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. ! | GRAND ISLAND TO HAVE THE BEE: OMAHA, ,TUESDAY, JUNE 1, 1915, 3 the spices of the Nebraska Pure Rred | fc premiunis. There is to be N eApes Minat ol 5 Horee. Besulirs' dasocietion: Anaual sates | ity attrdetive promiem tot tov wean- | 31 EMLS HOGS AND: SELLS ton -miles morthwast of here and- stoe |- S IERATIR ORE e Nebraska HORSE SHOW AND SALES |are conducted by . this - organization, | lines and vearlings. Thers will be at THEM BACK TO OWNER | e lors from e ermers EIevalor & tal)~Mr. ana Mrh. Paul Smith; milssion- - purely in the interest better horse | tractive prizes all the way through, but onars - After hie acrest, {he superintend. | Ar1es of Sudan, Africa rrived here iast ‘ GRAND IFLAND, Net May 3.(8pe }‘h‘f"v»l and improved agriculture Grand | these prizes mentioned are designed to Ma Sie ent at Keary ae 1 ted and his re- evening and will remain in this sountey “'u-l» The re Morse Breed d has again been' selected as the | K6t out a great colt show and aid to the g ) -"“‘ el Kyl | tor - one., e o0, Tarbith They REAVIS ORATOR AT LINCOLN -2 o T o e b b ek o T | s 3 e | W e e S (e o e e o s | the mid-winter horse show and sale, the [ Will be Februa M and % A libera wla n'.‘,.(. ':,. yoars ¢ ¥ . ““»“'_' school a has baen taken ‘back | on 8 stockman at Barwyn some time ago |C: Mitchell and family here, and s N . eame (0 be held at the same time and | Prize list | has arcanged for the |C0ln has been elected secretary. J. ( gt i 2 o = X | s ot = | parents, who live near 8i Paul, Neb, . 180 o > . ho od snles o stitution by Sheriff Wilson, | and o |was originally nt to Falls City Man Delivers A“""“ 0 shace the annual sales, and also unde | #how, and & handsome sum appropriated | Price also of Lincoln was appointed sales - 00 & N | s | Veterans at the City Audi- manager K , torium. l BESPEAKS NEUTRALITY FOR ALL| orrespondent.) 3.~ (Special.) ,rmy»l gressman C. F. Reavis of Falls City was the orator at the Memorial day Services held at the city Auditorium thid after- noon. The buflding was crowded and the audience was charmed by the elo- auence of Nebraska's new representative in Washington. n the morning the Grand Army of the Republic, Spanish-American War Veter- ans, Sons of Voterans, Women's Rellet Corpe and Ladies of the Grand Army of the Republic gathered at Grand Army of the Repubiic hall and were taken to the cemetery in automobiles and special street cars. At'(he cemetery the usual order of ex- ercises was observed. Fourteen squads of veterans and thelr sons, jointly in charge of a representative of each organization, decorated the graves and then gathered at the “circle” and the exercises of the decoration was observed.. At the close taps were blown by Bugler O. C. Bell an the participants in the ceremonies re- turned to the efty During the exerciees survivors of the Spanish-American war decorated the graves of their falle comraden and then jolned in the exercises around the circle, Congressman's Speech. In his addvess at the Auditorfum in the afternocon Congressman Reavis dis- ussed the civil war, causes and meaning. Result of Civil War, Concluding, he said It was to determine whether man had progressed far enough on the road to | his_ destiny, whether civilization had | reached that advanced ground where a governmént dedicated to human liberty and founded upon the rights of man | could endure. There are timid souls to- day who doubt the people's abliity to govern themselves and who, unmindful of the lessons of this great conflict, are demanding a government ‘too strong for the complete liberty of its people. Mentions Present War. In speaking of the European conflict, he said: “Individual neutrality is im- possible. The activities of the human mind, the passions of the human heart cannot be detroyed at the word of com- mand. But such’ activity, such passions, when crystallized into words and con- duct, must be tempered by national ob- ligations o as to be in harmony with the highest ideals of meutrality. I criti- cise no man for loving his native land; it would not promise well for his citizen- ship in the land of his adoption If he did not love the land of his birth. But I feel that patriotic impulses should con- trol all our citizenship so that it would abhor any word or act that would in- volve us in the appailing conflict.” Barton at Grand Isiand. GRAND ISLAND, " 31.—(8pe~ clal.)—Ag usual there was a dual ob- servance of Memorial day in this city, the one under the auspices of the Grand Army post and Woman's Rellef Corpe of | the oty and the other under the auspices of the same prganization of the Soldlers' hcme members. The Veterans of the city held their memorid! sermon at the Trin- ity Methodiet Bpiscopal church this morn- ing and Decoration day service the irst Methodist Episcopal church this afternoon. Rev. Tompkins, the pastor, and Hon. 8. R. Bparton, former congress- man, being the speakers. The decora~ tions of graves will proceed at both tI Grand Island and the ' Soldiers’ home cemeteries in the morning:at 10 o'clock, and in the afternoon the city ;:mm‘m will join the veterans of the in decoration day services, when Rev. Sohick of the Trinity church sand Mayor Ryan will be the speakers. Nebraska School News TABLE ROCK, Neb., May 31.