SPIRIT OF ARBOR DAY PERPETUATED Millions of Treti Have Bean Planted Since Day Waa Fint Observed. ' ' ' EXERCISES IN PUBLIC SCHOOLS While leielly there will t tie aeeerel ohaervanre of Arbor day thin ear, other than l rr1 aid keep It e holiday, throughout Ui state of Ne braetie, ea In lh pant, thouaanas, anil perhep hundred of thouaands of tfte "III be lnted. Hr In the city, Inela4 of waltiea; for the coming of Arbor day. penple of tire-planting mlnda hava pretty aell fin julied the beautifying of Ihelr yard and li. without walling for the eorolng of the holiday that haa enm to he look upon aa one of the timet Important f Shakespeare and America m Dr. Charles William Wallace of University of Nebraska Speaks The Promotion Hi veer. In pt Vr It w the custom with conn ftlot) WHO 8naKesper K, CHARLES WILLIAM WALLACE B researches in tna uooaon Hall of Records, and the Important dlovrls be bat mad Kb referenca to the Ufa and lime, tbe business and prrisonal Buoclatlooi of William BUkkeapeare, and the Intimate gllmU.'-a of the private life of the great actor, poet and dramatlat, have frequently been referred to Id The Bee, ! It baa been a grfat pleasure, from lime to time, to Inform our readere and the fellow-tltb.ena of the doctor in Nebraska of the progress of hie work, and of the recognition It baa brought him. , Ilia rorreepondenr with The Bee's dramatic critic haa been Intimate and Interesting;, and while more than a year h "w P"M lnc the last letter waa received from blm, It la known that only the Interven tion of the w.r baa prevented the announcement of atlU greater discoveries The address herewith published la aet Into type from X)t, Wallace1! original copy, and la peculiarly pertinent at thin time. It waa delivered at Jlydo l'a'k Ilouae on Wedneeday, June 10, ill, ai an nmv rr n," over which ' Ambassador W. If, Tage presided, and which waa hld In connection with tbe plena then under way for the celebration of the centennial of peace between the United Plate, ,nd "roe, nr...m. ihe courae of bla addres. Dr. Wall.ce mikea no reference to hi. work In bla extensive rrHiercn na me iim rmuun the fark hoard end sd many of ihe --i,,.,. tint thl. feature via fenerou.ly alluded to by other., and par- i-lvlc, societies to plant tree, on Arbor day, but during more recent year they have tnn the planting at an earlier date. Do far thl year the Tarn com mlaalon haa planted aevrral thottaano1 tree alone the boulevard, and by Ar bor day Ihe work will he pretty well concluded, Thla year. Arbor day, April , cornea on a Bnt'irdey and eon"l'iently the arrleee In the arltonl will he held Fri day, Thee exerrlaea will rnnelet of song and stories concerning treea, told by bolh teachera end children. I. . Morion's nlrlkday. The Arbor day tople haa befit e thor I .. int lha .nlillr tlctilarly by the London new.p.pera in reporting, - Th copy of the addre.a ha. been In the weepm or ne n, ,r , .welting tbla moat opportune momnv or no niraiiona nf the new world, t have Dr. WeJ1.ce, who wae preaented by Mr. rate, aald: Wo of America ace not Infrequently re minded that we are young, very young, And with the frankneea of youth we ad mit the Impeachment, el!hoih aa tu drtita of hlatory we know that our evolu tion from a colonial If not e aava.e a'ain to the hleheaf. rlvllUatlon la but. an eaeiiy ohaerved rpllonie of the evolution of man through mm of time to Ihe preeent, o'ighly grounded that hoy. and glrle of an-! that the whole hletory of Kurope, aa Immodietely prefr1n the way tor u. through Kngllah eolonlfallon, le but early American hlatory, Tet we .re young. o, too. In the ..me wo.., I. hake epaare young, very young. Both were bom together, twinned at a .Ingle Wrtn, children ef the game Meal, They are ef the game age and heve grown up together--or may In good time grew up, unteaa the common Ideal ahall keep them forever young. Ponce De lee