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About The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1913)
Builders Waiting for Cheaper Lumber are surely destined to a lonR spell of inartivity. for with the Government zeal ously pushing tiniler eon servation and the inunda tion of the country con stantly increaslnn all hope of lower prices long ago vanished. Even though prices are not going to be any lower, the prospcrt that confronts the home builder is not. nearly so du bious as some manufactur ers of substitutes for lumber would have you believe. The quality of lumber we handle these days is far superior to any we ever had. It's smoothly finished, steam kiln dried and most of it ready for nailing into place without a particle of hand work. This means a big saving to yon. as hand work is exjiensive. This is only one feature in favorof build ing today. If you want others come in and let us show you some actual fig ures and the kind of lumber we handle. W00DR0W WILSON The Story of His Life From the Cradle to the White House "There's No Place Like Home' Forest Lumber Co. ALLIANCE, NEBRASKA A lvertlsmnenl--7-2t-lll 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 By WILLIAM BAYARD HALE Copyright. Mil. 1812. by Ooubteday. A Co Paee w O. H. MOON CONTRACTOR and BUILDER Any kind of Plans furnished. You are invited to inspect mv work. Satisfaction guaranteed Shop, 424 Miss. Phone. Red 440 BRENNANS CORNER I Opal Fountain Best Luncheonettes Hot and Cold Drinks Served by an Experienced Man 1 CHAPTER V. Still Studying Law and Polities. n n lid reconstruction lind ro dUCAt) the nuinlier of student nt CfearfottwftU to sum in the Ion of 1S7!). but war and. BCWnlriMltn had not low ered Virginia's lofty standard either of scholarship or of honor. Wilson's life here wns In ninny respects n repeti tion of that nt Princeton. Here, too, he Immediately took his place as e leader. Study was rather more tieces Wiry than at Princeton In those days A limn had to work lo pass Lis exatu iaoiUons. Still there Wtt a gay -H us well as a steady sot, and Wilson hud friends among both. Snorts were engaged in to the extent of an occasional baseball name auiotyf the Btudeuts or with h nine from a neighboring town, a foot race or two in the autumn and some boat facing. Wilson played a little baseball and took lone wulks through the picas, ml country lying about, often alone though sometimes with a favorite COED pnnlou. At Princeton Grata letter fin tarnttatf. were lllemil, but they ex Nt oil with the approval of the faculty at the University of Virginia, and Wilson was initiated into the Phi Kappa I'm He joined the chapel choir and the glee club. The latter circle of liar uionious spirits uiade sc Handing ex cursions in the country rounds Imiit two or three times a week, winding' up its pleasure Imparting career with a grand concert in the town hnll. Wil sou many a night stumbled along the rocky roads with his fellow gleemen to urrive at last under the balcony of some damsel and lift his flue tenor voice in "She Sleeps, Mj I.ndy Sleeps," and "Speed Awny." At the grand con cert, which was given on the evening of the final ball, a brllliuut aiKliem e that crowded the hull beheld the prize "i.itor and prist writer step down to the footlights and render a touching tenor solo. Wilsou Is best rememlered as a singer, however, by the thrilling effect with which he usually achieved the high note near the end at "The ; Star Spangled Manner." Wilson did a good deal of writing while at Charlottesville From the j road lu front of "Dawson's row" pass ! ersby would see htm sitting at the j window in the southeast corner of "House K." darkly engaged with an ink bottle, out of which he had con jured before a year was up the writ er's prize. In March, 1880. the University Mng j MBA) printed an article by him on John Bright, in the following month ' another on (Jladsione. The young mini's mind still ran. us it had run at Princeton, ou the personality of the great political leaders The John llright article was really n version of an oration which Wilson was delivering that month. So great bad his reputation grown in six months that there was a considerable demand from outside the university for ailniKxinn. and the occasion was thrown open to the public. At Charlottesville, as at Princeton the student body ;is divided into two literary and debating soejclies the Washingtoiiinn and the Jeffersonlan in the common tongue. "Wash" and '.left' " The fortunes of eaeh alternate ly waxed and waned. '.left'' wis the stronger in and Wilson joined it Mis talents at once won recognition. but he found a competitor to respeet The Pureist tup1 Most Delicious Home Made Candies Our Own Candy Maker Makes Them Daily Already the most popular line of candv in the city As he had done nt Princeton. Wilson at Charlottesville also organized smaller group of thinking chaps for debate. A tnemler of that group re members Wilson's unspenkable disgust when they chose as the subject for one night's discussion the question whether there le any fundamental difference be tween right and wrong The law professors of the University of Virginia were Mr Southall, who held the chair of International and common law, an easy going and much beloved man. and Or. John B. Minor, who taught everything else In the course and was In fact the college of lew. Dr. Minor probably Influenced Wil son more than did any other teacher he ever had He was Indeed an able and forceful man. a really great teach er, who grouuded his pupils beyond all possibility of ever getting adrift in the broad principles of law. As a young mnn Wilson suffered much from indigestion, an III which later he entirely outgrew. Just beforp Christmas. 1&80. he found himself so 111 that be left Charlottesville. The next year he Sieut at home in Wil mington, N. C-, nursing his health and rending. In May. 1882. Wood row Wilson went to Atlanta to enter on the prac tice of law. Atlanta was chosen for this experiment simply because It wns he most rapidly growing city of the south The young man knew nobody there He feel another young man. like himself a stranger in the city, whither he. too. had come to prnctlce law Udward Ireland Renlck. The two agreed tin a partnership; on ran- IInol-"Ientlml lMnstcrs An effective. min relieving plaster contain ing Menthol. Brings . l ie relief in Lnmbngis ltlieiiniiitisni, Hcmtica mid other pninftil affection. Yard rolls $1.00; also ''' atae, Sold by druggists or mailed on receipt of pric. Dart A Uwrence C o., New York. Sample mailed upon request, Ac. -mm... Mens Cough Balsam an excellent remedy lor Cough. Croup, Asthma. Bronchitis, and such complaints. Keep It by you lor an emergency. Contain no harmful riruon. Laree. Medium art Small Boitlf v DaVIS 4 IAWRENCE CO.. NEW YORK. i ai A M KBnr ' -PpHWSV ' RmI4 ' ff'BBKBtf Rev. The next two years of Woodrow Wil son's life wore spent at Johns Hopkins university ns a student of history and political economy. Here he was one of nn unusually Interesting group which included Albert Sluitv nnd R. R. L. Could. Join Franklin Jameson, the historian; Arthur Yngcr, now president of Georgetown college. Kentucky, and Thomas Dixon, who writes uovels. The advantages enjoyed nt Johns Hopkins by Wilson lay not so much in the hearing of lectures as in the oppor tunity of making researches. Here he got a valuable impulse in the direction of the careful and exact ascertaining of facts. Though always priding him self on dealing with actualities. Wil son was never n grubber after fact and, Indeed, never liecnme one. But he undoubtedly did get here a training that balanced the natural tendency of his mind to work from within out- ( Continued next week) ACKNOWLEDGE IT Alliance Hat to Bow to the Inevita ble Scores of Endorsements Prove It run down and failing in health day ! you from the first dose. Thousand-; by day, but you must work as long blM" ,h 111 for ,hpir fnrlous lieal as you tan stand. What you need n'' strength. Tr them. Kvery be' is Klectrlc Hitters to give tone, I" guaranteed to satisfy. On'y strength and vigor to your system, i ROr Ht p'rt, Holsten's. to prevent break-down and build you ' Advt Feb ti J. up. Don't be weak, sickly or ailing j , " when BtectrlC Bitters will benefit i IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE Hi WONDERS WtUjT rr 1 5 -THEN 5U00ENLY FINDS OUT j Or, Joseph Rugalea Wilson, Fa ther of Woodrow Wilson. tual inquiry Renlck proved to be slight ly the older, so that the shingle was lettered "Renlck A: Wilson." It was hung out of the window of a room on the second floor, facing the side street, ol the building 40 Marietta street. Atlanta litigants did not rush en masse to 48 Marietta street. In tact, they never came. Wilson's sole idea bed been to use the law as n stepping stone to a po litic! I career. Most of the public men of the south bad come from the ranks of the law. In eighteen months in At lanta be