& hi r n H I' IM - ....... M - II!, I I iTi II II W' mr 0 1 e4cC3mm cflurf c04aaiMTT - (a ew (gr Jbjlct J!?,' 3$ujC&4o rr4AA.. WAHAftl "Tlipy'rc talking uowadnys right mart about the great Napolvuii." nai'l Undo Dun, "hut when t'otlior day th boysoHked me who 1 thought the grentt'Ht uuin, I says 'I dou't know. There's Wash ington, mi' Alexander, uu' Xnpoleon. nn' lots of others, but, my wuy uf tliinklii', Old Abe Lincoln Is abend of 'era all.' "Greatness Isn't jest n belli' stern anil solemn-like. Now, Uncle Abraham could hoe his row with any of 'em iirgyin', on' yet some way lie lind the swing of them old prupheis. That struck mv when the war broke out, uu' ufore I knew it I caught the fever, curried coal oil lumps around with the rest of the crowd, gut howliu' about .loliu Brown's body niobler lug in the gi'iiiiiiil, and 'My .links,' says I, 'I'll jiiie!' "Of course. Hilly must stay at home to plow unil sow iinil make the corn ami bay. He'd jiiKt l uriied lll'tecii. hut as I nmrclieil uway, blt'Ht if there uiihii'i inn cry in' in his linns, uu' Hilly yelliu' like mud. 'I want a chance to strike for liberty!' I IIchs me again! in Ions than u year if 1 didn't hear one iln.v lliat Hilly bail enlisted, too. "How I wiilched that boy! Sometimes firuying when lie kept by my nidi' in but tle, KonicliuicH Hwcuriiig, loo. uiiiylic, when lie exponcd himself Ion carelessly. At Vickslioih' lie fell buck, crushed iiml miliini'd by the parnpet tire, mid 1 tooU bini ill my nrnis and Imre him hack, uu', half crazy wiih fears, dnsheil at the fort llgslll. ell, he rallied t'roin tile wniilid, but souieliow he never seemed so sound us before. There was a wundcring struuge 1 1 ess In his manlier, like lie didn't 'smelly know his mind, and one night, when skir mishes were daily, an' Sherman uu' Hood was trying to get the elm nee for a win ning light. Hilly was placed on picket duty where thinner hovered thick. 1 told him to keep his eyes wide open, but utter I'd got into my bliiuket in camp I couldn't sleep. 1 took my gun and hurried silent ly to the outposts, reached a spot close uuderuenlh the hill, and my heart stopped, for there was a scullle, u cry, and 1 suw the forms of half a hundred men. It wan't no time to think. 1 ruined my gun. The good old musket rang out the alarm, the rebels turned and ran. The boy? There he lay, his form stretched out upon the ground, asleep at his post! "Ho turned to me an' put his arm around me lovlni;!'. '1 couldn't help it, dad,' lie said, smiling his old boyish smile. " TOOK HIM IX MY ARMS AND DORK HIU BACK." and marched away between the guards. 1 begged, I plesd, I swore that Hilly wasn't like himself. No use. The sen tence came. I appealed to the generals. I got only one answer: The death acn tence of the court haa been approved.' Then I went to Washington to sea the President ft uw(mMl Zm-CoUj u AUtuJoy, fso seG poslf& t4 CAAthfGaUia 0 COfry of fhe Gelfesburd) ddreas'rna5e T by him for mesoldieri nd sailors fair! "It was my last hope. They wouldn't let me In. They even pushed me back as a carriage drove up. 1 saw who got out; I tried to attract bis attention. 'Who la this man?' says he. 'Only a soldier after nn Interview,' says tho officer. 'Only a soldier?' says he, musingly. 'Periling his life! Only a soldier, fighting the battles of this awful war! Thank God! to speak to me you need no other name. Only a soldier? Come in, my man.' And he led me up the stairs, while ministers nud gen erals, waited outside. "I told him, with sobs half choking me, the story of my (,-rief. His face was sad and furrowed, and he bowed his head us he listened. lie looked over the pa pers carefully. Then he turned, and smiling gently, said, 'We'll let the other fellows do the killing. I think the coun try will get along with this young fellow running 'round alive.' And then he wrote: 'This sentence disapproved. Restored to his company. A. Lincoln." Just there I lost my grip. I only cried like a baby. 'You tell your boy,' says he, 'I count on him to tight.' "In six months Billy stood upon the roll ns second corporal. Then he became color bearer of the regiment. We marched 'ONLY A SOLDIER? tliroiiKh Georgia until we faced the guns of l'rt McAlister. A charge was order ed, but at (irst the rebels lired at such a rate thnt the ranks wavered. Hilly, with face n flume, curried the Hag far up in the advance. 