vtm 'WW'" Wl "WM'tMHHJ,11- "l'j8l'n''''Wffl'ifli , p ,flm 4.W'1 PW saes. . The Commoner. VOLUME 9, NUMBER 2 STORIES OF LINCOLN AND TRIBUTES TO HIS WORK FEBRUARY 12, 1000 Into tho South thoy come to do him revorenco, Tli lit one whoso powor brought mighty severance Of chain and shacklo to a suffering race And North and South this day stand face to face. Into tho South they como to do him reverence, That spirit which to Freedom gave re-birth, No wounds, no scars, remain on Blue or Gray, For North and South united stand today. Into tho South thoy como to do him reverence, And from that glorious soul beyond tho stars A benediction not on South or North, Nor black nor white doth fall But upon all. Josephine N. S. Callahan, In Louisville Courier-Journal. LINCOLN ON CRITICISM Tho San Francisco Star prints this letter: "Sir: For tho benefit of a long suffering public that mUBt bo a-wcaried by these everlasting self serving messages to congress, will you kindly print tho following incident in tho life of Lin coln? In regard to an attack made upon him for an alleged blunder in tho southwost, an officer asked him If it would not be well to set tho matter right in a letter to some paper, stat ing tho facts as they actually happened., ,, " 'Oh, no,' replied the president, 'at least not now. If I were to try to read, muck -less an k,swbr, all tho attacks made on me, this shop .might as well bo closed for any other business. nJi'.d6 the very best I know how -tho very best I can; and I mean to keep on doing so until the end. If the end brings' mo out all right, what is" said against me won't amount to any thing. If tho end brings, mo out wrong, ten angels , swearing I was right, would , make . no difference.' " - . ,v.; versary of his birth, it is but fitting that every loyal American citizen, in tno proper oDservunuo of this national event, should feel it a duty and a privilege to take some part in such exercisea as will perpetuate his memory. "To this end that Nebraska may maintain her patriotic and loyal distinction, I hereby re spectfully request that on Friday, the twelfth day of February, A. D., nineteen hundred .and nine, the citizens of Nebraska display tho flag, and assist all patriotic societies and institutions in their efforts to venerate tho memory of the lamented Lincoln.' LINCOLN'S VIEW OF WAR Allen Thorndike Rice, a former editor of tho North American Review, tells somo interesting stories in his "reminiscences" of Abraham Lin coln. Referring to the great president Mr. Rice says: "Ho was melancholy without being morbid, a leading characteristic of men of genuine humor, and it was this sense of humor that often enabled him to endure tho most cruel strokes, that called for his sense of pity and cast a gloom over his official life. On these occasions hd would relieve himself by compar ing trifles with great things and great things with trifles. No story was too trivial or even too coarse for his purpose, provided that it aptly illustrated his ideas or served his policy." To this peculiar tendency of mind, we . un doubtedly owe .the many' stories and quaint say ings which lend, a , strange and,, uncommon in terest to every recollection of Lincoln. '" As an illustration of the peculiar rapidity (TO. THE MOTHER OF FIVE SOLDIERS Executive Mansion, Washington, November 21, 18G4. Dear Madam: 1 have been shown in tho illeB of the war department a statement of tho adjutant general of Massachusetts, that you are tho mother of five sons who have died gloriously on the field of battle. I feel how weak and fruitless must be any words of mlno which should attempt to beguile you from the grief of a loss so overwhelming. But I can not refrain from tendering to you the con solation that may be found in the thanks of tho republic they died to save. I pray that our Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement, and leave you only the cher lBhcd memory of the loved and the lost, and the solemn pride tliat must; be yours to nave laid so costly a sacrifice -upon the altar of free dom. Yours, very sincerely and respectfully, ABRAHAM LINCOLN. To Mrs. Bixby, Boston, Moss. NEBRASKA'S PROCLAMATION Govornor Shallenberger of Nebraska issued thiB beautiful proclamation: "Tho namo of Lincoln strikes a responsive chord in tho breast of every true patriot', and inspires to more noble deeds and higher ideals, the citizenship of the American republic. Lin coln, a name which stands out pre-eminently in a conflict 'which not only shook the very foundation of our own country, but Tvas felt like a mighty earthquake throughout the na- l0nlLtllQ, earth' Lincoln tho man, who, when tho battle for a principle which concerned all mankind, was on, guided it so wisely to a triumphant conclusion. "Tho life of Abraham Lincoln was dedicated to humanity, ignoring all selfishness, and labor ing against oppression and wrong, a far-seelnc statesman a man of tho common people, cloal to the soil, foremost on the nation's banner of illustrious citizens, a leader of the nat'on ?n InJi VST f VQ,rU d wlth w"se blSod was sea od tho proclamation of universal liberty The name of one who has contributed so sonorously to the welfare of his countrv in -tS past, should bo an inspiration fo? ho future and on this tho approaching contemUal aX . . ., . ., ,i :. - -; . . 