THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTLAND, FEBRUARY 9, 1919. What Would Abraham Lincoln Do If Fie History Records Attitude on Question of League of NationsShows Him to Have I HAVE not willingly planted a thorn in any man's bosom." None could eay so more truth fully than Abraham Lincoln. This, together with having preserved the Union and freed the slaves, was his greatest glory. For a thousand times, when the power to strike was his and the incentive for revenge would have filled the bosoms of most other men with devouring flames of wrath, he meekly forbore, and, in lieu of chas tisement, contented himself with ad ministering good-natured, kindly ad vice to the offenders. An illustration of this was his treat ment of Clement L. Vallandigham, who had made a violent anti-draft speech and whose imprisonment sentence Lin coln commuted to transportation be yond the military lines. Other acts of defiance by frientls of Vallandigham on the refusal of the President to make effective in his behalf the writ of habeas corpus in an area under martial law, elicited only this characteristic response: Must I ahoot the elmple-minded soldier boy who deserts, while I must not touch a hair of a wily agitator who induces him to desert?" Lincoln had even offered to release Vallandigham, who had been nominat ed for Governor of Ohio, if the friends who interceded for him would sign a declaration that there was a state of rebellion and that an army and navy were constitutional means to suppress it. This they refused to do. Their con tumacy and the President's generosity caused a revulsion of feeling in Ohio, and Vallandigham, who had first been regarded as a sort of martyr, was de feated at the polls by an overwhelming majority. He Drank Only Water. Prohibitionists have especial reason to celebrate Lincoln's birthday anni versary this year, wherein they have scored the double victory of liquor drouth, both by constitutional amend ment and as a military measure. Lin coln was a teetotaler. One of the first uses he made of his abiltiy to write as a boy was to prepare an argument for temperance. This was printed in an Indiana newspaper. To a member of Congress he said in 1S54, in his 45th year: "I do not In theory, but I do in fact, belong to the temperance society; fh this, to-wit, that I do not drink any thing, and have not done so for very many years." To the committee appointed by the Republican National convention at Chicago, May 16, 1860, to announce formally to Lincoln at his home in Springfield, 111., his nomination for the presidency, he said: "Gentlemen, we must pledge our mu tual healths in the most healthy bev erage which God has given to ii.an It is the only beverage I have ever used or allo-ved in my family, and I cannot conscientiously depart from it on the present occasion." Government by the People. Appropriate likewise is the celebra tion of his natal anniversary at a time when the great peace conference is sit ting to devise means for a league of all nations and the insuring of free dom to all mankind. Union and free dom were the guiding stars in Lin coln's life. For this reason he made the Constitution of the United States his chart and the Declaration of Inde pendence his compass from the time he was first able to comprehend their meaning. In a speech In 1858, when he was running for the United States Senate against Stephen A. Douglas, the Demo cratic candidate, he said: "This (the Declaration of Independ ence) was their lofty and noble and wise understanding of the justice of the Creator to his creatures to all his creatures, to the v.-hole great fam ily of man. In their enlightened belief nothing stamped with the divine image was sent into the world to be trod den on and degraded a.id imbruted by its fellows. They grasped not only the whole race of men then living, but they reached forward and seized upon the remotest posterity So that no man should hereafter dare to limit and circumscribe the great prin ciples upon which the temple of liberty was built." And again, years afterward, when General Lee had been defeated at Get tysburg, in July, 1S63, and in Novem ber that battlefield was dedicated as a ! solders cemetery, Lincoln said: "Fourscore and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on 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 civil war, test ing whether that Nation, or any nation eo conceived and so dedicated, can long endure. "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 place 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 dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we can not hallow, this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who strusrarled here have consecrated it far above our 1 poor power to add or detract. The world will little note nor long remem ber what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here. "It is for us, the living, rather to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who fought here have thn ; far so nobly advanced. It is rather quick action of Sheriff Wheeler, whose for us to be here dedicated to the great l'fe blends all the romances Of the task remaining before us that from I passing "Wild West." these honored dead we take increased I Bisbee, Ariz., a center of the world's devotion to that cause for which they I copper industry, became at once a cen gave the last full measure of devotion ter of the world's attention, and Sheriff that we here highly resolve that j Harry C. Wheeler, the leader who these dead shall not have died in vain; planned and directed this "posse," be that this Nation, under God, shall have ' came a National character; or rather a new birth of freedom, and that gov ernment of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth." In this noble speech Lincoln was mistaken only in his belief that the woria would little note nor long re member" what he said on that occasion. Of this speech may be said what Ham let said of the entreaty of his father's ghost to be remembered: . Remember three! Ay, ,thou poor ghost, while memory holds a seat In this distracted globe. Remember thee! Tea, from the table of my memory I'll wipe away ail trivial fond records. All saws of books, all forms, all pressures Past, That youth and observation copied there; And thy commandment all alone snail live Within the book and volume of my brain. Unmixed with baser matter; yes, by heaven! His Letters Among the Classics. School teachers had but little" to do with Lincoln's training. All told he attended school less than a year in all his life. And yet many of his speeches are ranked as among the most treas ured classics of our language, and be neath a letter of his, preserved in one of the colleges at Oxford, the-authorities of that institution have appended the comment, "One of the purest speci mens of pure English extant." TRe letter is as follows: "Dear Madam: I have been shown In the files of the War Department a statement of the Adjutant-General of Massachusetts that you are the mother of five pons who have died gloriously on the field of battle. I feel how weak and fruitless must be any words of mine which should attempt to beguile you from the gTief of a loss so over whelming. But I cannot refrain from tendering to you the consolation that may be found in the thanks of the republic they died to save. I pray that the Heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement and leave you only the cherished .memory of the loved and lost, and the solemn pride that must be yours to have laid so costly a sacrifice upon the altar of freedom. "Yours very sincerely and respect fully. "ABRAHAM LINCOLN." And of his second inaugural address, delivered March 4, 1865, the London Spectator declared: "We cannot read it without a renewed conviction that it is the noblest political document known to history. . . . Surely none was ever written under a stronger sense of the reality of God's govern ment. And certainly none, written in a period of passionate conflict, ever so completely excluded the partiality of victorious faction and breathed so pure a strain of mingled Justice and mercy." Here is the concluding portion of this address: ' Fondly do we hope, fervently do we pray, that the mighty scourge of war may pass away. Yet If God wills that it continue until all the wealth piled by the bondsman's 250 years of un requited toil shall be sunk and until every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn by the sword, as was said 3000 years ago. so still it must be said 'the Judgments of the Lord are true and righteous al together.' With malice toward none, with charity to all, with firmness In the right, let us strive as God gives us to see the right; let us strive on to finish the work we are in, to bind up the Nation's wounds, to care for hint who Khali have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan, to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves with ail nations." Some Sidelights on His Life. Many have asked the question how one who had received no more school ing than could be crowded into less than a year could attain to such high excellence in oratory and literature. He needed no teacher other than the inspiring light of his own genius, which showed him how to make the most fruitful use of whatever books chance brought to his hand. His mother, Nancy Hanks, a woman of far higher intelligence than is ordinarily found in the lowly sphere in which the Lincoln family moved, taught him to form the letters of the alphabet. Much beyond this her store of learning did not go. but it sufficed in Abraham's case to unlock to him the treasures of the Bible, Aesop's Fables, Robinson Crusoe, Pilgrim's Progress. History of the United States and Weens' Life of Washington. His first reading of these volumes was prompted by curiosity to know the "stories" they contained. They so im pressed young Abraham's mind that he wanted to tell the whole world about the interesting things he had "discov ered." He found it hard to express himself in as interesting a manner as the authors had expressed themselves to him; so he went at the books again and again, rereading them until he had well-nigh committed them to memory. Not only that; like the ancient Greek Demosthenes, the greatest of all ora tors, who transcribed Thucydides' many-volumed history, Lincoln, too, transcribed a great 'deal of what he read. Judging from results it will not be amiss, for the benefit of ambitious youngsters of today, to outline Just about how this young embryonic Pres ident proceeded in his self-imposed-task of garnering the wealth of thought which he found in the books. He would read a paragraph, then think it over, and, after having mas tered the Ideas contained in it, he would write down these ideas in his ownwords. Then he would go on to the next paragraph and repeat this op eration, and so on and on. until he felt he had done enough mental harvesting for the day. Many a word which the boy en countered in his readings was, of course, unintelligible to him. He had no unabridged dictionary in those early years .of his life to aid him in getting ARIZONA RANGER, WHO FOUGHT I. W. W., WAGES WAR ON HUNS Captain Wheeler One of First Young Men to Enroll in Regular Army for Spanish-American War. 0 XE day in July, 1918, the country was astounded to read of the de portation from Bisbee, Ariz., of more than 1200 men, I. W. W. and al leged sympathizers, whose tactics were beginning to display its insidiousness against our preparations for Germany. At 4 o'clock in the morning a "posse comitatus" of several hundred men, thoroughly prepared and instructed, combed the town and within a few hours, without a shot being fired, 1200 men were bundled into trains and later interned by the United States Army in a stockade at Columbus, N. M. Thus at one well-executed stroke. I. W. W.ism" was dealt a deathblow ln that region, the mines were kept in operation, millions pf pounds of cop per a most vital munition are monthly supplied to our allies. German propaganda has been crushed and the Kaiser has learned he can expect no help from that part of the world, all through the courage, fearlessness and an international character, ror today he is Captain Wheeler, A.. E. F-, some where in France. In the Spanish-American War Wheeler, then- a young man. was one of the first to volunteer in the Regular Army. After that campaign he was stationed at Fort Grant, a western post, where an accident occurred to him that changed his entire life. One day while taming an unmanageable horse that no one else would handle, the young sol dier was kicked and so severely In jured that after a long spell in the hospital he was discharged from the service. This was a heart-breaking blow to the young man who had been raised in the Army. But thus in early man hood to have a life's career dashed away only caused him to grit his teeth and push on to the Arizona territory on the open frontier, to start life anew. In those days "law and order" in the open country was not what it is today. The vast territory of Arizona, almost three times the area of New York State, held fewer people than a. suburb of Philadelphia. Mining towns were running "wide open"; cowpuncbers, miners, sheep herders, prospectors, pro moters and the ever-present Mexican made up a picturesque, though some what lawless, crowd. Accordingly, the Arizona Rangers were organized to police the entire territory, much on the order of the Canadian Northwest mounted police. The rangers were the hardiest, most fearless, most adventurous type known. Their horses, their canteens of water. X 4 r at their meaning, their derlvaton or their pronunciation; and, so he was left to get, from the context, such meaning of these words as "common sense" suggested. But. if the correct usage of words in the writings of his mature years is any criterion, he must have done what other great minds have done and will ever continue to do in such a contingency, namely. Jotted down upon a piece of paper every word of unfa miliar import and either looked up its definition as soon as opportunity of fered, or else asked somebody qualified to know to tell him its meaning. And as soon thereafter as possible he would use these words either in. his conversa tion or writing. Nancy Hanks Lincoln died In 1818, when Abraham was 9 years old. A their six-shooters were their constant companions as they went over the vast domain, winning the empire to law, order and justice, striking terror to the hearts of the brigands, and even, if necessary, giving "the supreme sacri fice." It was but natural that Wheeler should be attracted to this service, for which he was so fitted; and It was but natural that he should soon rise to be lieutenant of this hardy organization. When Captain W. Ranning resigned his commission as chief of the Arizona Rangers the position was tendered to Wheeler, thus awardins him the great est compliment that bravery could be given. Now, being in full charge of the vast territory, he became ever an object to be shunned by evildoers. One warm evening a certain man rode into an Arizona town. Dismount ing before a "wide-open" saloon, he tossed the reins over the pony's- head, and glancing up and down the street, swiftly entered the "wet-goods" insti tute. Bang! bang! bang! flashed his grun, as he ordered everybody to throw up their hands. "Quick, every one of you!" Around the assembled gang "the col lection" began to be taken up. Captain Wheeler had a short thne before arrived in the town after a long ride across the desert. He was un saddling his horse when he heard the shots, and his quick mind scented trou ble. In a moment he was at the saloon door. As he started to enter a friend stopped him. "Don't go in there, Harry," warned the good-lntentioned friend, "there's a hold-up man in there and he means business." Wheeler's face became rigid. "I mean business, too," was the laconic reply. "That's what I'm here for." Without the least hesitation Wheeler entered to what might be sure death. But his duty as a Ranger was clear to him. As he opened the door the desperado instantly recognized the well-known figure of the ranger, whom he had thought was miles away. He had several scores to settle with the captain, so when the hated figure was silhoueted on the threshold he fired pointblank. Again two revolvers barked at once: again Captain Wheeler cut a notch on his six-shooter. A short time before statehood was granted Arizona the rangers were dis banded, the police duty being turned over to the counties. Wheeler then became Sheriff of Cochise County, three time elected. Agitators came, doing their usual stunts. They found fertile fields among the ignorant to sow their in sidious propaganda, but in reaping the crop they sowed they had to take into consideration the ever-watchful, cour ageous Sheriff. When the war was declared Upon Germany the outlawed L W. W. started f '?V - "t 'tW SAUV flWVhvM f : "V:.:. x -alSnlP VV2 ABRAHAM LINCOLN year or bo later his father, Thomas Lin coln, married again, this time a widow, Mrs. Sally Bush Johnston, who had been his flame before he had met Nancy Hanks. Fortunately, the step mother proved to be kind-hearted and motherly, and it was her insistence which obtained from her utterly illit erate husband permission for his young son to indulge the fondness for read ing. The elder Lincoln regarded every minute spent over books a waste of time, and until his new wife's inter cession he had made it almost impos sible for the boy to do any reading ex cept by stealth. Later, alien Abraham was drawing toward the close of his teens, he ob tained from Major John T. Stuart, a lawyer, a copy of Blackstone's Com activity throughout the Southwest. They chose Arizona for their nefarious work, hoping to tie up the enormous copper industry. "I. W. W.ism" was spreading its poisonous fangs into all parts and sections and was surely bringing disaster upon the Nation. With nerve and courage Wheeler looked at this new situation. With fearless dispatch he made up a plan to rid forever the country of this menace. The L W. W. realized there was no law to touch them and they felt secure. Until some definite act pointed directly to them they could carry on their disloyalty to America. Wheeler, however, did .not wait for that disastrous act to be committed. He organized the citizens of the com munity Into a "posse comitatus." gave them complete idstructions and at a certain hour, under his direction, gath ered together the I. W. W. and their alleged sympathizers and drove them nearly 1200 forever from the county. This blow has done more to carry terror to. "I. W. W.ism" than anything else. From then on the copper mines of Cochise County have never been idle one day. And withal not a man can be found even among those he has had "professional" relations with, but who will credit Wheeler with being always "square." When the declaration of war was passed Governor Campbell called for a volunteer regiment to offer to the Nation- Sheriff Wheeler was chosen as one of the officers. When the War Department decided not to accept vol unteer units. Vfheeler entered the first officers' training camp at San Fran cisco. Being retiring, quiet and totally unassuming, ln the general rush of WHEN LINCOLN FAILED TO REACH THE BATTLEFIELD IT MAT be consolatory news to the soldiers who didn't get overseas and were disappointed because they didn't to think that Abraham Lincoln tried to fight for his country once as a private in the ranks, only to find that the fight was over before he bad had a chance to fire a gun at the enemy. The hardships were his, but the military glory was not. It was In 1832 when Black Hawk, chief of the Sac and Fox Indians, made war on the forts and set tlers in northern Illinois and Wlscon Binsin. Lincoln, twenty-four years old, enlisted in a volunteer company of mounted rangers. In the same war Zachary Taylor, afterward was commandant at Fort Prairie du Chien. Wisconsin him, as lieutenant, was President, Crawford, and under Jefferson Davis. The war was over and Chief Black Hawk brought captive to Fort Craw ford before Lincoln had seen any ac tual fighting, yet on the march and In camp he had made himself so popular with his comrades that soon after his return to New Salem, Illinois, his townsmen nominated him for the leg islature. In later years when Zachary Taylor was a candidate for President and ex travagant claims for military honors were set up by the Democratic candi date. General Lewis Cass, Lincoln, then in Congress and an ardent supporter of Were Alive at Present Time? Been Teetotaler And He Had Short Shrift for Bolsheviki . lap VH MV !.'aM'. i' . -i mentaries: and as the major's office was in New Salem and Abraham's pa rental log-cabin home 20-odd miles away, he walked that distance to ob tain this four-volume work and a "Chitty on Contracts," which the ac commodating lawyer had also recom mended, as well as a grammar. And the method of reading which had stood him in such good stead in regard to the other books he now pur sued with these. And still later he en riched his ever-expanding mind in tne same manner with the poetry of Burns and, above all, of Shakespeare. "Ham let" became his especial favorite. When the Black Hawk War broke out. in 1832. Lincoln, then 23. had just begun to plan a campaign to get him self into the Illinois Legislature. He that first camp, he was so far over looked as to be turned down at the start. Nothing daunted, he tried again, this time having an opportunity to demon strate his qualities of leadership. He was soon recognized, won a Captain's commission and left with the Rainbow Division. After the famous deportation, while Wheeler was in France with the first troops to fight on French soil, the L W. W. and their alleged sympathisers took legal action against the members of "the posse." with the result that more than 100 citizens of Elsbee were Indicted for this action. Some of the most prominent men in the Southwest were included in this Indictment, by which the I. W. W. and their alleged friends sought retaliation. Therl it was that Wheeler did break into print and the following is his cablegram from the battlefields of France to the citizens of Arizona: "American Expeditionary Force. Somewhere ln France: Wish my friends to know am anxious to protect thenn by again assuming all responsibility for deportation. Would do same thing over again under same circumstances. No traitors or L W. W. sympathizers over here, only American soldiers. My country needs me here, but when I can be spared. If still alive, you will find me ready to go home and stand with my friends and fellow Americana to undergo any tribulations the poli ticians, I. W. W. sympathizers and other traitors can inflict. The eagles feel only contempt for these vultures at home, but do not fear them. "CAPTAIN HARRT WHEELER." General Taylor, ridiculed Cass's pre tensions to soldier fame In a speech before the House and alluded to his own military career ln the Black Hawk war In this way: "By the way. Mr. Speaker, did you know I am a military heroT Yes, sir. In the days of the Black Hawk war I fought, bled and came away. Speaking of General Cass's career reminds me of my own. I was not at Stlllman's defeat, but I was about as near it as Cass was to Hull's surrender, and like him I saw the place very soon afterward. It is quite certain I did not break my sword, for I had none to break, but I bent my musket by accident. If General Cass went In advance of me In picking whortleberries, I guess I surpassed him ln charging on the wild onions. If he aw any live, fighting Indians, it was more than I did; but I had a good many bloody struggles with the mosquitoes, and although I never fainted f or loss of blood, I can truly say I was often very hungry." Lincoln was given a quarter section of wild land down in Iowa for his ser vice as a soldier. A comrade In the ranks was John T. Stuart, who took Mr. Lincoln into law partnership with him. The Lieutenant. Robert Anderson, who mustered Lincoln into service was the Major Anderson who commanded Fort Sumter when it was fired on In 'CI. At an Interview with President Lincoln. i after the evacuation of Sumter, Major had. by that time, "seen a good deal of the world" In the way of two event ful trips by river on a raft to New Or leans: and. being 6 feet 4 and a verit able Hercules in strength. he was easily the leader among the sturdy backwoodsmen of the younger genera tion in his section of Illinois. Therefore, when Black Hawk, the old chief of the Sac Indians, led 600 mounted warriors across the Mississippi, in defiance of his solemn agreement, the friends of Lincoln chose him their captain; and so. instead of laying down laws, he took up arms In behalf of his constituents. The only qualifications which those who chose him captain considered nec essary were his popularity and good nature. Years afterward, when he fpoke of this period, he said: "Once, when I was crossing a field with a front of 20 men I could not for the life of me re member the proper word of command company endwise In order to pass through the gate. So when we came near the opening in the fence I shouted. "This company is dismissed for two minutes, when It will fall in again on the other side of the fe ...e." Often Lincoln had distinguished him self in feats of strength. once by throwing a brutal bully 12 feet, thereby reducing a gang of ruffians, of whom the bully was leader, to a sense of or der and civility. And now again in camp, during the Spring and Summer of 1812, the lanky young captain won laurels as a wrestler. The champion wrestler of Southern Illinois chal lenged him, and Lincoln, who had been used to tote around loads of half a ton, now found it comparatively easy to throw the champion flat upon his back upon the turf Proof of HI Americanism. Once the Know Nothings tried to in terest him in their brand of American Ism. In a letter to a very dear friend. Joshua F. Speed, in August. 1855, he satd : "You inquire where I now stand. That is a disputed point. I think I am a Whig, but others say there are no Whiss and that I am an Abolitionist. When I was In Washington I voted for the Wilmot proviso (against the ex tension of slavery) as good as 40 times, and I never heard of anyone attempting to unwhig me for that. I now do no more than oppose the extension of slavery. I am not a Know Nothing; that is certain. How could I be? How can anyone who abhors the oppression of negroes be In favor of deicradir.g classes of white people? Our progress in degeneracy appears to me to be pretty rapid. As a Nation we began by declaring that 'all men are created equal.' We now practically read it. 'all men are created equal but negroes.' When the Know Nothings get control it will read,' 'all men are created eiiu:xl except negroes and foreigners ami Catholics." When It comes to this I shall prefer emigrating to some other country where they make no pretense of loving liberty." Karly Tragedy la III" I.lfr. Lincoln in 1834 had been elected to the Legislature of Illinois. He lived at New Salem as a boarder In the log tavern of James Rutledge. His host had nine children, of whom Anne was one of the belles of the town. She was a rosy-cheeked, beautiful girl and had Innumerable admirers. But of all these none was so deeply, so madly in love as the young legislator, Lincoln. And she reciprocated the flame. In August, 1835, Anne contracted a cold and soon she was so ill that hope of recovery was abandoned. Alone with her, while the Angel of Death was hovering near, Lincoln was overwhelmed with sorrow; and when his beloved had breathed her last he came forth from that rhamhor of death an vtterly changed man. He was plunged into a melancholia which, as he afterward said, made him so dis trustful of himself that he did n t dare carry a pocket knife about while this heavy mood was on him. A friend kept constant surveillance over him for sev eral weeks, until the pall of grief had lifted sufficiently to enable him to re cover his equilibrium. Nevertheless, it is believed that the profound spells of melancholy which alternated with his merry outbursts throughout the rest of his life were the