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July 13
Champaign, IL
Omaha World-Herald (Morning Edition), Omaha, NE, 14 July,
1896.
"I have not been in your city since 1879. In that year I was a student at the Illinois
college, and I attended an intercollegiate contest at this place.
I am not going to make a political speech this evening—(small boy cheers;
laughter).
I have just been talking some in Chicago and am sort of between speeches. This is an
important campaign. In my judgment, it is the most important campaign this country has passed
through in a time of peace. The issues are those which affect every man, woman and child in the
nation, and I beg of you that you shall appreciate the important part you bear in this campaign.
This is the greatest nation on earth. It is in advance of all other nations. Its advancement is
because our form of government is the best on earth; because, being in the hands of the people, it
can be made as good as the people desire. If our laws are good, if our laws are just, it is because
our people have force to make them just. I believe there is more justice in the people than is
expressed through their representatives. If laws are bad it is the fault of the representatives of
the people and so must be remedied by the people.
There are those who have the idea that patriotism can only be manifested in time of
war. I was too young to go to war, but in every campaign such as this you and I have a chance to
show our patriotism. Our government is the most perfect form of government because it is the best
that the people can offer for a display of patriotism. Every great economic question is a moral
question. When you come to a settlement of a question like that of the present campaign morality is
involved. The financial question is the most important issue in this campaign and I wish that you
would study it so that you may understand the way it affects you and your interests. There is no
class to which the question can be committed because no one class can be trusted to take care of it.
Before the campaign is over the discussion will turn to one question: 'Is this nation
great enough to legislate for itself?' We believe we are strong enough to determine our own
financial policy without waiting for any other nation on earth. (Cheers.) It is not a complicated
question. Every great economic question is at least a great moral question and when it comes to be
settled it can only be done by the great common people of the nation. The politicians, too, have
tried to settle the money question; the people have tried to settle the money question, but it will
be unsettled until the people have a chance to express their opinions, and it will not be settled
until then. From that there is no appeal."
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