The Family Man's Hardest Problem and at the sumo time 1 In most ttniMMtnnt one is the building of h siiitnMt' home. So much (Upnl.s on Mi' environment of tlx- children tlmt every precaution mIiohM be taken for their comfort1 iind health. Sunlight tftd fresh air in the homo in iH'ctssnry uniform tetn leiature and humidity in also neeessnrv T h o s " things ami many more have come down to um through generations generations when the home was the making of our Nation and the material used in most of those homes was good An.eiiinn wood sometimes crudely cut, hut always given the preference be cause of its titness to health and comfort. Our yard to tl.iy contains the stone Kind of lumber, hut more per feetly cut and flnisued so that the work required 'of the carpenters has been re duccd to the minimum. We want to show it to you and explain how you can use it profitably. W00DR0W WILSON The Story of Mis Life From the Cradle to the White House By WILLIAM BAYARD HALE Copyright. IU. 1012. ty Doubleday. at Co I'aRe "There's No Place Like Home' Forest Lumber Co. ALLKNCE, NEttASM Advertisement -7-2t-tl1 Paul W.Thomas INSTRUCTOR ON VIOLIN Phenel7f Alliance, Neb. A Matter of Choice If 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 CHAPTER III. Off to College. II F, WllSOUS moved from Au- Kiistn to Columbia . S. C Ui the iiniiiinn of 1870. the Uev. Dr. Wilson resigning bis pas- loratc In order to become a professor In the Southern Presbyterian Tbeolog leal seminary. His chair was that of pastoral and evangelistic theology. He retained it four years Tom appears to have retreated here Into the more exciting scenes of an Im aginative life. He forsook in mind the streets of the commonplace town and the dreary banks of the Congaree ami adventured forth in search of exploits In faroff lands. All boys do some thing of the sort but there can be no doubt that In the case of this young dreamer the exercise of imagination waa constant and vivid and that dur ing a great part of his days he lived, so far as his mind was concerned, in one or another of the various characters which he had invented and assumed. Thus for many months he waa an admiral of the nnvy and in that char actcr wrote out dnlly reports to the navy department. Ilia main achieve ment In this capacity was the dls covery and destruction of a uest of pirates in the southern Pacific ocean. It nppears that the government, nlotig with all the people of the country, had boon terrified by the mysterious disap pearance of ships setting sail from or , expected at our western ports Ad inlral Wilson was ordered to Invest! gate with his fleet. After an eventful cruise they overtook oue night a pi ratical looking craft with a black hull and rnkish rig Again and again the chase eluded the admiral. Finally the pursuit led the fleet to the neighbor hood of an island uncharted ami bit I) O. H. MOON CONTRACTOR and WILDER Any kind of Plans furnished. You are invited to inspect my work. Satisfaction guaranteed 'Shop, 424 Miss. Phone, Red 440 BRENNANS CORNER Opal Fountain Best Luncheonettes Hot and Cold Drinks Served by an Experienced Man 1 The Puruist and Most Delicious Home Made Candies Our Own Candy-Maker Makes Them Daily Already the nnst popular line of candv in the citv erto unknown. Here lay the ships of the outlawed enemy nud the dismnn tied hulls of many of their victims ! And It limy 1m: believed that the brave American tars, under the leadership of the redoubtable admiral, played a truly heroic part in the destruction of the pirates. There are two things worth noting about tills story: First, the length of time several months In which the lo.v lived tin; greater part of his wuk InK hours In the character which he had Invented, and, second, the verl similitude willi which the details re lating to t ho greet adventure were set forth In the dally "retWto." About this time Woodrow was read- j Ing Cooper's sea tales and Marryuts I yarns, and, though be had never seen u .1,1,, In hla 1,1.. ......... .. .... ....... , I .. ocean -he knew every particular of every class of lyie of sailing ship, the name, place and use of every spar, sheet and sbroud. At Columbia Wood row, as be began now to be commonly called, attended i the school kept by Mr Charles Hey ward Itarnwell. Hut his real education continued to be conducted by his fa- I ther. He was now approaching 'ho ae for college In spile of his late start at j book, lie had rapidly itiali'ied in the ordinary preparatory studies, and at I seventeen, in the autumn oi M&, he was sent ott to cohere Davidson college, in famous Mecklen burg county. N. C is a prosperous in stitution now uud forty years nco was a Ktaneb school The fact that Dr. IVUfMMI hail been