Show SILLY TALK Those pfcople who are deploring the election of Cleveland on the ground that it will prove disastrous to the business l intere tg of the country are the blind J who will not see There is nothing in I the his ry of the Democratic party to warrant the belief that the political policy of the organization will prove injurious to the Republic in either asocial a-social or a business sense on the contrary con-trary the whole course of the Democracy Demo-cracy has been directed towards development devel-opment and progress ill the line of improvement the betterment of the I condition of the people is what the I party has struggled tor ever since its organization and the people understanding I I under-standing this have again placed the Democracy in control of the government govern-ment I But suppose it were different suppose I now Mr Cleveland were isposed to meddle with the industries of the t Country and should undertake to check its growth and development develop-ment and bring disaster to the I V republic 1 How would he go tab utit V Perhaps some of the grumblers and I V faultfinders can tell us The President of the United States is one of the most powerless individuals in the republic I t so far as disturbing the ordinary run of Vt things is concerned There stands between V be-tween him and any any thing he may V Srish to do a Congress one branch of V which conies directly from the people who have selected the members because i of their knowledge of and familiarity i with the needs of their respective communities com-munities The members of Congress V V are responsible to their constituents to V whom their allegiance is due rather V than to the President who must siiupty 1 execute the will of the lawmakers r expressed in the statutes President V Cleveland might be the most vicious I i evildisposed person in the Union and V without Congress he could do I nothing Bad appointments tot to-t i office even could not V be made I H without the sanction of the V Senators who are held responsible to r V I t their States for the wise discharge of then the-n sacred trust reposed in them In Mr i Clevelands case he will be tied and 7 handicapped to a greater degree than the ordinary President for while he may have the popular branch of Conj V Con-j t gress with him politically it is quite certain that the Senate will be V Republican during his entire term and I t V > is quite likely to prove a stumbling i o block in the road to whatever changes J II x > r fefdrma he might bo disposed to make There is not the slenderest reason tot f to-t believe that President Cleveland will k L attemptt to dp anything that is not for V r the best interest of the country to 11 which he is devoted but in case he should the intelligent and thoughtful V understand how completely his hands t are tied Only the unreasoning thoughtless V j V thought-less persons talk as if the country were f in danger from a Democratic President V |