—(Special.) ~The activities of commencement week in the Table Rock public schools began Tuesday night, when the senior class of the high school gave its class night pro- gram. Wednesday night occurred the an- nual commencement exercises. The fol- lowing students received diplomas: Wil- llam Van Drosek, Minta Schurr, Thomas Howes, Vera Stover, Edna Herrick, Alma Ash and Matilda Raitora. Dr. M. O. Mec- Laughlin, president of York college, gave the commencement address. Thursday night the Alumni association gave a re- ception to the class of 1915, Friday after- noon the elghth grade held promotiop exercises, thirty-one recelving thelr dtplomas. ARCADIA, Neb., May 8L—(Special)— Arcadia echools held commencement exer- cises in tl Independent Order of Odd Fellows hall Friday evening. Orations were delivered by eleven members of the class. Adelyn Mason was awarded the scholarship. The baccalaureate sermon was delivered by Rev. C. E. Campbell at the church last Sunday evening. Thurs- day evening the junior-senior banquet was held at the Elite cafe. After three vears of successful work Buperintendent Zacek 18 leaving, having been elected to & more remunerative position as super- intendent of the Rising City schools. ROCK ISLAND FREIGHT IS PILED IN THE DITCH FATRBURY, N May 3L—(8pecial Telegram.)—Train No. 608, the Fairbury- Horton Rock Island freight, was wrecked at noon today east of Harbine in this county and a number of cars piled in a hedap and the track damaged. Conductor Jones of this place was in charge of the train, which was traveling twenty miles an hour when the wreck occurred, It was attributed to soft track, Ruperintendent , Sheshan ordered the wrecking train at once to the scene of the accident and accompanied the train. Both crews escaped injury. BOOSTERS GO TO CHEYENNE TO FIGHT DENVER PLAN SIDNEY, Neéb., May 8l.—(Special Tele- gram.)—Twenty-seven autos loaded with sitizenn of this city went to Cheyenne 0 attend the Boosters meeting to re- monstrate against the action of Denver n endeavoring tu divert the travel from Riz Springs, Neb, to Denver and thus cut off all the Lincoln Highway terri- fory hetween Big Springs and Cheyenne. Couvghed fur Three Years. \ grateful sufferer writes: ““Your med- Dr. King's New Disovery, cured mv cough of three years' standing. dde, ATl druggists. - Advertisement. Read the Bee Want Ads each day. “And Jesus said unto her, Woman, hath no man condemned thee? * * * Neither do I condemn thee: go, and sin no more.” This text inspired the writing of, David Graham Phillips’ greatest novel, “The Story of Susan Lenox Her Fall and Rise” By DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS Dr. CHARLES H. PARKHUIRST, the famous clergyman, says: “This great novel, having reada it in manuscript, its spirit and purpose have not passed from my memory. “The heroine is depicted as an lllegitimate child, and the purpose of the fiction is to shew the blight that attaches to innoaent ' sgitimacy. : » DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS author of *“Old Wives and New,” *“The Grain of Dust,"’ **The Price She Paid,"" Etc., Ete. To this most startling American novel ever written, David Graham- Phiilips devoted six years of his life. Today, four years after his death by assassination, this, his greatest work is given to the public in Hearst's Magazine. ; 3 A million fathers and mothers will see this story, and read the lessons in it. . ,Deeply they will sympathize with the child unhappily born, and rejoice that they can protect as she was not protected, those within their care. ‘ In Susan Lenox, David Graham Phillips shows with all of his courage and power the story of life as it is. A girl beautiful, intelligent, unhappily born, cursed with the _ cruel stigma of illegitimacy, fights against the world. Phillips tells of her journeys down the hill, the cruel selfishness of relations; pushing their own daughter ahead of her. The marriage forced upon an inexperienced child. . The horrible revelations of what false marriage really is. The curse of a union without love on the woman's part, with- out refinement or kindness on the part of the husband. The flight of the girl hating immoral marriage more than any risk in life. Then the story that the public will read with breathless interest, the hard struggle, against hunger, cold, anxiety, and the last, worse dangergthat threatens every helpless woman. 26 It is indeed as Dr. Parkhurst says, fiction “‘that has a meaning, the ONLY KIND OF FICTIOIJ THAT MORAL INTELLI GENT PEOPLE SHOULD READ.” With his extraordinary power fully developed, David Graham Phillips tells of the fall that could not be avoided, and then of the spirit conquering, of the rise of the soul, the end of a struggle. The story of Susan Lenox, is the story of cruelty inflicted by cold civilization upon helpless girls. It is a story of beauty as'well as of horror, J It is a lesson in powerful literary work, a lesson of true moral teaching. MO Many a man who reads it, many a man who feels within himself part of the guilt that pushed Susan Lenox down the road, will feel as those men felt in the ancient days, when ‘‘Jesus stooped down, and with his finger wrote upon the ground, zs though he heard them not.” Many realizing in Phillips’ powerful, vivid teaching, how de- fenceless is woman cursed by man’s brutality will wish that they might slink away from theirown past, as ‘‘they which heard it, being convicted by their own conscience, went out one by one, beginning at the eldest, even unto the last.” P° No story but this wonderful narrative of the fall and the rise of a beautiful, unhappy spirit, wil: .¢ discussed-in this country, as long as the reading of the story lasts. Order from your dealer NOW! Begin it Today! cars Magazine “The treatment zccorded her by her kindred, who by ordination of nature ought to have protected and cherished her, illustra think the worst of people rather than the best. in a graphic way the vicious tendency imminent in human nature to ‘*it is one of thosoe fictions that has a meaning, the only kind of fiction that moral and Intelli- gent people have any r'ght to spend ‘heir time over or give their thought to.” First,— A bad start, illegitimately . v & SUSAN LENOX — the heroine of David Graham Phillips’ great American novel. if your dealer can’t supply you ‘phone Eric Nelson, 1618 Capitol Avenue " Douglas 6134 Omaha, Nebraska. o