II I Patriotism and Love of Country ran scarcely Ik? exacted of children reared by tlOUIlUMi parents with no more se rious thought than the present. "Just as the twin is bent, the tree's inclined." and as more recent, writers have said. Tin- Mine is the backbone of our na tion," it behooves all lovers of life, liberty and happi ness, and particularly ttfOM dirtM tinK the footsteps of the youth of our country to set a good example. To do this it is not necessary to build a palace and go into debt for life. Wood con struction will just meet your requirements. With It you can plan a home of any size you may ultimately desire and then start with a few rooms and build on as your demands require. We have helped many inople solve their building prob lems and would like to help you. Gome in and let's talk it over. There's No Place Like Home" W00DR0W WILSON The Story of His Life From the Cradle to the White House Forest Lumber Co. ALU4NCE, NEBRASKA dv 12-2t-161 ) A Matter of Choice It you want a cur iosity, buy a Fly ing Machine. If you want Reliability, have your PHOTO taken at the : : : Alliance Art Studio 114 1 4th St Phone 111 By WILLIAM BAYARD HALE Copyright. 1911, 1112. by Doubleday, A Co. He rmnlne1 two yeiirs, the MCOIMi your ns bolder of the historical fellow ship The time was brightened Uy oc casions) visits to New York and bis Osneeu (Hid to IMiilmlelpliUi. where lived mi uncle ol hem whom she some time visited There was Do kIcp club at .lobna Hopkins, hut Wilson set straightway about organizing one. Wben it was proposed to give n concert at Hopkins ball and charge for admission In or der to pay some expense ot the organ ization, the grnve gentlemen who at the time presided over the destinies of the university demurred. Preside) t (ill man offered to donate the necessary to make bis lectures futorestlng. One of the faculty who lived next door tes titles that the light in Ids study win dow was Invariably burning long after everylMKly else had gone to bed From the start of his professional career Mr. Wilson appears to have realized the necessity of Imparting vivacity and reality to his lectures. There Ik some ground to suspect that the lutense young ladles w ho sat under him did not always appreciate the lichter side of bis discourses. At all events. It ts re membered that he appeared one day In the lecture room without the long mustache which had up to then "dom ed his countenant e -i sacrifice which. It was hinted, he bad made in the hope of being thereafter better able to sug gest to his classes certain delicacies ot thought and fancy which tbey had shown little signs of apprehending Hryn Mawr college ccned with for ty-three students. Three houses at the edge of the campus were occupied by the dean and professors, many of the latter being bachelors. Later Mr. Wll son leasod a pretty cottage, the pataQB lire of the little Baptist charcb on the old Gulf road, in the midst of a lovely countryside. In this, their first home the Wilsons took great pride and at Isf.'x tion. Id vocation time tbey went back south among old friends. It was Id the south that the 6rst two children were born In June. 18X0, Professor Wilton look his Ph. D. nt Johns Hopkins, the unl verslty accepting as his thesis his boot "Congressional Uovernraent. ' During bis third year at Bryn Mawr Profea sor Wilson accepted n lectureship at Johns Hopkins. This took him to Ual titnore once a week for twenty-live weeks. Social life at Bryn Mawr was most agreeable An inrltntlon to an older Hnr.o1-M ntlinl Dusters nrt will remove to MKJrew very FnV'-tWely tettevt pain. The ssthing rf. ' soon, lie Is a leading Broken Bow f eta of Menthol sro qnirklv felt in Buck. IllK'tnntitmu. ru'ia'cit hum otlut nrln Mtftfal affection. Tan rlls iii.00: reu larsixeS'x'. All druggists or direet hy mail Dart St UnrrcMt in.. nw ark. Sample mailed upon request. Sc. stamps. (Roughs. Croup, Bronchm$l H Contmtm mm harmful drum: wi All dealer. fl K! DAVIS a LAWRENCE CO.. Nam Tsrk. jffi a quisition ley. to the North Platte val Mrs. J. T. Wiker lost an envelope a short time ago containing severs.! x tltfaVBsS contracts and other papers, togcllur with some paper mone. The parcel was discovered by th little son of Dispatcher I'eckcnpaugh aid returned to her within a fe hours after being lost. -at o , H.MOON CONTRACTOR and BUILDER Any kind of Plans