'Bring back the colors to the regiment!' cried the colonel. Amid the crack and crash of the guns, the boy re plied, 'You bring the regiment to the colors!' Then, with shouts and cheers, the brigade rushed madly on, and before they fairly sensed it, the day was won. "Hilly had gone down. They had to pry his fingers loose from the Hug. There was n smile on his face a thousand years can't make nie forget. 'Redeemed at last.' the general came and said, mid placed his name among the heroes. They wrap ped the Stars and Stripes iirnund my son. When they put him in his new uniform that night, they found his treasures, and among the rest was a picture of Old Abe, and written on its back were the words, a prophecy, 'I've fought, great frieud, and died for liberty!' " ' LINCOLN'S SWEETHEART. She Was a I'coiitllul Kentucky Girl and Had Mirny Suitors. Lincoln first met Ann Mayes Rutledge In 1S:2, when she wus 1!). She was a beautiful girl and as bright as she wns pretty. So fair a maid was not, of course, without suitors. The most determined of those who sought her band was on John McNeill, a young man who had ar rived In New Salem from New York soon after the founding of the town. Ann be came engaged to McNeill, but it was de rided to put off marriage on account of Anu'a youth. After a while McNeill left for his borne In the Kast, saying that he would return In time with his parents. Then It came out that McNeill's real name was McNanmr. The New Salem people pronounced him an impostor. A few let ters were received from him by Ann. but finally the lover ceased to write to her. In the spring of lffl Ann s greed to be come Lincoln's wife. New Salem took a ' Ifift If III iUPv -iff 11 fit mm i tKtvt fry? tf&r pfcy eOdJ (MyWitkA vS--(5 w Jn gT'-fax v -fu4 f f uw rta pUX?Zrfojr. u'u Jrcr tr- it2X! JtgJ if, fCS. cordial Interest in the two lovers, and presaged a happy life for them, and all would undoubtedly hnve gone well if tho young girl could have dismissed the haunt ing memory of her old lover. The possl. bility that she had wronged him, 'that he might reappear, that be loved her still, haunted her so persistently that she took to her bed. Her death speedily followed. Lincoln's grief was Intense. lie was seen walking alone by the river aud through the woods, muttering strange things to himself, lie seemed to his friends to be in the shadow of madness. Tbey kept n close watch over him: and at Inst Bowl ing Green, one of the most devoted friends Lincoln then bad, took him home to his little log cabin, half a mile north of New Salem, under the brow of a big bluff. Here, under the loving cure of Green and his good wife, Nancy, Lincoln remained until he was once more master of himself. But though he hud regained self-control, his grief was deep and bitter. Ann Kutlcdge was buried in Concord Ceme tery, a country burying ground, seven miles northwest of New Salem. To this lonely spot Lincoln frequently journeyed to weep over her grave. "My heart Is buried there," he said to one of his COME IN, MY MAN." friends. Strnnge to say, McNmnnr prov ed to be nn honest umn uud a faithful though cureless lover. THE IMMORTAL LINCOLN. An Apotheosis in His Memorable First lnnn'-nrnl. In nn epoch of couvulsiuu and cataclysm and chuos Abraham Lincoln wus intro duced into presidential power, lie held to the syllogistic aud spurned figurative speech. No fustian found favor in bis prejudices. Coming to the end of his first inaugural, Lincoln reached these words: "In your hands, my fellow countrymen, and not in mine, is the momentous issue of civil war. The Government will not assail you. Y'ou can have no conflict without being your selves the aggressors. You have no with registered in heaven to destroy the Gov ernment, while I shall hnve the most sol emn one to preserve, protect nud defend it." "I am loath to close. We are not ene mies, but friends. We must not be ene mies. Though passion may have strained, it must not break our bonds of affection. The mystic chords of memory, stretching from every battlefield and patriot grave to every living heart and hearthstone all over this broad land, will yet swell the chorus of the L'nion when again touched, as surely they will be, by the better an gels of our nature." Lincoln's Trust In God. "What I did I did after a very full de liberation and under a very heavy and solemn sense of responsibility," said Lin coln with reference to the emancipation proclamation. "I ran only trust in God I have made no mistake. 