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Page 103 text:
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'I'lIl'1 YAI.l'l SIHNGLI-I. 97 beneath the glare of the red light which was so lav- ishly supplied. Captain Lawlor and Lieutenant Donovan were in their elements--the rest of the company consisted of Ward and Reynolds, besides the ofhcers and a few Seniors. We marched through all native kinds of mud and many doubtful districts of the town, where our numbers and splendor were our only protection. Sometimes jeers and boots were our portion, at others we found the crowd gen- tlemanly and sympathetic. Very few interesting events are recorded. The election of Cleveland twhich was no doubt assured by the paradesl was most satisfactory to one, while Wayne McVcagh's oration pleased another most. Some men cannot remember minutely just what did occur. One gives this following vivid description of a parade towards its close: Stormy night, deep mud, borrowed suit, long march, vociferous lungs, weary, but patriotic. Another sums up his experience thus: llat burned, feet wet-saw a light. Several men got into trouble on account of handling Roman candles carelessly. One man says he nearly blew a fellow's head off, but left before anything interesting ensued. As we look back, we can hardly understand why we should incur such risks for the little good and pleasure such campaigning affords. Eight men, Conlon, Cromer, Averill, Callahan, Hedden, Freeman, R. P., Dowd and Barker have held public ofhce. Registrar, Justic of the Peace, Councilman, Ofhcial Stenographer, Court Clerk, etc., have been their titles. Hawkes says indignantly that
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Page 102 text:
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96 Tllli 'YAI,li Sl'lINGl,li. pendent Republicans. Twenty-live of us are out and out Democrats, and there is one Mugwump. One bold fellow says he owes allegiance to no party. The rest are too young to know what they are politically. Thirty-one men believe in protection in different degrees, while only ten men believe in absolute free trade. Five men think that a mean should be struck between the two, and several others believe in a tariff for revenue only. Several men favor free trade on principle, but think that the arti- licial condition to which the country has been brought by long continued protection, renders the further maintenance of the same imperative under the cir- cumstances. Two men say they believe in both in reason, although it is hard to understand how this happy compromise is possible. Twenty men believe that the ten per cent. tax on the issues of State banks is a wise provision, but ten others favor a repeal of the law imposing it. One man says he will never believe that the tax is improper while he can remember '49, and another scents immediate danger in repeal. In the future an appeal may become expe- dient, one thinks, and another thinks that a proper substitute for this law can be found in one requiring State bonds as securities for issues. Quite a number have formed no opinion on the subject. The Campaign Clubs drew about twentv men from our class, fourteen of these were in the Phelps' Bri- gade and six in the Cleveland Guards. Free liquor and lunches were held out as inducements to parade and although these usually proved mythical, five or six times each faction marched about the town I
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Page 104 text:
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93 'l'Iil'l x',x1,1a s111No1.1s. hc ncvcr hold L1 public onicc, adding by way of ox Jlanution, I um an honest man. Bonsall su fs, 5 7 My wcll known modcsty has long forbidden my wooing thc public wculf' X f' K si xg X 42,
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