c 0 st 0 Q y t yuA j i M < trr 1 HOPklNSVlLLE IL 1vT 11C tAN FEB 11 1909 pA eE 1 I c 14 n J i V F tli I r w se BirthPlaje of Lincoln f No Other American farm Save Mount I r 1 Vernon Has Producod Such a Wonder t Cui Crop of Patriotism iii Iil iii a 1 I 1Cpyrh HORATIO BLISS Cpyrh IPOO by American Press Aaoelatlon 6 IIIb I VO milts from iroilgimvllletKy is a one hundred and ten acre farm that raises little except pa triotism The trlotlSluTberops crops on it aro for ttltt input part stunted and have a discour aged appearance Perhaps this de jection c a in e s from dodging about to tnlsg the rocks or from trying to find fertility in the soil a hopeless task vyhatever the ca v sjKrthfi a fJlctr > IIJnt t LrfiCOLN nt 1862 the 1Qrtgtyrwiftnt tnw unable to make enough fromtbn pfeee to meet the ngns jIV ng the ewtfieBt one of record u certnb fawner carpenter of the name of Tb nms Lin ae1u failed to get enough out of the fcarron acres to pay for th > w Yet this stony unprodacHv spot of earth is now one of tho worlds shrines On Feb 12 presidents gov errors judges cardinals and cabinet ministers foregather Uiors to orate and dedicate these rocks and sttfrlle soil patches to the p oplw for all the days tdcome On one of the hills a white memorial hall patterned after a Greek tomple will likewise be consecrated aIHlloft as a Mecca for future genera Mane The temple incloses an old erne Mai log cabin with a stick UtuinSJ i one door one window and nQ 0ff T tL In this cabin was bop alai tfefid whom the world has trtttpa fa fts ieart Abraham Lliicolu war president sad liberator man of meekness mind mercy strange compound of sorrow mNWWWW1 MBS Ln corN m 1861 id of laughter lie the baby that me here of parents poor and almost a ijlterate Is the reason for the temple k r the crowds and for the oratory He is likewise the reason for the na t 2t n existing at all in its present form these humble acres aro not all un ductlvo even though they cannot I glow crops for they brought forth a neat soul to lead a people from bond jeSe and to place before mens eyes u J iype of charity and forbearance that J lll make us all tenderer and better for having seen 7 The Lincoln farm after passing out F of the ownership of Thomas Lincoln f iiplonged for many years to a family a the name of Creal after which it t i i as bought by a New Yolk capitalist h i j3Ir Dennett who made some 1m 1vcmeuts on It with the idea of t lunging It into a national park This Irs abandoned however because of otji I tied up in the litigation of the Den tt estate and for years was negleet t 010 At last It was sold at public auc OJ ton by the authorities of Larue coun si Ky when It was purchased by t OJin 1 Richard Lloyd Jones as a representa tive of Robert J Collier A Lincoln farm association was formed with I 1t Folk of Missouri at its bead apd various distinguished men on its 4 directorate To this body Mr Collier turned over the farm popular sub I memorialf f other fmc CuITdtng was erected and c provements wore made As a result the Lincoln birthplace farm on Feb J2 will be opened to the public as a national park From a scenic aspect j i It is n beautiful spot Near to the plaza fronting the memorial building fa the famous rock spring and not far f r distant Is u picturesque creek on the ftApks of which the boy Lincoln play J edIn 4 In addition to the dedication of the JBucm n statue of Lincoln will be un Yeftfed In Uodgenvllle More Important s attll It Is now practically certain that some form of memorial will be erected at Washington n step that should have been taken long ado Everything connected with Abra tam Lincoln Is hold precious by the American people Ills bhthplaco and rigs tomb Ills acts and his words tho people with whom ho associated all are objects of a popular Interest such few men in aroused by 1as has been the history of nations Compared nrtth Lincolns simple greatness most nti the character grouped arpund him r in writer by coatftst This la true even e W3 family lproae I feel that Jas p L WJIP w tip tlce has tifiver boon gone Mrs Lincoln She was not without a prophetic