1 shall make no attempt on this occasion to sustain what I have done or said by any comment. It Is now for the country and the world to pas judgment, and may be take action upon IL" Looking a difficulty square In the face will of tan kill it dead. &x. c4 vva SAW LINCOLN SHOT. ONE WHO WITNESSED GREAT TRAGEDY. THE Storr of tbe Man Who Wol the Flrt to Reach the Bide of tbe Wounded Presldent-Hla Clothing Stained bs tbe Blood of the Martyr. Our Nation's Darkent Day. There now lives in 1'hlladelphia a gen tleman who suw tbe whole scene of Lin coln's assussiuation, and was the first to reach tbe wounded man in tbe prevailing panic. Willinm Flood is tbe gentleman's name, and be gnve the following graphic account, which is taken down In his ex act words: "At tbe time the President wns shot," said he in answer to a query, "1 was in the United States navy and was acting en sign and executive oilicer on board the stenmship Teuzer. Cuptnin Silas Owen was the commander, and the ship wns lo cated at the navy yard on April 14. Tbut evening Captain. Oweu, who had been over in the city during the day, came to the ship and suggested thnt we go to the theater that evening, as Laura Keene was to play 'Our American Cousin,' and the President was to be there. We went to the theater and secured seats in the parquet or orchestra chairs. "The Presi dent occupied the second box up from the orchestra and second from the stage. Just as the curtain fell on the first act I heard a shot and saw a man jump from the President's box to the stage. As he jump ed his foot caught in the folds of the ting thnt draped the box, and be fell sideways on tbe stage. It was quite a good jump, and he came very near falling back into the orchestra. lie got up and limped away across the stage, brandishing a great long knife in bis' right baud, and shouted, 'Sic semper tyrunniB. "In less time than it takes to tell it I was on tlie stiiKe. How I got there over the heads of the orchestra I really don't remember. Just ns I reached the stage Mrs. Lincoln looked out of the box. She was crying and wringing her hands and said: 'They have shot papa; will no one come?' I answered that I would come, aud immediately climbed up the side of the boxes to the one the President occu pied. "The President was sitting ns If he hnd fallen asleep. He was breathing, however, and we nt once laid him on the floor of the box. I looked for the wound, but nt first did not discover it. Miss Keene brought a pitcher of water aud 1 bathed his forehead with that so as to re vive him. I then discovered the wound in the back of his hend, where the ball hud entered, and the blood ran out on my arm and down the side of my coat. Some nrmy officers brought in a stretcher and he wns placed on that uud carried out. I then went to the front of the box nnd motion ed for tbe audience to remain quiet. Kvery one was talking, and there was a general uproar. As soon as it ceased for a minute I told them thnt the President wns still alive, but hail been shot, and wns no doubt mortally wounded. Captain Owens nnd 1 then went out to the front of the building and found a platoon of police in the street. The sidewalks were so crowded with people that we bud to get out in the middle of the road to get down the street. We went to the Nntioual Hotel, nnd by the time we got there the mob wus so dense we could get no further, so a couple of police took us through the hotel to C street, at the rear, and we got a cab and were driven to tbe navy yard. I wns so bloody from the wound, my right hand and arm being covered, that it is a wonder that I was not banged by that mob. They were intensely excited at the time, nnd it would have tnken very little to have driven them into frenzy. "The next day our ship went down the river to bead Booth off, and did not return until after be was killed. I was then sent for to go down and identify him. I recognized him very readily as he jumped from the box as J. Wilkes Booth." Talleyrand never was In love but once, and that was when be was about 16 years old. When Napoleon ordered bim to marry and picked out a wife for him. be pleaded tbls youthful attach ment, which was Immediately scoffed at by tbe great match-maker as a piece of nonsense. MIRROR SET INTO A GLOVE. A: mirror ou tbc lmliu of a glove la (lie lutiwt novelty. With IIh glHtuuoe Ita owut-r Ih cnnbli'd to bo ture iliut her lxiuin-t s on Btrn