Patriot-Statesman-Martyr ABRAHAM LINCOLN A Brief Recital of the Noble Life of L o "Rail Splitter" President; The Un natural Struggle of Brethren,--The Triumph and the End. WHILE North and South were at death grips, while the nation seemed forever rent asunder, while graft, Incompetence, cross pur poses and factional strife hampered 3he Government's movements the jtorm ever centred about one quaint, pfcturesqtio figure Abraham Lin coln. t A gigantically tall, bony, ungain ly body; a wrinkled, rugged face, aly redeemed from grotesque hide usness by Its luminous, melancholy tark eyes; a slow speech, Interlarded with keen rustic wit; an awkward manner and a personality wherein arude strength and Infinite gentle ness were curiously mingled, such, tt a glance, was Abraham Lincoln, jsnancipator and martyr. Born In utter poverty in the Ken tucky backwoods and working his way up gradually as rail splitter, trra hand, boatman, store clerk and Tnally lawyer, Lincoln wrote later ibout his early chance: "When I came of age I didn't tnow much. Still, somehow, I oould rd, write and cipher; but that was ill. I have not been to school since. , Tk little advance I now have upon cats store of education I have picked in from time to time under the acessure of necessity." Countless other men, with the me or better start remained till ttath at shop counter or farm work. fat the drawbacks which would -mm strangled the ambitions of most ABRAHAM LINCOLN. -uths only strengthened the young '"ekwoodsman's. Picking up a legal ducatlon, he forged his way ahead Btil In 1846 he was sent to Con gress. When the slavery question . -rose Lincoln enrolled himself heart nd soul upon the "no extension" de and became known as one of anti-slavery movement's stanch rt supporters. Avoiding the radl- U.hysterical methods of the ex Jae Abolitionists, he was' never teless a firm champion of liberty, id sprang quickly to prominence t the new Republican party. When tat party elected him President In S60, the South, knowing his strong eas on the slave question, almost t once withdrew from the Union. Ineoln replied to the Secessionists: "You can have no conflict without elng yourselves the aggressors!" Then came the Civil War. And for ie next four years Lincoln endured e most trying position ever forced r an American. He had not even . eorgo" Washington's consolation of nowlng, in darkest hours, that his 'How-countrymen loved and he aved in him. The South and many v ortherners regarded him as a tyran Ical oppressor. The more rabid, ex- table faction at the North fiercely vmdemned his conservative calm In fusing to be swept off his feet In e general delirium and uproad. "lose who mistook hysterics for pa iotlsm doubted his ability and even s loyalty. For the mistakes of the War De triment, for the failures of the lion generals, for the humiliating feats caused by Incompetent Jacks ' office, Lincoln received the full ame. Because he worked out his eat plans with the quiet slowness cessary for their success he was re !ed as inefficient and lazy. A large rt of the English speaking world ?ered at his awkward, countrified mners and mocked his ugly, gen .face. His homeliness, his huge, in figure, the uncouth vulgarisms it he had not been able to shake ' these and other defocts were the -gets for Jokes, contempt, denun- . .Hon. Through It all Lincoln pursued his m, unswerving course, toward the . al he had set himself the goal of .'ree, united American nation. Deaf abuse and scorn, holding the wild ticals back, urging the timid con rvatlves forward, guiding the Ship State through hurricanes that urly threatened to swamp it, the esldent continued along his chosen He selected the exact "psy- , ological moment" for freeing the vea; a moment when the move ant everything to the Union cause, igland and Franco more than once med about to take sides with the -.mth. Lincoln'! .consummate tact averted these perils and kept the country free from foreign complica tions. At last his plans began to work out. Little by little the nation real ized all he had done and was doing for It. Europo too commenced, to understand that the despised back woodsman was a statesman and pa triot to whom the whole world might well do reverence. He had carried the country safely through Its most terrible crisis. And the country, somewhat late In the day, adored the nan It had mocked. The war was over, the Union pre served, the slaves freed. No praise was high enough for the man who had achieved these miracles. And In the brief moment of his boundless popularity Lincoln preserved the same gentle, strong calm that had marked his days of adversity. On the night of April 14, 18C5, a gala