eought for the fountain of youth In Florida to keep the phy.leaJ twine vnune. Hut Khehaepaare found and partook of that common fountain of youth, called The Meal, that keep a youthful nation not only young, but, In li Irreverenre of age and trallllone, ehameleaaly hopeful that It may, along with him, remain forever young. ttut then, Tome de keon waa a npan. lard In thoe day. of anient rivalry, and fhakpr .n Kngllahman or .hall we claim him by-natural affinity In thl ae an American? And there you are. Kven If the Kpanlard had found the coveted fountain, with It doom of un- Inaplred phyelcal perpetuity, aome preda ceaaor of lrake on the high ea would have .wiped It from him before he got It half way acroaa the Atlantic and tapped from It an enlightening alream of Ideal-lain. r,aglen4'e Dreeme eed AanMlleee, By the time Hlbabottt came to the throne, England had a"iulrd the habit of alway. eutdolng the Kpanlard anyhow. The queen hereelf, epltomlalng the .plrlt of her country, bad way .bout her of getting what .he wanted that puwiea not only the great Armada and the ex plorer, returning from the weai wun laden gallaone, but alee King I'hlllp hlm- aelf peraonally .nd dlplomatlcaJly beyond all aolutlon. And Kngland In the day. of good Queen He, wae only ' young America In the buoyant tieedleaaneea aui lawteaeneea of ohllilhood in chaalng over all obetacle after the puree at the end of the ralnbo It wae In theae day. ef dream. en4 reetleaa roving end fierce aea realllle. that England got bar bulldog grip on the world, which Ita not looeeneu alnce. Not that ahe controlled, tint ahe wa. con trolled by eubconaelou atlvltln. wlil.'h he wa. not even aware of end which ahe could not have diverted even If .he bad wlehed. That I. the way with the .ut- conanloue dlreotlve forca, which we may call the Ideal-onee It get a t'lP " we cannot get away from U. Human progreae I explained on no oter beala. That ta why we are elvlllsed end ktep clvtltaed and want to grow more oHlllaed and make the reet of the world elnillarly ctvillaed, whether U agree to It or nut. We often think we are not Ideall.t., .corn to be celled uoh, and believe we ere very practical, even proeele. Hut e wake up eotnatlme and find that we are Ideallala alt the came, poet evary one of ue-prei-nt company aarwially Included-ln our Ineylretlnn. and motive forcee, All l ooked tn the !. It wae thla Inaplratlon of the Ideal In ubraniL-louanrea that Imbued all f.ng- ATTEND LINCOLN BANQUET lendlntHoae day. of Kllaabeth and Jamca that .re moat acouraieiy oouniiaii uy im Klfty-nlne demorrat returned aafe and I twantyedd ycer. of Hhakeapeare'a lttr- aouud from Uncoln, whera they attended ary ertlvlty, Men felt tne inajuraium. a han(iitt et th l,lnl!l hotel Krlday Tlwy looked out to the weal, mrre waa (veiling. A count of the returning ban- wwte eapectatton of aomathlng beyond gurtera tallied mth the count when (ha that could not be reallaed at horn". Men iilal train departed at i p. in. All n the flelda dropped the reina, or ri'portrd liaMng enjoyed e good lime atrilghtaned tlwlr backe above tha ho In (tier old l lm oln. ae they Itviked to Ihe weat. Thoe In the Uhnua lat fall the hammer, er alllled the OMAHA AUTO CLUB AOOS , cWa.l in lie atroke. er louaed the epron UIIIV MCMDrDC IM WCCV tn the fl-wr. ea the inner ui-am .n- IIIHIl I MlklllUkllK in iibkn . , . , . I liailivili t l""ir I ' Nebraaka, even thoae of tender year., ere a. familiar wtih It origin a they are with the origin of the Fourth of July. They enow that April 13 mark, the birthday annlveraery of the late J. Uterilne Morton, en honored Nebraeka pioneer, who during bla lifetime reelded et Arbor txdge, Juat eutalde the cor porate llmlle of Nebreaka City. Tbe yeung panpla know that he we. the founder of Arbor day end that It we through hie effort that the holiday came tnte exUtence. They alo Unow that moat of Ihe