Lumber Holds Own in Home Building ltoeause it can lx- adapted to all kinds of Ktructurei and be made to tit all sized jKH-ket books. It's the most elastic building material on earth and, judged from the viewHint of health, makes the lest all round house you can build. It s h jwor conductor of heat or cold and rejects dampness abso lutely, keeping your house free from mustiness and bad odors common to so many otlici kinds of build ing material. Prove we are right yourself by jotting down these features and then visit a few of the frame houses right here at hom This may seem a lot of trouble, but you don't build a home every year and it pays to build wisely. It also pays to look closely at the kind of lumlier you use. There are many many r rieties and they all have a favored purjWHe. We know their uses ASK ITS. There's No Place Like Home Forest Lumber Co. ALLKNCE, NEBRASKA Advertisement f-ttlS1 1 West Florida lands Small farms, improved and un improved, easier terms to pur chasers than rent, crops grown all the year round. Oranges. Means, tigs, corn and cotton. Healthy climate; tuherculosis, asthma. Catarrh, rheumatism, all disappear here. Large bodies of tine timber lands. Excellent mill sites, subdivisions to the deep water city of Pennsacola. sk as questions, the answers are FliKK. Charter land Co., Pensacola, Florida Advertisement 1868 4 181 Paul W.Thomas instructor i W00DR0W WILSON The Story of His Life From the Cradle to the White House By WILLIAM BAYARD HALE Copyright. 1911. 1312. & by Co Doubleday, Fag () 11112. by Ail', i lean PfWM Aicla(lon. Tlie Wilson Handshake. I CHAPTER f. Background and Boyhood. 1' was four jreurs more than a century iiro that a rvHtleiM outti or twenty, to wliqye enr hnd rouie amazlm: ato- ON VIOLIN ihonel75 Alliance. Neb A Matter of Choice 1 1 you want a cur iosity, buy a Fly ing Machine. If you want Reliability, have your PHOTO taken at the : : : Alliance Art Studio 114 E. 4th St. Phone 111 ."let of the opitortiinlties to be found In new Intnl. forsook the Lome of hlH 8citobliWb fathers In County Down and an lied forth toward the piths of the western stars. I'erhaps he Imtl beard of the fame of a Scotsman of his own name and without doubt his own kin who, bavlnt; migrated to America only a generation liefore. had become one of the founders of the new nation, one of the sinners of the Declaration of Independence, a member of Its const! tutional 'onrontlon and a Justice of Its first supreme court. At all events. It was on a ship bound for the city of Justice .lames Wilson tbat young James Wilson :iilmi The later emigrant may have been destined to no such eminence as araf the earlier, vet young James, too, found his opportunity Iti the new country found It In a little shop full of the smell of printer's ink and mysterious with (lie apparatus of the preservative art the shop at 15 Franklin court, for merly the home of BtOjMStfl Kraukllu, whence Issued to the enlightenment of the good people of Philadelphia Wil liam Dunne's daily paper, the Aurora. To their enlightenment. It Is to be hoped, certainly very much to their en tertainment and their agitation and not only theirs, but the whole country's as well. William Dunne was the earli est muckraker In American journalism. .tames Wilson took aptly to the print ing trade and to his employer, as his employer did to him. The young mar. prospered. And he married married Anne Adams, an Irish girl four years his Junior, who had come over on the ship that brought him. .lames Wil son's wife was a bluestocking of a Presbyterian to the day of her death and brought up her ten children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord In the strictest sect of Presbyterian-Ism. Wilson now became nominally pun- i another, not Usher of the Aurora. Duane. whe" the came amonj war of lSm broke out. was made O. H. MOON CONTRACTOR and BUILDER Any kind t Plans furnished. You are invited to inspect my work. Satisfaction jruaranteed i A Judge Jam Wilson. Paternal Grand father Woodrow Wilson. Shop, 424 Miss. Phone, Red 440 LARGE ATTENDANCE AT TEACHERS' EXAMINATION The icKulur stale teachers' exam ination, unnouueed in The Herald last wttk. whs held in the district ceurl ri mil of the court house, cn Friday and Saturday. onduited by County Supt Delia M, K. 1 I Im exitnimaticu was taken by sixty per sons, most of u horn !.