Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 35, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 September 1884 — Cleveland and Labor. [ARTICLE]
Cleveland and Labor.
(From ttifi I'mlnge l{e|>ul»l'fii>;.i At the immense workingmen’s mas meeting recently held in New York City, a declaration of twenty four reasons for voting for Cleveland was adopted and one hundred thousand copies ordered to be printed for distribution. The declaration sets forth in comprehensive language the benefits accruing and to accrue to workingmen in every one of Grover Cleveland’s vetoes of legislative measures concerning which Republican papers have attempted to make capital, and wherein his approval of other measures tend to the general welfare of that common wealth. The workingmen of New York rightly conclude that a man who has the ability to faith fully and impartially govern a. great State can be trusted to fill the presidential chair. Their confidence in Cleveland will not be misplaced. How many libel suits will Mr. Blaine bring now. For example will he sue James Gordon Bennett for saying of him in the Herald “As a friend he was false to his friends; as a swindler he was false to his associates, whom he aided in defrauding the government.’ This is highly libelious—ultra libellous. Let Mr Blaine try his hand at a libel suit against James Gordon Bennett. —L I. City Star.
