B5HS535 Bwwwippwfppgi ' JL j; The Commoner. 14 VOLUME 3, NUMBER 29. I.'- I It u In ski; JR. 14 liV , Clinton (111.) Reglator: Clovoland'a presidential boom is bounded on all Bides by his hat band. Petty (Tex.) Enterprise: It is not strange that Grovor Cleveland should be so highly praised by tlfo Chicago Inter-Ocean and other republican pa pers. Jerseyvillo (111.) News: Can a stul tified party win? It is very doubtful. And the democratic party .will bo stultified if it heeds tho advice of the reorganizers. Jerseyvillo (111.) News: If tho democratic party holds to its prin ciples it can't bo any more than de feated; if it abandons them it will bo both defeated and discredited. Eureka (111.) Democrat-Journal : Tho republican editors, having recovered their wind, aro again making them solvea red in tho face trying to inflate tho collapsed Cleveland boom. Grand Island (Nob.) Democrat: Un til the republican assassin of William Goebel is returned to Kentucky soil, tho republican governor of Indiana would do better in the background. Indianapolis (Ind.) Standard: Tho democrat who thinks that Grover Cleveland is a Jefforsonian democrat would make a companion to tho repub lican who imagines that Mark Hanna is a follower of Lincoln. Emporia (Kas.) Times: No sooner had tho people of tho country learned that Cleveland might be persuaded to make tho raco a fourth time for tho iroaidency than they apparently lost all interest in his candidacy. Fremont (Nob.) Herald-Leader: Tho trouble with Brlstow is that ho be lieves that a republican thief is no bet tor than any other kind of a thief. Naturally enough this view is not ac ceptable to tho average republican or gan and boss. Auburn (Neb.) Granger: when our government sends prayers to tho czar of Russia in bohalf of tho persecuted Jews, then Russia with propriety turns to quote, "Physician heal thy self, " etc. Wo have. killed more in offensive Filipinos while compelling them to submit, twelve times over, than tho Russians have killed of tho Jews, Red Wing (Minn.) Argus: La Fol letto of Wisconsin says wo need a new declaration of independence to protest against taxation without rep resentation. The trusts tax us, he . says, and allow us no share in tho government Governor La Follotto should bo moro careful. Such talk will land him in tho democratic party if ho doesn't watch out Malono (N. Y.) Forum: Tho Clove land boom for president in 1904 will xiover take root, for various reasons, the chief ono being that the people don't want him. In an active light for tho nomination it may bo possible for him to got tho delegations of a fow eastern states, but to get enough votes for a nomination is simply out of tho question. His boom cornea from re publican and gold bug papers only, but .he has no backing whatever from tho Jefferson democracy. Cleveland would make a good president from a repub lican and monopolistic standpoint and if ho ovor wants tho nomination for that office again ho will nave, to get it from tho republicans. Cumberland (Md.) Alleganian: Can non says thero is no necessity for financial legislation; Hanna says tho tariff is just tho thing as it stands; 'Payne says tho postofllce scandals aro "hot air;" Root says tho army scan dals aro dreams; Roosevelt says tho trusts are smashed. Therefore, ac cording to republican officeholders, ev erything is just lovely. There will bo a different tune heard in the next presidential election Bellofonto (Pa.) Watchman: Sur face indicationp show no signs of the overworking of Mr. Roosevelt's stren uosity in tho job of uncovering tho postal scandals. Fremont (Neb.) Herald-Leader: It seems that ono of the easiest ways to get a cheer in a republican conven tion is to get mixed up in a brutal murder with a prominent democrat as the victim, fly to another state and hide behind the coat-tails of a repub lican governor. Jackson (0.) Herald: How many people reflect that the building up of a powerful navy and a strong army means the building up of a powerful pro-war party? That thi3 is so is obvious from tho fact that it means the education of many men whoso solo profession is war and who can attain success in their careers only through war. Palmer and Mark Hanna to demoralize and destroy tho democratic party. In the opinion of the News, they aro less democratic than Mark Hanna him self, and tho attitudo of the party to wards thom should bo more pro nounced in its opposition than toward republicans. Mt Pleasant (Mich.) Democrat: The Washington correspondent who claims to have discovered that President Roosevelt and J. Pierpont Morgan have become reconciled, cannot ex pect much credit from his discovery until he demonstrates that there was over any difference between them. Emmettsburg (la.) Democrat: Gro ver Cleveland will address the com mercial club of Chicago in October, and it is predicted that he will take advantage of the occasion to Inflate his little boom for a third term. The trusts are patting him on the back only for tho purpose of making Teddy walk straight Ho may yet find out to his sorrow that the west has very little love for him. Watkins (N. Y.) Review: Accord ing to tho Iowa republican platform, it is perfectly proper to tax 80,000,000 people to help 250,000 men do busi ness, or '80,000 people to help 250 men get along in the world, or 320 people to enrich ono man, with the under standing, of course, express or im plied, that theao individuals who are thus helped by government subsidies should contribute a proper percentage of their subsidies every four years to keep tho party upholding such a pol icy perpetually in power. Eureka (I1L) Democrat-Journal: Some editorial philosophers have been Orangeburg (S. C.) Patriot: The northern republican papers aro con stantly trying to show the south that Mr. Grover