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October 23
Springfield, IL (Excerpt)
The Evening News, Lincoln, NE, 24 October, 1896.
"I am glad to come back to Illinois, for while Nebraska is the place of my residence,
Illinois is the state of my birth. I became acquainted with many of the people of this capital city
before I was acquainted much beyond the confines of my county. I am also glad to come to
Springfield, because it was here a year ago last June that the Democrats assembled and gave notice
to the Democrats of the nation that Illinois was still a Democratic state. (Applause and cheers.)
They gave notice to the Democrats of the nation that no matter how other states might desert
Democracy for plutocracy, the Democracy of Illinois still prayed with windows open and toward
Monticello and the Hermitage. Your convention had much to do in giving hope and inspiration to the
Democrats of the nation and your state played a most important part in bringing the Democratic party
to the indorsement of free and unlimited coinage at 16 to 1 without waiting for the aid or consent
of any other nation.
Upon the action of the United States may depend—aye, my friends, I believe upon
the action of the United States will depend the monetary policy of the civilized world. I believed
that when this great nation shall cast its influence into the scale upon the side of bimetallism,
then international bimetallism, which we pray for, will be brought to us, not by our following, but
by our leading European nations. Do you tell me that we shall put bimetallism further away by our
efforts? I tell you that we have waited for 20 years, and petitioned and begged, but my friends,
while we have been petitioning, the dollar has been rising and those before whom we laid our
petitions were profiting by delay. Washington has well said in his farewell message that our nation
need not expect favors from another. We have been looking for favors. We now propose to make it to
the interest of the old world to join with us. Do you want to know how we can make it to their
interest? Let me tell you. We shall open our mints to free coinage at 16 to 1, we shall make the
silver dollar an equal legal tender with gold for all debts, public and private, and we will say to
our foreign creditors: If you do not want cheap dollars you join with us to make the silver dollars
good.
My time is up, and I simply want to leave a parting word with you, and that is that we
cannot reform our monetary system until we can take possession of both houses of congress as well as
the executive office. According to our constitution a president cannot sign a bill until after the
House of Representatives and Senate have concurred in its passage. If you simply elect a president
and elect a congress hostile to silver, the fulfillment of our hope will be delayed two years more.
I want you, if you are in earnest to restore the money of the constitution to work from now until
the polls close to give us a congress that believes in bimetallism and elect a legislature which
will send a silver senator to Washington. I have been gratified to see the manner in which all of
the reform elements have been able to co-operate in this state in the campaign. I am glad that
silver Republicans and Democrats and Populists, instead of fighting each other, are going to combine
against the common enemy. I am glad to know that you are a single unit on your electoral ticket, and
nearly all your congressional and nearly all your legislative tickets, and I am glad you are united
on your state tick also, and you are going to elect Altgeld governor of this state."
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