Democratic Sentinel, Volume 8, Number 39, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 October 1884 — Marvelous Restorations. [ARTICLE]

Marvelous Restorations.

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One of the great speeches of he campaign was that recenty made iazMassachusetts by Jr. William Everett, a son of he distinguished scholar and •rator, Edward Everett. Dr. Averett has always been a reublican. but he is in earnest n his obposition to Blaine, nd states the reasons for his ourse with rare clearness and orce. His analysis of the >oasted foreign policy of the magnetic candidate presents hatcompound of knavery and uackeryin its true colors: “How did Mr. Biaine adninister the department of tate? For here alone can we udge ot his qualifications for iign executive office: and we .re told he is needed to give is a brilliant American policy, and enable the U. S. to asume a true position in the vorld. And when did the U. 5. fail to assume the true, exited, American position? In vhat administration, under vhat secretary, I beg to know, las our foreign policy been anything but American? Vhat secretary has truckled >r cowered when American toner has been at stake? Run >ver the list of secretaries of tate—a noble one it is—and isk when we rfelt ashamed of he dispatches sent from Vashington. Did Jefferson, »ur first secretary, lower us?— )r Pickering, »or Marshall, or Madison, or Monroe,or Adams, >r Clay, or Livingston, or Foryth, or Webster, or Calhoun, >r Clayton, or Everett, or Mary, or Buchanan, or Seward, >r Fish, or Evarts? Has Engand, or France, or Austria, or tpain, or Russia, or Mexico, bund us silent or fawning yhen spoliations or boundaies, or fisheries, or personal ights were at stake? Martin r an Buren stooped to court he government of England, nd the senate, under the lead t Clay and Webster, inflicted

scathing punishment. There r as nothing whatever needed o maintain an American poliy and national honor, but that Ir. Blaine should follow in lis predecessor’s steps. And diat did he do? ’He succeedd in a few short months, in icking a petty quarrel with alf a dozen of the most (rejectable foreign representaives; he sent Mr. Lowell highounding and vag U£ instrucions on the tendered jpoint of ational honor, and then left im to work out the anxious nd thankless details?, without fleeting one thing, .either to laintain good feeling with ingland or to defend our own itizens. He showed the most stounding ignorance »■ of our reaty obligations. He tried ) hinder the pacification of 'eru, as she was bleeding uner the sword of Chili, until a rivate claim of very doubtful alue could be thrust into the reaty, and he sent to repreant us in South America men /hose worthlessness was too arefaced for evena United tates army coat to hide. And 11 through his term of office lere was just that fussy, selfssertion which m’ght make a ot-headed, warm-hearted .elf elieve he was going to make ar, but which would alterately disgust and amuse cool iplomatists without frightling them one bit; in two ords, Mr. Blaine’s career as cretary of state was bluster id fluster.”

The Cincinnati Enquirer ys: ‘ Had Ohio gone demo?atic on Tuesday, Mr. Blaine ould have been practically it of the national fight. He left in by a scratch. He is , factor in the November enigement by means of the auds in October, and the forof independent re- ? iblcans with the republican ' ate ticket,” The time so r le independents to speak has it yet.arrived. It will come i the] 4th day of November, here will be no forbearance • len, and if the independent • : ement .is as strong in Ohio as . has been represented to be, > i s vote may be all that is needed to pull the state out of the republican rut.

rhe honest and respectable >ters of the country need > otection, but not the protec- ’ >n preached by the dema<ue from Maine. They ? ;d protection from the in- . nous gangs of aimed United ites manuals and their bruU ignorant negro deputies, o shoot them down at the dis.