performance was given at a Washington theatre to celebrate the triumphal close of the war. As President Lincoln sat watching the play (his appearance having been greeted with mad applause), a dis reputable actor, John Wilkes Booth, member of a gang of conspirators who sought to avenge the defeat of the South, crept behind him and shot him through the brain. Thus died Abraham Lincoln, hero martyr; struck down at the moment when unjust hatred and ridicule Against him had changed to admiring love struck down when he had barely ta&ted the reward of his years ef thankless labor. He had saved his country; and he gave his own blameless life In payment. HOW LINCOLN WORKED. In Harper's for December W. H. Crook, who was Lincoln's bodyguard, gives a dramatic picture of Lincoln In war-time. He pictures one of the levees at the White House and then: "The levee was supposed to be over at eleven, but some people re mained until nearly twelve. After they had all left, Mr. Lincoln wrap ped himself In the rough gray shawl he usually wore out-of-doors, put on his tall beaver hat, and slipped out of the White House through the base ment According to my orders I followed him, and was alone with Presi dent Lincoln for the first time. "We cross ed the gar- Jen, which :y where the execu tive offices are now. Mr. Lincoln was bent on his nighty visit to Sec retary Stanton at the War Depart ment. I stole a glance up at him, at the homely face rising so far above me. The Btrength of It la not lessened in my memory by what would seem to me now the grotesque setting of rough shawl and silk hat. "That night," as I said, I waa a little nervous. The President no ticed it. He seemed to know how I felt, too. I had fallen into line be hind him, but he motioned me to walk by his side. The statesman who came to consult him, those who had it In their power to Influence the policy of the party which had chosen him, never had the consideration from Mr. Lincoln that he gave the humblest of those who served him. "A few strides of the President's long legs a few more 'of mine brought us to the old-fashioned turn stile that divided the White House grounds from the enclosure of the War Department. Mr. Lincoln talked, in his soft low voice, chiefly about the reception through which he had Just gone. " 'I am glad it is over, he said. !'.I.VentUred t0 ask ,f he waB tlred " 'Tea, It does tire me to shake hands with bo many people,' he ans wered. 'Especially now when there Is so much other work to do. And most of the guests come out of mere curiosity.' "With these words and the half sigh which followed we entered the east door of the War Department. In those days that was a small, mean two-story building, Just in front of the Navy Department. We went im mediately to Mr. Stanton's office, which was on the second floor, on the north front, and overlooked Pennsylvania Avenue and the White House. There, at the door, I waited for him until his conference with Secretary Stanton wbb over. Then I accompanied him back to the White House. From the moment Mr. Lin coln spoke to me so kindly I felt at home in my new duties. I never lost the feeling which came then that while the President was so great, be was my friend. The White House never awed me again." mm I V0 SSSOv THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBUuS. 0 LINCOLN; BY fThcron Brown THE night was bloodshot: thro' the dark Hod furrows split the welkin wide, And pallid households shrank and cried As dogs at thunder moan and bark. On rustic eyes the awful show Wrote "Judgment" swift on vengeful wing. They saw the heavens toss and swing And shed their stars like fiery snow. One gazer faced the frightening glare Like AJax In his youthful might; He looked beyond the ethereal fight, And saw Arcturus shining there. Untaught, but wise,' he scorned the fret That random drove the quailing crowd. nnw nn .nfrii .mi mi "With Malice Toward None, Charity To All, Following the Right As God Gives Us to See the Right." j.n iim nti 114.111111 1111 ABRAHAM w 1 "The skfes are calm!" he chou'isi loud. "The ancient start are stan.l;:i;, yet!" He towered alone. With vl.