furnished. You are invited to inspect my work. Satisfaction guaranteed Shop, 424 Miss. Phone, Red 440 BRENNAN'S CORNER Opal Fountain Best Luncheonettes Hot and Cold Drinks Served by an Experienced Man money provided the cluo would give iv conceit without adniNxlon fee. In the slight controversy that followed Wll son appeared as an insurgent, protest ing that the glee club bud Its dignity to consider as well as bad the university The concert was given as originally planned, and no one felt that the dig nity of the university suffers I in the least from the ptrforfBMCt. One piece of writing that Wilson did at this period, a study of Adam Smith was recognised by all as exceptional in felicity and power of expression. was given magazine publication and later gave the tltlo to a volume of says-"Aii Old Master." Karlv in 188T was completed and published the result of the siiggestloi made by the perusal of the Gentle man's Magazine articles ten years b fore and of constant thought and study i ever since a iook, "congressiona Government A Study of Government by Committee by Woodrow Wilson.' It was the first account of the actua working of the constitution of the Unit ed Slates: an tnscetion of our govern nient. not as it is theoretically coustl luted, but ns It actually works. The IsHik met with instant success A serious1 work seldom makes a sen salion. and that word would be too strong to apply to the Impression nro duced by "congressional Government," but it ts quite true that It received nu enthusiastic reception at the hands ol all Interested In public matters. Of its merits It Is enough to say that Mr. I Mines Ur.vce. in the preface to "The American Commonwealth." acknowl edged his obligation to Woodrow Wll-son. It was a great moment in the life ol the young man Indeed, a great moment for two voting persons Success like this meant that life was at last to be gin. On the heels of the fame won by "Oottr alQIMU tioveriiineiit" came In vitations to MVeAl college chairs There was more work still to be don for a Ph. D. But (he Johns Hopkin faculty was to accept the book as a doctor's thcis. and the author accept ed one of the calls that from Brjrr Mawr. which wanted him to come a associate in history and oll:ical econ omy . Woodrow Wilson aud Klleti Ironist Ason were married at her grandfa ther's Infuse. In Savannah, on June VI 188.". In the autumn they came to tin pretty Welsh named village on tbt "main line" near Philadelphia, and a new chapter of life bOKM 1 The Pureist and Most Delicious Home Made Candies Our Own Candy Maker Makes Them lailv Already the most popular line of candv in the citv Don't Overlook 4 aia la we caa always fi&sl the MONEY CHAPTER VI. "Professor" Wilson. 8CHOOLTKACH KITS exist ence is not. in the narration a HaHWg story. The lrst sexenteen I'M CM of Woodru" Wiisou'si life after he left Johns Hop kins imixcrslty were M-ul iu teachiug They were years of usefulness. Thou sands of students will testify to Ih atill MBBftBf inspiration they owe t i in m and to In in They were years ol delightful living, of cultured aud gen tal companionship It was with the unrelinquished pur BBM of having his part In the publk life of the nation that Woodrow W'lsoi entered upon the profession of a teach er of law and ol!ti s li can hardl.x be said, however, that bis first ssltioi was ..no w hieh gave promise of auj large immediate influence mi public utlaiis . number of Johns Hopkins men on the oieuiug in 18So of Bryn Mawr college accepted it their first j professorships places lu tin- faculty ol ' the new Institution for women I lit vulgar ex en referred to Hrvn Mawr a "Jobauua Hopkins" Scuue were m Irreverent as to suggest that the youut: professor weiv "merely tryiug It or the dog" Professor Wilson, thoogl i i ailed to Itr.x u Maxvr priiunrily to glx instruction lu Hlitics and ioliticai I mi taught a g..,l deal beslde those subjects Classical history and I lie bWto'y of the lenaissaucf fell to and larger Institution was. nevertbe leas, not to be declined. Ampler oppor tunity opened in a school atteuded by young men, and In 1888 Professor Wll ton accepted an election to the chair ol history and political economy at Wes leyau university. Mlddletown, Conn. " From the start Professor Wilson's courses were extremely popular. And well indeed they might be. for New Kngland bad rarely beard