The Commoner. WILLIATl J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. ...... 11 - fVol. 4. N. 6. Lincoln, Nebraska, February 26, 1904, Whole No. 162 v REORGANIZATION MEANS CLEVELANDISM v v h The democrats of the country are under obli- ttions to Mr. Cleveland's friends for the frank rowal of, their purpose to make Mr. Cleveland the V )minee in case the reorganizes obtain control. ie Montgomery Advertiser publishes an inter- Lew given by the president of the Memphis Com- Lercial-Appeal company to the Brooklyn Eagle. mese three papers, all prominent among the re- rganizers, join in lauding Mr. Cleveland as "the san" to be nominated. The president of the emphis paper, after declaring that he spoke for limself rather than for his paper, is reported as lying: , "Mr. Cleveland should be nominated." fMr. Cleveland has no elements of weakness as a (candidate." "I do not believe Mr. Cleveland would refuse to run. He would probably refuse to run his -candidacy was a mere proposition of poli tics, but it is a national emergency which calls for lis services. The democratic party should go ihead and nominate him without asking his con sent, and in notifying him should say: 'We have lominated you because the country requires your services and because the democratic' party desires to restore the country to the basis of safety and (solidity which you gave it as president " Here is the opinion of the president of the Memphis paper. t is drawn out by the Eagle, whose editor claims to be the political Columbus, who discovered Mr. Heveland's new availability, and it is reproduced the Advertiser, whose editor was postmaster Under Cleveland, gratitude torf which finds daily editorial expression. The bolting newspapers are full of such interviews and it is plam to any one. Pwho cares to see that it is neither harmony nor fsuccess that the reorgahizers desire, but a return Lto Clevelandism. But that is not all. The Memp'his man gives IX j.1 J. t- r.-i. i-t. -vii. lyawuy anotmsr oecrei,,- uuintuy, unit iuo uujtsuuou. tfto the reaffirmation of the Kansas City nlatform I is not opposition to silver alone, but opposition to the party's position on imperialism and the trust question as well. -He says: "The south is, unalterably opposed to the reaffirmation of the Kansas City platform. The south knows that the democratic party . cannot be successful so long as it goes before the country on those Issues. There is no issue . of expansion. TlTat issue is dead. To argue against expansion is to argue against the com mercial development of the south." So imperialism (ho calls it by tho more euphonious riame of expansion) is also dead! The paramount issue of 1900 is, in his opinion, no longer a debatable question. All the party said about human rights and self-government must be repudiated if the party would be "successful." No republican paper has advocated commercial ism more boldly than this man who is described by the interviewer as "one of the staunch southern old-school democrats." It would seem, then, that a carpet-bag government is not bad in itself, but that it depends on who appoints the carpet bagger; A system which was objectionable when enforced by the north against the south is, ac cording to this "staunch, old-school democrat," all right if enforced by the United States against the Filipinos in the interest of the commercial devel- opment of the south. This certainly does not rep resent the sentiment of . the south, but it is re produced to show how complete is the surrender demanded and upon how low a plane the next campaign is to be fought if the reorganizers have their way In the convention. On the trust question, also, the Commercial Appeal's president opposes the last national plat form. He says: "Mr. Bryan is not a factor at all. Ho is not a democrat. He has never been a demo crat. He would exterminate the trusts by destroying the business of the country, He, would prevent a business house, incorporated In our state, from carrying on business in other states, if he found a bug in tho house ho would tear down tho house. I am not a 0 defender of the trust systom in any of its il legal or oppressive aspects, but I am a busi ness man, and I do not consider Mr. Bryan's prescription for business either sound or democratic." He refers to that plank of tho platform which denounced a private monopoly as Indefensible and intolerable and proposed as a remedy, not that a corporation should not bo allowed to engago in In terstate commerce, but that before doing so it should show that it has no water in its stock and that it is not trying to monopolize any branch of business. That Is a remedy that means some thing -a remedy that would bo effective, and, of course, it Is opposed by those who favor