Show POLITICAL orES The election of a Democratic House of eperesentatlves In November would undoubtedly un-doubtedly be followed bya renewal In Intensified form of financial distrust and business depression with vastly more serious consequences to capital and labor than have already been sufferedOmaha Bee Rep This Is the old familiar calamity howl of the Republicans but it long since lost Its terror The citizen with a good warm blanket around him in the bitter nights of the coming winter will not lie awake thinkIng think-Ing about twenty pounds of sugar for 1 Sugar however should be and will be on the free list whenever there Is a Demo cratic SenateSt Louis PostDispatch Dem The country will not only have free sugar when the Senate is as thoroughly Democratic as the House but many other things free also Commenting Tom Reeds speech at Old Orchard the Chicago Times Dem makes the following very proper answer to It The difficulty with this very simple solution I so-lution of the Democracys mingled I strength and weakness Is I that it will not stand the test Mere division on geographical graphical lines cannot be maintained In the face of the fact that Senators BrIce Murphy and McPherson all from northern north-ern states joined Senators Gorman Camden Cam-den and Caffery from southern states In defeating true Democratic tariff reform re-form Mr Cleveland has done the country an unintentional service He has stripped from his cumbr tfs personality the last heed oE spurious statesmanship with which his worshipers have invested him and he stands revealed today In his true character as a weak blustering illtem pered man who has not manners enough tQ conceal from the country the rancor he feels because he has not been allowed l ils own way In matters affecting the public inter stN Y Commercial Advertiser Ad-vertiser Rep He has done the country a service but not of the kind Indicated by the Commercial Com-mercial Advertiser The last vestige of confidence in the courage of Grover Cleveland disappears today He Is nothing but a compromiser after all Denouncing Gorman and his associates on the Democratic side of the Senate for their perfidy and dishonor In abandoning the Democratic principle of free raw materials to keep up the cause of the Sugar trust the president now permits the mong become a law without Mall and Express Rep Republican estimates presidents are notso en impartial as to have an and It Is so In the prese Mr Cleveland in the demned the Senate bill perfidy and dishonor a he threatens to expose terests of the country t j sis of disquietude by fur tariff leglslatlonSt PRep P-Rep It is a very broad c can make of the pre Congressman Catchlngs the business Interests ol For just and Ihvmcibl the president of the U mirably sets forth In written yesterday to Catchings and published aid Mr Cleveland has the new tariff bill but come a law last midnig The country will draw sigh of relief that the was laid in Its grave In i midnightfIt hour for i torment N Y Herald The now tariff law has Iquitous McKinley bill n this Is a great jjlory foi party For one thing this li to enforce the necessar tween Democrats who and those who falsely cIt It Indicates the preside not signing the bill J had signed ItN Y TI It also enforces the dli what has been gained a to be gained His letter to Mr Catc reasons for his action sturdy proclamation of his letter to Mr Wilson that the president sho Gorman bmN Y Woi I rel tariff bill to his signature of Democratic nlnently fair andy and-y special weight nt instance first letter con 1 as a policy of nd In his second the business Into In-to a new paraly ther attempts at lul Pioneer Press onstructlon that isidents letter to a threat against f the country I e reasons which nlted States ad a ringing letter Representative 1 in todays Her refused to sign allowed it to be ht a long and deep I fnll1 tariff I the darkness of its Inglorious In Ind 3 replaced the In md to have done r E the Democratic etter helps much y distinction be are Democrats all themselves so nts reasons for But we wish he lines Dem stlnctlon between nd what remains hings giving thIs th-Is a bold and his views After It was Impossible uld approve the I rid Dem I The letter was bold and thoroughly characteristic of Mr Cleveland And it was generally approved There isno use of testing the Income tax of the tariff law In the courts as to Its unconstltutipnality for the supreme court has already decided that Congress has a right to Impose such a tax The only way to defeat the law Is to elect men who will repeal itSt Joseph Mo Herald Sep I That which will worry most people Is I the absence of an Income adequate tc come under the law A prompt signature for the bill I with a protest against the provisions which he deemed to b > violations of Democrat pledges was what the people had aright a-right to Took for from the president and because he failed to meet this expectation expecta-tion he has lowered himself In the popular popu-lar estimation St Louis GlobeDemo crat Rep To have signed the bill and protested because he had signed it would have been a very inconsistent proceeding on the part of Mr Cleveland The United States today nters upon i ndw epoch In Its economic policy It pats aside and rejects protection as the permanent policytof the government and idopts that of a revenue tariff To bE wre the new tariff Is not all that the friends of tariff reform desired yet it to X beginning The ship of state Is set in i the right direction under much travail 0 I Q < r o oc b I and confusion Pittsburgh Post CDem I I The only tariff that Is justifiable is one for rcvpnue All the signs point to this as the ultima goal of tariff legislation If McKinleylhtn Is what Mr Reed ands and-s party declared it to be two years ago the plain duty of the party Is to demand its reenactment Mr Reed does not do this and dares not do it He knows perfectly well that the country would reject such demand with den ig ctS sian His specious I and contradictory speech is as we have said the funeral oration of McKinleyism Y Times Dem McKinleyism has become so odious a name that the Republicans themselves will fight shy of It as a rallying cry If hey adopt it they will call It by some other name By invelghlrg against labor saving ma chin cry Mr Debs shows that ha Is singe larly unfit for the position he ocjjpies I He is altogether too narrow provincial I end antiquated to lead any Industrial movement If his Ideas were to nrevall hafwoum become of the men who are making mowing and reaping machines ireahlng machines plows and all the various va-rious and almost innumerable machines now regarded as Indispensable by every ntelllgent farmer Minneapolis Times Debs Incapacity to be a leader of men was shewn at the time of the strike For him to now claim that labor saving ma hinery is to blame for the ills of the working man Is to show how absolutely behind the spirit of the age he Is j t f |