EVENING LBBGER-PHIUADELPHIA, THtfRSDAY, EEBBUAEY IX,. 101? 8 - - " i ' , f M U I' ll !' It PUDtIG LEDGEU COMPANY rtnua . k. ctrtvriB, frassibajrr. rtiarifn II LuAlnsten, VleefTMfdant. JetinO Martin, P-rftry and Treasurer; 1'blllp 8. Colllm, John n. XViillrn. Dlrectore m. ,imiii hi . i , ii EDlTOIttAt, UOAnDi Ctac II. K. Ccaris, Chairman. f. If. WilALcr... Biecutln Editor JciHrtC. IrAnTtN. dnrl Duttntat Manater fc A II III II I If-,, , ! ! I I III rubilah4 daltr al.ToUo LtixJia Dulldlni, Independents Square, Philadelphia. tJEMXttCiNttut.,..a,,,,,,lreadand Chestnut Btrttte ATMfttto Crrt .rrtii'Vnton BulMIs KfliT T6SK 170-A, Metropolitan ToWtr Cmc.M .,.. 81T Heme Insurance nulMlnr Vnyt) s Watertoo riaee, rait Mall, S. W. news BtritE Aim: ttAHatiata. TJnnutr. .... ,..,.Th raMot TlulMlnr WtaillNQToK BurAC. i. ..The Pott nullainf Nan Ton HCto The Timet llulldlnir BtatlM nnaiAo .......... .SO FrlrtrlchatraM ?rOX HDHtitr.. 2 Pall Mall Kill, 8. W, PliU Beano ... ...32 Rue Loula le Grand sunscmrooN terms Hy farrier. Dult Omt, alt cents, tlr mall, postpaid utalde of Philadelphia, except where foreign point a la required, Djii.i Oslt, on mnnth, twenty-nye eanta. B.ilt 0.ti.r, pne year, three doltara. AM mall tub rrlptlfens payable In advance BKixsooowAi-Mrr kei stone, main aooo f tMnMS all communication J to Sitntng J.rd)tr, tndtpendtnn Squari, PMledtlphta. SKTtrccs attoc rriinoiLrnl roirornci ia arcovt cuii iiit mini, rillLADKU'illA, TIllinsDAV, lEPIltlAUY 11, 1918 Odftcraflon after generation has tct tts stakes ot the road of progress, and the xcorld has moved up and moved y and moved on and act other stakes, tut crime and disease and the dema gogue are still In the procession. Come Forward and Help THEItE nre families in this town without enough to cat, families of men who have worked hard all their Uvea and would bo Working hard now if they could lind any work to do. There are children actually Buffering from want of sufficient clothing or means of sus tenance. There Is a call from the Innocents for help, n call to nil Who have a store frorn "which to Rive, a call for sacrifice, a call for the sort of human sympathy that translates itself into material contributions. Mora than $100,000 is spent In Philadelphia every day for things not absolutely neces sary to the spenders' comfort. Tens of thou sands of nickels and dimes go for little lux uries. Forget that midday cigar! What It costs will keep a baby ullvo n day and may uven save Its life. Make the lunch a light one for one day and convert the saving Into assistance for the needy. There are a thou sand and one ways In which sacrifice can manifest itself. One hundred thousand dol lars Is the goat set. Every cent of It should be In the coffers of the Emergency Aid Com mittee by midnight tomorrow. How better can the birthday of the Great Emancipator be celebrated than by making of it a day of self-sacrifice, a day of brotherhood, a. day made glorious by a new demonstra tion of the humanity and sympathy that are In us7 Give! Give!! Give!!! There are agonies and sorrows which can be dissipated by your generosity. --. One Dollar Is Enough THE sole object of a marriage license fee is to cover the cost of maintaining a rec ord. It is not to raise revenue, nor is it to dlscourago marriage. There are countries where the marriage license fee is so high as practically to prevent legal murrlage among the very poor. But it does not prevent Il legal marriage, to the demoralization of both parents and children. If the General Assembly is seriously con sidering the proposition to raise tho mar rlpge license fee from $1 to $2, it ought, in stead, to turn about face and decide to let well enough alone. One dollar Is all that any mart ought to be asked to pay for a license, ' and it the purpose of the license Bystem, to secure an orderly and decent entrance into the marriage relation, could be effected by n. 50-cent fee, it would be better to halve than to double tho present legal rate. An Example of Pernicious Efficiency GANG politics, and nothing else, is in the Stern bill to chango the method of filling a. vacancy in the office of Mayor, At present, If a vacancy occurs, the succession falls upon the Director of Public Safety, the Director of Publla Works and on the other members of the cabinet in a fixed order, nnd this acting Mayor la to serve until the next municipal election. This arrangement assures the continuance of the ppllcy which the voters indorsed when they elected a Mayor, and it guarantees that there will be no change In that policy until the voters themselves