HAlffilSOVS Wfmi. A STUMP SPEECH DISGUISED A3 I A LETTER. A Bolt! anil I'nbluxhlng Hid for Votes , Which H Will Not t Mitring Adap tation of Protection's I'aradoxes rood Sltili Hoth Cheaper and Dearer. Preei'lent Harrison's lttr of accept ance is riinply a stum) epeech in the fttrtaof an epistle. It is less a docu ment to elucidate Ms views or to ex plain bis party's purposes than an at tempt to gain votes by accommodating those view and purpose to a hostilo public opinion, r , Foui4 Tears ago Mr. Harrison bad only oatetnpt for "cheapness." Now he arrnes that the law passed to increase prices Las reaUy . lowered them, . The paradoxes of protection never had a nore daring: adapter than the president. According to him the same law has increased prices to the farmer and made toodtheaper to the consumer, has low ered the cost of manufactures by taxing their raw materials, has enabled the piodncer to pay higher wnges by reduc ing the price of his product. fa one respect only lias Mr, Iltirrison tbs entire bravery of his bourbonism; he defends the billion dollar congress from its initial usurpation to its closing outrage. - That the people condemned this congress, and incidentally his ad ministration, by a majority of more than 1,800,000 is calmly ignored by ttao presi dent. He says that "a vote of want of confidence is asked by our adversaries." aa if that, vote had not been given in 1890 and repeated in 1801. The election this year is simply" a demand for judgment upon a verdict once rendered nnd con firmed. .' President Harrison's tardy recognition of Air.. Blaine's action in furcing the par tial amelioration of reciprocity upon n bill that had no original saving clause will hardly atone for his previous action in claiming all the credit of it. Good as far as it goes, this sd .called reciproc ity is still "a Sham," as the Democratic platform declares it to' be. It untaxes fcslgners only. It applivs to our poor est instead our best customers. And it favors ether countries at the expense of our owiw .The president's contention as to the effect of tariffs on wages is thoroughly disingenuous, uot to say dibhoiu-st. lie knows that the duty nnder the JIcKin ley law in many schedules is more than the entire labor cost in the nrticles pro tected, and yet he repeats tho deceptive claptrap about the necessity of covering "the differences in wages'" between this country and Europe. Ho claims that "protective duties strongly tend to hold up wages, and are the on barrier against a reduction to the European scale," when he knows that the wages in free trade England are from 30 to 100 per cent, higher than in any protection ist country in Europe, and that the vari ations in wages ialh.e same industries in. different states of onr Union nnder the same tariff are as great as the differ ence between the average wages here and in England. It is characteristic of this nefarious system of false pretenses that it should convert the letter of acceptance of a president into the dishonest screed of a special pleader. The passage upon the force bill will be variously interpreted, bnt fairly read It seems to be an abandonment of the extreme policy embodied in that odious measure. Two years ago the president tried to press a force bill through con gress. He now talks soothingly of a nonpartisan commission to devise some scheme for counting the negro census as Republican votes. He affects to see, however, in the "new political move ments" in the south and "the recent de cisions of some of the state courts" a hope that "the arbitrary and partisan election laws and practices which have prevailed may be corrected by the state, the laws made equal and nonpartisan and the elections free and honest." Such a solution, he says, would be re ceived with rejoicing by his party the party of Wanomaker's Pharisaism, Quay's corruption and Dudley's bribery inasmuch as "a healthy and patriotic local sentiment is the best assurance of free and honest elections." This is the Democratic doctrine, and while the smooth sayings of a candidate cannot be accepted as binding upon his party it is evident that President Har rison, like Mr. Reid and the other lead era of his party, is anxious to drop the force bill issue. At leant he refrains from defending it, and definitely sug gests another and far better method of settlement. But, as we have said before, Mr. Har rison cannot wipe ontthe ltepublican record; he cannot hide facts with pa laver. New York World. The Material Must Sutter. The poor man has a certain number of outfits to buy, whether the material be ijood or bad, and if all wool suits do nut coma within his means he has to take tho all cotton and shoddy. When he iliivera in the keen winter wind he may or may not take the trouble to trace his rofferings to its source. Its source, when he finds it, is in the policy of 'protecting" the manufacturing capital ist at the expense of the poor the few it the expense of tho many. Tariff laws made for revenue only would give the wor man and his family a practical un taxed outfit, not for the back only, bnt tho kitchen, the bedroom and the work shop. Minneapolis Times. It M ill Help Ktevenaon. The greatest cry of ltepublican organs against Adlai E. Stevenson, Democratic candidate for the vice presidency, teems to be that ho turned down Republican postmasters to put Democrat in their places. What advantage can be expect