g77iJ y'-fWRwmjp'yfrw wi IJ L1 JJPUP FJR ' 4 N j ?-: 4 'A H The Commoner. Vol. a, No.3o. H t i - - -r ' I . , FORUM OF THE WEEKLY PRESS , s I ' ' ' ' ill I II . - , . ff iT Batav'ia (0.) Sun: Tho recent har- jnbny dinner in Now York held un- dor Now Joraoy auspices was notablo for tho absonco of roal democratic leadors. "; Hamlin (W. Va.) Monitor: How would ttoo sugar beet do for an emblem in tho next presidential campaign? .Thoro is some doubt about the, "full dinner pail" working again. Bonton Harbor (Mich.) Times: Tho republican party stands for slavery and polygamy at least congress voted in favor of it, by voting against a bill' to wipe it out. Memory of Lincoln, whore art thou? Gunnison (Colo.) News-Champion: Roosevelt said ho pardoned those Fili pinos on tho Fourth of July by virtue, of power vosted in him by tho consti tution. But tho supremo court told us tho constitution did not apply to Filipinos. Albia (la.) News: The democratic party will bo true to its best tradi tions when leading a light for tho rights of the peoplo, as against tho trusts and monopolies fostered by high tariffs, and for tho issue and control of the volume of money by the people instead of tho banks. Harisburg (111.) Register: In 1892 Grover Cleveland was elected presi-, dent, and 219 democratic congressmen were elected. Two years later but 93 democratic congressmen wero chosen, all because of Cleveland's betrayal of tho peoplo. No wonder Watterson sa.7s lie left tho party a wreck. Toledo (0.) Bulletin: If tho Kan sas City platform wore wrong and not In the interest of a great majority of tho people tho newspapers opposing it should take it up plank by plank and show by logical reasoning that it is wrong. This shooting in overy direc tion except at the mark inclines many readers to think tho papers pursuing this course are insincere. Holmes County (O.) Farmer: The cry of the republicans in 1896 and 1900 was that 'if free silver won every commodity and necessity that the peo ple used would double in price and that tho wages of labor would be the last thing to advance. "Well, free sil ver didn't win and that is exactly the condition we have now. Will some of our good republican brethren explain , tho wherefore of this condition and show us wherein the demand regulates the price. ,. Bonham (Tex.) News: The real democrats are going to harmonize, sil ver or no silver, while a few pretended . democrats are not going with the pat ty, diver or no silver, unless they can dictate the platform and tho nominees. flPhese are tho Palmer and Buckner crowd, and have not In the past, do not now, nor ever will belong to tho democratic party. They are repub ' licans, and we do not want any har- mony on their terms. Tho rest of the party will harmonize all right Don't worry. . . Vandalla (111.) Domocrat: Tho beef less dinner pail is a silent but potent protest against tho policy of tho re publican party, which by Its tariff systom "protects" the beef trust while tho latter robs tho people. Proston (Minn.) National Republi can: Thoro is no more odious poli tical character than Grover Cloveland. Ho was raised up by the Belmonts to botray the democratic party into the custody of the money trust. Cochocton (0.) Democrat and Stand ard: President Roosevelt's suggestion in his Pittsburg speech with respect to additional legislation against the trusts has boon received with chilling coolness by tho republican bosses and editors. When one of the former, Senator Piatt of Now York, was asked several days after tho date of the ad dross what ho thought of it, the eva sive answer was ready: "I have not yet read it." Dodging answers of that kind deceive no one. They are the feoble resource of wily politicians who, for diplomatic reasons, aro unwilling to express the approval or disapproval which thdy entertain. And so of the eminent journalists of tho samo party. The prudence which seals tho lips of tho bosses prompts them to give pri vate circulation only to their opinions on a question which is of universal interest. Dexter (Mo.) Messenger: John L. Thomas, of DeSoto, prominent in state politics, is openly affiliating with, tho republican party. In a recent address at Jefferson City he made use of the following language: "Tho only place for a reorganizer is in the republican party." Mr. Thomas has had a bad case of sulks for several years, and was a follower of and an appointee of Cleveland in 1892. He followed his master off and lost all the pull he over had with his party. He is right in saying that tho place of every reor ganizer is in the republican party, and it is to be hoped that this class will ex hibit tho samo moral courage and cast their lot with tho party they have been aiding for years. We admire Mr. Thomas fOr his change, because wo believe he is now where he belongs The only way to purify a party Is by getting rid of tho refuse material. Watertown (N. Y.) Reunion: We have an abiding impression that it is not necessary to go beyond the senti ments and principles declared by the democratic masses the folks in tho country and school districts, in tho workshops and on the farms to find out what tho democracy' of this coun try stands for today. We see no need of reorganization or any calls for a now departure in politics, either in tho way of principles or organization. The eloquent gentlemen wo have lately heard from are prolific in good ad vice, but they should take some of. it themselves and join, with- tho same earnestness and hope they had when J candidates themselves, in