have had an oppor tunity to order it at a regular election. Tho Stern bill provides that a vacancy (n top office of the Mayor shall be filled by Councils, meeting in Joint convention with in ii hours after the vacancy occurs, and that the man so chosen shall serve until the next municipal election. The purpose of the bill is to provide against future contingencies In the Interest of the Organization by empowering Councils', which Is more, likely than the mayoralty to be con trolled by the Machine, to elect a Machine Mayor- Its preparation and Introduction Il lustrate the thoroughness with which the Gang does, its work. It can be de'eated only tiy similar vigilant thoroughness on the part ot the friends of good government. The Great Discovery S rriUE most interesting discovery or tno "4- year I that people are Just folks. It is ot new. but when things are running umaethly, and there is no unusual drain upon Ue-r$aerve of brotherhood. It seems as If i(ie woifftp who dresses -in. Ml. wears line fyr, $tm ta the opera In a limousine, wrap ped m tdvuta,-that set oft the warm satjn ut her neck and shoulders, is made of differ-' ent Muff from the wife of the man who .lnv the car. And to the average English ip. n duchess Is something so far above i-onuneti mortals that aha must not be men tioned In the some brtatlj. pf course, when atUuk of it, we remember that God mad? 6Ut f otte ptey ail Uie p$oplw ftf the eart,h. Bun w ta t thloij f U. TJib' assents of 'i .... .- ,.... -,.. -... WKaltb 1 anctry create supwfteial di UotuHt o marked WU they ar seif using. Out nr u) tar?pe arj unraplyjft6$ in Ik i u,taM( StAMM bate shckd ua it $- ts.waet mfmmm aWw wNn a tajW John D. It6ckefeller, Jr., that she had thought he was some sort of a monster, in stead of tho nmlftblo youngi man ho Is, try ing to do hln bost, according to his lights, the poor women who have been compelled lo seek relief from tho Emergency Aid Com mittees hero and In other cities have dis covered that tho wives and daughters ot tho rich, administering tho business ot those committees, aro women nlso, nnd not crea tures of another race too fine for human na ture's dally food, The fashionable -women have discovered, In turn, quntltlcs of mind and heart In the very poor which would do honor to the highest station. Tho English farmers' boys aro fighting side by side on the Continent with the sons of the castle in the park, nnd the mothers nt home are drawn together by a common dread that tugs at the strings of their common tnothor hcart, Alt ranks arc leveled In tho face of n great danger. Though wo do not hear so much about conditions In Germany nnd Russia, tho same leveling process Is nt work there. It Is this rediscovery of a common hu manity that will bo responsible for what ever wave of democracy sweeps over Europe after the war. Tho privileged classes nre learning that the great privilege Is to serve. Noblesse oblige. And the masses nre re ceiving nn education In self-confidence nnd self-assertion on tho field of battle the effects of which will later bo shown in poll tics. Tho whole world Is kin, after nil. and why should wo not be kind to those of our own family? McNichol Driven Into Line? CJENATOn McNICHOT, now declares that k) ho is In favor of rapid transit, that ho recognizes tho necessity for It, that Ills fight is morely an Incidental one relating to methods; and ho broadly Intimates that his position has been misunderstood. It Is even asserted that he will permit tho Finance Committee to report tho transit ordinances out at tho meeting next week. This Is good news. It Is to bo hoped that tho Senator's change of mind will bo perma nent and that he and his allies will Join heartily In the movement to begin transit work this year. It will not do, however, for citizens to forsake tho fight a minute. It Is more than ever imperative that they remain on the firing line and stay there until abso lute victory has been achieved. Habit might unfortunately get the better of the obstructionists. An nrmy of fighters to re mind them of the new road they hao set out to travel should always bo at hand. The. public is not interested in technical details. It simply knows that this or that move will block transit. It understands clearly that the failure ot Finunce Commit tee to report tho transit ordinances out at the next meeting will delay transit a year. A failure to report them would be construed as a betrayal of the city. That Is what It would be. Senator McN'ichol controls Finance Com mittee. Let him, through it, make good his promise that l.e is for