other .tetea ef the nnton followed the teed et by Mr, Morton and that now Arbor day I pretty generally dealgnated aa e holiday, , January 4, 172, Mr. Morton eppeered before the Hiete Board of Agriculture when It we holding It annual eeaaion tn Unjoin, and called attention to the fact that Nebraak waa a wide eipanae nf treelea prairie, rb h In It produe- tlvetieee of ell the grelna end greeeea, but that with Ihe exception of along the aareema and In the draw, and canone extending berk from theae etream., wee atmnat devoid of timber, Mr. Morton pointed to the fact that the a1l that would produce crop In uch abundance would grow tree If they were Planted, cared for end protected from the fire that In thoae pioneer daye awept over the prairie almoat eech eprlng and fall. The argument were o convincing that the board looked upon ihe project with cenelderable favor. Prlaee Were, Offered. Pefore edjournment the boerd dealg nalrd April of each yeer ee Arbor day and offered a prle of $i0 to the rtiunty that, Ihe following year, reported the greateat number of Ireea planted. To create atlll more Intereat In tree planting, a price of wa offered to the Ne hraaka farmer who, the next yeer, re norted the lareeat number of tree planted end growing. The flrat Arbor day after tbe adoption of the reaolutlon adopted by tbe rUete Hoard of Agriculture, more than l,0MW foreat trea were planted on farm nd In the rltte end town, end It la eald that during the Arbor day of Wi fully a a many more were aet out Tbe movement to pl.nt tree met with anon uulvaraal favor In all pert of the etata that March t, 174. Oovemor Furna leaned a proclamation, celling for the publla obeervanee of Arbor day . and dealgnaled It ee one ef the tate holiday. It continued aa e, eeml hollday until IMS, when the atate legtalature gave It a legal atatua by the paaaage of a law. fixing It ea on of , the Nebraaka bolldaya. The date of Me obaervance wa changed by alatute, however, end Inatead of contlnu lr, i it on Anrll 10. It wae changed to April the birthday of Mr. Morton, Xlnre the aaaaton of the legtalature that fixed the legal atatua of Arbor day, .late after atate bee taken the matter up and paaaed lawe, aettlng ealde eome day dur ing April aa an occaalon for planting tret-e. FIFTY-NINE DEMOCRATS lout and gentle men labl earn me rapier im the captain tovk Ihe wheel, Te oilier they elrerrd te the eeat. Ta Hie et lay Inllnlte poaelbllltlee-nel liiy i. allli. but et that hl-h elone lt Ideal demendrd-the Hht te ll't Ul the he. J and aev l H the oil. even llh Ih kl( of the earth, "I am a man" Into thie aa eel of It wie Shakeipear and Am.n e b"rn. t'old u carve n e ataiu ef H-iig'and et that moment, eir- Prtmd lute lia )iy of unieallaad twfiuM v, Mra. II li4F.ae, if Nnh 'Iwenitetltler Mint we pft'ite or l. er emwawv n ,i. a .-wad lb l-iia le l'le her In a txm, er ehd it fM In hiuhcj a r-..il evit, 1 !itii. aaeaaa etteted fivm Th etatue weeld I bat eiw ceugHl . .itilr atietnuon and haa mt menl. tba phiui 'l fee m a.ue. W.n (,. fiM mua The ! I llM ih (( t-t Hi vma et aa tnaie .l,.iw.!, b it .io hair, md IK eu.t lb tuuaW kH Iba dieaiu t t'.atabllahihg new record tr th lfar. tlilrly-elsbt nee niemh-n arre ,lr.1 to ti.e rol r of tbe Hinaha Aul inobtla I'luh ituilhg the tt wtrk Thi'ro ate Hue titer nimibeta In th ituh and It I ep,"lrd that lb 1 A maik UI be i a'4 Iwfoie Ihe brgianlng ef uioimr FIVE.VFAR-CLO YOUNGSTER MISSING SINCE WEDNESDAY a ai a't blue cap SIX NEW CASES OF SCARLET FEVER ARE REPORTED t , t.,!i,. ta iii,i itt ka i( ,ii I 1 1 I'lM, t ri t t-.'t ew, 14 Mi. i ...,! 1- W'mt law N , tH . i h t t i l .". It'l IPl.tlr.! . , tni,Ri,,n1 ifi i.tiir !, !- I, lt, ( isrt s , H ... t, ' nk ROADS NOT SPOILEO BY THE RECINT SHOWERS v .! . it.eu i be e.a t t ! t ai.it1 a-ta. .i.m f p. 'i iba lnvb Ae . i tt a a'a .. i (. 4 e i ixk ;!. (Hf l!'