Show FARMERS AND THE TARIFF every E very democratic orator on the stump in utah and every democratic sheet in the territory from the herald down to the six column weekly with 11 patent innards are persistently declaring that the poor farmer is being robbed by the unholy tariff that lie is taxed on everything he lie buys and has no protection on oil what lie bells sells after these thesel calamity bowlers havo have rung all the changes on what tho the poor farmers ai 0 uta utah h t suffer they invariably go back ba bk and an 1 tell how the agricultural classes of kansas aru ara oppressed the census shows that the mortgaged debt on lots in chicago is greater than the whole farm debt of kansas business inena mens failures were greater last year in massachusetts pennsylvania and connecticut than in tho the three western states of illinois kansas and low iowa a and greater in proportion to the population three fourths of DI the mortgaged e d indebtedness on western arms fa represents prosperity not hardship in face fa ce 01 ol of the fact that th aLvery very few mortgages are lorenlo foreclosed se d the minority of the house committee on agriculture in the present congress spoke the truth when they reported that in no other age in in no 0 other country and in no other time in in this country has thero there been illah passed of an economic character in which the interests of any class of I 1 persons dersons were more carefully guarded than were those of the farmer in the tariff law of 1895 is popular with w 1 ith 1 tho the flax and hemp raising farmers of minnesota iowa south dakota and nebraska 2 the imports of these two articles before and after the passage of the mckimley Mc bIc KisLEY KINLEY law is represented by the following values 1 ISOO I 1 1892 flamand flax and hemp acas F flax 1 ax total the mckinnley McK McKI iLsLEY INLEY law lias has been BO so successful in shutting out foreign flax and hemp hep and encouraging homo home production that the farmers of the northwest supply all but 20 per cent of these articles used used in the united states the law protects the wool growers and hop growers of washington and oregon the tol tobacco iacco growers grow era of connecticut and new york the fruit growers of california the barley grower grow era of montana the flax and hemp growers of the northa est and alie f farmers of the frontier states who produce hay bay potatoes toes eggs butter cattle and horas moraes Tho The Toronto globa globe thua thus complains of the mckim EY tariff curiously Can enough done to th tho canadian export barley arley trade b by the me mc kinley tari iris is felt every year just at at aithus this time by the wholesale whole nale trade trader before the united put nn an almost prohibitive d duty on gnada barley there was a braik d demand for igat good s spot 1 prices it was the barley t then hen t that h a t ax was 1 first 1 r at marketed by our banners fan ners this stories at once put a great deal of money in circulation and ana always had a good effect on country remittances now payments vay Cay ments are backward as they have eeik ee 1 for several seasons past at this period orin year s a ra d r andt he ile is honest candid d ana i ift which particulars lie differs from tile I 1 democratic candidate for the presidency I 1 candidate CLEVELAND CLEVELA is a quibbler in hia his discussion of the tariff question although lie stands pat on the tile free trade platform iny GEORGE is acquainted with tho the candidate pandi date and declares that he lie I 1 lias has not swerved ono one hairs breadth from the radical declaration on the tariff question made by the democratic Domo cratic party at chicago and frankly fully and unequivocally declares against protection high or low as anti american and unconstitutional as a robbery and a fraud thesis this is alewe all we could island for the present it is enouse thus stands GROYER GROVER CLEVELAND with the disciples of JOHN 0 CALHOUN and jerr enso DAVIS behind him engaged in an rin attempt to put in force in this country the same economic conditions tha taic paralyzing the industries and abd blighting I 1 tho the commerce 61 england alio th 0 con coni i editions under which the laborer spends lila his active days toiling for fora a miserable pittance aselio as the serf of his employer only to end liis his iko life in the workhouse antho on tho other side unalterably opposed to the democratic doctrine of cheap labor and dependence on foreign countries for our our manufactured products are BF 1 HARRISON ir Annison and the republican party paty tho the resolute aavo cates of the protection and development of american industry the payment of high wages to tho the workingman and the security and comfort of the american home 9 I 1 trie NEW YORK press says that one of the most astonishing curiosities in mr I 1 letter of acceptance abis is liis elat emerit that ho farmer is learning that the prices of liis his products are fixed in foreign markets where lie buffers suffers from a competition invited and built up tip by the system lie is asked to sup support just how this alleged fact is reconciled with the fact attested to by democratic senat senators ors and HARRIS of tho tile senate finance finace committee that the tile system ey stem ho lie is asked to support ba hag S not prevented the average value of farm products from advancing 1367 per cent in two years of increased