- uieiiibtrb of the normal training classes ot .U lia:i"e High school and St Agues At adeiiiy. Othirs who t;:;k the aniinutim were Mat Kllu Uolliurake of Hcmiiiford, Miss Kiuuia Doyla of Berva; Itay Keddish. leather in Dint. No. 16; and Ml Nelle Ache son, teacher Dial. No :s Mrs. lieu. I'rUe and son Oule of Heuiiugfi-rtl were in Alliance tram JViduy until Sunday, the guests of Miss I Mia M Heed. at) jut ml general of the eastern district K......J. 1 .ml., ii tliut I,.. sou left l lie management of the paper to WiKon With the peace or tJlient a new movement westward set In Wilson determined to try li s fortunes in the hinterland lie went to I'ittsburgh. lust itowIicj into m cltv. Then his faucy wns UtktKPby the little town ot Lisbon, Just across the line in the new state of Ohio: but soon he found a better location in Steubeu ville Here be started a SMMr of bis own -the Western Herald it was ea Hod -mid It was ilest I mil to a long and measurably Influential career. .lames Wilou. tirst and last, must be beld resjKJiislliie for n goodly portion of the printed wisdom mid folly of the early nineteenth century. He printed In Philadelphia. He founded a news paper in Steulienville. and lu Its ofttca he trained every oue of his seven sou to tie an einert couiKsitor. lu PWJ he founded a pafier at I'ittsburgh-tlM I'eiiusylvanla Advocate air Wilson started tt AdvocaU with the aid of four of bla sons and two apprentice boys, but when It was fairly on its feet be left It In the Im mediate charge of his eldest on. James Wilson was a man of extraor dinarily positive opinions. Further more, he was very outspoken In them. His paper was a very vigorous publi cation indeed, diseussle-sr the ouestlons Events of of the day and they und pretty big questions In the llrst half of the nine teenth century with fearless convic tion and bluntness. The editor was a Justice of the peace and was ordinarily addressed as "Judge" Wilson. He was for a term a member of the Ohio state legislature. During bis absence at Columbus his wife, wltb the a'd of the sons, edited the paper and boarded the bauds. Judge Wilson died In Pittsburgh dur ing a cholera epidemic In 18.TT. He. bad teu children, seven boys and three girls. The dnughters married well, and the sons all attained considerable distinc tion. Judge Wilson's youngest son was Jo seph Ituggles. through whom runs the special current of this story. Joseph was born at Btenbenvllle on Feb 2S. 1822. He got bis Orst school ing in his lather's shop. Like all the other sons, he learned the printer's trade. Not one of them but could to the day of his death "stick type" with any Journeyman. Joseph from the start was marked for the scholar of the family. There was a good academv at Steubenville. and he intended it. At eighteen be went to .leflersoii college, a Presbyte rian institution at Canonsburg, Pa.. where lie was graduated in 1S44 as valedictorian. He engaged in teaching for a year, taklug chatge of an acad emy at Mercer, t'a. Hut he call was clear to a higher life work. Before he had left botne for college he had mnile- u public profession of his faith In the I- irst Presbyterian church of his na tive towu. Now he took his way to the Western Theological seminary at Allegheny. Pa . remained a year and then went to spend another year at Princeton seminary. He went home and was licensed to preach, although not vet ordained. He taught for two years In the Steubenvlfle male acad euiy . To the fact that there was another Steubenville academy Is due the neces sity of telling this story. There was for males, and to It rbere other girls of the Ohio valley a damsel from Cbillicothe. Uie pretty town which was Ohio s nrst capital Janet Woodrow was her name. though lMst peopn i abed her Jessie, and she ivjis the daughter of a great i and fatens Presbyterian minister of th day '"ie afternoon, the lessous at Dr. Be.-'1 s school Iwing over. Janet Woodri took a walk Passing by the Wilson i se she spied through the pickets ! the garden fence the young theolog raking In a pair of kid gloves. : On the 7th day of June. 14!. Joseph It. Wilson and Janet Woodrow were le gally Joined in marriage by Thomas Woodrow. minister ot tle gospel. We have another Immigration to ob serve. The Woodiows are an ancient ' family originally out of Kngland. who trace their Scottish history back Htx) years Among them flourished minis ters. scholars and men of substance, with a Presbyterian martyr or two. The Uev. in I lion. .s M'tMsimw, born ut Paisley In 17'.r...a graduate of :ias gow university, recrossed the Tweed to become