rapid transit. American Factories Will Decide War THE result ot tho war in Europe will not bo determined on the battlefields of Eu rope, but in the factories of tho United States. That fact has been apparent for weeks. It is said that money decides wars, but that presupposes goods which money can buy. So generally has the conflict tied up the man ufacturing nations that the United States alone is left In full possession of her means of production. This Is the only great mar Uet open, and whichever side has access to It derives therefrom an ud vantage which is certain to tell eventually. Too Much Congress JUST about tho time business men begin to get cheerful again the President de cides that Congress must continue to sit. No sooner is one "major operation" com pleted, than some politician or other dis covers a new disease, real or Imaginary, and before anybody knows what has happened, the Administration takes the thing up in a fanatical sort of way and declares that more operating Is necessary to save the country. About the time any business begins to move along smoothly and Is earning profits, it gets a Jolt from Washington. There is nothing fundamentally wrong with business. It la suffering from shock, sympathetic hysteria, neurasthenia, superin duced by politics. The logical, sensible, way out is a defined area of free operation for business, but no sooner is the area defined, than Congress undertakes a new definition. There are intelligent men who are convinced that Congress not in session would be worth Jl, 000,000 a day to the country. It is a pity that men who live In Washington so soon get out of touch with conditions in the na tion Itself. Count Zeppelin will be welcomed on this side of the ocean with one of his airships If he will only leave the bombs behind. If a dog without a license can be shot in the public streets, why can not he be shot in the parks when he Is attacking the deer? Once more the attempt to hold religious meetings in the public school houses has failed, and It should fall every time It is made. Bread a day old can be freshened by moist ening It and putting It In the oven, for a few moments; but what can be done to re lieve a hunger St hours old? The rich men who have appeared as wit nesses before the Industrial Relations Com mission took what was coming to them in the shape of fees and mileage allowed, As to segregation, there are times when It seems as If the problem could be solved most easily by providing separate quarters for the Jevel-heaijed there are so few of them. Tho anti-suffragists who object to prayers In the General Assembly for the psssa'ge of the suffrage amendment tP the Constitution are "Ply asking that thejc opponents play fair. I.-, " -j " jt Is wicked for the opponents of the ship purchasa bill to filibuster for Its defeat, but f yhtn the friends of the measure filibuster dalay a vote until iney nave rallied all ir forces ttiey are ac.tJng patriotically! if the whale British merchant fleet should ly the Limed states nag, tne Stars and gtrlpea woujtt dominate the sea onc more Perhaps tWs Is ttMt oeiy way that the dom Iniuce Ttt sV4) mlf Oiey get s, Mttle wiser iif WmMMm THE PRESIDENT'S REFUSAL TO PLAY WITH THE TEAM Hnrdly a Dozen Democratic Senators Aro nt Heart in J?nvor of tho Ship ping Bill The Party Objects to Too Much Wilson. By J. C. HEMPHILL I WAS told tho other night by n Democratic Senator this! "There are not 12 Senators who are at heart In favor of the ship purchas ing bill, which Is delaying tho public business and threatening tho dissolution of tho Dem ocratic party, t don't want It nnd will Mot Vote for it; my people do not want itj the business Interests of tho country wilt, not bo served by It; it Is wholly un-Democratlc be cause it Is purely Socialistic; It seeks to do by Indirection what the Democratic party has always fought ngalnst the granting of sub sidies to ships; It Is time-serving becauso tho best that is claimed for It by Its most mouthy advocates Is that It is Intended only lo meet a passing emergency. "Congress is asked to authorize the expendi ture of something like $30,000,000 in the pur chase of ships, of which tho Government Is to be part owner. These ships aro to be used for the transportation of American goods and produce to foreign markets nt rates far car riage that will be less than tho rates charged by the owners of ships that arc engaged in tho sea-going trade. The rates are said to be extravagant and the United States Govern ment is to spend an enormous sum of money to set up In business for the spaco of two