learned tbat it was impossible for a dim ii without private means to support himself long eOOWgfa in law to get into public life; iniossible eertmhv ) to establish a practice without giv ing up all idea of study and writing not strictly connected with the pro fession. The law was a jjmlous mis tress He bad begun writing a book, on congressional government, and he found the work full of Joy. Rut toe Atlanta experiment was nee without it- .reat cored fortune. During the siuuiuer of lfSKt Mr. WkV son found time la make what turned out to is- a momentous vWt. His old playmate ami cousin. Jessie Woodrow Rones, with whom he Inn played In dian on the sand hills near aUfttatt. was now living in Rom. Ga. To Rome had come also another family with Whoat the Wilsons had beeo in timate in Augusta the AXaMh. The A -ois uere n Ceorgla lowland fam ily. The Rev S Kit ward AxsOlr's fa ther was t distinyuisluti clergyman lu anvanttab, tad bis wife's rathe, the Ilex. Nathan Hoyt. was Khir pastor of the I'resliyterlan church at Athees, Oft. The calls upon his time not being en tirely owupyliig. as BM hMP hinted, young Wilson went to t:ome see his eaoaja. and Itayed IS more of Miss Kllcn Louise Axsou. 1 lie meei ing was on the piar.r.a of the Rone, home In F.a -t Rpnaa T accurate, t hii not unite the couple's first uieet inu. He had l-eii n issioiiate ad mirer of the lady when he was a boy . seven and she was a baby. The sentiment of those days, tieyond the recollection of either, re ived. He took her home that evening She lived in Rome across the river She must have been captivating, for as lie came back ncrovs the b:idxe he clinched his ha mi and took a silent oath that BUM Louise Axson should I his wife. Which also in due time came to pass They had seen each other eleven times before he had persuaded her to any "Yes." There was no idea of an immediate marriage. Already. ls-r- After reading the public state men' of this fellow-sufferer given be iow. you must ccme to this conclus ion: A remedy which proved so i beneficial years aio, with the kid- j " ft can naturally be expected to perform the same work in similar cases. Read this: Airs. Herman Sehroeder, WaahhiK ion Ave., Sidney, Nebr.. says: "I was In a bad way as the result of kidney trouble. I suffered from I ..ins In the small if my back and dizzy spells, and I was unable to stoop. On the physician's advice, I put a plaster on my back, bat this did not relieve me. 1 also tried many kidney remedies, but to no avail until I began twin1; I loan's Kid i v Pills. After I had finished the contents of the flint box the pain va my back stopped and 1 continued iianaj this 'Remedy until my .froubM j disappeared. You may mm my name as one who recommends D Kin's Kidney Fills highly." The above statement was gicr. .May 7, IDO'J, and in a: later inJBsr vie Mrs. Scbroeder aid: "I wi'l ingly confirm my foreier tsiilorw mciit of Dean's Kidney Fills. The cure this reenedy made lias been permanent." (lvelsenient Feb 17 For sale by all deal en, cents. Foster-11 ilburn Co., N.-vv York, sole ageiiis United States. Remember tfce name Oban's lake on other. Frtee SA lietftalo. for roe and Ambitious Boy Railroad Superintendent Commends Ceawford Bay for His EJToj is to aKake Money AN UAMPLt FOR OTHER ROWS Telephoning Will Save You Time and Money By telephone you quickly obtain a personal interview with the party you want. Tlierv i.' a decided advantage in nsin the telephone in tranHactions yon r;ilize should be handled peraonally. The Bell Telephone brings distant fiiios and towns within t!i' range oiyorif voice, affording practically n faee" to-face talk. Bell Service cfethpreliends a nyBtem of t-x-changee and long ince lines, permitting rapid nnd eeonotnitoal eofutniiieation nearly t'Vfry wlii't'e. BELL SYSTEM NEBRASKA TELEPHONE COMPANY 203 NTe Old Trusty Incubators, Brooders and Repairs in another "Jeff' man, William Cabell Bract, .vuuns orator of extraordinary ability. The chief annual event at Charlottes ville wns a debating contest In the JeaTersouhin hociety. ut which two paid medals were awinM, one fr debat ing, the other for oratorical ability J'ruec was ft4ra tat d'bater's BOW medal, while the orator's prise wen: lo Wilson 'I'he opinion of pretty near ly every Isaly, aside from the Judges was that the awaid should have been reversed Bruce was ornate In style, Wilson simple, direct ami logical. lu a wholly ditYcrcnt velu from his speeches in the "Jeff" society was one notable