approached In connec tion witli It presidency may have had some! hiiiy to do with its choice tor Wood row l.h ing was rather primitive: tic hoys kept their own PODWM, tilled their own lamps, for they had ulv Uetoselie: cut up ami hrouuht in the I for their own tires and carried in water from the pump outside W ilson's room was on the ground Hour, luckily: it was rather a Job to carry arm loads of wood to remote rooms on the upper doors. There still lingers at Davidson the tra dition that Tom Wilson established a ratio n in the minimum time necessary to dress, cross the campus and be in ills seat when the H.'fore breakfast chapel Ull stopped ringing lustructnui at Davidson was rather better than was common at small col leges in those days. StMI. it can hard ly lie said that Wilson received much intellectual impulse here, althoimh lie probably added something to Ids sto. k of knowledge His college uistes In cluded a score or mole who afterward ' made reputations in the norld. ier hiips the most eminent befog It. it. Olenn. who beCBlOe governor of North Carolina His classmates remi tuber m. thine unusual ttlmiil Wilson when at 1 .i id s n college. They say he tind : an open, engaging face, pleasant man ; nerv nod was very generally liked. They :igree that he was not very notch interested In yanies. which then eon- rfW, fie puiieii o.ikci.hh on the i-olleue nine and hail the pleas ure of hearing the captnlu ay. "Wil son, yon would make a dandy player If you were not no d lar.v." He was a great walker and nt times seemed to like to I alone, walklnc the country nlmnt apparently wrnp-j pod In thought. Still he was. as a rule, n very social animal and a erent talker In congenial cotnpanv. When the fellows repaired to his room they would L'enerally Iind hinl curled up on the bed with a hook in bis band, read ing. He Joined one of the lllernry societies, the Fiiuienean." Once a year. In February, c holldav was given to every student on which be was to plant a tree. so. whether Wilson did it to get the holiday or been use be wanted to do something useful, he planted nn elm on the campus nt Davidson, and It stands there strong and upright today. Karly In the year a small Incident ' In class fastened upon him a nick- ' name. The rhetoric class being en gaged upon that well known part of ; Trench's "English, Past nnd Present." ! which sets forth (much after the man nt of the Wamba In the opening chapter In "Ivooboe") how good Baton beasts take Norman names when they COtM to the table, the professor nsUsi Wood row, "What is calves' moat, when served nt table?" and received the : hasty reply. "Mutton!" Wilson wa "Monsieur Mouton" for the rest of the ' year. Indeed, he did not finish the year, for he fell 111 just before the examinations came on and was taken to bis home, then at Wilmington. N. C.. to the pas torate of the Presbyterian church to which city Dr. Wilson had just been called. Wood row remained to hia father's house at Wilmington throughout the year 1874-5. It had been determined that he abould not return to Davidson, but should go to Princeton, and he spent the year tutoring In Greek sod a few other studies. In truth, there was a good dcsl of play done that year too. The boy had grown too fast and was hardly fit for the rigid schedule of college life. So he "took It easy." Wilmington wss an old and historic place. It was a sea port; for the first time Woodrow saw a ship and caught the smell of the sea. Talk was still full of the adventures of the blockade runners of the war lately ended, Wilmington having been a fa vorite iort of the desperate men ami swift ships that then made so many gallant chapters of sen history, what Imaginative youth from the Interior but would have haunted the do. ki and made nn occasional trip down to the cape, to return with lb pt!ot of an outgoing ship. For the first time here. too. the voting man began to take part in tha socin: life whlcb is so important an rtetceut of existence In the south, lie wss real ly too young for the associations Into which he was now thrown. Dr. nnd Mrs. Wilson immediately achieving de- voted popularity, the p.nsonaue swiftly becoming a social rendezvous of the city. It was a city of gentlemen of good company and women who would have been esteemed brilliant the world over It was a chap rtrj different from the raw youth of Davidson who one day in September. lS7f. too'; the "Washington anil Weldon" train for the north to en ter Princeton college Ilnrnl-Mentliol ll:ts its, quick v lif in Liimhsgn, Harkm-he, RcUtiea, V ur.iltfi.i ; 1 1 I ninny painful nnWtions. Tin drive away the punt until it Isquitn forc..tt.n. Yard rnlUf)i.Mj EnuUler si mW$c Dealers ho v " t! etn iu stork, or