Page:Speeches, correspondence and political papers of Carl Schurz, Volume 6.djvu/498

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474
Index

Militarism and democracy, VI., 48; appeal for peace and disarmament, 49; a standing army essentially a monarchical institution, 53; democracy demands that the armed force be militia or volunteers, 54; France and her standing army, 54-56; Oliver Cromwell's use of the army, 56; reasons given for European standing armies, 57; United States maintained policy of adapting its armament to its needs, 60; United States the strong neutral Power of the world, 63; the probable size and cost of a standing army, 66; enlarged naval establishment, 67; the burden of our pension fund, 68; what must be shown to justify increased taxation, 70; abrogation of the Constitution suggested, 72; demoralization of war, 73; we need have no war, unless we provoke it, 76

Military interference in Louisiana, III., 115; legislature assembled, 116; temporary and permanent organization of, 117; declared illegal, 118; certain members ejected by force, 119; when the Government may assist the local government of any State, 121; violation of the Constitution, 124; to what it may lead, 126; review of reconstruction period, 127; the statesmanship required to maintain a republican form of government, 135; return to self-government of the Southern States, 136; intimidation, 138 et seq.; the Government must itself observe the laws, 142; people beginning to distrust the policy of the Government, 145; the question at issue, 148

Military rule in the South, need of, I., 267, 269

Mill, John Stuart, II., 525, 526

Miller (General), M. P., VI., attacks Iloilo, 97, 248

Miller, Justice (Supreme Court), IV., 176, 177, 188, 191

Miller, Major, I., 289

Millionaire, the, in politics, IV., 457 ff.

Miramon (General), Miguel, I., 203

Miranda, Francisco, II., 231

Missouri, Address to the people of, I., 510; Republican pledges that must be redeemed, 511; amendments to State constitution, 512; trickery and demagogism, 513; bolting Republicans true to their party's principles, 515; party purification, 516; advice to colored voters, 517; republican institutions menaced, 518

Missouri compromise, I., 136; III., 19,22

Mitchell, Rev. Dr., IV., 222

Mittermaier, Joseph Anton, III., 8

Mobini, VI., 302

Moltke, Gen. von, IV., praised by the Kaiser, 498, 499

Money crisis in the West, I., 33, 37

Monroe doctrine, II., 110, 111, 113; V., cited in Venezuelan question, 252, 365; exposition of, by Webster, 436; permanently destroyed should United States be drawn into imperialism, 500; VI., safeguard of, 155, 249, 370, 372, 393

Monroe, Fortress, I., 181; Fort 182

Monroe, James, V., great Constitutional authority, 162; four-year-term bill signed by, 164; asked as to bill's Constitutionality, 365

Morgan, Governor (New York), I., 171; asked to secure guard of honor for Lincoln, 174; III., suggested as Secretary of the Treasury, 380, 391, 393; Secretaryship of Navy, considered better, 381

Morley, John, VI., a true friend to the United States, 107; receives present from Carnegie, 296

Morrill, Justin Smith, II., and the civil service, 123; V., defends protective tariff, 43, 44; predicts free-trade, 51; manufacturers asked nothing, 52; manufactures, pillars of support, 53; internal revenue taxes, 54

Morrill, Lot M., III., 401 n.

Morris, Isaac N., I., 90

Morris, Jay, I., 176

Morris, Robert, IV., 339

Morrissey, John, II., 134; III., 303, 322, 324

Morse, John T., Jr., IV., to, 156; to, 308; to, 400; to, 462