Show REPUBLICANS ASK FAIR JUDGMENT i j The New York Tribune I One clear note runs through the whole of Mr Hughes' Hughes speech of accept accept- ance deal deal- dealings It is a challenge enge of incapacity an indictment of failure The dealings dealings deal deal- ings of the administration with Mexica l constitute a confused chapter of blunders Thus reads the opening sentence of the Mexican subsection Mr l Wilsons Wilson's attitude toward the big problems of the day day both both national l and international international has has been that of a dilettante His Isis policies have been happy drawn out of a hat They have been subject to change I and to reversal to eclipse and re Washington has lived in an orgy of benevolent phrases each treading his elder brother down or elbowing him out of the limelight Mr Wilson can expect nothing from the country but a fair judgment on his own record That is all the Republican party through its candidate now asks Long as it is Mr Hughes' Hughes indictment is the one thing which the administration cannot successfully meet For to meet it is to open wider than ever to to- public view all that melancholy record of in ineptitude which as Mr Hughes rightly says cannot be examined by any real American today without the profoundest sense of humiliation |