-.t,-l.) f - . .afci t I a I t, !' ti .,.,., t. '.. ! twa I : l I Hit-in ir.iJ -n ,a -ni- i i ... t, a 4 ,tth iiii a l W n k I ,,ii,i Il.ttei, a ig' abrr up a auittnteit ul ti e pl ee t the atl if tlia et tie luttire t'it l" ai"'' an f th a i.i iwntii. e 'i-J a kit ae M't'H.i, liint an l i . ta I ta f .ll nne, aiiu' a luae-i i( It l liUe, ' ltMilt, liw f li' " a ' a,i ,'!.. tiwia ta eiaae. t4 t' a t, t lieu ef the via t i'..- ' Wa ! t'a ei. te tr bla ( ! rm lt4 wl I ''! (m ! ikniiiiii' a. lfc,ib . H 1 1 b a b- aa t lbeit.,i. h i aa al k'a H V aa iba bnt a n t l tiai.ma t. l lt M ial e a I li e M' at ( a ) a lb a e el e .ttg bit ,uh M ' taieeeat la e Wta .anna te i-e'i ' 'd e t 4iit h h ,Ud vall'k w U a, a le' .'U I In b e t but l- a e..i i l,.i. i In Ibe titm mII bt Mi-i .'..!i- a r 4 rit.i,4 a- iia l u. '-n .. a( a i hit- -t,tna , it t'i4- a a- I. it i ,i ale f t' i it- e ...'i,,.. ,, h. r- u a,), vt i.i ; la i a U al bin -a ..n i,,ii, iik m nt been eurprlaed alao to find that eome of hie theatrical frlciirta end ae,clue were paraonafly end fliiemlally Inlereeted In Amerh'nn colrurtr.atlon nd rnep handKlng. Aa the remit nf one well known adven ture, "Tbe Tenipeat" wee rlHen. reflert lug I Im luui't roinaiiilo vlaion. of the new ortd, V.III1 It plbllltleg of freedom and umlimked niiilimli, wher even the power,' et play are tn tun cirij ' with human poealldlliy, even to the levm of 'ipernaturJ achievement. f)na ennot. however, wltn line cer tainty ley Ihe finger on other playe and aav they, have the .erne definite eouroe ef lnpiratlon. Put one can lft them all and find that they reflect the general enlrtt of the time, all oelebratlng the Ideal, either In aohlevement or in tragie InUrruldlon, And when thl I done, loo, w find the total gum of Hhakeapeere I noble Ideal, Of ne other dramatUt of hi tlma can that be eald. That I what make him a unlvereal elvlll.lng force, world-power that need, no armament to enforce peace over the panoply of armlea to prevent wer. in- ' aa amenea. And now. after TH) year, what Influ ence he fthakeapcar bed on Arnerl''aT It la dlffloult to eay In a word. He be an entered Into our live, I ao murh a part of u, that we Ao not think of him aa an tnfliienco apart rrom ua, no our a he I your, by common Inherit ance, Tou ere not nearer 10 mm we are almply beeatiae you have remained In the lend of hi birth, while we have gone to the land born with blm. Perhape you ere not even o near, for that now land atlll retain the broad outlook con tinent with the eplrlt and the age that hexot both. In final anaJyul, then, the Influence of Kbakeepeare on America would coma te hi appeal te the Ideal, The manner .nd the effect of that appeal may not be the aama a with you, W heve not nulte the earn mean of meaauring hi. Influ- enne, in rcngiend and m uermenr imer eat In Hiakeapeare, if not hi Influence, I mired In pert by th number of performance or th lack of perform anoe of hi pty., We hear much talk of thla a a .tamlard gauge here, and are constantly remlndud that aa Oermeny perform many of the play and Kngland few and but rarely, therefore Kngland care comparatively llltle for him. I'or hap It may not be a perfect atandard of mcaaurement, llorr to ftaaae Ite rffeeta. What Nhakepeare mean, to America le by tie mean rightly meaaurod by the number of , performance. Ill Influence doe not corn through voclntie organlxed to rouaa enlhuelHain for blm, a here and In Germany, We da not go mad over lilin, nur even wildly cnthualaatlu, but leke him a a matter of couree, and ap- preulate .him none 1 1 in Icaa. To ua gen erally he I not a god, to whom only ape ilnl prleeta may be Inlerpi-alcra, but man and a poet who might, if now living, be elected an honorary member of thl aoc.lt ty. l'cirhapa hi. Influence with ua la not leaa than with you. It may be even more nenily national, touching the whole maax of tho po(lc. Kr the main clien tele of