-' blear Gray elders round the stih Like all the scare-blind to ... went mad, And Lincoln was the only seer. , The years went by. In Ftcr. form Came service; and the man c great Till, captain of the sovereign sir He faced a wilder meteor storm. Men saw the planets sore dlstressM, They saw the rival tropics hurled To combat thro' the stellar world, But he was taller than the rest. He scanned the purple height su preme, With all Its endless lights aglow, And knew the flaming strife be low Was passion's threat and ruin's dream. He lived to shame the false des pair. The civic firmament was peace; Its banner spread to every breeze, And not a star was missing there. wfrti nn nn -n-an mi iin u-j infra mm 1111 -114.11 mi un LINCOLN. A laboring man with horny hands, Who swung the axo, who tilled his lands j Who shrank from nothing new, j Bat did as poor men do. j One of the people. Born to be Their curious epitome, 1 To Share, yet rise above, -' . ! Their shifting hate and love. Common his mind, It seemed so then, His thoughts tho thoughts of other men, Tlaln were his words, and poor . But now they will endure. No hasty fool of stubborn will, But prudent, cautious, still Who, since his work waa good. Would do it un he could. No hero, thin, of Roinnn mold Nor like our stately sires of old. Perhaps he was not grout But he preserved the afeite. 4 O, honest face, which all men know, O, tender heart, but known to few O, wonder of the ago, Cut off by tragic rage, !V By R. H. Stoddard. if LINCOLN'S STORY OF HIS LIFE Here is Lincoln's Story of His Own Life, Supplied by Him to J. W. Fell. It Was All He Thought Worth While to Say. I WAS born February 12, 1809, In Hardin County, Kentucky. My parents were both born In Virginia, of undistinguished families second families, perhaps I should say. My mother, who died In my tenth year, was of a family of the name of Hanks, some of whom now reside In Adams and others In Macon County, Illinois.-My paternal grandfather, Abraham Lin coln, emigrated from Kocklngham County, Virginia, to Kentucky about 1781 or 1782, where, a year or two later, he was killed by the Indians, not in battle, but by stealth, when he was laboring to open a farm In the forest. Ills ancptors who were Quakers, went to Virginia from Berks County, Pennsylvania. An ef fort to identify them with the New England family of the same name ended in nothing more definite than a similarity of Christian names In both families, such as Enoch, Levi, Mordecal, Solomon Abraham and the like. My father at the death of his father, waa but six years of age, and he grew up literally without educa tion. He removed from Kentucky to what Is now Spencer County, Indi ana, in my eighth year. We reach ed our new home about the time the State came Into tho Union. It (was a wild region, with many bears hnd other wild animals still In the woods. There I grew up. There were some schools, so called, but no qualification was ever required pf a teacher beyond 'readln', wrltln' and r.lpherin' ' to the rule of three. If a straggler supposed to under stand Latin happened to sojourn in the neighborhood he was looked upon as a wizard. There was abso lutely nothing to excite ambition for education. Of course, when I came of age I did not know much. Still, somehow, I could read, write and cipher to the rule of three but that was all. I have not been to school since. The little advance I now have upon this store of education I have picked up from time to time under the pressure of necessity. I was raised to farm work, which 1 continued until I was twenty-two. At twenty-one I came to Illinois Macon County. Then I got to New Salem, at that time in Sangamon, now In Menard County, where I re mained a year as a sort of clerk In a store. Then came the Black Hawk war, and I was elected a captain of volunteers, a success which gave me more pleasure than any I have had since. I went through the campaign, was elated, ran for the Legislature the same year (1832), and was beat en the only time I ever have been beaten by the people. The next and three succeeding biennial electiona I was elected to the legislature. I was not a candidate afterward. Dur ing this legislative period I had studied law and removed to Spring field to practice it. In 184G I was once elected to the lower house of Congress. Was not a candidate for re-eiectlon. From 1849 to 1854, both Inclusive, I practiced law more assiduously than ever before. Al ways a Whig In politics, and gen erally on the Whig electorlal tickets, making active canvasses, I was los ing interest In politics when the re peal of the Missouri compromise aroused me again. What I have done since then la pretty well known. If any personal description of me la thought desirable It may be Bald I am, In height, six feet four Inches, nearly; lean in flesh, weighing on an average one hundred and eighty pounds; dark complexion with coarse black hair and gray eyes. No other marks or brands recollected. :ooooooooccocccc THE LINCOLN FARM CELEBRATION The following is the inscrln- tion on the memorial tablet to be unveiled at the T.in Farm Celebration on February 12, 1909: Here, on the twelfth day of February, eighteen hundred and nine, into the cabin home of Thomas