minister or the Independent Cougreuatlon at Carlisle. Kngland After hnviug served there sixteen years sod begotten eight childreu he felt the call to become a missionary in the new world Two weeks after his marriage with Jessie Woodrow. Joseph Ituggles Wil was ordained b the presbytery of Ohio It was seeial years, however I lie'ore he undertook a pastorale of any ! consequence, serx inc for a year as ! "professor extntordiuai -v" of rhetoric in Jefferson college anil tor four year- as professor of cheml-try and natural sciences in Hauipdeii-Sydney college. Ifgtato, In the meantime supplying small neighboring churches The Itev Mi Wilson had become t lie father of two daughters. Marlon and Annie Jo sephine. before he was called as ptistor to Staunton. Va . In PA Staunton. u Iimih tic remained for two years, was a towu of BAOO population, beautifully siin.it. d In the famous vnlle ot Vlr glula. Here It was that on IV V ISM Thomas Wotidrow Wilson was born The Infant Wilson no spend a mo in. .tit rv ieninu Ids uareiital history" was born ! au auspicious Heritage His blood was Scotch Irish, m strain tierbaiis the most rtituMNM physically. tnc moNt a;rt mrfttalt the -i bust morally of at! those ItSl SSfS SS gled In the shaping of the American character His forlears were men and women who hrid conspicuously dis played the qualities of a sturdy race: they were people Imaginative, hopeful, venturesome, stubborn, shrewd, indus trious, inclined to learning, strongly tinctured with piety, yet practical and thrifty on one side they were an an cient family who had preserved the memory of a part in large affairs, who for generations had cjrriisl the banner of religior and learning the para mount concerns of Scottish men On the other side they bad had tbclr share In the public affairs of a more modern nation. The newborn wns descended from clergymen and editors; men of strong opinions, men likewise accus tomed to gie free leave to their opin ions. Tbey were Protestants in reli gion and In politics radicals, pioneers, a stout hearted breed. Such was the ancestral preparation for life of IBS little son of the Presby terlan pastor who came Into the world Christmas week. 1888, In the dawn of an ample day of national evolution and conflict. (Cantinucd next weeki Washington Tetter THE NATIONAL CAPITAL Interest from Government the Seat of BY CLYDE H. TAVENNER Congressman-Elect Special Washington Correspondent this Newspaper to fff WONDERS WHIT IT iSfTHtrt fyDPENCf BNO-S MK BTy wasliingtc i letter by clyde h tavtner Washington. Jan. - 'We want tO get a large amount of revenue on luxuries, so that we pat) put a less tux cn the necessities of life." This is to be the bi:tis of the tar iff revision in tiie Sixty-third Ccn great?, teeordtaf to Chairman Pndei WOOd of the Democratic Ways and Minns committee. The above ex-j presslon is .Mr. l.'ndcrwc:)d's. He made it directly to one of the big silk manufacturers who was testify ii i before his committee. The Indications nre that the dem-1 ocratlc policy is likely to be free I (IreKsttl and rough lumber, shingles,' laths i.nd fence posts. The mem- j hers cf the Wnys an. I Means t oni mittee, while asking questions cf witntssip, appeared to be in favor cf t hat polity. Frio meats. It is rumorid, may. aifo be a par' of the tentative tariff plan the com:n!tlee will frame to s ihmlt to the extra session. Kvi n tho air In the corridors out side of tin? tcnimittec rcm seem to breath a feeliug that the demo crat!; leaders inttnd to see to it that the promises made to the peo Iple before election are to be relig iously carried out after election. Why Fear Downward Revision? High proti ; t it nlst.s declare even the slightest tariff revision down ward would hurt our business, and lessen out exports. "Tlie slightest revision downward will throw men out of work," Is the cry of the multimillionaire tariff trust heads who have been getting a ever-increasing amount of pro tection all these yeni- Sfeitc at the same time importing foreigners to take tlie places of Mnerican workers and paying their workers little, more than a pittance. Is there anything in the argument of the rich hjgh protectionists. If thiy are right in their contention that seine tariff revision would less- tn our exporta, one would naturally think that Cineat liritafn. wit li free trade, would have perished Ion; ago. But Great Hritaln is n :t pi Uing. Kcr the month of November tlie to tal amount of trade in Ureal U