hie Inflacnce are the aohoole end college 1. nil home from one end of Amerh'a to the other, lie I an eaaentbtl part of, our aohool curriculum. It 1 thl condition primarily that give bhnket'poaie lilt lentc end eleadlly In creaelug aiujli'iicra In the theetere In an ever-widening aiea throughout America. Hut It takca the grout at lor to make him Ihe tn Ibo full, and tbua to widen end ib'i pen Hie clianncla of Influence. We o.irmlvea have produced aome llluatrloua Interpreter of bhnhc,cre on the atago. We have nlno Invlimt from Kngland end ether lende end received elih open arm a the moat llluatrloua actnra of the world, tine of hum, Jut rrtiirriil to ou frmn liotahln tnur after inanv yeaie ef MhakeeiK-aieun aervlce, alinuUI now tit a our prcuitt chairman, Kir ha nt kept away by ImlieiHielilon, k u hava Juat heard announced Hut It l aufe to ay that even bir Julinatuii ftobrrtaon aoiild not hava bud I oita i"''eUii"i ha baa bad. n,if h five I audli-iuea that bai croa.i-d bie pr Immaniea If II acie not tur thla uiii Vereal ac'iuamUiii e with iliikeiieai (mm Ihe rlvmentat V an hmila ina I Imp and have lima iluubi that he, Uka ethara betme hint, found bla mat ipte vlailve a ml, f n-n In th hmil and ol lr( loan. laaerlea' lrM la t".arall. Aineiba tekra Infimi rtUa 111 e.lu aling her auna and ilauahiti It w inigltt '.iil b the ml of money I t ell t I alliui and th .-nail per nl pt llttar.'. mi founli in th ml vetaa a-i aim k for ruln, t.f ai uih-i citiMHy 'ija an e,.- n.t in any aay a'paiabto, an) ia uil,i vu ii.uy ba a ut tt a pv.,Mttii ef IIu,,m, an a-c ne it of line nf bt ani i p (. atmw III uml 1 " tii.i. voit'-eia ir ac(i i-tin"! -f aini-ii MUli'y. ae Ihaui !! V I 111,1 tbt lt.f f tbe rtl ll- lMr lf J .I.. H It Hullti. !! W I . t Iba tv-'a f - b a hi finu ! A 11. la tl H ,-u'mt ttf l tu ta ea.h inlM't ef !- n il".t iti Vt et ! t ate t I've .11 l aU l r t s t cf a ea ai . t- in tr b-tn a. 'I, r ' m 1 aet ' lit 1 ',( ;it a , . t a. v J! m I i , u tet in aiiiiio. i !,! ta lte .i, m h a 1 I r ;, a.. , ,K: f 1 ai'l 11 aet aa rWt)i I mi-ihi 1 a "ra ib aeaal ! Mv tao ,'!, ml . , te im I a I-) litiiii.it i ,1 1. 4 1. a ii i, ii,i 4 ft .!. t - ll CM t ,''! ,111 , W Ikr i'-iIi-i i M a ant w.,n " e bin., mat b I ka t l, "i t I .t a . tn t . I 1. . 1 --t ,1 n jI"hii m t t; I ! j.,v,,h iH'iC'i l Hilt,! i a , pear in the high thool alone. Iticreaeed during thoae ten yeare at the rete of t,V a year. And what 1 true of the high achool a true In laige meeaure of the whole I.'akVMl atndenl In eecondary edj- totion, Uvcn of the iMctyw in tne eio tiienlary lioola, a good many In the miriimir grade or cleewhre K''t aome taato of Bhakenpeai-e. Heide, every one of intelligence, aa a matter of courae, la uppoeed to know (omethlng of fhake. apaare, and tr a home la provioeo wun th Bible end a duxcn other hooka, on of them I almoat ccrlaln to be rtheke pi. No wonder publleher find Khake- apaare atlll their beat .oiler. Teaeklag of kbebeapear. Ill an Kngllah review of a book on ehakeapeare by one of my colleaguee a few ye.r. .go. It wa eald with evident .urprlae, "In America they aeem to tnr.h Khakeepeare," We moat certelnly do. Are we to Infer that In Kngland you do not? In the unlveraltlee, of ciur, thrumb- out the world, Hhekceiware la tnu.ht. or lectiired upon livery college end unlver- try In America offer one, two or llireo courae In Hlmkeapeare every year, While tbe method of gelling at him dlf. far, the aim of Inilmata acquaintance, with him la Ihe earn In all. In the unl- veralty with which I have tho honor In be aaenolated we elm to atudy him at flrat hand In lb light of life, meaauring Ideal gl,iiat. Ideal, by epfi'lilc mean that cannot here be touched uptm. Life I a better rrlllclam f art than ait la of life, end we find none that ao eland the teat a Bhakoapeare, end ron uuentlv none thet mure completely enter. Into the live of