Carried forward $276,779 81
Work on Greenhouse:
Lord Hort Mfg. Co. $49,611 50
Stewart, mason 635 83
Plumbing, painting, concreting, etc. 685 12
Labor, blasting, and digging 4,696 21
Supplies, chairs, bedding, etc. 102 87—55,731 53
Wall in front of Greenhouse 945 62
Gardener's Cottage 3,045 88
Farmer's Cottage 6,849 38
Additions to barn 703 27
Plumbing 18,964 55
Allowance Stone Stable 1,500 00
Furniture 19,269 05
Furniture Baldwin House 1,600 00
Plants in Greenhouse 8,901 89
Plants outside 75 25—8,977 14
$394,327 23

JOHN BIGELOW TO HON. WILLIAM H. PECK, EX-SECRETARY OF STATE OF MICHIGAN

"New York, Febry. 28th, 1879.

"My dear Friend,—In your last note you ask me if Tilden will be in the field for the Presidency in 1880.

"That is a question which, I presume, no one, not even Tilden himself, could answer categorically at present. I can express to you my own conviction, and you may take it for what it is worth.

"Mr. Tilden has scarcely been in a position at any time, since the election, to consult his own tastes or personal comfort in this matter; if he had been, I think he would have notified his friends immediately upon his return from Europe in 1877 that they must look for another leader. He forbore to take that step, because he shared the popular belief that he was the President-elect of the United States, and that he was thereby clothed with certain responsibilities to his party at least, anomalous and unprecedented it is true, but which were of the gravest character and which it was impossible for him to put off.

"He was still the commander in the midst of a campaign in which he had defeated the enemy, but had not yet realized the fruits of victory. To leave his soldiers in the field and in the presence of the enemy without a leader was a step which would not stand the test of a moment's reflection. Washington could, with equal propriety, have resigned his command after the battle at Yorktown and delivered his sword to Cornwallis, instead of himself taking the sword of the British general.

"Such a procedure on Mr. Tilden's part would have practically disarmed the Democratic party and compelled its surrender at discretion. What in 1877 would have been only compromising subsequent events would now make disgraceful. Conscious that they had come into office by criminal processes, and that Tilden was the choice of the people, the administration has exerted all the powers of the Federal government in the effort to reconcile the country with this result by defaming and maligning the character of Mr. Tilden, and persecuting him, if possible, out of public life.