Show 1 a GOOD HOME DOCTRINE l Referring to the unhappy condition of 8 Europe when the people are taxed in timo of peace for the maintenance of 1Sa ° their establishments upon n war footing I tho New York Tribune complacently i 41 w remarks That is a bad country to live i in where peace costs as much as war True enough and happy is America that 1 4 she is secure in her position thanks 41l to the sea from the conditions which b make a European country such a bad one to live in But the hue significance I of the Tribunes remarks lies in the application ap-plication to this country where war taxes 1 are maintained more than twenty years N after the war is over If tho e rc great Republican paper really believes e the sentiment embodied in its little apothegm why dont it advocate the final placing of our own system of taxation S i 1 l taxa-tion on tho peace basis instead of insisting insist-ing on the maintenance of a war tariff tho like of which is not elsewhere in the it world in this piping timo of peace |