,'t .' WILLIAM J. BRYAN, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. ."'11 . 3ne Commoner ; 'in- j . .' Voirv'No; 18, Lincoln, Nebraska, May 20, 1904. Wholt No. 174, THE CLEVELAND BOND DEALS Ex-Presiderit Cleveland, after a silence upon the subject for some ten. years, feels called upon to give to the public through the Saturday Even ing Post "a detailed history of tne crimes charged -against an administration that issued, bonds of the government in time of peace." He proceeds at great length to describe the situation and the manner of issuing and selling the bonds. To those who investigated the matter at the time, liis article presents nothing new, and it is only, significant for two reasons first, because there was no occasion for the making of such an ex planation at this time, and, second,, because the explanation conceals or misrepresents some of the most important parts of the transaction. The only plausible excuse that can be given for the preparation of the article at this time is that Mr. Cleveland desires a renominatfon and, keenly, feeling the criticism directed against his admin istration on account of these bond deals, is try ing to- explain, them in such a way as to satisfy, the financial, element to which he looks for the support of his candidacy. His political opponents in the democratic party (''may their tribe in crease") are not alarmed by the article because if the people aro "sane" they will think no more of Mr. Cleveland after reading the article, and still less of him if they will consider -what he ought to have said, as well as what he did say.. He starts out with a misstatement o the law. He assumes that the greenbacks, were redeem able in gold. This is a groundless assumption The greenbacks called for paymont in dollars, and were payable in either gold or silver at the option 'of the government. The creation of a gold reserve did not obligate the government to redeem its paper in gold. The bonds which the secretary of the treasury was authorized to sell to provide a redemption fund, were coin, bonds. Mr. Cleveland sent a message to congress com plaining that he could only issue coin bonds, and asking for authority (which was denied) to issue gold bonds. Gold and silver were standard money and every national platform upon which Mr. Cleveland has run recognized gold and silver as the coinage of the constitution. His platform of 1884 so declared; his platform of 1888 reaffirmed the platform of 1884, and his platform of 1892 said: "We hold to the use of gold and silver as the standard money of the country," etc.. Coin" means silver as well as gold. He Issued bonds because at the dictation of Wall street he re fused to recognize silver as a standard money. He acted upon the assumption that gold alone was good money, and he permitted the financiers to raid the treasury and force an issue of bonds at the expense of the people. In his attempt to find an excuse, h& has searched the law of 1890, and finding there an innocent clause, attempts to make that clause a scapegoat, and blames, it with tho bond issue. He saysr , "It is hardly necessary to say that the as sertion in the act of 1890 (tho established pol- -icy of tho United States to maintain, the "two ,. metals at a parity) had the effect of transfer? -ring the discretion of determining whether -, those treasury notes should be redeemedin gold or silver from the secretary of the t;reas-. ury to the- holder of the notes. This is mere subterfuge. Tho clause referred to does not necessarily Imply that geld could 'be rightfully demanded. That is a construction which iWall street has placed upon the section, and Mr. Cleveland simply accepted the Wall street con struction. ' That, this was not a necessary con struction, or even a reasonable construqtion, , is shown by a quotation from 'the testimony given , by Secretary Carlisle on the 21st of January, 1895, before the house committee on appropriations. ' Tho following question and answer bring out the point; 4 Mr. Sibley? ' I would like to ask you (per "' ; fiapg not entirely connected with the matter r ; ninder discussion) what objections there could J". be to having 'the option of redeeming either in silver or gold He with the treasury in stead of tho noteholder? Secretary Carlisle; If that policy had been adopted at the beginning of resumption and I am not saying this for the purpose of criti cising the action of any of my predecessors, or anybody else but if tho policy o reserving to the government at tho beginning of resump tion, the option of redeeming in gold or sil ver all its paper presented, I believe it would have worked beneficially, and there would have been no trouble growing out of it, but the secretaries of the treasury Irom tho be ginning of resumption have pursued a policy of redeeming in gold or silver, at the option of the holder of tho paper, and If any secre tary had afterwards attempted to change that policy and force silver upon a man who wanted gold; or gold upon a man who wanted silver, and especially if he had made that at tempt at such a. critical period as we have had in the last two years, my Judgment is, it would have been very disastrous. There is a vast difference between establishing a policy at. the beginning, and reversing a policy after it has been long established, and, especially, after the situation has been changed. It will be seen that Secretary Carlisle blamed preceding, secretaries of the treasury. He did not blamo the law, and this, it must be remembered, ivas after Mr. Cleveland had issued his bonds after, Mr. Cleveland had made the deals with Morgan, Belmont and Rothschild. Cai lisle, it seems, had never discovered tho clause to which Mr. Cleveland refers, and upon which ho relies. He blames preceding secretaries for establishing the precedent, and hides behind tho excuse that the precedent having been established, he was not able to disregard it. He even went so far as to say that in his opinion it would have worked beneficially if the government had reserved tho option of