Show NOTHING TO ADMIRE r t Coufidfi cecannot Always be placed in prepsliBpatcheH but nevertheless they V pass current and like bank notes while some may Jiofc be genuine thenwjprity are The atesf Onewe have seenthat is V of interest to all is a special to the Tribune this morning and tells the story of Mo of Sjjnjf nciipowho vent East last r n11 ejkdioneer ljEor Cleveland and a flendricks having made in all one hundred hun-dred and fiftythree speeches It js also said that he pawned hisLhomaeiiold Boodsj to raise campaign funds Such devotion showed far more zeal than judgment and is far more rare than sacraficing ones life for ones country The trouble now 48hatMrl1QU1i1 thafl greatly changed f Kis opinion of tHe President although it is strange that he should as the Presi dent has ibeen true to himself his pledges and his party He wasp was-p placed in nomination because of his record as Mayor of Buffalo and as Governor of New York State The < < r i sf 6htimes waajgnune Andhon e5trf9rn in the civilservice l for the cquntryhad come tolQ lkjW th apprehension apprehen-sion upon the change in the personnel of t jpffioers j pfthe jGoyernment ewry Sour J tears It was beginning to engender the idea that government party was mre I ly a scramble for office by party For I i guch ideas V to become universal and for the citizens to rest their govern V ment upon so low and base an idea would have justified the scoffis I and A jeers Lthe jnonarcbical governments gov-ernments of Europe that republics jand I freedom were a failure V Party is simply a me ins and not an end in representative repre-sentative government j it is the channel I throughiwhich l1CPeOplOprOpSL i their ideas as to policies and whenever a country reaches such a state that to only one party can be entrusted the reins of I govenamentthat country is f astapproach I ing that condition when kings and tyrants I ty-rants arise and crush out freedom and tthe rights of thp pepple I To wrest the reins government from the i hands of the Republican I party and place them in those of the Democratic I party Mr 3Iohan sacrifiped his time and liia means When he did so itrwas presumed pre-sumed that hedesired above all V things I the triumph of Democracy and the principles ciples of the Chicago Platformj that he t thought Grover < Cleveland the man to make u those principles triumphant and I to see them made effective if elected Has npt President Cleveland in every justifiedthe confidence that was reposed J I V re-posed in him nd should not those who pdoj odthejr time and means to secure f his election find their truest reward in the I fact that he has justified what they said of him Mr Mohan feels aggrieved at the Presidents treatment of him The t telegram referred to says that the President J Presi-dent told Mrllohan that he would give jhira 1 position in the San Francisco Custom I Cus-tom IIouse for which he was an applicant appli-cant ThevPrjsident it seems inquired I of him if he were a business man a very t Pjop er jjuesfion toiask a man who asks for a place that above all needs business qualification and tact It is said that Mr < Mohan turned red in the face and managed to say to the President that he f didpnpt jdeem it necessary to inquire k of him when he asked him to stump I i New York State whether he were a i biwiness man or not It is probable that t t 5B mew > at exaggerated thouglzj4qiji is doubtless something in I it Had Mr Mohan been an applicant I for a judgeship or an attorneyship it certainly I cer-tainly wculd hayo been proper thing to do to khim if he were a lawyer or if V he had applied for a consulship to have I aglcedjumifjhe were l conversant with the I language the country to which he jriaEecl to go And if suchqufe3tions are right and proper us to those positions I why shpiild jthey inot be asto a mans qualifications for a business position The President may have lost an ardent adnnpxhiterbut lie was true tothiMpldgeand tC p rant p r-ant tW is Tht aiic 5g nt conse uceV I V V |