such instruc tion as was given iu the lecture room of Wesleyan's professor of history aud political economy. While at Middle town he continued his lectureship at Johns Hopkins. Now, however, instead of going down once a week he bunch ed his twenty-five lectures in a month of vacation allowed him by the Wes leyan trustees. His fame as a popular lecturer also was growing apace, and he was frequently called to give ad dresses In New Kngland and the east ern states. It was while at Middle town that he wrote "The Slate," a vol ume which, with less pretentions to II. erary form than Ids other work. Involx ed an enormous amount of labor. Mr Wilson was a member of the ath letic committee of Wesleyan and took the keenest interest In the college sports. One student of the time re mcmlters how incensed he became at the limited ambition of the Wesleyan boys. who. when they played agalnsl Vale, were satisfied only to keep the wore down. '"That's uo ambition at oil!" he used to cry. "Go in and win Yon can lick Yale as well as auy otbet team, i io after their scalps. Ikui't ad mit for a moment ti.at they can beat you." Life at Mlddletown was pleasant. But Mr. Wilson's growing reputation would not perwH him to remain there When iu 1SU0 the chair of Jurispru deuce and K)lllics in Princeton col lege leeame vacant through the death of Professor Alexander Johnson the tnisiees elected to it the Princeton graduate, who bad so tjuicklv distin guished himself as a student of poll tics. Soptend'er. 1800. then, found Wood row Witsei again domiciled in the Jersey eol'egiate town. He xvas now a man whose renown had begun tc spread iu the world, an author, a pub lie sneaker of enviable repute, tin head of a family, a figure of consid eration, a doctor, if you please, both of philosophy and of laxv. The Wilsons rented a house In Li brary place. After a few years they built a home for themselves ou an ad joining lot, an attractive half tlin lcred house designed by Mrs. Wilson. The new professor stepped at once iut, the front rank, as indeed became ( a Princeton graduate, a member of one of the most famous classes the old college had graduated, a man thor uglily imbued with the best tradi tions of the plate. But his lectures Princeton had no tradition that ac counted for their charm. They In stantly became popular: the attendance .uoonted until It surpassed that ever before or since given any course of itudy at Princeton. Before long very nearly -too students, almost the total uuinlM-r of Juuiors and seniors com liined. were taking Wilson's courses, uid thex w ere no cinches" either. Widely informed, marked by a mastery of fact even to slight detail, Inspiring lu their range ami sweep aud spiced with a itervading sense of humor. Pro fessor WiUon's lectures were further marked rty the great freedom with which he delivered himself of his views on current eveuts. It was bis custom to put students on their honor not to iv i blm; there were always likel.x to be iu attendance students who had connections with city uewa papers who might frequently have made good "stories" out of the pro fessor's lively coinmeiits on the poll tick of the dsy. but none ever took ad vantage of the optimum The classes were uow so large that elsewhere than in flie classroom. Yet the Wilson home became and always remained resort hugely popular with the young men xvlio were ao lucky as to Ik- admitted to It and Its doors weie hospitably hung. Professor Wil son, iu short, stepped into the position of first favorite alike with his col leagues of the faculty and with the nndergratK Tbey have at Princeton a way of voting at the end of each year for all possible sorts of "popular personages." For a manlier of years Professor Wilson was voted the most popular professor. He was able, he was genial, he was active, a member of the faculty committee on outdoor sports and of the faculty committee on discipline. Iu faculty meetings Mr. Wilson soon became one of those most attentively listened to. During the twelve years. 1800 to 100.'