ed through raising such a cry it is hard to see unless It is the desire to keep tho prejudices of those Republican office holders alive and thus prevent them from jolntng the popular tide that is flowing this year toward the Democ racy. Easton Argus. TAXATION. An Arrttrntn Analysis of Its True Pnr pour. To seek to make taxation, which is a fit contrivance only for raising revenue, an instrument for effecting some ul terior purpose, bo it ever so just and legitimate; to seek to use it for the at tainment of any other advantage than tho obvious one of raising money, is to lose sight of a futidatneutal principle of every free government and to forbid all expectation of recognizing any other basis for the exercise of this great sovereign power of the stato than expe diency, which in turn will depend upon the actions, passions imd prejudices of legislators, who may not be the same in any two successive legislative assem blies. Such a perversion of principle, furthermore, reaches its climax of ab surdity in practice when its immediate beneficiaries claim to lie the only proper persons by whom the incidence and amount of taxation can be intelligently determined, a claim that is practically equivalent to the assumption that privi lege should take precedence of right in the theory of government. The idea of using the power of taxa tion for other purposes than that of ob taining revenue for defraying the neces sary expenditure of the government was one hostile At the outset to all the beliefs and hubita of thought of the American people; was totally incongruous with the social and political system which they Instituted nnd expected, and was reluc tantly admitted nnder the idea that the industries of a new country might need some temporary stimulus and assistance at the outset. It was not until after our late war that anybody ventured to open ly maintain or defend the proposition that protection was other than tho inci dental and not the main object of the exercigeof the taxing, iower, although this perversion of principle . was tacitly recognized by the iiuxeitiou and con tinuance of taxes which' had for their intent or resulted in a prevention of the raising of revenue. David A. Wells in September Fornm. Nbrnku'a Uovoruor. The Democrats of 2s ebraoka have nomi nated as their candidate for govemur that eminent philosopher nnd tariff re former, J. Sterling Morton, whose career while in congress attracted national at tention to him. If Mr. Morton shall be elected governor of Nebraska he will bo in a iosi tion to adminis ter the nffairs of the state in a sat isfactory man ner, for he has al ready held the of fice once. His ro noraina tion is therefore nil the t ' - more of a comtdi- J. stk rliso morton. ment, as it shows that after one trial the people of his state still want him; Mr. Morton has fre quently been called the "Father of Ar bor Day' for the reason that it is in great measure due to his efforts that the growth of artificial groves has been so carefully looked after in Nebraska. Mr. Morton has lived in Nebraska ever since he was twenty-two, at which time he was married to a lady to whom he had become engaged at sixteen. He was born In New York state in 1832 and graduated from Union college in 1854. The Milk In the Cocoanut. If Republican platforms lay down precise rules for laying duties," Repub lican lawmakers should conform to them. If difference of labor cost is to be the rule we want a self ad justing tariff that will remove some of the bounty when wages go down. Why did they not give the president the power to issue a proclamation to reduce the tariff as wages are reduced? It would be just as safe as giving him the power to tax or nntax the people on sugar, coffee, tea and hides whenever in his judgment any foreign country is not trading fair. Somehow these legislative powers are conferred on the president only for the purpose of increasing the burdens of taxation, not to lighten them. Louis ville Courier Journal. The Force Itlll flutter. The force bill plotters looked forward to the time when southern election offi cers would not dare to declare a Demo crat elected to congress, and when every southern Democrat for a month or so before and after a congressional election would feel as uncertain of his liberty as a Russian nihilist, knowing it to be in the power of federal spies and detectives to cause his arrest, after which he would be tried before a jury of "tried and true Republicans'' and perhaps sent to a northern prison. Florida Times-Union. PrnpomUnt rti'pul)licun. The Republican press is evidently worked up over the dark prospect that confronts its party. The outlook is so dismal that it seems to be necessary to charge the Democratic party with the most nefarious designs on tho govern ment. Everything that is lovely is cred ited to Republicanism and, all that is pernicious is charged to tho Democracy. And still the prospect doesn't grow brighter. Strange Binghamton (S. Y.) Leader. A Tusk IutlteU. The recent terrible labor-capital war faro throughout tho country shows in a very bad light tho happiness and pros perity of tho protected American labor er. What with tho great Pennsylvania riots, tho New York strike and the bloody east Tennessee wurfaro to ex plain, those upholding existing govern mental methods have a task indeed be fore them, Houston Daily Post. Let Mr. McKlnlejr Answer. As Mr. McKiulcy