the trusts. They want to get rid of the Kansas City platform and then write an ambiguous one which would permit a campaign of deception. He speaks as though It were Mr. Bryan only who favored tho anti-trust plank which ho first misrepresents and then condemns, but it is a platform remedy which received the support of moro than six mil lion voters. He does not like Mr. Bryan because tho latter still stands by tho platform and still opposes the trusts. As an evidence that the reorganizers will give no quarter it is asserted by the Eagle's correspon dent that while tho delegates may differ as to tho most available reorganlzer to nominate no man favorable to tho Kansas City platform will attend the next convention as a delegate. This Is an example of the "harmony" which is so much talked about and suggests what may be expected when a "reorganized" administration begins to deal with those who were faithful to the ticket. The old Clevelandism was bad enough, but it would be an hundredfold worse if to tho. sordidness that characterized it before there is added the spirit of vengeance which animates it now. SURRENDER DEMANDED Some of tho reorganizers profess to believe that the silver question is the only obstacle in the way of harmony. As evidence that complete sur render is demanded it is only necessary to cite the recent experience in Ohio. Thfr democrats of that state made a fair test of this matter last fall. Mr. Clarke, the man named for the United States senate against Mr. Hanna, was a bolter in 1896 and made speeches for the Palmer and Buckner ticket. On other questions he was with the party and had shown his sympathy with the people by supporting tho reforms for which Johnson was contending. Believing that his sympathies were right, the democrats, at the request of Mr. John son, nominatedjiim and the silver men as a rule supported him, but in spite of the fact that the republican papers took pains to advertise that he had not changed his opinion on the silver ques tion, he was defeated by an overwhelming ma jority. His. advocacy of the gold standard did not save him, nor did it conciliate the reorganiz ers. They make a great deal of noise about 16 to 1, but they are not content with a surrender on that finint. Thev insist that the platform, candi dates and the party organization shall represent organized wealth on all points .and that tho demo cratic party shall bo a miniature edition of the republican party. Nothing less than this will restore the kind of "harmony" they want - jfiJJ Instruct. A casual reading of the corporation dailies is enough to convince any one that there Is a con certed plan'on foot among the reorganizers to pre vent Instructions. "Select good, conservative men," they say, "and leave them free to act ac cording to their judgment In every district they "are working for a delegate who will follow the dictation of Wall street and if they can suc ceed in sending these mc-'u uninstructed, Wall street will writ the platform, name the candi dates and control the organization. If the voters aro heard at all they must be heard in the pri maries and in the county conventions. A motion to instruct for the reaffirmation of the Kansas City platform will draw the line between those who want to make an honest fight and those who want to surrender the party into the hands. of the financiers. JJJ It appears that greed has not been so thor oughly shackled that it cannot reach dp.wtinto.Ita pocket and dig up for the g. o. p. campaign: fund. mkmmammmmmmmmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm WALL STREET IS IN LINE Those who imagined that Mr. Roosevelt could be depended upon to hold out against Wall street and that he would meet with the antagonism of the Wall street magnates, have had their day. of awakening. Recently It was announced that James Slill man, president of the National City bank at New York, had dined with tho president at the Whit house. Then we were told that A. J. Cassatt, the Pennsylvania railroad magnate, had announced his loyalty to Mr. Roosevelt. Then the dispatches informed us that Mr. Blythe, attorney for the James J. Hill railroad interests, had assured the president that his railroads were for Roosevelt The story is well told by Walter Wellman, Washington correspondent for the Chicago Record-Herald. Mr. Wellman. is understood to stand very close to Mr. Roosevelt, and he seems to know what he is talking about. Over the Well man dispatch the Chicago Record -Herald prints . this head line, "Wall Street In Line." Mr. Wellman says that it is asserted confi dently by friends of Mr. Roosevelt that during . ; the coming.'slxr weeks, therewill be; a great change . ' of-sentiment-in. Wall street as to the desirability j i i vrj ft J At' J&i,