Democratic Sentinel, Volume 16, Number 39, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 October 1892 — Cleveland’s Letter. [ARTICLE]

Cleveland’s Letter.

Mh. Cleveland has carried the flag of his party to the front, if he be right his letter challenges the existonoe of the Republican party as advocating policies that are a menace to the prosperity of the country. It Is a bold, frank, and well-considered utterance, worthy of the past statesmanship of the republic. It is a call to every Democrat who believes In Democracy to take hiß place In the ranks and stay there until the battle shall have been won in November. —Philadelphia Record. Like all his previous public writings and utterances, Grover Cleveland’s letter of acceptance of this, the third Democratic presidential nomination tendered him, is vigorous, virile, and sound In every way. It is the utterance of a man unused to circumlocution and temporizing, and whose habit it is to walk in the straight path of his honest convictions.—Bt. Paul Globe. Mb. Cleveland's letter of acceptance will meet a hearty response from every intelligent and patriotic citizen who desires to see capable, honest, and constitutional administration of the government in the interest of the whole people, for whom It was framed and established, and not for the benefit of a favored few at the expenso of the many.—Rochester Union and Advertiser. The letter contains bristling points that will be remembered long after election. Sentences and thoughts which he gives to the country will inspire the Democratic speakers and furnish material for intelligent newspaper discussion. Mr. Cleveland’s letter will make him a still stronger candidate for the suffrages of the American people.— Toledo Bee. "Within a compass not equaling a third of the space occupied by Mr. Harrison’s letter Mr. Cleveland has treated every question of interest and importance before the American people in a comprehensive manner, which renders, his letter one of the most notable state papers in the history of” American politics.—Kansas City Star. The organs are hard to please. For some time they have grumbled because Mr. Cleveland did not write a letter, and now that it is published they are as inconsolable as though Mr. Blaine had indited another epistle of the kind that recently got mixed in the Maine election.—Milwaukee Journal.