claims to be a good lawyer, well read in the constitution, he ought to think matters over and tell tho public whether it would not be just nnd lawful to deny public protection to every industry thBt has organized itself as a trust or monopoly. Surely the peo ple ought not to be forced to protect public roblMjrs. St. Louis Republic. REED ON EXTRAVAGANCE. The Ka-t':r nnd Ills Humorous Clutrite Agulnt the llou1. Ex-Czar Reel Is something of a hu morist i:i his way, and lie has seldom been mow humorou than he is now in accusing the Democratic house of "ex travagance," because with a Republican senate and a Republican president against it it could not repeal tho sugar bounty act, tho steamship subsidy net and such like acts passed by tho Reed congress with the delilicrate intention of increasing tho expenditures of the government and making the increase permanent. The Reed congress aud tho Harrison administration have run the annual ex pense for pennons nlonc p to f 140.000, 000, so that with this and the (10,000,000 a year for sugar bounties we have a permanent expense of $150,000,000 a year altogether aside from what are projrly the ordinary expenses of gov ernment. Under the disability pension bill and other pension acts now in oeration the annual expense for pensions will in creiwo for some years to come. It will reach at least $1.V.000,000 a year. The sugar bounty will bo repealed as soon as the Democrats elect a president and a majority of the senate. Until then it remains with the other permanent charges imposed on the conntry by the most scandalous congress the country ever had. With a Democratic senate these per manent charges can be greatly reduced. When Mr. Cleveland is inaugurated ho will certainly renew the practice of that strict economy which characterized his first administration and resulted in tho surplus which Harrison has dissi pated. In the meantime Harrison is responsi ble before the country for the increased expense of his radical administration. Ho is costing the conntry a round f 100, 000,000 a year more than Arthur cost it Whero is the Republican who will say that Harrison is wortli this much more for the country? It may be that we are to have another Republican president in the future. If so, Ut us get one who costs less aud is worth more for the money. St. Louis Republic. Sowing the Wind and Reailiii the Whirl wind. Chicago Times. Which FaUehood Shall We Ilelleve? Republican organs are now busily en gaged in telling their readers that the reason why the wages of the ironwork ers are being reduced is because the price of iron has fallen, owing to the re duction of the tariff on iron. At the same time they tell ns that the prices of woolen goods, tin and other products are reduced because the tariff has been increased. It is just such idiotic and false arguments as these that are caus ing the sensible people to vote against the Republican party. The people are not fools if the editors of the Repub lican organs are. Bristol (Pa.) Ob server. Benefloeoee of MeKlnley's Tariff. Is Mr. McKinley explaining to the Jersey people how imports have in creased when he promised that his bill would check themT It is appalling to see how Americans stick to imports when they ought to buy nothing bnt what is made by home monopolies. Things will never be right nntil ire adopt the Chinese policy completely and make a tariff that is absolutely prohibi tive. As it is now nearly every Ameri can who has the money to do so appears to prefer buying importations rather than the home product Lonisville Courier-Journal. The Bonth It fttlU Solid. We do not lielieve that Virginia or any other southern state will go for the third party, or that enough votes will be drawn from the Democratic ranks by that party to give any such state to the Republicans. There will no doubt be considerable talk and some bluster, but when southern white men come to the polls in November, and consider that they are in reality voting either for or against the force bill, they will be very apt to take no risk, but cast their ballots squarely for Democracy, white rule and free elections. Richmond Times. Only the CapltalUt Gets Protection. Where does the "protection" como in? The American workman certainly gets nouo. . The. capitalist gets it all. He is permitted to filch money from the pub lic in the form of exorbitant prices for his products, and not satisfied with that he must bo allowed to rob his workmen. Just now, too, this high tariff protec tion includes a contribution of some hundreds of thousands of dollars from tho people of Pennsylvania to pay the expenses of tho stato militia while pro tecting tho Carnegio mills. Rhode Is land Democrat. The Two CundldHte. At Ilu.zurd'a Huy, euelt lmily Uiiy, Tim merry tUU ilo bite, And tlrover litmrs uood news come In From morning until ulght, Wlillu fUUIint from the sandy bank Willi all an auglm' uiluUl. Itesldu the waters of the Lake of Ioou Htalks worried Heuny 'Death the pale, oold moon. Twists In bis hands his old grundfutlji'r'a hut. And says, "How ran I got round tbut man I Flaw1 New York Journal. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a Harmless, Posltlv Cur for the worst form of Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles, Inflammation and Ulcers t:on, Falling and Di.placetiients, also Spinal Weakness and Leucorrhrea. 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