People's Pilot, Volume 5, Number 23, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 December 1895 — England's President. [ARTICLE]

England's President.

Anyone who supposed Cleveland would permit Secretary Olney to push his “vigorous foreign policy” evidently don’t know Cleveland. The president has called Olney down just as he did Gresham on the Corinto affair. A Washington dispatch of Oct. 26th says: “You can bet every dollar you can get hold of,” said an attache of the State Department to-day, “that there will be no trouble between this country and Great Britain over Venezuela. To take up Venezuela’s case by force means the establishment of a protectorate by the United States in South America, and I can assure you that nothing is farther from the minds of President Cleveland and Secretary Olney. The vigorous foreign policy we have been talking about will be on paper entirely. “Spanish-American sympathizers assert confidently that the boasted “vigorous foreign policy” of the United States has come to a sudden and inglorious end. Those know of the personal and social relations between Sir Julian Pauncefote and the President never could be made to believe that any firm stand against Great Britain would be possible under the present administration, and now they are more convinced of this fact than ever.” English capitalists knew what they were about when they put Cleveland in president. No greater friend of England and enemy of the interests of the American Republic ever occupied official position this side the big pond.— Sentinel. The old party papers will probably drop politics entirely, just after election. The people are bo agitated that the politicians want them to cool down enough to be handled without gloves by the bosses next year. But it won’t work —there are enough Pojmlist papers to keep things warm, and the campaign of ’96 is already begun.

Why is it that men who are “born to work” do not find a job that was born at the same time for their accommodation?