Through the great campaign : with Hastings and his spellbinders . eign goods that come in competition with ourown; free admission to our markets for the necessaries oflife which we do not make or produce ourselves; but fairtrade is fair play, and when we freely open our marketsto the products of other nations they must in turn opentheir markets to us under reciprocal interests and arrange-ments. I say that when James G. Blaine and BenjaminHarrison put these principles into the McKinley Bill theyopened the new epoch and marked the new departure ofindustrial development and commercial expansion


Through the great campaign : with Hastings and his spellbinders . eign goods that come in competition with ourown; free admission to our markets for the necessaries oflife which we do not make or produce ourselves; but fairtrade is fair play, and when we freely open our marketsto the products of other nations they must in turn opentheir markets to us under reciprocal interests and arrange-ments. I say that when James G. Blaine and BenjaminHarrison put these principles into the McKinley Bill theyopened the new epoch and marked the new departure ofindustrial development and commercial expansion underthe two great twin Republican, American principles ofprotection and reciprocity. FROM start to finish, from the first crash ofdynaniite cartridges in noisy welcome up atEmporium, down to the last careeringRoman candle ball on the night of November 5,two men were the almost constant companions ofGeneral Hastings and General I^atta during thecampaign tour. They were Hon. Charles , City Solicitor of Philadelphia, andHon. Henry Hall, of PittvSburg. 42. Hon. Charles F. Warwick. Take Warwick first. Medium height, full,florid face and dark moustache ; high forehead,thin hair, nervous, an orator, fiery of speech, in-tenseh^ practical, yet with a breadth of mind thatcould—and did—discUvSS within the limits of aquarter of an hour and with absolute accuracy asto time, place and names, the main points irix-Vssyrian archaeological research, and the earlyhistor} of civilization beyond the Mississippi. APhiladelphian, happy in his home life, engrossedin his profession, a campaigner from pure love ofit, and the most charming conversationalist onecould meet in a month. His keen sense of the ridiculous made CharlesF. Warwick one of the central figures in everyepisode of any moment on the trip. As an oratorhe carried his audience with him. Charles F. Warwick, City Solicitor of Phila-delphia, read law in the office of E. SpencerMiller, Esq., entered the Law Department of theUnive


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectpennsyl, bookyear1895