i;ain was 1620,000,000, The fnctaSSf -' ex perts as compared with the "bom" figures of November, 1911, was $1I,S60.000. There is now full i m ploytnent tor labor in chat "benight ed" free trade kingdom. Kv n tlie; protectionists are for. -id to admit 1 'a cycle of spleudid trade Mid na- j tloaal well-bainc," and thai thaw Is no protectionist country thai shows a parallel prosperity. Tin re is fcod EOT reflection in these figure's. They show there Is nothing to the contention that re vision downward of" the tariff is like ly to ruin business. Ifontst husi niss nun of the country fully real ize this, and have no apireli nsiens I because cf democratic ascendency. KEEP THE KIDNEYS WELL Health is Worth Saving, and Some Alliance People Know How to Save It Many Alliance people take their In. in their hands b naftoctlBS the kidneys wheti they kn'W these ; organs need help. Weak kidneys are r sponsible- for a ast amount of suf fering and ill health, but tin re is mi n i ii to suffer nor to remain in dan- I ger. USa Doali's Kidney Pills a remedy that has helped ihoc i ini! i of kidaej sufferers. The follow In 8 tatemcQi loaus bo ground for doubt. K. W. tiaylord. North M: jrehead I St., Chadron, Ntbr.. says: "I have I n -ed Dean's Kidney Pills off and on for about fifteen yea is and 1 would! not be without them in the hnjse. j Si.ini time ago I suffered severely ft i in tit nblcs. caused by weak kid-j ii s. I finally began using Doan's ; Kiiluiy rtrs and the con tints ji om box removed the attack. I highly ft i nincnd loiins Kidiiev I'ills to anyone suffering from backai he or other symptoms of kidney com plaint." Kor sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Koster-Mllburn Co., ituffalo. New York, sole agents for the I'nlied Stale. Ite member the name -Uoan's and take no other. Advertisement Jan 2::-::u New Bell Toll Lines Are Built Nw Ions? Jistiir W tl ephoM I ines have been extendtHj frofti this trr ritory to distant tnwn. Five States Neighbors These tirw litti's extend from Nobrtiska and South Dakota to wu.s to Montana, Wyoming and Colorado points. With tho eontpletioa of these new crrcnitH, pmts tirally every town in theae nre ataten Ls within the ratiare ot' vnur voire. "Ask "Long Distance" For Rates. NEBRASKA TELEPHONE CO. BELL SYSTEM. 14 NS II II 111 mill iMIIlllll Hli IMH 1 National Mazda The quality lamp cuts the light bill almost half. Un necessary to have them on a switch and they cost no more than the other kind. Newberry's Hardware Co. MOLES AND WARTS Removed with MOLESOFF, without pain or danger, no matter how large or how far raised above tbe surface of the skin. And they will never return and no trace or scar will be left. MOLESOFF is applied di rectty to the MOLE or WART, which entirely disappears in about six days, killing the geim and leaving the skin smooth and natural. MOLESOFF is put up only in One Dollar bottles. Each kittle it IwmiSid itstpud in itcwa! if inci. is ataOy pM in a plait cast, ac MMtaaitf by lull diitctiits, and ctnttms ttttl untidy It rtmitrt tiftl tr ten tffaiiy MOLES tr WARTS Wt sell M8LESIF f undei t sitiit SMASANTEE. il it fails It itmtvt yiui MOLES ar WART wt will tfimptly itftad tbt dollar Lttttrs dim ptisttafts wt all know, ttttktf with much falaaili itfttmatitt, will ki mailed frtt uaaa tttatst pies te uention this pnper when sua we ring Florida Distri bating Conapsny I'fiisiK ola. Florida Onsrsnteed hy tin- Fla. DtstHbuting Co. under he Food and Druffs Aoti June 30, 1006. Berisl No. 456H8. i- 181 IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE If You Doctored 19 Years For RHEUMATISM Ami tvaaUwaS)' fwifa j tutwatStnaj that trvt it uui of yuur yt-iii ... i.i y,.u avwryWodl) rM ouoldl afixaui ii jr wwiM .'i k-p 1 1 wvrwl puuraeif? i ttunu in.' 'limiM If II. . i . t if vnii tfffla .n f .iiIThi.t BtM will I el I you Ndaal iliov.- .1 tfu kjWf at OMM t hmu llwjl S--M. Hlra bear In limit I li.ivv nM4hHln Inrrrhaiiitlar of any k in t to mU, M y ' i n-fl nui Ik iia. A.ii. in IMldiliaj fur ill foi iiiatloii. I want 10 i-'p . m mil will lve you alt It) uifoi mail in wilBOtM Ml" (MM dJatJMMlt. 1 ''an n- i'i t lio I ufafd from it im iiim a4 !mw II,. i I I fui a I0114 ItNtt an I n., .in li nn m)m ur tt - all .-.Ian. u il ti- 4 in Tliat 1a wli I am nil aama fun ' nml mo- f i tMithtNa y- kuow tHMhlag about, ak I ivali- Uo nai. i ii II Wka aa n: i;,i 41... iu;,n ij. Kiii'lia' IMMiafa fi 1 :!. MMS. M. Z. COLLY. Aacriwaaiit I OH. Ilf M PtwWw tt. CHICA.O