0. LINCOLN' WARNING ryWhat constitutes, the bulwark b.f .our , own liberty and independence., Iiistnot our frowning batlements, our bristling,. t;sea coasts, our ..army and . ouivinavy. These are not our reliance agajpst tyranny. All of those may be turned i,againpt us ?wJthout making . us weaker , for. the struggle. Our reliance is in the love of liberty rwkich God has planted in us. Our defense is in the spirit which prizes liberty aB the heritage of all men, in all lands everywhere. Destroy this spirit and you have planted tLe seeds of despotism at your own doors. Fa- , miliarize yourselves with the chains of bondage and you prepare your own limbs to wear .them. Accustomed to , trample on the riehtn nf nthava vr Have lost the genius of your own inde pendence and become the fit subjects of the first cunning tyrant who rises among you." . ) 0 with which he would pass from one side of his nature to the other Mr. Rice cites a story for which he is indebted to Governor Curtin, of Pennsylvania. Summoned from the gory battlefield of Fred ericksburg to the White House, Lincoln plied mm withquestion after question. Mr. President," said the governor, "it was not a battle; it was a butchery." As Curtin described one harrowing scene after another Lincoln reached a state of nervous ex citement that bordered upon insanity. Finally, as the governor was preparing to Xe'e W118 President's hand and said: Mr. Pres dent I am deeply touched by your sorrow and at the distress I have caused'you have only .answered your questions. No doubt my impressions have been colored by the suffer- nf aavo seen. I trust matters will look brighter when the official reports come Tin I would give all I pbssess to know how to rescue you from this terrible war " rescue Lincoln's whole aspect suddenly changed and "ThisVrl? mlnd by tellins XE This reminds me, governor," he said, "of an old farmer out in Illinois that T used to know He took it into his head to go into hog ratalnT" He sent to Europe and imported the fineft breed of hogs he could buy. The prfze ,h?B was pUt in a pen and th y A ne vrtao hog chievous boys, James and John, were told tn be sure not to let him out. But James th wors of the two, let the brute out' n day The hog wen straight for the boys and drove John ud a tree. Then the hosr went fnr- ... seat of James' trousers, and the only way the boy could save himself was by holding on to tho hog's tail. The hog would not give up his hunt nor the boy his hold. After they had mado a good many circles around the tree tho boy's courage began to gjve out, and he shouted to his brother, 'I say, John, co'me down, quick, and help me let this hog go!' Now, 'governor! tht is exactly my case. I wish some one would come add help me let this hog go!" "LINCOLN AND THE SLEEPING SENTINEL" Mr. L. E. Chittenden, who waa register of the treasury from 1861 to 1865 and a personal friend of Abraham Lincoln, now for the first time tells in. full the story of "Lincoln and tho sleeping sentinel" (Harper & Brothers), which has hitherto been known only In its bare out line. He speaks aa one having authority, and with justice, for he bore an important share in the episode. It was on a dark September morning in 18G1, he informs us, that he was waited on at his Washington office by a;, party of soldiers. They belonged to the Third Vermont regiment, then stationed at the Chain bridge, some -three miles above Georgetown. One of their number, a youth of twenty-one, had fallen asleep at his post as sentinel. A hardy boy, not as yet in ured to military life, he had found it impossible to keep awake for twd nights in succession. He had been found by the relief sound asleep, had been convicted by a court martial and sen tenced to be shot. .... . . ;1V'., With tears in their eyes, his comrades plead ed with Mr. Chittendenvto use:his Influence and save the boy's life. .' '; vv "He's as good a boy as there is in the army," Baid their leader, "and he is. hot 'to blame." .Scott had never before beenup all rilght in his life. He -had been ",all beat out" by his first experience. The second nighty he had succumbed-;, to sheer physical exhaustions . Mr. Chittenden's heart was touched:" J-Ie de termined to. put young Scott in personal touch with President Lincoln- By uBing all ?.his, influ ence he succeeded. ,. l- &.. ..-ncic .t:'i This ia how Scott himselfi. told, the story ot the interview: .-.. "The president was the kindest man I had ever seen. I knew him at once by a Lincoln medal I had long worn. I was scared at first, for I had never befpre talked with- a great man. But Mr. Lincoln was so easy with me, so gentle., that I soon forgot my fright. He asked me all about the people at? home, the neighbors, the farm and where I went to school, and whp my schoolmates were. Then he asked me about mother, and how she looked, and I was glad I could take her photograph from my bosQm and show It tohim. He said mow thank--ful-i-ought to be that my mother 'still lived, and liow, if he was in my place, he would try to make her a proud mother and never cause . her a sorrow or a1 tear. I can not remember it all, but every word was so kind. , "He had said nothing yet about that dreadful next morning. I thought it muste that he w so lnd Parted that he didn't like to speak It wby did fle say so much about my mother, and my not causing her a sorrow or a tear, when I knew, that I must die the next morning? But I supposed that was something that would have to go unexplained, and so I determined to brace up and tell him that I did not feel a bit guilty, and ask him wouldn't he ux it so that the firing party would not bo wm fUr J;?""" n&at was going to be the hardest of all to die by the hands of my comrades. . "Just as I was going to ask him, this favor he stood up, and he says to me: 'My boy, stand up here and look me in the face.' I did as he ?? Lm My boy' e Bald' 'yo ar not going En 2 Jomorrowi I Relieve you when you JSn?? f yU CO"ld not kep awafee- T a SifSJX TVt0 an.6end yo back jo your Swo J ba:Ye been put t0 a Sreat deal Sn IZ y,lrr ccount- I nave had to come 5?MfeHeJr?mVoahta8n when X nave got a great deal to do, and what I Want to know is, how areou going to pay my bill?' ' There was a big lump in my throat I could SCTly, ?P,ea J na'd fexPeced toa?e, you see. To h tinn?i lg0td t0 thinldat way! u JIS 511 chanS6l a minute! But I got it crowded down an.d managed to say: .vnti,? srateful MX Lincoln. I hope I am as fng my lire ntVT b foraV mg my me. But it comes upon me sudden and ""y- vTKfiywfyjBKgBWWMiSiM , -l.iVlfll: