diligently his copy of the "Statesman's Manual," and found in Its pages both ideas and phrases which needed only his utterance to become his own. Probably to his immense surprise nt first, ho found thut his platitudinous versions of venerable Ideas were hailed by a considerable and very voluble part of tho American public as tho revelations and Inspirations of a vast, original politi cal genius. Thus there grew up In him tho firm und apparently sincere belief, perhaps the moat characteristic and cer tainly the most amusing feature of his Intellectual make-up, that a truth needed to be accepted and uttered by him In or der to possess public Importance. He had discovered early tho potency of the word Heform.but reform was, iiptreform un til the Word wirH'phUii.tJMfyith?Cleve land. Successively the various Issues to his attention, or his always keen expe dient, were nbsorbed Into his capacious sclf-consclousneas und became part of tho Cleveland whole, and went forth again ns emanations ot Cleveland. Thus ho bo camo greater than Democracy. auowixa aitEATKH. The psychological process by which ho also bocomo greater than the presidential office Itself -was similar In origin and de velopment, Hn entered the white houso with tho declaration, suggested to hit) then comparatively modest mind by tho utter anccs of some of his Democratic prede cessors, that the ambition of tho oocu pnnt of that mansion to get himself re elected, constituted nt once tho most se rious absncla to thu proper performance of executive duties, nnd the gravest men ace to tho permanenco of our republican Institutions. Ho began, In fact, by pledg ing himself practically to n single torm. It Is not profitable to trace step by step the evolution of the candidate for a Beo ond nomination, the cnndldato for a third nomination and a second term, tho un successful candidate for a fourth nomlna. tlon and a third term, nnd the man who goes out of olllce today upheld by tho entire Mugwump circlet In. his private uenei nun uie country win discover dur ing the next four years that he Is Indis pensable to Its. welfare, und will surely demand! his return In spite ot traditions and unwritten laws. He Is not wholly to blame for this. Thu lnlluences which have wrought that great change in twelvo years are botli from without ami from within him. From a chief magistrate loudly celbrated at the stnrt as tho Ideal devotee of law and constitutional restric tions, he has educated himself and has been educnted by others to be, In his view of his office and Its functions, tho nearest approach to the Irresponsible dictator, tha self-contained ruler, that we havu over had as president. He has done more than any other president to famllarlzu the pub lic mind with the dangerous idea that a personal government, a substantial auto cracy, Is more convenient and In somo respects preferable to government by tho co-ordinate departments which the founders of the republic erected as a check against tho aggrandizement of any ambitious Individual. Dining the last half of his second term his attitude In this regard has been openly offensive. The congress Is a nuisance, avd he Is an noyed when he ha.s the national legisla ture "on his hands." Tho constitutional question between tho senate and tho ex ecutive ns to their relative powers In the shaping ot foreign policy Is decided by him off-hand In his own favor, and upon his own unsupported authority. This ul timate period In tho development of tho man who Is larger than the olllce of presi dent is marked yet by a pretence of re spect for law, but It must be. law as laid down by Cleveland, or as Interpreted by him. Thero is yet; much tulk, In the old so norous fushlori, of direct responsibility to tho people, the source of supremo power, who have constituted him as a sort ot uni versal trusteo and receiver; but tho peo ple he means are the people who clamor for more Clevelnnd. Even in the subor dinate but not less significant matter of tho use of government property for pri vate convenience, and the employment of olllclal opportunities for personal gratifi cation or prdlVti the Cltlaens of this coun try have gradually become accustomed to the same dumb, stolid Insensibility to restraints which have appealed to con science or the creed ot propriety In the cases of twenty-two other presidents, with possibly one partial exception. From Pan-Electilc to Perrlne, from Wall street to Ilntteras Inlet, he has proceeded upon tho theory that a unique personality nulli fies the ordinary limitations affecting tho president of tho United States. Such Is tho metaphysical and personal aspect