Tfie Ball Players. Martin, the little brother of Pitcher rlouMhsM Hints; The quickest cleaner lor a sticky i The Birthplace of Lincoln 7 No Other American Fsrm Srve Mount Vernon Hit Produced Such t Wonder ful Crop of Patriotism 0000 , By HORATIO BLISS Copyright. 1909, by American Pratt AMoeittlon em 1WO miles froit Hodgenvlllo, Ky.. Is a one bundrcO and ton anrr farm tbnt nil.se; little except pa triotism. Tbt cropu on It lire for the mosl part stunted have 11 dlseour need appearance Perhaps this de Jectlun c o 111 e f from d o d k 1 11 s about to nil si the rocks or from trying to And fertility In the soil, n hopelesi task. Whutevei the cn use, the fact remains that mncolr in 1802. the latest tenant was unable to make enough from thr place to meet the taxes, Just as tht earllost one of record, a certain farmer carpenter of the name of Thomas Lin coin, failed' to get enough out of th barren acres to pay for them. YeV this atony, unproductive spot ol earth la now one of the world' ehrlnea. On Feb. 12 presidents, gov ernors, Judges, cardinals and cabinet ministers foregather there to orate unc dedicate these rocks and sterile sol. patches to the people for all the dnyf to come. On one of the bills a white memorial hall patterned after a GreeL temple will likewise be consecrntee and loft as a Mecca for future genera tlons. Tho temple Incloses nn old on room log cabin, with a stick chimney ono door, oue window mid no floor nl all. In this cnbln was born a mm. child whom the world has taken to lti heart Abraham Lincoln, war president and liberator, mnn of meekness nnc mercy, Htruugo compound of sorrow MltS. LINCOLN IN 18lil. und of laughter. He, the bube tlisti came hero of parents poor ami almost illiterate, Is the reason for the temple for the crowds nnd for the oratory He Is likewise the reason for the na tlon exlstlug nt all In Its present form So these humble acres are not all un productive, even though they caiino'. grow crops, for they brought forth great soul to lead a people from bond uge and to place bofore men's eyes type of charity and forbearance tha will make us all tenderer and bettoi for having seen. The Lincoln farm, after passing oil' of the ownership of Thomas Lincoln belonged for many years to n fnmllj of the nnmeof Creal, after which I was bought ly n New York capitalist u Air. Dennett, who made some iiu provciuents on It with the Idea o changing It Into u uatloual purl;. Thin was ubnndoned, however, because n business reverses. The farm lieciiiti' tied up In the litigation of the Dun nctt estate and for years was neglect etl. At hist It was sold at public auc tion by the authorities of Larue coun ty, Ky., when It was purchased i, Itlchard Lloyd Jones as u rcpresentit tlvc of Itobert J. Collier. A Llucoli. farm association was formed, wltl Governor Folk of Missouri at Its lieu ' nnd various distinguished men on Its directorate. To this body Mr. Collliu turned over the farm, popular sub scrlptlous were raised, a nicmorta building was erected, and other tin provenientH were made. As a result tho Lincoln birthplace farm on 1-Yli 12 will bo opened to the public as a national park. From a scenic aspect it Is a beautiful spot. Near to the plaza frontlug the memorial building is tho famous rock spring, and not fat distant 1h a picturesque creek, on the banks of which tho hoy Lincoln play ed. In addition to the dedication of the larm, a statue or Lincoln win no un rolled in Ilodgouvlllo. More Important still, It is now practically cortaln that some form of memorial will bo erected at Washington, a step that should have been taken long ago. Everything conneotod with Abra ham Lincoln is held precious by tho American j jople. His birthplace and hie tomb, hie acta and his words, the people with whom he associated, all are object 'if a popular interest such aa has been aroused by few men in ib history of hatiou. Compared with Lincoln's simple greatness most of the ohkrac tere grouped' around him offer by contrast This la true even yVmiimfj. FeroMlMJttat Jus- tlce has never been done Mrs. Lincoln. She was not without a prophetic qual ity In divining her husband's fill tiro eminence, sho had spiritual Insight, she suffered many sorrows, and de spite her difference from Mr. Lincoln In temperament and Inherited tnnnnent and beliefs sho was loyal to him throughout. One other character has been mini mised much in the same way William H. Bewurd, Lincoln's chief conipctltoi for the presidential nomination and afterward his socrotary of state. Ono thing that can be said for Seward I that he was man enough to acknowl edge Lincoln's greatness when he saw it He refused to plot against hit chief, as did some of his fellow mem bers of the cabinet. He was a wise counselor and unselfish statesman. He had enough foresight to buy Alaska when the publte scoffed at him for the act Tho truth about Seward Is that he was of a very high type, but not withstanding his height was over shadowed. Mr. Lincoln's life falls Into twe great divisions that preceding there peal of the Missouri compromise and the formation of the "Republican par ty and that following these twin events. His one term in congress was the last Important public service in the first period. Following this were five or six years of law with little 01 no politics. In congress Lincoln bad gained a reputation as a story tellei and wit, had made one or two cam paign speeches, had Introduced a measure to abolish slavery In the Dis trict of Columbia nnd had refused tc say that the Mexican war was right eous. Following his term he had ap plied for the ofllco of land commission er, to which he had not been appoint ed, and bad been offered the governor ship of Oregon, which he declined. Ir 1860 he refused another nomination to congress and In 1852 delivered a eulogy on Henry Glay. It was In 18iH that he really re-entered politics, be ing stirred thereto by the repeal ol the 'Missouri compromise. That yeni he was elected to the legislature, bill refused to serve. He was also a can didate for United States senator, com Ing within n few votes of winning With rare unselfishness he threw nl! his strength to Lyman Trumbull and elected him. For Lincoln to go tc Trumbull, who had but n handful ol supporters, was like the tall wngglnp the dog, but It 'prevented the election of a proslnvery mnn. 'in 1850 Mr. Lincoln participated In the formation of the Republican party making h.s great "lost speech" al Bloonilngton. Ho also received 11C votes for vice president in the Repub lican natlonnl convention nnd ran foi elector on the Fremont ticket. Twc years Inter came his great debates with Douglas, which were held at Ot tawn, Freeport, Jonesboro, Charleston. Gnlesliurg, Qnlncy and Alton. As n result lie had n popular majority, but was beaten by holdover senators and a gerrymander. Following the struggle with Doug las Mr. Lincoln inudo speeches in Ohio Kansas, New England and the famous address In Cooper Union, New York Early In 1800 the Illinois state conven tion Instructed for hlra for president und in the national convention thai met at Chicago, May 10-10, ho was nominated on the third ballot. In the following cnmpalgn Mr. Lincoln re mained nt home and declined to maki speeches. The Democratic party splil on slavery, which made his election possible. Following the aiinouiieuiiieii! of the result ninny of the southern states seceded, but the president elect refused to be drawn Into any public utterance as to his policy. On Feb. 11 1801, ho started to Washington, mak ing a few short addresses on the way and secretly passing through Haiti more because of minors of possible An Appreciation of Lincoln COPYRIGHT, 1009. BY ROBERTUS LOV1 S0MEWHAE down thar round Hodgenvillo, Kaintabky, Or tharabouts, a hundred year ago, Was born a boy ye wouldn' thought was lucky; Looked like he never wonldn' have a show. But I don' know. That boy was started middlin' well, I'm thinkin. His name? W'y, it was Abraham Abe Lincoln. P0EE whites his folks was! Yes, aa pore as any. Them pioneers, they wa'n't no plutocrats; Belonged right down among the humble many, And no more property than dogs or oats. .' But maybe that's As good a way as any for a startin'. Abe Lincoln, he riz middlin' high, for sartinl SOMEHOW I've always had a sort o' snealdn' Idee that peddygrees is purty much Like monkeys' tails so long they're apt to weaken The yap that drags 'em round. Ho use for iuobI But beats the Dutoh How now and then a lad like Little Aby Grows up a president or guvnor, maybe. WILLIAM n, BBwxnn. assassination. After his inauguration his history became that of tho country lu nor rnotft gigantic strugglo. Tho su nruae events of his administration as they affect bis fume-woro the Issuance of tbo emancipation proclamation on Bopt. 22, 1802, and its official promul gatlon on the 1st of January following, vlcksburg and Gettysburg on July 1-4, 1803; the Gettysburg address on Nov, 10, 18081 the second election to the-jpresideney and second inaugural, and the assassination on April 14, 1MB, five days after Appomattox. j $ ' ' A, BE LINCOLN never had no reg'lar schoolin' ; JLJ He never quarterbacked nor pulled stroke oar, t Nor never spent his time and money foolin' -' With buried langwidges and ancient lore. But Abe 1'arned more To set him forrerd in the human film' Than all the college fellers' kit and bilin. ABE LINCOLN never did git hifalutin . Not even thar in Washin'ton, D. C. ,v He jist kep' common, humble, ord'n'ry, suitin' His backwoods corn patoh raisin' to a T. But jiminy gee! W'y, Abe was any statesman's peer and ekul And wise as Solomon or old Ezekul. I RECKON I'm a bit old fashioned, maybe, But when I want a pattern for a man I'm middlin' shore to measure Father Aby And out to fit his homely human plan. And long 's I can I'm hootin' loud and rootin' proud, by