eft 1 1 in whi Ii the unieislly's favorite ppptTtd w hen he delivered j medals to UH. winners in aiu.euc , Mm tames avlnB iiriwhI to make this. . , , i,,,,, ,., 1.... Wil...,. r. inm-h "I"'" l",,M " ' " . " i i ui ... s luii or Lnret I ..ou-iixr timt Hie nractlce of law was - . -- - pr Wilson 1 exercised as to what to say ! parted his isrplexlty to an Don t Overlook ttwt lUMcriptwc. If you are Is arrears resseaiser we can always ficd M tor the MONEY very much and im lattautf friend, who rattled off two pieces of I tiouseuse nhhli he suested would I nliout hillt the taste of the audience In I the K.vuiuasluin Neither piece coniaiu ' ed the slightest allusion to athletic BJWjrta Vet tat orator worked them in. The u.vmnasium ssex-h represent! ! one of the few o. .-.-cmhhs in which itn: j paaaa atadtut is-nt rar far from Ma i diunlt,! in public, tail iu private he i.,.,i i.cU.te.1 Mlth humor and wtr ! and was very lunch ylven to monkey-shine-. study! uk i lie science of l kin I years more ' coverument. The partnership ot Kenlck Ac UfNt was dissolved. The young man t whom the jieople of Atlanta ifave sa llnlc ft f ISIMtnitnt but who had won what made I.Ira lneiiuiably happier than tatalBS else OatfglM could have Blveu him. went uorth In Kepteicber About Ihe same time Miss Axson. too. went lo New- York lo develop her al ready recotfnued Uilunts In paiutiuu M luttnlitr of the Art Students I Jim iij Froiu Crawteml Couri r. ' '). ti Clare Robf. taw of Crawford's im bilious boys, who is alwayss lockiiix for an oppoct unity to earn a liiile nioiaty to assist iu his cate. ri.eatly wrote to Bnpt. Weideiihiimer for permission bi. sell sa.idwlclus lo peo plt on BufUnXtOn Irsins. While- the Mipt i intendt nt cculd uoi grant this reqaist at was so pleased witla the display nt ambition in the boy t but tit wrote hjm the followlim petsunal Ittttr in reply to his request: Alliance. Ntbr., Keb. 1. 191.!. My dear Clare: I have today received your letter raaaaattai that I gram rou s per mit to sell sandwiches on the plat- Term at Crawford to pecple riding on our passenger trains. I am sorry to say that 1 cannot grant you this pri liege. 1 admire u boy wto is am bitious to earn his own livlni? but It Is against the rules of the manage agement to allow peddling on our nltrrus or nasKe fixer tnilns. No doubt, your brother hh till ycu thai iirws boys wire taken off our pas senger trains several years ago. We have found that when boys are ! rtnitted to peddle sundwiches, pea luts and candr on our trains or plu -fcinn they frequently get Injured. They also board the tram ana It ii in motion before they can alibt and tlie result is that the boy is usuilly injured in leaving the train. On, the other hand they an on the platform in tBt way and are liable- to get In t!o Wi.y of moving trains or tu-ks or b- loaded Into a dangerous place. If you wllll be a gcod boy and go lo Svhool and set an educa Ion. I will keep ycu In m .id and when you are old enough, if I am still in a position to do so. I will give you em ployment. The motto cf this big railroad is "Safety Pirmt '. Yours very truly, W. M. WKIUKMIAMBK. II Incubators $10.00, $12.50, $16.50 Newberry's Hardware Co. ! I teWleWHtll I I l4"M"t"H ltw No Need to Stop Work Unn Hue de.ioi olden, you to stop work it staggers yon. I 'eaa't. ou say You know you are weak, MEN AND BOYS EFORE buvinr vour foot wear, set- M. D. Nichols' stock of New Shoes. Better oods and lower prices. It wont cost you anything to look at them, Remember the place, at the siyn of the boot, 217 Bpx Butte avenue. B If You Doctored 19 Years For RHEUMATISM Ami event . .1 i i tumetbbM that drv It out uf y jui eysMHt wo ,M ymu tell eVeylMA .u en.iW about it ui would on kep tin- m iivt m rimlfcull ' I think on,; should tell, unit if .you writr en old eutTeiei- elm will tetl you whet diovn it from Iht at a mil of ees ItMS B.H t'leexe beer in mind I have BO uiedWIne M iiieivliundlee of en kind to xll, a., yuii nwl not b h.u k.ii. in eendi'ia tor in i. ii men. hi I went to 1 1 1 1 ret sat w ill give you all tlx htfermatlon w ithout one ( -nt deposit 1 run ttvei feewtl awe 1 tMteefe4 from H naamthmi end now .-up. Med 1 wes fei ktSSj time end now no lint, pita or fate ill iltqs oT H'tft tote i le w!iy 1 am r.ot asiat 'o i to send mon-v f.ir ee tin:i roil kaow notluue uuoutv a 1 reeiiae how rneiiy fee re are afet Mil e let end 4.1" no , K;k-1oh lKilese foi I p. MRh. M. 2. COLLY, AssrtaMI 100. 117 in. Ceaiaorn &t.. CHICAGO.