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Don't Be A Slave To Party

Don't Be A Slave To Party image
Parent Issue
Day
30
Month
October
Year
1896
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

Strange how party prejudice will warp individual judgment. Thousands, yes hundreds of thousands, of people charge such men as Teller wittf being traitors to the Republican party. These men stand exactly where they have ever stood. The fact, which is apparent to all who honestly investígate, is that the monicd interest controlled the St. Louis convention and made it declare directly opposite to its former deelarations on the money question, made it indorse the very principie that it had been condemning the Demoerats for. The Democrats at Chicago were wise enough to discard Cleveland and his policy and to acuept the issue, and thus William J. Bryan, as a leader of a new Democracy, is the champion of the interests v-t all the people. Party ñames mean little, and we should all be wise enough to see that to follow the Republican party at this time is to forsake a principie that is paramount at this time. William McKinley's platform advocates just vhat he, in a speech at Cleveland, O., Feb. 13, 1891, arraigned Mr. Cleveland for. Mr. McKinley then said of Cleveland: "He was determined to have a single medium and diminish one of the coins of commerce and limit the volume of mbney among the people and make money scarce and therefore dear; he would have increased the value of money and diminished the value of everything else - money tne master and everything else the servant." Don't be a slave to party. Stand for principie and vote for Bryan and ver's

Article

Subjects
Ann Arbor Argus
Old News