of Clcvelandlsm. What results have theso qualities wrought? RESULTS ACHIEVED. Very meagre, except In words, and even more meagre In nouns than'ln ndjectlves, Is the record of nctual achievement now exhibited as tho Hon. Grover Cleveland's title to bo regarded as "the greatest pres ident since Washington." lie took up civil service reform, with tho principles of selection for supposed merit, of perma nence of tenure, nnd of federal non-interference in elections. Ho applied those principles by the wholesale and with con sequences whereof the value is yet to bo determined by experience, whenever his personal fortunes had nothing to lose by their application; and whenever he per ceived any benefit to himself from their violation, he violated them openly and defiantly. He took up tariff reform, used It for ono year to procure his own renoml nation and the overwhelming defeat of his party, and then traded polltlcaly dur ing four years of retirement upon his constantly proclaimed purpose to conquer or die with that cause; and having thereby got back itrfo ofilce, he deliberately plot ted and betrayed the reform which hla party had demanded, and gave the coun try a ridiculous and Ineffective, tariff act, plus a socialistic Income tax, which the Supremo court overthrew. Ho found a consistent protective tariff that produced a revenue adequato for tho government's needs' and a surplus large enough for safety; and ho left an incongruous pro tective tariff that produces annually an immense deficiency, and. that has, during its dishonest and dieful existence, de volved upon the country financial confu sion and business distress beyond the power of figures to measure or ot lan guage to describe. He lias Increased tho public debt, In a time of peace with all the world, by more than a quarter of a billion of dollars. He has borrowed money on false pretences, compelling tho taxpayers to pay for his disastrous tariff experiment while informing them that they were sustaining the government's credit. Ho has rendered, even if indirect ly and disingenuously, some service in tho way of helping to maintain a sound cur rency; but In so doing, and always with his selfish Interests steadily In view, he ha3 broken tho Democracy in pieces, re inforced the hosts of socialism and anar chy, and wrecked for the time, If not Ir reparably, the futuie of one of this na tion's great historical political organiza tions. He has destioyed the Democratic idea as a living force, and has given us In Its place a socialism of discouragement and discontent which finds Its heaviest ammunition in .Mr. Cleveland's own let ters and speeches. Ho has sounded tho bugle call for the enemies of thrift and the assailants of every owner's rights to tho accumulations of his ability and in dustry. The Supreme court, wo say, de feated his socialistic Income tax; but no Supreme court, no power under heaven save tho common sense and common hon esty of the people, long and vigilantly ex ercised, can counteract the stimulus which the forces of disorder have re ceived through the sullen pessimism and Inflammatory philosophy ot his socialis tic teachings. He goes, but they remain, the most lasting and most pernicious lega cy ot Clevelandlsm. ONE BRAVE DEED.- Once, to his honor, he has been led to lntervcno for tho suppression ot domestio riot. Once, ulso to Ids honor, ho has sound ed a note of genuine Americanism In a communication to a foreign power. Tho Chicago strike proclamtlon and the Vene zuela message shine all the brighter be ciuihe ot the black background, but be yond them, ranging through tho whole dismal story of effort and Intrigue to pre vent the national expansion, to restore monarchy In one Island to perpetuate It In another, to evade tho responsibilities of neighborhood, humanity, and republi can sympathy, to avoid our national duty to our own citizens in prisons at tho mer cy of butchers, and finally to compensate for all these outrages of commission and cilmcs of omission by Juggling tho United States Into a humbug treaty of perpetual peace with a nation which tho world has always had to pay heavily to be peaceful i running through all tho record of Mr. Cleveland's domestic and foreign achieve ments, whero else do you find any con spicuous deed recorded which Justifies the Mugwump theory that tho Man tfnd not tho Principles is what this country needs at Washington to rule it and to shape Its destinies? What wonder .that nn overwhelming majority of Americans will remember with heurtfelt gratitude March ), 1897, as a day ot dullverance and tho starting point of a new era of good feeling and hopel