years or 12 months, In competition with the people who aro employed In this trade. And the whole people nre to be taxed to cnablo tho Government to do this un-Democratlc thing. The Spell of the "VrTitle House "It Is worso, far worse, than tho Govern ment ownership of railroads and the telegraph nnd telephone Industries of the country, be cause It will subject us to the danger, at least, and not a remote danger, of complications with foreign nations engaged In tho sea-going trade. All this has been pointed out by the Senators who have spoken against this new nnd very dangerous departure In the func tions of the Government. "If the President should ndvlsc Congress to appropriate J30,000,OOQ to bo expended with tho shipbuilders of the" United States In tho building of ships to be UBcd under Govern ment direction and ownership In the business of carrying the manufactures and produce of this country tn foreign markets, don't jou know that would raise a howl? If u voto should be taken In tho Senate on the question ot voting direct subsidies to ahlpbulldets, do ou think for a moment such n proposition would meet with favor from tho very Sena tors who nro now backing tho picscnt meas ure, and backing It. I believe, simply because they arc under the spell of tho White House? It Is admitted that the purpose of tho bill Is to cover only a passing emergency, and I can not understand why wc should do this foolish thing that will riso up to condemn us when wo have recovered from our hysteria and resume our old rulo of fighting for 'prin ciple.' " This. In substance. Is what one of tho oldest of tho Democratic Senators said about the whipping bill which Is Impeding tho public business that tho President may scoro another personal triumph. Tho "team" does not want it, the country does not need it. As one of the Elder Statesmen said last night: "Government ownership of ships is the first step toward Government ownership of railroads, and ownership of railroads means. In fact, railroad ownership ot Gov ernment. There are over 2,000,000 railroad employes In the United States and 'team work' among them would not leave very much for the rest ot us." Not the Same McAdoo There was a gtcat outcry last summer nnd fall for relief for the cotton growers of the South nnd the efforts of Congressman "Bob" Henry, of Texas, to have the Government issue $250,000,000 special currency to help them In tholr distress constituted one of tho most pathetic spectacles in the legislative history of the country. Secretary McAdoo prevailed against tho taldeis and the Treasury was saved, and the conditions have so much Impiovcd In the South that there is little or no talk of the starvation and ruin from which It was contended there could be no escape. The McAdoo who was so strong and effective in saving the situation then was not the same McAdoo who now stands for the shipping bill, Thero is much objurgation of the filibuster of the Republican Senators against the bill, and tho seven Democratic Senators who have Joined them in opposition to the measure aro to be burled without benefit of clergy; to fill buster Is a crime against the people, and the infamy of the men who are making this fight will endure, and nil that. But the men who protest so vigorously against th wickedness of the filibuster In this case forget the time when precisely tho same sort of tactics was regarded by the Democrats as the only se curity of the South and its civilization when the Itepubllcan majority was seeking to en act the Lodge-force bill. The Preiident'a Usurpation WhJ' should the President insist upon doubtful, unnecessary and un-Democratlo things? This shipping bill is not in any sense vital. It is Socialistic In Us tendencies; It has not been demanded by any considerable number of people; It Is designed to relieve a manufactured emergency; yet the President fights for It Just as If there was somo great principle Involved In It and as if without it the prosperity of the country would be utterly destroyed. He has done many good things for which h I commanded of all men. IJe could rest his case on the new currency sys tem which John Joy Edson, one of the high financial lights In this community, declared last Saturday night would give the United States the greatest financial system the world has ever known, but he Insists upon doing things' that are unnecessary and of doubtful expediency, If not utterly Indefen sible. The pundits say that there will be a deficit of something Ilka SO,000,000 at the close ot the present fiscal year, and this in spite of the fact that