redeeming in either gold or sliver. This testimony of Mr. Carlisle's convicts Mr. Cleveland of having manufactured an excuse AFTER HE HAD DONE THE THING WHICH HE IS NOW TRYING TO EXCUSE. From the testimony- of Mr. Carlisle it appears that previous administrations surrendered thq, option which tho law gave to the government, and Mr. Cleveland's administration refused to resume tho op'ion and thus protect the public From Mr. Carlisle's tes timony it is also apparent that no distinction was made between the greenbacks and the .Sherman notes. The distinction created by Cleveland's article is an afterthought, a distinction created for tho purpose of unloading upon some one else the blame for his disgraceful bond transactions. Again Mr. Cleveland saysr "Manifestly, in the face of this assertion of the government's intention, a demand for gold redemption on the part of tho holders of such notes could not be refused, and the ac ceptance of the silver dollars insisted upon, without either subjecting to doubt the good faith; and honest intention of the government's professions, or creating a suspicion of our country's solvency. The parity between the two metals could not be maintained, but, on . the contrary, would be distinctly denied, If the secretary of the treasury persisted in redeeming these notes, against the will of the holders, in dollars of silver Instead of gold." Here, too, Mr, Cleveland is assuming a fact that he cannot prove. In France gold and silver are maintained at a parity at the ratio of 15 to 1, and the Bank of France exercises the op tion, and pays In whatever coin it desires. If the bank officials' think that an attempt is being made- to secure too much gold for export, they refuse to pay in gold, or offer to pay part in gold and part In silver. By thus exercising the option they are able to protect their gold reserve, and 'they do not raise a doubt as to the good faith and honest intention' of the government, nor do they creato a suspicion of tho solvoncy of oithor the country or tho bank. Instead of strengthening silver by using it as full legal tender standard money, Mr. Cleveland constantly discredited it and discriminated against it. Mr. Cleveland does not think for himself on tho money question. Ho accepts tho ready-made opinion of tho monoy changers and permits thorn to do his thinking for him. Whatever they want done Is, in his opinion, "manifestly" proper, and with him it Is "hardly necessary to say" that what they want dono should bo dono. It has been currently reported that Mr. Clove land's first secretary, Mr. Manning, prevented a raid upon tho treasury gold by announcing that he would pay in silver if tho financiers attempted to draw out gold. Tho threat was sufficient and it raised no doubt as to tho government's Intentions, and it created no suspicion of Insolvency. Mr. Cleveland describes with some minute ness his struggles to keep gold in tho treasury, and there is a refreshing innocence in his narra tion of the way in which tho purchasers of bonds drew from tho treasury tho gold with which to pay for tho bonds. It is difficult to understand how any ono with sense enough to save him from incarceration in an institution for tho imbecile would permit tho withdrawal of gold for the ex press purpose of purchasing bonds that wore is sued to obtain gold. And yet Mr. Cleveland, in a really serious vein, explains that the treasury was depleted by tho purchasers of bonds, and that it was for this reason that ho stipulated in the Rothschild-Morgan contract (tho contract was drawn by his former law partner, Mr. Stetson, and gave a largo profit to Morgan, Belmont and Rothschild) that at least half of tho gold pur chased with tho bonds should be Imported. This, however, was no real protection, because It sim ply enlarged tho circlo without at all breaking that circle. The papers at the time reported some amusing instances. In ono case a bond buyer presented some greenbacks and Sherman notes and called for the gold with which to pay for his bonds. They told him at tho sub-treasury offico in New York that ho could not make the exchange in tho building, so he had to cart the gold across the street to his office, and then cart it back again, and he complained that ho was thus put to the expense of carting both ways. His protest was a reasonable ono, for if the government would let him draw out gold and take it across the street to his offico, and bring it back and deposit it In payment for bonds Issued foi tho sole pur pose of securing gold, why would not the gov ernment let him make tho exchange in tho room? In explaining the Morgan-Belmont-Rothschlld contract, Mr. Cleveland says that ho could have sold gold bonds on terms that would have netted the government $18,000,000 more than tho com bonds did, and yet in spite of the fact that the purchasers of tho bonds- charged $18,000,000 dif ference between coin and gold bonds, Mr. Cleve land has always insisted that the bonds should bo paid in gold. In other words, after the bond- holders had charged for tho risk, they were to be saved the risk and given the amount charged a& a gratuity. Mr. Cleveland says that while the bonds sold under tho contract were sold at a lower rate than bonds sold at auction, he believes that the gov ernment got an advantage equal In value to the difference paid, in that Morgan and Belmont were able to regulate tho rate of foreign exchange and lessen the depletion of the treasury. In other words, he charges that the. government wag in a helpless condition and had to hire two financiers, at a high price, to take care of its interests, and he admits that he preferred to hire Morgan and Belmont rather than exercise the rights conferred upon the administration by law, namely, the right to redeem coin obligations in silver. In addition to misrepresenting the law and the consequences of silver redemption, in addition to defending the Morgan-Belmont-Rothschild con tract, he deliberately covers up ono of the most -f S x. 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