huoky, For that old boy from Hodgenville, Kaintuoky! Ed Walsh, will be given a cbanco to display his Idea of the national pas time with the Chicago Americans next spring. Mr. Moudez, the Cuban pitcher, re ported signed with Cincinnati, Is Bald to be ns bind: as a coal scuttle. Now some one will rise up nnd Insist on drawing the color line. Cleveland's Eastern league captures don't look to amount to much. Barger won thirteen nnd lost thirteen for Roch ester, nnd Stanley won eleven nnd lost twenty-one for Montreal. Manager Joe Cnntlllon of the Wash ington Americans says that whon the Nationals meet the Detrolts lu a two game series at San Antonio, Tex., he will send Iturns nnd Johnson against the league champions. Cincinnati's new college pitcher, Tom Cantwell, halls from Winchester, Vu.. nnd will not be of age until next year. He weighs 200 pounds nnd Is six und a half feet high. He Is now taking a postgraduate course at Georgetown university. The Gettysburg Address Remarks at the Dedication of the National Cemetery at Gettysburg, November 10, 1863. FOUESCORE and seven years ago our fathers brought forth upon this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great oivil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived and so dedinatKA. nan inn ' " "J . vuuug, We are met on a great battlefield of that war. We have come to dedi cate a portion of that field as a final resting plaoe for those who here gave their lives that that nation might live. It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this. But in a larger sense we cannot dedioate, we cannot oonseorate, wo cannot hallow, this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled here have consecrated it far above our power to add or de tract. The world will little note nor long remember what we say here but it can never forget what they did here. It is for us, the living,' rather, to be dedloated here to ihe unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly advanced. It is rather for us to b here dedicated to ihe great task remaining before ns that from these honored dead wb take increased devotion to that caeaa fev which they gave the laat fall measure of aevetiaa; that m here highly re wive that these lead than not have disi avail ; that Itkk uCer Oed, shall have a new birth f fretfea, aal fflut jitmiwial if tho ywBi, fcy tha jwepk art for tbe jafla Him aarth. Snowless Lands. Over two-thirds of the land surface of the earth snow never falls. bread or cake pan Is a crust of stale bread. A dish of water kept on the radiator will Improve the nlr of a steam heated room. A scratch on polished furniture can be almost obliterated by rubbing vig orously with linseed oil. Fringed dollies nrc kept in better condition If the fringe Is brushed with a small nail brush rather than with a comb. The darkest stain on mirror or win dow pnne can generally be routed with a flannel dipped In spirits of camphor, nub until dry. A good silence cloth for the dining table enn be mnde with 'a double thick ness of white flannel laid with the soft side on the Inside nnd quilted on the machine. "Edge with a binding of white tape. An Isle of Many Names. The French island which was known as Bourbon under the ancient reglmo was named Reunion under the revolu tion, He Bonaparte under the empire and Bourbon under the restoration and Is Reunion now. i '-i'l' !--,. -.M(i 'j :,.'.. !:'' : ,.!r-!(. .' . si.. I- I ,.- . ' ,H ! V '.' ' ! Ml1 6ii..-i:!i-rf.:i.it.-H!tlivfci. iS sfS - J Jf0"' you desire everything in Clothes that money can buy, here is the place to come. Picture to yourself the finest all wool suit it is possible to procure, and you see precisely what you obtain by ordering the famous International made-to-measure Clothes. The prices are popular and your chance for selection is the largest in the country. L. A. HELFERICH, Honesdale. !.IaVtr. HON ESDALE, PA. MEANS M UCH To the level-headed young man, a bank account, added to a determination to make it larger, means much. The names of many such are enrolled on our books and the number is steadily increasing. , Are you among the number? FARMERS' and MECHANICS' BANK. Honesdale, Pa. The Era of New Mixed Paints 1 This year opend with a deluge of new mixed paints. A con dition brought about by our enterprising dealers somkiiid of a mixef paint that would supplant CHILTON'S MIXED PAINTS. Their compounds, being new and heavily advertised, may find a sale with tne unwary. Is JADWIN'S PHARMACY. T here are reasons for the pre-eminence of CHILTON PAINTS: 1st No one can mix abetter mixed paint. . 2d The painters declare that it works easily and has won dorful covering qualities. . , . . . . . 8a Ohilton stands back oMt, and will agree to repaint, at ms own expense, every surface painted with Ohilton rarao una proves defective. . x, a-'ai.. 4th Those -who have used it are perfectly Batiefted-withit, and Tecofflmend its xm to others.