we have a war tax, an Income tax, a corporation tax; and greatly increased revenue from Internal taxation. Hoiy much better It would have been had the President not Insisted upon free eugar, which gav us a rather steady revenue of about (50,000,000 annually, and had he regarded tho suggestion of Oscar Underwood that this sugar tax should ba retained, and that a small duty on wool would be of advantage to the Govern ment. And how much better would it have ben if Mr. Underwood had Insisted upon his views on those matters Instead of yielding to the President's opinions on the ground that tbU U Mr. Wilton's Administration. Th wWjt' fsM are sfntJv, "V 'OF"ViS-r 'j A'V .ITATL r tf I II Ml I III I I III -5- zcsy z---.-'s -$ -tos&mfcstmgmMm&s&.iBi?1 - .y5e? n 4Vi rar j- ?aaaaaraiL a. ;lTaaaaaTaev!rtJ- fi"'-"" -"" administrative, advisory; Mr. Underwood's business was legislative, and whatover the failure of tho tariff legislation tho blamo Is to bo attached to the man who mado tho law rather than tho man who advised It. If the President would play with tho team now and then InBtcad of requiring tho team to play with him always thero would bo less friction nnd discontent among many of his ardent supporters In Congress. MTO THE GERMAN ARMY"' Earl Curzon Turns Poet ttf Express His Feeling Toward the Teuton Foe. DISPATCHES from Germany have told of tho popularity thero of "The Song ot Hate," having for Its themo the bitterness of feeling of Germans toward the British. Tho Kaiser decorated tho author. Now Earl Curzon of Kedlcston has written a poem expressing his personal hatred of the Germans. Earl Curzon married Mary T-ellcr, ot Chicago. She died several years ago. Ho has long been prominent In British official life, having been Viceroy of India. His poem, published in a London newspaper, is entitled "To tho German Army: A New Tear's Prayer, 1915." It follows: I pray that every passing hour Your hearts may bruise and beat. I pray that every step you take Mnv scorch and sear your feet! I pray that beauty never more May cliui-m your eyes, your ears, That you may march through day and night lteneath a heaven ot tears. Blind to the humblest flowers that In The hedgerow corners bloom, ncaf to whatever sound or cry May wake In you the memory Ot dear ones left at home. 1 ptay your guns may be engulfed , Beneath the loam our loam! I pray the streams our streams may leap In floods above their banks and sweep Your trampling hosts to doom! 1 ptay the spectres of our slain May haunt jou In your tents Ylgll ot sleep, whlche'er you Beck Naught smelling but tho' bloody reek Of our Holy Innocents. I in ay the ruins of our homes May crush you like a worm, Your brains beneath, the torment reel. Doubt from your hearts their fury steal. Fear drive you llko brute beasts that squeal Ami fly before the storm! 1 pray that you may live to writhe 'Neath every pang we've known; Then haply may Almighty God Spare the supreme avenging rod. The eternal anger of His nod, Arid say the miles that you have tiod Shall of themselves stonel Social Insurance in Germany. From the New Orleans 8tat. German statistics bIiow that Just before the war ll.POO persons were protected by compul sory sickness Insurance, 24,(00,000 by compulsory accident Insurance and 10,000,000 by old ace and invalidity Insurance, exclusive of several mil lions of salaried ,employes who were brought under compulsory Insurance by recent legisla tion. This gives a rough Idea of the all-around security enjoyed by the average German work man In pructlcally all Industries and many of the trades of the empire. Sincerity No man can produce great things who Is not thoroughly sincere In. dealing with himself, who would not exchange the finest show for the poorest reality, who does not so love his work that he Is not only gljid to, give himself for It, but finds rather a gain than a sacrifice In the surrender. James Itussell Lowell. O CAPTAIN! MY CAPTAIN! O Captain! my Captain) our fearful trip lb done, The ship has weathered every rack, the prlza we sought Is won, The port U near, the bells I hear, he people all exultlnr, Whlla follow eyes the steady keel, the vssiel grim and daring; But O heart) heart! heart! (i the bleeding drops of red, Where on the deck my Captain Ilea, Fallen cold and dead, O Captain! my Captain! rise up and hear the belts; nise up-for you the flag Is flung for you the huale thrlHs. , For you bouquets and ribboned wreaths for you, the snores a-crowdnr, For you they pall, the swaying miss, their eager faces turning; Here, Captain) dear father! This arm beneath your