protection mr CLEVELAND does not explain but if it were true ahat eliat the allegation of cof mr CLEVELAND CLEVEL IND was fact and if the prices oltha farmers products were fixed in deige foreign markets ali 0 best test thing that could be done for the farmer would N b to to give E ham im marb or f a ciomo roaey marke the mckinley U law does this iu in tw way waya a by bi shutting out imports offar of farm nl products and by increasing the industrial element of the population with the establishment of industries protection turns the farmers competitors into CUB cus e customers into competitors nud suo then be will till have ha c as much competition at homo home is aa lie lias has abroad Ls TIIE tim matter of political recognition THE tim STANDARD desires to impress upon the tile party the importance of making haste very slowly in recommending recent arrivals from the liberal party for important offices ofT ices when straight out division republicans are crowded into the back ground in order to confer honors political upon men who have havid not yet vet taken any active part dr or expressed tho the least sympathy with tho tile division movement then we rise to enter a protest let all honor and praise bo be given those who cycil even now now abandon tile forlorn hope of liba liberalism allam and let them bo be assured that as soon as is consistent with seilusi sensible ble politics the tile republican party will recognize nize equally mith any oilier other good member of the party but to them immedi tho the first of thearin th cirin to unite with us would bo be to stultify the party anis FLEA of unconstitutionality by which the democrats seek to throw odi odium um on protection lias has ever been re by shallow minda minds in order to hide hido ih the iio poverty ver ty of ofa their argument whenever iu la the past political or partisan expediency demanded the blocking of any legislation it was asserted ta that ai that legislation was unconstitutional I 1 by falling back as a last resort upon the tile claim of the unconstitutionality of protection tec tion democrats not only scorn the ahe teachings of the fathers of their party but they tho the constitutionality of our national policy I 1 has las long since been passed upon and aff an irined by tho tie JW rations lona highest tribunal the th united states I 1 sti supreme preme court THE democratic platform asserts that tho the federal government has no constitutional tut ional power to impose and collect tariff duties except for the purpose of revenue only this is in effect to declare the first tariff law signed by WAS TIMaToN and every tariff law w which lias has since passed absolutely every OKO one of them thern unconstitutional not only that but it denounces the democratic Monni sox bill the democratic MILLS bill and even the pending democratic free wool bill as unconstitutional for every one of them recognizes in some degree the protective principle which according to the re jibed democratic creed places them all in conflict with tho the constitution TUB tax AmEn icAx manufacturer needs certain kleuls ot of foreign wool to mix with the american wools this ia is an arguin argument ent frequently advanced by tile reformers but did they act on chis theory in the wool bill passed bv by the tile house of representatives no tb that a t bill pichi all kinds of wool on the free list Acco TO the topeka i Ca cavitalo vital morl mortgage gage I 1 indebtedness in the state of kansas is being reduced at the rate of a month the editor of the post had heard of this when hamade he made bin 1118 great spee speech cli at smithfield JA fil fly T troon boon 1 is our friend rien d from michigan ex judge he can sniff a political apolitical breeze aa as far as the next man hig ills scent is as keen as a hounds and when the whispering winds into his auricular appendages the notes of democratic defeat in utah this fall our very sensible old political stager declined to mount the sacrificial altar and be bombarded to death by the lle Ite publican canna T ane mountain labored yesterday labored fearfully and brought forth a candidate name jo L RAWLINS 1 residence salt lake city mr CAN my will find in mr no mean antagonist antagonists but wo we believe he be will down him in the election THE tits journal says that enrin J has announced hini himself self as willing to accept the nomina nomination fion for mayor from the liberal party 11 the man who accepts cents the nomination for mayor on the liberal ticket will be elected to stay at home k THE LIDER LIBERAL 10 parly party cont continues finues to in maintain abort of an organization in ill two or three counties ol 01 viall the class of citizens who baill stick to the old ola hulk have an inordinate itching for office and the spoils thereof they will not feed at the public crib this year ins 1119 four our years ye a r s cf 0 0 office 0 c e mr r CLEVELAND signed signe 1246 pennon bills and 4 vetoed up to the present time denja MIS IlAn niso has signed 1676 1576 special pension bills and vetoed none orone or one article arc are consumers of another and to cripple ono one is to equally affect the other we must have good fair prices if we vre would keep U up p our standard of wages 1 gloff an average of 25 cents more per day for labo rt than th than anthey they did 9 before fore the enactment of the mckinley McK iNLET law but gloves remain at the same old price |