peculiar service rendered by and wherein his greatness lay, 88-89;
the personal worth of, 89;
early career and surroundings of, 89-90;
wherein he differed from the average Western Democrat, 90-91;
training and development of his intellect, 91-92;
further consideration of his character, 94 ff.;
contrasted with Jefferson, 95;
with Garrison, 95, 427;
with Jackson, 96;
necessity for emphasis of the difference between, and his contemporary
fellow-countrymen, 98-99;
national intellectual and moral stature of, 427.
Low, Seth, as a reformer, 143.
Lynching,
cause of, 318;
method of stopping, 344.
M
Machinery,
place of, in American economic development, 108.
Machines, political, 117 ff.;
created to satisfy a real need, 124-125;
power of, felt in the courts, 318;
corruption and incompetence of state legislative organizations
traceable to, 321;
complete reform of local administrative systems necessary for breaking
power of, 334;
civil service reform has not retarded progress of, 335.
McClellan, George B.,
as a reformer, 143.
Madison, James,
conduct of second war with England by, 53-54.
Manufacturing,
Hamilton's policy in encouraging, 39.
Merit system in offices, 143;
disappointing results of establishment of, 334-337.
Mexico,
cooeperation, of, in establishment of stable international system, 303.
Middle Ages,
city states of the, 215;
origins of the national state found in, 217 ff.
Middle class,
rise of, in Great Britain, 234-235, 239.
Militarism and nationality, 254 ff.
Millionaire,
the "tainted," a result of extreme individualism, 149.
"Money Power,"
Jacksonian Democracy's attitude toward, 59.
Monopolies,
suggested measures against, in municipalities, 374.
Monroe Doctrine, the, 290 ff.;
accepted as the corollary of policy contained in Washington's Farewell
Address, 291;
the American retort to the Holy Alliance, 291-292;
American democratic idea converted into a dangerously aggressive
principle by, 293-294;
results to United States of attempting to enforce, 296-297;
implies an incompatibility between American and European institutions
which does not exist, 297;
continued adherence to, will involve United States in fruitless wars,
299-300;
necessity of forestalling inevitable future objections to, 307.
Morgan, J. Pierpont, 202.
Mugwumps, 141.
Muirhead,
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