head! It is some dream that on th deck You've fallen cold and dead. My Captain does not answer, hi, lips are pal and till. " My father doea not feel my arm, he has no pulsa nor tv ill. The ship Is anchored safe and sound. Its voyage sloie and done. From fearful trip the vietor ship comes in with object won, Exult. O shores, and ring. O bells' But i with mournful tread, Walk ttia deck my Captain tits. fallen told and dsld. " -rWlt"WJlt83B. DEAF J Cf SUCH WAS HE, OUR MARTYR CHIEF" The Man Who "Bound the Nation of Lincoln That Reveal Something of a Many-Sided Personality. IN LIVING words Robert G. Ingcrsoll spoko of Abraham Lincoln: "Strange mingling of mirth and tears, of the tragic and gro tesque, of cap nnd crown, of Socrates and Rabelais, of Aesop and Marcus Aurclius; of all that is gentle and Just, humorous nnd honest, merciful, wise, laughable, lovablo and divine, and all consecrated to the use of man; while through all, and over all, an over whelming sense of obligation, of chivalrlc loyalty to truth, and upon all the shadow of a tragic end." We cannot look upon a groat man, however Imperfectly, said Carlyle, without gaining something thereby. In the hundreds of anec dotes that have been told of Abraham Lin coln we may find something of tho great man's nature and golden worth. Even those which have been most frequently repeated are still profitable. The few stories which follow do not comprehend the whole man but who, indeed, may compass his many sided personality? An Unfettered Lawyer. Lincoln the lawyer waB known for more than his displays of rough and ready wit. Says Doctor Oberholtzer, In his excellent biography: "In cases where wrong and Injustice had been committed upon tho clients' whom he represented his notes covering that portion of his argument were brief: 'Skin the de fendant.' He was a master of the florcest invective when aroused, and if he could once rid a case ot its technicalities ho and his clients never feared the result. He could sway a Jury at will when his heart was in his work. A lawyer who accompanied him on the cir cuit has related that Lincoln could take greater liberties with the Court and still keep within tho bounds of orderly procedure than any one clso then pleading at the Illinois bar, and this was largely because of his deep sense of Justice and his cleverness in tho use of apt and humorous anecdote. "In the law, as in every field he ever entered, Lincoln was oilglnal and unfettered by the conventions of the world. To a man who entered tho office of his firm In Spring field one day to state his case, Lincoln made this memorable reply: " 'Yes, we can doubtless gain your case for you; wo can set a whole neighborhood at log gerheads; we can distress a widowed mother and her six fatherless children and thereby get for you six hundred dollars, to which you seem to have a legal claim, but which rightfully belongs, It seems to me, ns much to the woman and her children as It docs to you, You must remember that some things legally right are not morally right. We shall not take your case, but will give you a little advice for which we will charge you nothing. You seem to be a sprightly, energetic man; we would advise you to try your hand nt making six hundred dollars In some other way.' " A Rivalry in Height. Many stories are told to illustrate the unconventional democracy of Lincoln, The experience of Joshua Douglas, a lawyer of Meadevltle, In this State, will serve as well as any. Ur. Douglas had business in Wash ington and while there ho went to the White. House to pay his respects. He entered the President's office, where Mr. Lincoln was busy at a desk. Mr, Douglas was a man as remarkable as Lincoln for his height, Mr, Lincoln looked up after a few moments and saw the stranger, "Who let you In here?" he demanded, with a fine show of Indignation, "I never let any man come in here who Is taller than I am." Then with a smile he arose, held out his hand, and asked, 'How tall are you, any way? Let'a measure." So the two stood back to back, and another .caller acted as Judge and decided that the two men were of the same height. . "I "Wpuld not h,ve believed It," chuckled the President. "Well, how are you, any way, and how dd you grow so blgt" and hey sat 4own and had a pleasant chat together, Jfe was equally unceremonious when he came upon George Bancroft at a reception at the White House. He seized Bancroft's band in one of his an& -waved the other, high In tho air and shputed: "Now, don't tell me who you are. I know you History American history Bancroft George Bancroft! That's