. Mr. Wilson continued to fulfill at Princeton the duties of professor of jurisprudence nnd iolitlcs. They were twelve years of steady yet pleasant lalsir years of growth and of grow ing influence both In the university and in the country. Four new books were added to the list signed by this man who wrote history and politics with so much literary charm "Divi sion and Keimioii." An Old Master," "Mere Literature" and "George W ash tngton." He xvas heard noxv In occa sional addresses in many parts of the land discussing public questions be fore commercial. Industrial and pro fessional IhmIIcs. The vigor of his views on questions of the day. as well as his readiness, grace and power on the platform, gave him (dace among the recognized leaders of national thought. He had for a time continued going down to Johns Hopkins, and now he gave occasional lectures at the New York l.axv school. At the end or a decade in his chair Mr. Wilson had attained, uaturallj and with the good will of all. a posi tion of unchallenged supremacy In th university town ami of marked dls Littctioii iii the country. With such brief summary, this blog raphy must dismiss n period the ex ternal facts of which were of little dramatic value, incommensurate alto gether with their importance in the development and strengthening of con vlctiou and character which were to have play in the time which we now approach. (Continued next week) ACKNOWLEDGE IT Alliance Has to Bow to the Inevita ble Scores of Endorsements Prove It After reading the public state mi li of this fellow-suffe-rer given be ioxx, you must come to this conclus ion: A remedy which proved so ii 'iicficial years ago. with the kid neys can naturally be expected to perform the same work iu similar case. Read this: Mrs. Herman Schroeder. WdVaing ton Ave., Sidney, Nebr., says: 'i xvas in a bad way us the result of kidney trouble. 1 suffered from pains in the small of my back and dizzy spells, and I was unable to stoop. On the physician's advice, I put a plaster on my back, but 'his did not relieve me. I also tried many kidney remedies, hut to no avail until I began using Doan's Kid nej pills. After I had finished the contents of the first box the pain in my back stopped and I continued using this remedy until my trouble disappeared. You may use my name as one w ho recommends Don Kidney Fills highly." The above, statement was Ki ''!: May 7, 190!, and In a later iu'er viexv Mrs. Schroeder said: "1 wi'l ingly confirm my former endorse ment "of Doan's Kidney Pills. The cure this remedy made has been permanent." For sale by ad dealers. Frice 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the Fnitod Stat. s. Remember the name -Doan's and take no other. Adveittsement Feb 2027 'No Need to Stop Work him His lectures are said on high , the work of a professor consisted si aulhoiiix in liaxe Leen "marxels ,. scbolHi-ship. profoundly impressing lib clashes. Professor Wilson worked verv hard inost euilrely of lecturing. As we shall see later. It was not then the Prluceioo idea to give the students hi sou iWigVsJ ireairUJ or luyidrstlou When the doctor orders vou to stop work it staggers you. I eua't. you say. You know you are weak, run down and failing in health duy by day, but you must work as long as vou can stand. What you need is Fleet rle Hitters to give tone. strenfJh aud vigor to your system, to prevent break-doxx n and build you up. Don't be weak, sickly or ailine when Electric Bitters will benefit you from the first dose. Thousands bless Jhem for their glorious health and strength. Try them. Kvery bot tle Is guaranteed to satisfy. Only 0c a Fred K llolsten's. Advt Feb -27 ' ' BUYS M'GRFW BANK Jos. Pitman, ol Broken Bow. was in Altance last week on his way from MoOreW to Broken Bow Mr ptgtma was accompanied by his wife. II. lias just purchased a controlling IntireH In th- Mcllrew State Bank When Time Counts It Pays te Telephone By Bell Telephone you may travel near or far with equal ease Bell Telephone .errice permits noiverse fomimiiiieut ion personal mMMsgOB from towu. to town ami from state to .state. By telephone yoU may quefttioti or he ques tioned, explain or hear an explanation, saving time ami misunilertanding. Unneeesary trips, waiting, delays. Iok time enerjry and money may be saved hy uaiug the telephone. BELL SYSTEM REBMSKA TELEPHONE COMPANY NTs V a Old Trusty Incubators, Brooders and Repairs Incubators $10.00, $12.50, $16.50 Newberry's Hardware MEN Al DtfUKt buvinir vou D Nichols' stock of N and lower prices. It W look at them. Remembej the boot. 217 Box liutte HllllllltllllMI WH BOYS itm tn t wear, see M. 13. hoes. 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