direct from DavMiA tsetasn Oo.t Nrw Ytk. S nii.lf mm . upon r. qiivsi , He. tiinp. Don't experiment, take Allen's Cough Balsam and relief is certain to fol low. UaeO lor obstinate rough. rolOa, sore throalv. or bronchial Inflammation. Contain no harmful drugn. All dealers. DAVIS A LA WHENCE CO.. Nrw Yorh. m Wm i sifted of baseball and shinny. How CHAPTER IV. A Student at Princeton. HKN Woodrow Wilson got Oi. the train at the little station in Princeton early iu Septem ber. 1S7.". one of UM tiew- comeis. he found himself in a cliarm iug old . v.i ot uuiples. elms and catal pas. gBniiig which stood the college buililitms it itlug, one of them, back to i:r,j The phlT, full of traditions of the Itevolui. . iiv war. hail been a favor ite resort itf sOthsru students up to IStil. The lirst war bad battered the front ot OKI K'umsMU hall, and the sec ond had done more substantial it' less picturesque damage m srKhdniwIna from the institution fl lare pail of its soutlierii patrouate The south could ill alVotti to send its young meu far away to college now. This year, In ilecil. thele came twenty men from the southern stales It is I euiemlierctl that some ot tliese youtlis n ceiled lecon vtruction. Wilson is eememheretl In no such way. He was known as a Democrat sf stout .pinions from the day he lirst ipem d iii mouth on the campus, hut no re ullection tenia ins of Ids having displayed any sectional passion. A classmate remembers, however, that on one occasion when a uroup of fel lows were talking of t lie misfortunes that follow in lie wal.eol war Wilson, who was in tlie group, cried out. "You know nothing wh itc er alMint it!" and with face as while as a sheet of pacr abruptlv left the company. All testimony pies to indicate thai Tom Wiison immediately took his place as a leader In the class. He up pea red is a young fellow of great ma turity of character, blended with un nsunl freshness of interest In all things ItOrtglSitig to coUfJpa life. He had the manners of a young aristocrat. His speech was cultured. He soou won the reputation of already w ide reading and sound judgment. There is abundant evidence tlmt lie was from tlie start a marked figure among the men who now constitute the 'famous class of '"! " There have Iwen more famous Princeton graduates than these, but there Iuik never been a class of so Idub au average of ability. Kohert Bridges, one of the editors of Seribner's Maga sine; H e Uev. Dr. A. s Hals, . asers tary of tlm I'rfsbyterian boartl of for eign si las kins: CkMritst A. Talcott. M l?.; Mablou Pitney. .i:stice of the su premc i-ourt of the 1'niled States: Robert H, M C.u tej . x attoruex yen oral of neW .'crscy: iMwnrn w. Miet don, president of the United States Trust company: Colonel Kdwln A. Stevens of New Jersey nnd Judge Roll er! I!. Henderson of Maryland are only typical members of a class of unusual mental capacity. Among such men Wilson from the start ranked high. Not as a sttideut perhaps. He was never a bright particular star in ex aminations. Princeton graduated as "honor men" such students ns had maintained throughout their four years' course au uvernge of 90 per cent. Not less than forty-two out of the 122 graduates of '7! were "honor men." Wilson barely got in among them. He ranked forty-first. The fact is that this son of clergy men and editors badn't come to school to pass through a standardized cur riculum and fill bis head with the knowledge prescribed In a college cata logue. He had come to prepare him self for a particular career, and before be hid been nt Princeton three months he bad finally determined on what that career should be The class historian. Harold (Pete) Godwin, celebrating the advent In Princeton of the members of the class that graduated In '71. declares that on arrival "Tommy Wilsou rushed to the library and took out Kant's 'Critique of Pare Reason ' " To the library Tommy Wilson un questionably did rush, but not to read of pure reason. If ever there wns a student who demanded facts, concrete subjects, applied reason, it was this same Wilson, even In his college daya. The truth is that, prowling In the al coves of the Chancellor Green library, new then, one day early In the term the boy stopped at the head of the south stairs, where the bound maga zines were kept, and bis hand fell upon .i lile of the Gentleman's Maga zine, that ancient and respectable re pository ot P.ngllsh lltniture wblch Dr. Samuel Johnson had bellied to start awa back in tlie middle of the eighteenth century, with Ids reports of iarliame!i:nrv debates. When Johnson lay on his deathbed he declared that his only eouipun tion was those parlia mentary renorts. for, of course, they were fakes." Now. it happened thai in tlie seventies '.he editoi nl the day. feeling round for in attractive feature, hit upon the idea if resuming Ihc parliamentary reports Aceordingic there began in the num-,-ier for January. 