who you are, George Bancroft, author of the History of AmerJea," and h beamed with 4eUg Ut, while the suttts arnica h! shouted with laughter. Cr5r" -w r -. ,Arf. tfflrt . -.VfJH T-i . J VV 1 mS, 1 "" and Unbound the Slave" Stories! Sometimes Lincoln won pestered with vli ltors who came on foolish errands. OnceJ when his burden of sorrow and toll wis almost greater than he could bear, a worais came to him and said in an imperious, !', clamatory manner: "Mr. President, you must glvo me a colonel's commlslson for my son. Sir, I demand it not as a favor, but as ft' right. Sir, my grandfather fought at Lexlnjij ton. Sir, my uncle was the only man who did not run away at Bladcnsburg. Sir, my father! fought nt New Orleans and my husband riil hilled at Monterey." "I guess, madam," Un" coin replied dryly, "your family has dons enough for the country. It Is time to g'y somebody else a chance." ' Lincoln had little conception of his own greatness or Importance. When General Fryi called at the White House to escort the Preil-i dent to the trnin which was to carry him to Gettysburg for the dedication of the nations! cemetery he found that Mr. Lincoln was not, quite ready to start. Tho General suggested itaaa that they had better hurry. "I feel aboutjS mat," sam me lTesiaent, "as tne convict in one of our Illniols towns felt when he wul going to tho gallows. As ho passed along ttlejfl mi road In the custody of tho Sheriff, the people,' eager to see the execution, kept crowding add pushing past ltlm. At last he called out 'Boys.you needn't be In such a hurry to git ahead. There won't bo any fun till I get there.'" After delivering that beautiful anl Immortal address at Gettysburg he sat down. thinking he had not done himself credit, and said to his friend Lamon: "Lamon, thjtj speech won't scour." sorrow iuixea wnti numor Governor Curtln, of Pennsylvania, after t battle of Fredericksburg, was summoned t the White House. The Governor had Just viewed that field of national disaster. Mil coin showed great anxiety about the. wounded, and asked many questions aboun tho dead. As Allen Thornton nice decruH the Interview, Governor Curtln replied: 'Mr, President, It was not a battle, It was butcli' cry," and proceeded to give a grsphlsj description of the scenes he had witnessed. Lincoln was heart-broken at the recital, snl soon reached a state of great nervous excite mcnl. "Finally, as the Governor wns leaving t&i loom." sava Mr. nice, "he went forward ana. taking the President by the hand, tender! expressed his sympathy for his sorrow. Hi( said, 'Mr. President, I am deeply touched your sorrow, and at the distress, I bay, caused you. I have only answered yourj questions. No doubt my Impressions hm been colored by the sufferings I have seen, j trust matters will look better when tA official renorts come in. I would give all possess to know how to rescue you from thK terrible war. "Lincoln's whole aspect suddenly change' and he relieved his mind by telling a story, " 'This, reminds me. Governor.' he said, '9, an old farmer out in Illinois that I used know.' He took .It Into his head to go I"!9- Vintr.rnl.jlnn- TT spnt nut to Europe SI imported tho finest breed of hogs he eooW Villi. VWo. ni-lvA Vinrr wnn mlt In n. Tien, and tQi farmer's two mischievous boys-James an John warn inlrl tn ba sure not to let hint OU Dut James, the worst of the two, let M brute out next day, The hog went stralJ for tho boys, and drove John up a tree- This, the hog went for the seat of Jf"W trousers, and the only way the boy couji save himself was by holding on to the PPJA tall. The hog would not give up bto hunjj nor the boy his hold! After they had mftdei good many circles around tho tree, the vlsj courage began to give out, and he enoui u his brother. ! sav. John, come down 1u'f, and haln m lat fhla hosr srol' NOW. Governor that Is exactly my cast. I wish some ooi would come and. help me let this hog Bo- 1 ' A Quakeress' Achievement. Vim Htm Tt ..at.,B TOnatm1a An Intartallnir fart ! racalled by tO I.0H?e Chronlels that tha flrat Kndllsh woman t !!! an interview with a Turkish Bultan JVl OU.V.Kii n.m.l M.rv VLhur. whO la lN "'til tn pnnv't Vihinim.il TV tn CihrtatU.Illtf'. appear.) that the energstlo woman travel Smyrna by water and frpot Iher trW ; Anrlnnnnl enn mil., kursv where Ilia -71:: .M AMnH j .w,.t. i.i. n.Mu Thiutrh be 1 fused to beeoms a Christian, he requestw . to remain in bis dominions, and. vrsei' ixted en going back to England pffered i assort. The Quakers have lw.y b" taarMOle fr merfcl cowraga as ior vrr t tfrar. t s -,i