Cleveland Is tho best can didate tho democrats can put out for the presidency. Between Cleveland i ;x"rrvi U"V '"V"""" ??" puzzling their brains to explain how and the trusts and 'all such would do ff woob J: . T .. ",,,, safe. They aro both servants of the grow a few years from an obscure samo masters. V Beardstown (III.) Enterprise: The democracy of 1896 and 1900 have no opologies to make for tho Issues that were made paramount' by the Chica go and Kansas City platforms. They are proud of the glorious fight for democratic principles that they made in those campaigns, and any conven tion that does not recognize this is not representative of the genuine democratic sentiment of the country. Newklrk (O. T.) Democrat-Herald: Wall street and t tho trust magnates know their cake would soon bo dough with tho democrats in power, for the one thing they most dread is tariff revision. The tariff protects them and allows them to charge the high prices which fill their pockets at the expense of the people. Sinco Presi dent Roosevelt began to talk like Han na of "letting well enough alone" the trust magnates are for him. to a man. Monticello (la,) Times: Perry S. Heath,1 formerly first assistant post roaster general, says he is being at tacked bv yellow journals for his con r.ectloilth tho postofllco department Whenever a newspaper exposes somo rascality or writes up some law breaker, the wrong-door and his next friend become hostile and charges the exposer of their villiany with being a yellow journalist Jerseyvillo (111.) Nows: As ita read ers perhaps know, the News is neither a compromiser or "reorganlzor." It knows that not Mark Hanna, but the traitors who call themselves demo crats and supported Cleveland in his treason, are tho men who defeated the party when it had the most brilliant chances to win. Therefore, it holds to tho principle that forgiveness should only be extended to these men who Lave hurt tho party bo grievously, upon open profession, of sincere re pentance. It take a whole lot of nervo for any man to call himself a democrat who joined with Cleveland J country lawyer and banker in Iowa to secretary of the treasury. It might help them to solve this puzzle to seo why Pennsylvania keeps" Quay in the United States senate when it might have the honest and patriotic man, John Wanamaker. It is because the money power must have a man there who will do anything it demands of him, and Quay is that man. The same power has made Shaw secretary of the treasury and for tho same reason. The bankers' trust and the others knew their man, and his subserviency to Wall street ever since his appoint ment to the treasury shows this very plainly. Rockvlllo And.) Tribune: The gold bug press is saying that four years more of President Diaz does not nec essarily mean four years more' of the silver standard of Mexico: that the "financiers" of that country have al ready made their plans for the gold standard, and that it will be adopted. Thero can be no doubt about tho de sire of the "financiers" of Mexico for a gold standard; It would be fat pick ing for them to compel the 'people to pay debts in gold that were contracted on a silver . basis, just as it was fat picking for the scoundrels who held this country up for a war debt con tracted on a paper basis and finally made payable in gold. But the Mex icans may not be such easy marks as we were when wo submitted to a forged act of congress demonetizing silver after it was made plain that not one congressman in ten knew that lie had voted for such an act Paragould (Ark.) Soliphone: Tho desires or wishes of Mr. Cleveland aro selfish and tend to his own aggran dizement Tho. future of democracy, thank God! Iie3 not in his hands, or in tho hands of his advocates. The grand army of democracy has no lovo tor Clevelandlsm. The speeches of Cleveland may mean a great deal to the mugwump of the east, but they are meaningless to the western and southern democrat. Jt it pleases the old man from New Jersey to think that he is a Moses, let the old fellow indulge in the delusion. The sane know that Grover Cleveland hath no part in the future of the democratic party :is its nominee for president. Adrian (Mich.) Press: Now tho democratic party, at its last two na tional conventions, announced its po sition on the money question. It pro claimed to the world that it favored bi-metallism, and that the sliver dol lar that has been coined at a fixed ratio for a hundred years should re main the same size and have the same value. From that position the demo cratic party cannot now recede. No man who supported the party prin ciples for eight years sees any need of abandoning that financial policy, or of reorganizing. And the fight might just as well bo begun first as last to maintain a principle. If the bl-metal-ists win, and nominate a candidate on the old platform, not a reorganlzer would vote tho ticket. Mount Morris (111.) Democrat? Nothing could be clearer than that the chief strength of the reorganizers, led by Grover Cleveland, lies in the republican press. Every republican newspaper favors the movement for reorganization and attempts to lead the public to believe that it is pop ular among the people. Whenever a reorganizer makes a speech at somo commercial club it is published under bold head-lines and commented upon as a "wise," "statesmanlike," "con servative" discourse, and it is made to appear that he has the approval of tho rank and file. But when at a gather ing of real democrats, some leader speaks for holding to the principles of the party, tho republican papers either fail to mention it or publish it whero it is likely to be unobserved. Three For One. Prairie Farmer Combination. THE COMMONER ?"$Uo6 f rairie warmer, weekly ) (. 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