result of this early period of heart tragedy. In 1839 he again fell In love, this Anderson was surprised when asked by the President, "Major, do you ever re member meeting me b?fore?" To An derson's admission that he had no such recollection Lincoln replied: "My mem ory is better than yours. You mustered me into the service of the United States in 1832 at Dixon's Ferry in the Black Hawk war." Soldier Witnesses Wild Out burst When Wilson Arrives. Chorea Bella, Cannon, Rombi and Airplanes Give Welcome In London. ( IT WAS a member of the honor guard X that received President Wilsoi when he arrived in London on Boxing day, December 26," proudly writes Florian Sauer, Marine, in a letter to his sister, Elnora Sauer. of Portland. Florian is a son or llr. and Mrs. John Sauer, of Grants Pass, Or., where he formerly resided. "Aa the President and King George came out of Charing Cross station." the letter continues, "I was so close to them that I could easily have touched them. When the President arrived a mllion people cheered, church bells rang, cannon boomed, bands played and several airplanes buzzed overhead. Before he arrived there was a great deal of speculation as to how the English people would receive him. but they could not have given him a warmer reception. There was one con tinual round of cheering from the time he left Charing Cross station until he arrived at Buckingham Palace, a dis tance of two miles. There were five carriages, and President Wilson and King George rode in the first one. Fifty of us Marines foHowed behind the last carriage. We were followed by 100 doughboys and they were followed by 80 sailore. It was a difficult task keeping step while so many people were cheering. Most of the people were yelling 'Tanks' and 'Sammies,' but now and then I could hear someone yell 'Jyreens.' 'Leathernecks' and "doughboys." When we arrived at the palace the mob yelled 'speech.' so Mr. Wilson came out on the balcony and thanked them for the hearty welcome. "Saturday morning we had to go to the Buckingham Palace gate to keep the throng away, so that the President could go to the embassy. He also had IS Marines at the embassy to look after his welfare. At 3:15 P. M. President Wilson returned to the palace and the mob dispersed, then we marched back to headquarters. It's an awful strain on one's nerves to stand at attention as long-as we did on Saturday, but no one grumbled because we had a good chance to see the President." BOLSHEVIKI KILL BISHOP Kubfcian Prelate Is Tortured and Murdered. VLADIVOSTOK. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) Bishop llcrmo gen. of Tobolsk, was tortured and mur dered by BolKhevlki. according to a pri vate letter received here. Since, the early days of Bolshevism the bishop time with M:ry Todd, an accomplished, prepossessing, refined girl, nine yenrs Lincoln's Junior. She accepted his pro posal md the wedding day was set frr January 1. 1541. Hut. somehow, the bashful briilearoom-to-be failed to pro sent himself on time, while the bri.ie. Hie guests and the minister were in waiting. The bride broke off the en gagement, and oi. January 23 Lincoln wrote to Major Stuart, who had become his law partner and who was then in Congress: 'If what I feel were equally oisinouted to the whole h-iiiian family there would be not one cheerful facu on earth." Late in 1842 a mutual frlotid suc ceeded in mollifying Miss Todd and Mowing the smoldering embers of loe into a fresh glow. Tuo "entente c-or-dialo" was completely restored by :in escapade which had in it enough of the aspect of impending tragedy to m.-ike Lincoln loom as a hero in the eyes of the young woman. Sh and Linenln had contributed to tho Sar.gamon Jour nal articles which placed' an irritable young politician. James Shields, in ;v ludicrous l.ght. He resented thil and challenged Lincoln to a duel. In ac cepting It Lincoln chose as weapons "cavalry broadswords of the larcest slzo." Shields was a man of slicht build ns compared with tho "six-foot-four" Lincoln, and a sword of the size specified would have been a hindranio rather than a help to hin. in a duel. Just before the meeting Lincoln brought the affair to a planant ter mination by apologizing. In after years he used to say that he was more ashamed of this affair than of almost anything else he had ever done. An Army officer during the Civil War asked Lincoln if he had really accepted a challenge. "I don't dny it." replied the Presi dent, "but if you desire my friendship you will never mention the circum stance again." l.at Work on Reconstruction. Lincoln was assassinated on the even ing of April 14, 1S65, just after ho had laughed heartily over a droll situ ation in the comedy of "Our