1S74. it series of ar ticles entitled "Men and Manner In Parliament." by "The Member For the Cbiltern Hundreds." Thomas Woodrow Wilson happened to pick no this volume of the Gentle man's Magazine and to turn to the pages occupied by "Men and Manner In Parliament" nnd from that moment his lite plan was fixed. It was an era of brilliant Qa"Hamen tary history There were giants In those days lohu Bright. DWruetf, Gladstone, Fail Grauville, Vernon tlaroontt. The personnel of the house of commons had never been more pic turesque, tlie atmosphere more elec- t Continued next week! ATTENDED ASSESSORS' MEETING tin state botfi or equalization The Informed Ihf Hrf!d fhtt fh f ft County Ass seor John .!?'!". ': ,.--,' t - nd: .: ' k m -j i i County Commissioner J. M. ..hiuk c -: .lA':1. ,llv anrt ? attended the nnnnal moot In. nf h ' lmle OI lno WWslntlve m llld county assessors of NehraskH ut Lincoln on Tuesday and Wednisdav Don't ov-rlook . .ii i- . . ... . . ... . uim ween, ine meciiug tietnn Willi want ads on THROW OUT THE LINE Give the Kidneys Help and .Many People Will Be Happier overworked don't fillereti out Ot the 5 lue of th SUADn HMOS out w '1 1 By Telephone Yo Get Quick R Telephoning saves delay a practically a face-to-face intervie In nearly every ease tlie telephone will f you a satisfaeiorily as a jxrsonal visit. So often it isn't what is said, hut hoer it said, that counts. The lonir disiaaee telephone ohtains for yon a persoiial talk with the party you waiit, and does it quickly. BELL NEBRASKA TELEPHONE COMPANY mm il 4 nd attains i w. l I f BL i r riTrn m n m.m s o XBIU i a I I J I Furs are Higher Steel Traps are Lower Big Reduction in Prices on Victor Steel Traps No. 0 Victor Steel Traps, per doz. - - $l .:;ri No. 1 Victor Steel Tram, per do. - - 1.50 No. 1 Victor Steel Traps, per doz. 'J.iTi No. i' Victor Double Spring Steel Traps, doz. :i. No. Victor Double Spring Steel Traps, doz. 4.2r No. 4 Victor Double Spring Steel Traps, doz. 7.2" "ThrOW Out the Life Li Of Weak kidneys need luip. They re often SCl the poison blood. Will you help t lit m? Doaa'a Kidney piiis bare brought ht nefit to I hoUMOda of kidney sif ferers. Read tli is ease: Mrs. G. K. heidy. :iJJ K. lXik:il a St., Alliance, .Neur.. savh: "I e-in iliKhly reeomiueiid Dou'l Kidney Pills to all sufferers from kidney complaint, as I have usod them on a number of occasions with ;ood re sults." "When your back is lame renum ber tlie name." Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy ask distinctly for Ooun's Kidney Pills, the name that Mr. I.eidy had the remedy Sacked by home ttstiiuuny. an cents a' all stores. Foster-Milburn Co., Props., Buffalo. N. Y. For sale by all dealers. Price 50 ents. Kostt r. Mil burn Co., Hufl'alo. NOV York, sole OgeBte for tin 'niieil Stall . Remember the name Dean's and ake no other. ti ert ieement Kt-b 013 Mothers Can Safely Buy Dr. Kiuk's New Discovery and ivc it to the little ones when ailing and iiii.rins with colds, coughs, throat r lung troubles; tasies niee, harm less. Once used, always used Mrs. Bruce Crawford, Niagara, Mo., writes Dr. Kiug's new Discovery changed our boy frcm a pale, w ak, sick boy to '-lie pitture of health." Always helps Huy It at Fred K. iiuls'eu's. Ad vi Feb -27 In answering advertisements please mention this paper II Newberry's Hardware Co. MEN AND BOYS BEFORE buyttlg your foot wear, see M. D. Nichols' stock oj New Shoes. lietter goorjl and lower prices. It wont cost you anything to look at them, Remember the place, at the sirn of the boot, 2 1 JT. Box Butte avenue. MM If You Doctored 19 Years For RHEUMATISM An. I SVefttMlly found .me(liing Unit dmve It out uf your yt in w..:ili1 you tell f.-r liiMl.t you totild :iboul II or would ton keep tha 1 1 el to pouravlf? think en. Itiawaj Irll, and if ott wille un ul.l tsutteier kite will tell von what 4rOV tl fr.nn n.-r .tl ,t .o.r'.f l.tty th.tii f: 00. I'lene bear in inli.it I Un.- n., indium. , inei. h tndlae of any kn. l (o wrll. ao you lire. I not be backward in utiii for m rorinatMM. I want lo help you and willgtte you all Hi- Infui-imitloa willwui .!' e.-nt tle.it. I en neve, foruet how I suffered from Kliaumailam an. I bow nn-pl-.1 I was for a long time ami now iu tlmi mil or l.'ii -iilt atianvoT 4t are suae That la why I am not asktns yo i lo aend SWM) for ssiualhlns you kn.,v i vol h Ins 1 !'t. a 1 realize liow many ilnie aiewlio asg a lot and ne nmiiina Kiulo- pu.-lage for rtfply t MRS. M. Z. COLLY, Ap&rtatent 100. 117 So. Laiborn St.. CHICAGO.