qurtl ity in divining her husbands future emlnqnce she bad spiritual iuslghf she suffcrod many sorrows and de spite her difference from Mr Lincoln In temperament and Inherited manners quit beliefs elie was loyal to him throughout One Hother chtfracter has been mini mized much in the same way William H Seward Lincolns chief competitor for the presidential nomination and afterward his secretary of state One tfilug that can be said for Scward Is tbnthe was man enough to1 acknowl edge Lincolns greatness when ho easy It He refused to plot against his chief as did some of his fellow mem bars of the cabinet He was a wise counselor and unselfish statesman He bad enough foresight to but AJnsKji when the public Scoffed at him lot the act The truth about Seward is that he wits of a very high type but not withstanding his height was overshadowed r r shadowed Mr Lincolns life falls Into two great divisions that preceding the re peal of the Missouri compromise and the formation of the Republican par ty nnd that following these twin events His one term in congress was the last Important public Service In tho fiat period Following this were five or1 sis years of law with little or no politics In congregs Lincoln had gained a reputation us u story teller and wit had made one or two cam paign speeches bad Introduced n measure to nbollsh slavery In the DIs trlct of Columbia and had refused to stty t hat the Mexican war was right qlbuH Following his term he had aPi piled for the office of land commission 8r to which he had not been appoint i > c1s and had been offered the governor sQbof Oregon which he declined hi IjStjQ JjP refused another nomination ttf = Vougre88 and in 1852 delivered a eulogy on Henry Clay It wits In 18j > 4 that he really reentered politics ho Ing Htlrred thereto by the rupeal of the MlHBQurl compromise That year lit wuA elected to the legislature but refused to serve He was also a can rjidiijf for United States senator com IIIK within n few votes of winning With rune unselfishness he threw all his strength to Lyman Trumbull and pjeotpd him For Lincoln to go to Tminhull nhp had but a handful of supporters was like the tall wagging the dbKbutJt prevented the election of II proslavory man manI Jp 18fiR ftlr Lincoln participated in the foniiiillon of tht Republican party making ht great lost speech at Bloonilngton He also received 110 TotS for vice president in the Repub lican national convention nnd ran for t lector on the Fremont ticket Two I pears Inter came his groat debates j tvlth Douglas which were held at Ot aiwa Freeport Jonesboro Charleston Salesburg Quincy and Alton As a result he had a popular majority but was beaten by holdover senators and a gerrymander gerrymanderFollowing Following the struggle with Doug las Mr Lincoln made speeches in Ohio Kansas Ndw England and the famous address In Cooper Union Now York Early In 1860 the Illinois state convene Ion instructed for him for president and In the national convention that mot at Chicago May lOjlU he was nominated on the third ballot In the following campaign Mr Lincoln n malned at home and declined to make speeches The Democratic party split on slavery which made his vluctluu possible Following the aunounriMUKiit 3f the result many of the Minitmru states seceded but the president HWJ refused to be drawn Into nay public utterance as to his policy On Vuu 11 L801 he started to Washington innk ing a few short addresses on the way and secretly pausing through Haiti more because of rumor < if iiotmhio I WILLlAA h rttit Lt assasLlnatlon A tier ftu iuinic < irauu I his history bPCdiuu mitt or rim roumry in her most glganuc BtrugKiv Tlu till promo events of hilt itUiiituiHtintlnii un they OffCt his fame vwr riu IH UUIU t > of the emancipation proulumutum mi Sept 22 18tr and Its otiUIul ptotuui gatlon on the 1st of January following i Vicksburg and GfttyaburK OH July 14 1803 the Gettysburg uddnJ1J on i Nov 10 J803 the second election to hthe presidency and second Inaugural lall4 tba wis Mlnation on April H tZA86 lye flays after Appetaatl4a I fj l = r D cL 1 