Yankeo Cousin" at Ford's Theater, Washington. Wilkes Booth, an actor, had gained access to the bo where President and Mrs. Lincoln and their guests were sit ting and fired the shot which ended one of the noblest lives in all history. Ten days before that Lincoln h..U visited Richmond, Va., the capital ot the confederate states, shortly after General Lee evacuated the city to sur render to General Grant. And it was just ten days after Lincoln's murder that the war was decisively terminated by the surrender of General Johnston to General Sherman. Lincoln's last public address was made at Washington on April 11. It was devoted chiefly to the ouestion of the reconstruction of the loyal jtov ernnients in the conquered slates. He had often Incurred the anger of the Secretary of War and the Generals in the field by granting pardon even in cases where the ueath of offending soldiers was declared to be essential for discipline. His kindness of heart, rebelled at anything like deliberate killing. Nor was he lend, r only to the men in blue. Those in gray were scarcely less the objects of Ins sol.ci tude. His great heart b--.it for them in their distress with a fatherly affec tion, like another Da i.l over another Absalom. The following incident il lustrates tins: Dr. Jerome Walker, of Brooklyn. X. Y.. had been taking the President through the wards of the hospital at City Point. After visiting the wards filled with convalescing Union soldiers they came to three wards occupied by wounded Southern prisoners. With feeliug of patriotic xeal I -r. Walker said: "I don't suppose you want to in there. Mr. President; they're only rebels." Lincoln stopped and. gently laying liis hand upon the surgeon's shoulder, said, "You mean Confederates." And he went through those wards and lr. Walker afterward said: "For aught I could see, he was ju.-l as kind, his handshakings Just as hearty, his interest for the welfare of the nun just as re-., as when he was among our own soldiers." "Now he belongs to the aces." said Secretary of War Stanton when, tho morning after the shooting, Lincoln breathed his last. had fearlessly denounced their work and for this was forbidden to preach. The aged churchman defied the Bol sheviki and ln his preachings displaxed greater energy than ever in condemn ing the Soviet authorities. The ISolshe viki arrested him and took him to Ekaterinburg. Thereupon the popula tion of Tobolsk Province, who greatly revered their old bishop, sent a deleg- tion to demand hi3 liberation. The Czecho-Slo'vaks at that time be gan to occupy Western Siberia and tho Bolsheviki feared to provoke the peas ants of Tobolsk. They released tho bishop and started him back to Tobolsk under escort of Red Guard troops. A steamer was provided and the delega tion, headed by the bishop, proceeded triumphantly as far as Pakrovsk vil lage. Here they met a steamer carry ing the Csecho-Slovaks or Whito Guards. Rather than have the bishop liberated by them the Red Guards de cided to kill him. The old man was beaten and forced to carry heavy bur dens of ammunition during the flight of the convoy. When he could go no further, says the informant, his tor turers tied a rock to his feet and threw him into the river. The body was recovered later by hi people and given burial in Tobolsk. Mrs. V. E. Guest, the American wifa of a British Army officer, has been ap pointed a member of a committee to determine the taxes on feminine lux uries In Ensrland. Simple Way to End Dandruff There Is one sure way that has never failed to remove dandruff at once, and that is to dissolve it, then you destroy It entirely. To do this. Just get abouf four ounces of plain, common liquid arvon from any drugstore (this Is all you will need), apply it at night when retiring; use enough, to moisten the scalp and rul it in gently with the finger tirs. By morning most. If not all. of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dis solve and entirely destroy every slntrlo sign and trace of it. no mailer how much dandruff you may have. You will find ell itching and digging of the scalp will Mop instantly, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and leel a hundred times better. Adv. A Single Application Banishes Every Hair (The Modern Beauty) Here Is how any woman can easily and quickly remove objectionable, hairy growths without possible Injury to th xkin: Make a paste with some powdered delatono and water, apply to hairy sur face ami after 2 or 3 minutes rub off. wash the skin and the hairs are p""" This is a painless, inexpensive method and. excepting where the growth Is un usually thick, a single application i.s enough. Ton should, however, be care ful to get genuine delatone. Adv.