Democratic Sentinel, Volume 16, Number 43, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 November 1892 — Some Cleveland Utterances. [ARTICLE]

Some Cleveland Utterances.

The world has not produced so grand a spectacle as a nation of freedom determining its own cause. We seek to win a victory which shall redeem the pledges we have made to regard constantly the interests of the people of the land. We have nowon hand all the silver dollars necessary to supply the present needs of the people, and to satisfy those who from sentiment wish to see them in circulation. This reflection lends to the bestowal of pensions a kind of sacredness which invitee the adoption of such principles and regulations as will exclude perversions as well as insure a liberal and

generous application of grateful and benevolent designs. A party should at all times, and in all places, be made to feel the consequences of their misdeeds as long as they have remaining any power for harm, and as long as they justify and defend their wrong-doing. I am convinced that our duty to those who have trusted us consists in pushing on, continuously and vigorously, the principles in the advocacy of which we have triumphed, and thus superseding all that is Ignoble and unworthy. With a party united and zealous; with no avoidance of any legitimate issue; with a refusal to be diverted from the consideration of great national and State questions to the discussion of misleading things, and with such a presentation of the issues involved as will prove our faith in the intelligence of the people, the result cannot be doubted.