our men end women, AaaeHea' ftotahle oolrlhntlon. A America baa received from Khake epeare, ao It ha returned. If we do not fully justify the recent expreaiion of an EnglUh writer to me on thl point, uttered with an air of plvaaantry, "rou have made Hhakeapeer very famou.," we have at least done eomawhat. Critical and school edition of the playe, com mantarlae, gppreolallone and other help ful books pour forth from our preaae In a conatant trm, aome of them of a high order. In crttlclem on the hlgheat Judicial level, J need die no more than Rlcherd Grant White end Jame IXueaell Iwe. Among our many, end eorn llluatrtou. editor, that of my late frletul, fr. If. If, Kurneaa, etande In Ih eetem of ncholar throughout the world nxj after the flrat folio end quarto. Among ohool edition, that of the late I'r, fmifc take high rank, In help to tho etudy of tthakeapeare, a etand eaelly flrat. Our llbrariea and men of larifa mean eagerly collect fihekeapeareana, time greatly enlarging the mean nd oppor tunities for tui1y, Two of theae collec tions, on public ami no private, ere among the moat Important In the world. Of the many great American Interpreter of Hhakeapeere on the etage, 1 need only to mention the neme of Kdwln flooth to awaken tribute In the heart of alt. In painting, as highly exemplified In the work of n A. Abbay, In euolpture, In mualfl, fihakeapear I a perpetual source of lnaplratlon through that everluetlng appeal that make Ihe Ideal went to em body liaelf in tangible form, Alt the are creditable, and are pleee ant to contemplate.' Yet they ure but the trapping, th outward sign of the eplrlt they clothe. The contribution thet we have returned to the world back of all there le that intangible mewhat that I a part of our life and being, end urge 11 on to higher thing. In continued com panlonehlp with the noble unachieved In Bbakepoar that haa gone Into eur making. oaiunpiilllaa In the I'.nd. Kvery play of ltmke.pea.r' was writ ten primarily for performance at court. That fact telle much tliit cannot here be touched upon. They were orlnlnalt) acted befoie Knel'ali audience In 1,'mdon, And now ho bug end cosmopolitan llioae audience lime urnwn! Bhkepcre'a coamopoiltHtilam and unl varaallty of appcit arc e"i In America a In no other country, becauee of our hetcrogeneoui population In procea of ainHlxamnllun. )n that. giet theater that apreada from- ahore lo hore, Hhake rpeire' audience la conipirad of Ameri cana, Kngllah, Irlah, Mcotch, IXuaalan, Auetrleii, ftohrmlen, Norwegian fiwede, I'ane, liulcb, (ieiintin, f'rench, s'penleli, llallan nd othei. If you would ' by whet prncx all there natlnnalltiea, wllh dlfferencea all foigol, are ainel.amaled I11I0 Ihe homogenenu solidarity of the American neilon. ou will 'find It In the Ideal awakened by poaelbl Hlea nd lrln"d by unlvereal iducnilon. And In that proc e of malnillon and development, Ihe moat remarkable In Ihe hlatory of humanity, Hhakeapeare, making the larg rat appeal of nil literature to the ideal, playe hi noble pari, Oroertk of liar Ideal, The awakening of Ihe American Ideal began In Kngland In the day. of fheke- apeara; He development ! followed In (he new world then dreamed of, What wonder, then, that Hhakeapenre, who more than all other of hi time or of any time reflect the poeilbHtlc of the Ideal, liould have hem end aim ild con linn to be a fgcior In thl development? In thla peat century of peace und un precedented world-advancement, not all the petty Jealouele of nation hve wiped thoa ideale .wy nor broken, though they have eometlme strained, the bond they make between America end Kngland, And ao long as we ere guided by the .em Ideal, w .hell remain united, not Kngiend end America agelmt th world, but America and Kngland for .11 the world, It mean much to you, It mean, much to ti, that Mhakearcar ha played a part In making Amerlra eland a. the taet