all legiti mate party work. Tho democratic party of this, country is today a woll organlzed force for sound and woll understood principles. Dyer3burg (Tonn,) Herald: Those who propose to reorganize the demo cratic party, whatever that means, should bear in mind that over six mil lions of true democrats will have to bo reckoned with. Mr. Cloveland, Mr. Hill and several others, who have not kept tho faith, met in New York re cently and made some miserable stag gers at what they were pleased to term "harmony," but which wero nothing more nor less than bold and stubborn attempts at justifying themselves for the part they had taken in defeating the party that had twice elected tha chief spokesman at this gathering to the highest office in Its gift. If theM is to be a reorganization of the party if there is a real necessity for it (which wo do not admit) the reor ganization must bo entrusted to the men who remained with the party In 1896. Those who left it have no right to expect to be entrusted with 'its re organization. At least they 'should not expect to bo given the seat of honor in tho council chamber. If tho party is satisfied it was wrong in 1896 and 1900, then let the party Itself re nounce its utterances and decide its principles and not the men who sulked in their tents or openly es poused tho cause of McKinley, the apostlo of protection; and the op ponent t)f every democratic doctrine enunciated since he first entered pub lic life. West Unity (O.) Defender: There are democratic newspapers in the' state that aro looking for a leader to guide the party to success. They claim they do not believe in "isms," "fads," and "heresies," but they wish the party to trlunofph they want it to win at the polls. They want to win their way. Their way is to surrender to the money power, to cater to the trusts, to truckle, to a false national pride which has arbitrary annexation of territory as a hobby. They believe in the abasement of principle and the abolishment of a policy which means now and for all time a true republican form of gov ernment, a firmly established dem ocracy. Catering to the earnest de sire of tho average member of tho party to win, they make specious ar guments why tho majority should not do so-and-so, without saying what it should do. This is the class of papers that fought wiCi tho enemy six and two years ago, "and which will do so again two years hence, unless they can commit the party to the same doc trines and policies pursued by the prrty in power. Either that or they wero lukewarm in those momentous campaigns and are chilly now. It re mains to be seen if tho great major ity of the party will lie down and per mit the disturbers to walk over their bodies to even greater disasters than we suffered in 1896, and 1900. Waynesburg (Pa.) Democrat: Ono of tho favorite words of. those wha betrayed tho democratic party in 189(5 and 1900 Is "reconstruction." Thoy would have the people forget that the Kansas . City platform was supported by "more votes than any other national democratic platform in the history of our country and had it not been for such bolters as ex-President Cleveland, victory would have surely perched upon our banner. The bolting demo crats who now want to reconstruct the democratic party aro so nearly allied , to the trust-ridden and Wall-street-controlled republican party thrit it would require a microscope to dis cover tho difference. Cleveland sold out himself and his party to Wall street for something a little more sub stantial than a "mess of pottage." Ho got his booty, let him enjoy it, If he can, in seclusion, but he and thosa who followed his lead have also the condemnation of the democratic masses and it certainly requires "cheek" in the superlative degree to come out before tho public and talk" about "reconstructing" that whlea they betrayed into the hands of the en omy. We are proud of an "unrecon structed" democracy which would sooner go down in defeat ninety and nine times than to bow the knee to the modern Baal, the money power. No, we are not greater than the ia tional platform and we expect to star.d. by it and on it until the democracy of the nation in convention assembled shall give us another. .. . Smiling Little Girl . FABLE- SHOWING THE UNWISDOM ,OF SOME CHANGES. There was a little girl once whoso natural expression yas a pleased smile. , ; It attracted the boys to an extent'' that the little girl's governess told her she must modulate the smile, or it ' would be supposed, as she grew to be a young lady, that she was seeking to attract masculine attention, tftaa which nothing could be more unwom anly. The""little girl was started in to.e ladylike. By 20 she was severe look ing. At 25 she was forbidding and at 30 her face was positively repellent. She was a perfect lady, but the mascu line sex had ceased to trouble her. So she decided' to throw prudence to the winds and to cultivate the old win ning expression. But, she had forgot ten how to look pleasant and resem- . bled a cheorful hyena when she smiled. Then she became melancholy, and that settled it. She saw them all go by. Misdirected refinement had been her ruin. Moral: Never make a change .un less you are sure it is for the better. Life. A Wrong System. Wo congratulate our thrifty friend, "' President Schwab, on his new $3,350',- ' 000 home in Gotham. It will be a fit ting monument to tho splendid system which builds palaces ror a few and condemns all tho rest to "company houses." Johnstown (Pa.) Democrat, I F J AT. -Lajli. i". U