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October 22
Lafayette, IN (Excerpt)
Omaha World-Herald (Morning Edition), Omaha, NE, 23 October, 1896.
"I want to ask you to consider for a moment the position taken by the leading advocate
of the other side, ex-President Harrison. I think I am justified in saying that, of all the
supporters of Mr. McKinley's election, Mr. Harrison is the ablest and most distinguished. He made a
speech yesterday in which he tried to show the impossibility of there being a double standard, and
yet Mr. Harrison was elected president on a platform which denounced Grover Cleveland for trying to
demonetize silver. (Cheers.) He tried to show that it was impossible to have two yard sticks, and
yet he ran four years ago on a platform that declared that the American people from tradition and
interest favored bimetallism, which means a double standard. (Cheers.)
But, worse than that, while he opposes the double standard, he is trying to run on two
platforms this year. He said in his speech yesterday: 'The present conditions are that we are a
bimetallic country,' and yet the republican platform of this year says that we must maintain the
present gold standard. (Cheers.) If we are a bimetallic country why didn't the platform say that we
must maintain the present bimetallic standard, and while the republican platform declares that we
are at present under s ingle gold standard, Mr. Harrison states that we are under a bimetallic
standard. (Cheers.) What does it mean, my friends? It means that, having been defeated in this
campaign on the gold standard, now, as the election approaches, they are trying to get under cover
of bimetallism and claim that their platform is false." (Cheers.)
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