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Show 1,1 Ujnv """ Mr Bryan is .very bitter these days. If he H attends the St. Louis convention be will go car- H rying a bigger chip on big shoulder than he took H Into; tho Chicago convention' in .1890. If events H -.culminate, as now seems probable, if the Hill- jH Bemont plan of campaign succeeds and Judgo H Parker or some other man Is nominated on a plat- 9 form of negations, we do not see what Mr. Bryan H can do except to call upon his school Of Demo- H crats, which is mostly a Populist school, write tot 9 them a platform, have Charlie Towne nominated " 9 and go in to smash the so-called regular Democ- 9 racy. That is where Mr. Bryan really stands; iH he is much, more a Populist than Democrat. ' H All this Is but another notice served on the jH people that Theodore Roosevelt Is still playing !H in the biggest kind of luck. J |