prriceee of man's evolution. It I not the life Im celebrate, not (he character Pr ae, but the appeal to Ideal. In both that make him one with ua. To you, te ua, to ell, In final analyal. flhakeapear mesne Ihe everlasting appeal to the Ideal. No nation can rad him without lifting up the head, Of what other writer of what other country ran thla be aald? If you havo produced hint, be proud end glad. If we find Ineplratlon In him, re johe wllh ua. A your perpetual amb aailor he rbme to u, end under the spell of hi volco wo forget all difference. A our ambaaaador of peace end good will and noblo Ideal, w return him to you, and by th token of the pnt w are - eured thet you will receive blm klnd lu our behalf, e we receive him from you. KNOCKS BOY DOWN AND THEN STEALS GROCERIES W. It. ftuckle report to th police that be live at 13 Ohio tret and that Friday afternoon hie wlf nt tbelr 10-year-old boy to a Hherman avenue grocery atore to make otne purchaeea, Aa (He boy was returning home, Buckle aaaerta that a man riding In a buggy, met the boy, knocked him down, took the groceries end drove away. IVe Bm Want Ads for iteeuit. B. Fred's Enlarged ' . af!!JL fJL- aV el . fix Ik ,1.1 f ii '' . .' rori.aa- a: r in nv 1 Offers for Moiday ant) Balance of Week I have dlecontlniieKl the Millinery Department In tirtlor to t nlargo my frol"a I1k antl Suit ImaliiMe, and now I have double the apace to (.how garment to le-ne Ihe artletlc aa well aa ihe conservative. Women's and Mlte' Beautiful NEW SPRING SUITS In all the lateet mod el. In gaburdlne, wool poplin, chiffon, taffeta. hitko and taffeta com bination, etc. In all the killing color.. VaIucb to 127. BO. On eale now 51500, $1975,52250 Women' and MUtei' Beautiful Ml SPnifiG COATS n all the Utcat l)lc and iulerlU A big shipment juat arrived, and "111 be shown here all etk. If you are louklua fr eiinitnhlin nifty at reaeonabla pner. b aura m ititne I tan i(iafy jou I'jUea (V ; 'i' - 1 ; - n :' ! lit .1 . $6.95, $9.85 $12.50, $1185 Skirts Vaist Specials ',4 ! 1, 7 if ee lul lecetied, a big hipnient i.f aktrtt, In ! a il.'th. ,eliv ilk I a f (, 1 Nil, eif tiiwe dajj '! la b l.'l. M S, on ! $5 ll e a u t i f u I ne Ijtigeiu aUU. li t tika, etc V , I , tie i 11 t. ' n.ia at Another I ( Wttat lu imi da tie, tub nlki, i 1 if.'. I M real Ualnif oee tin ' le H i , .el , ' tHhee t ! at J ti eel at; 98c $1.98 (i, M ill of Hea.tGV( f fI STQMACIS Mm Good health must have to start in the Stomach, Liver -j .V and Bowels, for these organj "T4 j ' -t au AAHlAllntt nAtxraf1 , r ure uiu vuutiviuuij ? " v. and have direct influence on the entire system. If stomach weakness is al lowed to develop digestion becomes impaired, the appe tite beginj to wane, the liver becomes lazy and the bowels constipated, Therefore the great im- a porta n cc of establishing and 1 maintaining strength and a-- j viror in these ortrans at all gmmmS i times, To this end just try HOSTETTER'S a STOMACH BITTERS It is nature's one best aid in the promotion otV health. ,i DDDOODDDDODD 5"peeeZeN HakBaaaM JtMala t ' jll'laWl'l ilWy 1 lmmumik Hit POPULAR PRICE STORE SouthfMt Cornrr Uth unit Douttat A ( )? n 1 STORAGE r l l BATTERY J The Little Dial on the Dash It's there for a purpose; to show you how much is going into and out of your battery. 4 And sometimes a battery may be starved to death. Don't blame the battery for that, but find out the cause. One of the functions of Willard Service is to help the car owner know his electrical system as he should Such information is found in booklets which are yours for the asking. Let us tell you what you need to know. We'll convince you that Willard Service is more than expert knowledge of batteries alone, . Nebraska Storage Battery Co. 2203 Fainem 3l. Phc ne Doug. 5102 V , Ida 4r.e Tea waa etaiata a 4t m MIM ta aaaal a Ma ika ra,N la i. Fiti intpection of any batt$ry at any tlmt. --i i