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Some Of The Reasons

Some Of The Reasons image
Parent Issue
Day
21
Month
September
Year
1892
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

First - When it carne to a vigorous assertion of our rights in Behring sea mider his administration, Mr. Cleveland dropped humbly on his knees before the British lion. Second - Because if you are an artisan the economie policy he is pledged to carry out, the policy to which his party has committed itself, will bring you to the ragged condition of the British free trade mechanica. Third - How can yon vote for a doublé action presidential combination like Cleveland and Stevenson? The team does not pull together. One is plowing in the political furrow of tariff reform, civil service and gold, while the other is pulling the old Democratie cart in the direction of free silver and spoils. Between them you do not know where you will fetch up. Fourth- Because with his free trade knife he is trying to kill the goose of protection that has laid the golden egg of prosperity for the United States. Fif th- If Mr. Cleveland's soldier substitute were running for the presidency I you could as a patriot find several good and sufficient reasons for voting for him; but what reason can you adduce for voting for the man who, in youth and vigor and unlike Harrison, did not have the courage to go to the front? Mr. Cleveland never heard a shot fired in anger, but he vetoed more old soldier pension bilis than any president from Washington down. That is his grea war record. He slaughtered veteran by the hundred. - New York Recorder.

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Courier