Ipht, and also that tier curln are In perfect order. She cnn HUewlne accrtiilii if her bow Ih at the most becoming angle at the proper time. All tliene thlugH and u hundred others. Importunt from the feminine point of view, she can find out on the street without attracting the at tentlon of pasMero-by, with the aid of this simple contrivance. The Inventor of this device has so arranged the little looklug-glastf In the palm of the glove as not to interfere with the shuttles of the hand. lie has likewise taken tbe precaution of putting It la tbe left-hand glove, so that when Its owner shakes bauds with a friend It will not be ob served. It is not the fair sex nlotie that will find this Ingenious contrivance useful. Men are quite as vain os worn en, so the latter clnlm, and will be seen by any observer to look at themselves In every mirror they pass ou the streets. A Hoy's Kiisay on Girls. ' "Girls Is a queer kind of varmint. Girls is the only thing that bus their own way every time. Girls Is of several thousand kinds, and sometimes one girl can be like severul thousands other girls, if she want you to do anything. Girls Is all alike one way; tbey are all like cats. If you rub 'em the right way of the hair they'll purr and look sweet at you. but If you rub 'em the wrong way they'll claw you. STong as you let a girl have her own way she's nice and sweet, but Just cross her and she'll spit at you worse nor a cat. Girls Is also like mules; they're headstrong. If a girl don't want to believe anything you can't make her. If she knows It's so she won't say so. Girls Is little women If they're good, and If tbey ain't good then, nor when they get big, they're ebe-devils. That's what father said mamma was once, when she fixed a hot flat-Iron In tbe cbair so he'd set down on It, 'cause she was mad at him. Brother Joe says be don't like big girls, but he does like little ones, and when I saw him kissing Jenny Jones lust Sun day and told bini what he'd said he said he was bltlug her, 'cause he didn't like her. I think he hurt her, for she holler ed nnd run, and there was a big red spot over both of her cheeks. This Is all I know about girls, and father says the less I know about 'em the better off 1 am." fnlm for the Ccmp'rxlon. Both as a benliug lotion and ns a cos metic, milk Juice of the lettuce has Ion.? been highly esteemed by French wom en. Lettuce cream of absolutely whole some character may be niudu as fol lows: IV.:r it quart of boiling water 1 over half a peck of the full-grown out side green leaves of several heads of lettuce. After the lettuce bus stpod a moment, drain off the water aud chop the lettuce line. Put It lu a clean towrl nnd wring out all the juice that can be extracted only the dry pulp will be left in the towel. Put this Juice lu ;i email saucepan of bright tin aud boil it down for two or three minutes. There ' should be about three tablespoonfuls of the green liquor. Set this aside. Pro cure half an ounce each of white wax and of spermaceti and four ounces of oil of almonds from n thoroughly trust worthy druggist. Put the materials In a large cup aud set the cup In a pan of boiling water. Tbe water should reach to the same depth as the materials In the cup. Let the vax and spermaceti slowly melt Into the oil. Stir it occa sionally. When the mixture is perfect ly smooth and no lumps remain, add the lettuce Juice and stir the mixture thoroughly. Let the cream cool in the pan that you Intend to keep it in. Set this jar in cold water while It Is cooling. If the cream Is not a delicate green when hard, me'.t It and add a few drops of French vegetable green. These col ors cost about 25 cents a bottle, and will keep a long time If they are corked carefully. No balm Is more healing to a complexion that has suffered rough usage from tbe winds of midwinter. No Loneer "..ot at Horn:" Perhaps it hi luerely a fashionable whim, perhaps it Is a wave of sincerity and common sense which dictates that the venerable polite fiction "not at home" Is out of date. The woman of so ciety now sends word by her servant that she is "much engaged," thus pro tecting her own conscience and that of her maid. The well-bred visitor will 'accept this graciously, knowing from experience bow Impossible it often proves under existing circumstances to set aside pressing duties for the chance caller. Formal visiting is now limited to afternoon hours as less liable to conflict wltb necessary appointments of daily life. Tbe latcbstring of hospitality still remain out for close friends, who drop in at all times according to impulse and convenience. A fine line of courtesy leads the vis itor not to offer ber card to tbe servant. NEWEST T1IINO IN OLOVBS. but to Inquire If Mrs. Binnk Is reeelT Ing. If answered In the ulllrmatlve, nsks If she will see' Mrs. S . If lu .the negative, then the enrd Is left a evidence of the call. Cards are In a measure falling Into disuse, tho English method of announcing guests being very generally accepted In the best cir cle of society, n pasteboard only being left when the lady Is out or not receiving. Hons-bntd Words. Under this heading the New York Sun offers the following: Lctuine be. D that collar button! Did anybody see my hat? Now I lay me down to sleep. No, you can't have any more cake. Oh, ninuima, Willie's pinching me. Say,. John, ain't you boys up yet? Who the deuce carried off that paper? Where's that half dollar I gave you last week? Yes, dear, $10 will do, but $15 would be better, , Oh, pupa, make Dick quit calling me names. Come on to your dinner before every thing gets cold. Come, now, It's time for you young ones to be In bed. Dou't forget to order a load of coal sent up right away. Good gracious, how much money do you want, anyhow? No, I shnn't have any young man coming to see you until you aro out of school. So there. But, my dearsh, you sh' know I bad encashment at tb' office till sho late I cou'n't poshibly come. Phyaicil Trnlnlnir. An authority on physical training for women gives the following directions for securing the best results, which naturally must be modified by Individ ual characteristics and circumstances: Sleep nine hours out of tbe twenty- four, bathe In cold water, exercise five minutes dully, drink a cup of hot liquid before breakfast, spend half an hour every day In outdoor exercise, make the best of bad bargains, and alwayt keep your temper." Womankind. Uccoratlon for Dinner Table. Skirls nnd Sleeves. The latest cut In skirts has compara tively no tlure around the bottom; yet Is fairly wide and fits very closely around the hips, with nil the fullness at the back. Paneled skirts are seen on some of the newest evening gowns, and these serve us a foundation for elaborate em broidery lu jeweled designs, or for the fashiouuble braidings iu Russian style. Brussels net or the wide open, coarse Russian lisli net, made over a change able silk iu some brilliant hue, is much iu vogue for evening wear. The skirt is finished with a lull ruche, of tha sumo material ut the hem uud another at the knee. A fancy of the moment is to wear long sleeves with the low-cut bodice, a boon to women whose urnis are not their strong point. The most striking novelty Is the long, transparent sleeve of net or chiffon, gathered very full iu mousquetaire fashion. The simple leg-o'-iuutton sleeve haa developed wonderful possibilities in the bauds of the skillful modiste. Finish ed nt the wrist with a flaring, open cuff, and slashed to the elbow ,and filled In with gathered lace tbe effect Is novel nnd charming. Plaid velvets are much In vogue for house wear, and the woman who does not own a blouse or tartan velour does not consider her indoor wardrobe quite complete. These are made decidedly loose, a la Russe, aud ore belted with the inevitable jeweled girdle. For evening wear, sleeves resemble miuiature lamp shades for ballet skirts, as they are made of frills and tulle and stand well out from the arm. Some are draped close up to the shoulder, nud so form a sort of butterfly effect, decidedly chic and becoming. Tbe very latest mode In skirts Is the graceful Spauish flounce, a most be coming style to tha tail, slender woman, and that brings up the query why do most fashions seem better adapted to the "daughters of the gods divinely tall" than to tbe petite morsels of fem ininity? Among tbe most elegant materials for dinner gowns is the lovely inirolr vel vet, which falls in Graceful, clinging folds, and has a sheen and luster all Its own. Whole costumes are mate of this effective fabric, which, when trimmt with fur, seems peculiarly appropriate for winter wear. The greatest devotee was Buddha, "The Light of Asia," "The Indian Christ." So powerful was the Influ ence of tbls remarkable character over tbe human race that to-day It is esti mated Buddha's followers number 480,. cco.oca