VOLUME 8, NUMBER 8 16 Published to Date The Commoner. Whi y i 1 1 fo " l in 1900. Such, however, is not tho case; the Bryan vote exceeded tho Parker vote in New Hampshire by 1,497. When all these facts are consid ered in the light of the further fact that, in all the debatable states, Bryan is admittedly much stronger today thanLe was either in 1896 or 1900, it is easy to understand why the World has met with so vttlo success in trying to persuade demo crats that it would be inexpedient to nominate Bryan this year. Omaha World-Herald. White States in which Bryan, in 1896, re ceived a larger vote than Cleveland in 1892. . i -,. 1 jim" . r -'v-y v-7 1. s Jfa1 IoK ' MONTANA DAHOTA ) tp, VV& I fjOtmJ J I WYOMING 1 "l OVA T 0x W&l? (L Uvaoa uTAH ZT White States in which Bryan, in 1900, re ceived a larger vote than Parker in 1904. BOOKS RECEIVED Democratic Foundations. A brief disquisition of the fundamental prin ciples of popular government, by J. Ulhrich. Co-operative Printery, 344 Sixth St., Milwaukee, Wis. Price 10 cents. Thomas Alva Edison, sixty years of an inventor's life. By Francis Arthur Jones. Profusely illustrated. Thomas Y. Crowell & Co., New York. Price $2 net. Postage 20 cents ad ditional. Federal Usurpation. By Franklin Pierce, of the New York bar. D. Ap pleton & Co., Publishers, 436 Fifth Ave., New York. Price $1.50 net. True Manhood. By James Cardi nal Gibbons. Doxey Book Shop Co., Baltimoro and London. The Making of a Millennium. The story of millennium realm and its laws. By Frank Rosewater. Cen tury Publishing Co., Omaha, Neb. Price, cloth, postpaid, ?1.00; paper, postpaid, 30 cents. Distribution. By Henry Rawie, author of "Principles of a New Po litical Economy." The Confessions and Autobiog raphy of Harry Orchard. Illustrated with photographs. The McClure Co., New York. Essays in Municipal Administra tion. By John A. Fairlie, Ph. D. The Macmillan Co., New York. Price $2.50. The Labor Problem; solved on Bible principles. By Rev. William Robertson, Allegheny, Pa. Pamphlet. Price 25 cents. Money Hunger. A brief study of commercial immorality in the United States. By Henry A. Wise Wood. G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York and London. The Knickerbocker Press. The World Judged by the Son of Man. By Seth Burke. Published by Sidney Printing and Publishing Co., Sidney, O. Price 25 cents. The American Constitution. The national powers, the rights of the states, the liberties of the people. Lowell Institute lectures. By Fred eric Jesup Stimson. Charles Scrib ner's Sons, New York. Price $1.25. THE TRUE MAP OF 1JUYAN1SM Tho World-IIornld publishes today, on tho first pago, a couplo of maps as a supplement to tho New York World's "Map of Bryanism." These maps aro accurato and fair, and thoy speak for thomsolves. It is im- iiuuaiuiu iu bluuv mom ana not ro- nlizo Mr. Bryan's shown in his two presidency. Mr. Cleveland, ibiiL', was a vor great strength as campaigns for tho when ho ran in strnntr nnnrilrlnfn Ho had behind him a united and ag grcsslvo party, tho prostigo of an able and successful first administra tion, and tho support of tho moral sentiment of tho country. And ho achieved a glorious victory. Ho was eloctod. Yet a study of tho map will show that, in winning this victory, Mr. Cloveland, in thirty states, polled fowor votes than Mr. Bryan polled In thoso same states in 1S9G, and in only ilttcen states did ho recoivo a larger vote than was cast for Mr. Bryan. In the total vote Cleveland, who was elected, got b, 6 11,7 7 5 votes; Bryan, though ho was defeat ed, got G,542,4SS votes. Tho showing made by the second map is just as conclusive. It is true that Judge Parker was not as strong a candidato as Mr. Cleveland. But ho represented tho choice of the New York World and tho conservative ele ment of the party. And, on election day, in only nine states did ho poll moro votes than did Bryan four years earlier, while in thirty-six states he ran far behind Bryan. His popular vote was 5,097,911, as against 15,37 1,9 61 votes cast for Bryan in 1900. Tho maps show that Bryan, dofoated candidato of isnn stronger than Cloveland, the success 1 m cuiuuuiue 01 is)'2, in such 1)iv. otal- states as California, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Michigan, Minnesota Mr. tho was and West Virginia, not to mention Kansas, Nebraska, Oregon, Washing ton, South Dakota and other states that will be debatable ground this year. The map shows that Bryan in 1900, was stronger than the World's candidate of 1904, not only in all the states named above except West Virginia, from which Mr. Davis was nominated, but that, in addition, he was stronger than Parker in such states as Connecticut, Now Jersey and Wisconsin. Even in Pennsylva nia, the seat of conservatism, ho was stronger than Parker tho conserva tive, and in Ney York, Parker's own state, tho World's own territory, he ran only a little more than four thousand votes behind the vote given to Parker four years later. There is one error in tho map. The map indicates that in 1904 Mr. Par ker received moro votes in New Hampshire than Mr. Bryan received Cannot Rest Your appetite is gone, you eat distresses you. failing aro bilious. You acho, backache, feel blue cnoiy ana cannot rest or What littlo Strength is have head- and melan- sleen. The fact is your nerves are unstrung, and you are on tho verge of nervous pros tration. They must bo strengthened, renewed? They will not cure them selves, but must have a nerve remedy. This you will find in Dr. Miles' Nervine It is prepared for just such ailments, and is a never-failing remedy, becauso it soothes, feeds and builds tno nerves back to health. If allowed to continue, stomach, kid ney and liver troubles will soon bo added to your already overflowing measure of misery. "I suffered from nervous prostration. When I began taking Dr. Miles' Ner vine I couldn't hold anything in my hands, nor get from one room to an other. Now I do all my own work." MRS. CHAS. LANDRUM. Carthage, Mo. Nervine seldom fails to do all wo claim for it. and so wo authorize drug gists to refund money if first bottU does not benefit.