and Nancy Hanks Lincoln was horn the sixteenth President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln pioneer, crator, Jurist, statesman, pnr doner, reconciler, emancipator, lover and protector of all life beloved of HUMANITY. Through the bitterness of war ho freed the alnvn served the Union. Through a martyr's deuth ho li,iii.i wounds of the sword and ce mented in love tho reunited people who dedicate this farm 10 msiory, . patriotism peace. and 50000000000COOODOOC0000030 ABRAHAM LINCOLN'S MOTHER She lived till he was 10. She taught him to Bpell and read. She instructed him in various ways. She was a most excellent Chris tian woman. the Bible. Little Abe learned to read that he night do this. THE LINCOLN FARM CELEBRATION One Hundredth Anniversary of of the Birth of Abraham Lino o!n to be Observed on Feb. 12 The nation will observe on Feb. 12 the one hundredth anniversary of the birth of Abraham Lincoln, tb mnn raised up by Dlvlno Provldem to preserve the unity of tho American people and leave no slave undw their flag. Recognizing tho patriotic slgnlfr. (ante of tills centennial, a group of American citlzeus two years ago or ganized and Incorporated under the lnws of the State of New York the Lincoln Farm Association, which proposed to mako of Lincoln's hum bin birthplace a national shrlno, sad on the one hundredth anniversary of his birth to dedicate it to the American pcoplo as the abiding sym bol of the opportunity with whlck democracy endows Its men. Through tho generosity of one of Its directors, t:ie Association, almost at Its inception, acquired the full title to the Lincoln birthplace farm and the rude little cabin in whici he waa born. Thus equipped, the Association began its preparation for an appropriate national 'celebra tion on the twelfth day of February. 1909. That some sort of an enduring memorial should be placed on tola historic ground all were agreed. In the two years' history of the Lincoln Farm Association the pro gramme for the centennial has takes, very ful and concrete form. It was decided by the Association's Execu tive Committee to build on the birth place farm, whlcn Is in the geograph ic centre of the State of Kentucky, a memorial museum, which U to cost about two hundred and fifty thou sand dollars, and which will tell the stcry of the early yeomanry life out of which Lincoln came. This museum will house, as Its central object of Interest, the weather-worn little log ca'jln in which Abraham Lincoln waa born. The farm, a rough little patch of one hundred and ten acres, bisect ed by tho old Louisville and Nash ville Pike, will be kept a farm, grow ing corn and squash, bluegrass and grain, as it has always done since the clay that Thomas Lincoln took his Utile family to venture Into the wilderness beyond the broad Ohio. On these broken and uneven acres Lincoln's countrymen will lay their tribute a broad green plaza, with the Memorial Hall at one end and a sim ple shaft at the other, to mark the ground on which stood the first home of him "whose memory is the strong est, teuderest tie that binds all hearts together now, and holds all States be neath the Nation's flag." The building will be constructed of Tennessee marble and fireproof material throughout. It will contain a central court, over which will be built a movable roof, and In which the birthplace cabin will be restored. Around this will be the museum halls, the main room being converti ble Into an auditorium for the use of any patriotic gatherings that may choose to use It in this way. One every year at least, onv the twelftk day of each February, the nation will hold In this ball the central Lincoln' birthday celebration. Lying, as this birthplace does, almost at the cen tre of our population, it will be the most accessible national shrine, and. in many ways it will be the most sig nificant, if not the most inspiring, it will become the Nation's Commons, the meeting-place of North and South, of East and West, a great na tional school of peace and unity, where all sectional animosity wilt forever be buried. President Roose velt has called It "A National Tem ple of Patriotic Righteousness." One hundred years have passed since this rough little patch of Ken tucky ground laid claim to the affeo tions of coming generations. In these years the American people have grown to love the man of tender strength who was cradled on that soil. On the twelftn day of February. 1909, the Lincoln Farm Association will open and dedicate to the Ameri can people this birthplace farm. President Roosevelt a year ago ao cepted the invitation from the Asso ciation's Board of Directors to deliv er the dedicatory address. kill