ithAppreciTionifLincoIa I1y QIb1ceriMJ V e I COPYRIGHT IDOO BYacfnhTt 5 LOVE i1 I it tC OMEWHAE down thar round Hodgenville Kaintucky Or tharabouts a hundred year ago Was born a boy ye wouldn thought was lucky looked like he never wouldn have a show But If I don know That boy was started middlin well Im thinkin1 His name Wy it was Abraham Abe Lincoln I S 1 ORE whites his folks was Yes as pore as any f P V Them pioneers they want no plutocrats belonged right down among the humble many And no mere property than dogs or cats i1 But maybe thats I I As good n1 way as any for a startin C t Abe Lincoln he riz middlin high for sartin J K r JK C OliEHOW Ive always hack a sort 01 sneakin I + 5OMHOW that peddygrees is purty much tt 11 Like monkeys tailsso long theyre apt to weaken The yap that drags em round No use for such I But beats the Dutch How now and then a lad like Little Aby 1 Grows up a presidentor guvnor maybe k 1 J BE LINCOLN never had no reglar schooling He never quarterbacked nor pulled stroke oar f f Nor never spent his time and money fodlin 1 With buried langwidges and ancient lore r But Abe Yarned more To set him forrerd in the human fun 7 Than all the college fellers kit and bilin1 b ABE LINCOLN never did git hifalutin A Not even thar in Washintori i C > He jist kep common humble ordnry suitin His backwoods corn patch raisin to a T But III jiminy gee iAud And wise as Solomon or old EzekulJIo JIo i 1 RECKON Im a bit old fashioned maybe IRECKON But when I want a pattern for a man t Im middlin shore to measure Father Aby And cut to fit his homely human plan I And longs I can Im hootin loud and robtiri proud by huoky For that old boy from Hodgenville Kaintucky II I i The Gettysburg Address I Remarks at the Dedication of the National Cemetery at Ge r rltI November 19 1803 v FOURSCORE and seven years ago our fathers brought fortupon F this continent a new nation conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal I Now we are engaged in a great civil war testing whether ati nation or any nation so conceived and so dedicated can long endUre We are met on a great battlefield of that war We have come to dedi i cate a portion of that field as a final resting place for thos6 who here gave their lives that that nation might live It is altogether fitting and proper that we should do this IBut in a larger sense we I cannot dedicate we cannot consecrate we cannot hallow this ground The brave men living and dead who struggled here have consecrated it far above our power to add or de 1 tract The world will little note nor long remember what we say hereI but it can never forget what they did hers It is for us the living rather to be dedicated here to the unfinished work which they who I fought here have thus far so nobly advanced It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task rcinahiing before uRthpt romI these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for wtich j they gave the last full measure of devotion that we here highly re solve that these dead shall not have died in vain that ths nition under IGod shall have a new biT if freedom and that government of the j p jpl a by the pwpkttAtar 4 epic All sot rrl toa tu LI I r y I I ii > frwsod iCtZYaana The linGoli1 ent l1arY 7 IThe Many ttare GenlulOs Were Born In 1 IB 1est of Them All IJ 1Jt iii 4 I tIJ 6By FERRIS G By EUGENE AnT lCorthi loo by American Pnas An U tA III II ie I theh h worlds great men born In 1SOS and whose centenaries will therefore be cel ebrated during the present year rearlIs Is surprisingly large The num ber reaches Into j wtLKts Doom the scores Chief among the poets werr Tennyson Poe Holmes Fitzgerald nnd Lord Hough ton Of musicians there were Chopin nnd Mendelssohn of scientists Dar i win and many lesser lights of fight ers Admiral Dahlgren Kit Carson Marshal Canrobert of statesmen Gladstone Hannibal HamlIn and Abram ham Lincoln i Lincoln and Darin perhaps the most celebrated of the list were born oh the same day One abolished chat tel slavery preserved the worlds greatest republic and set democratic government n long step forward the other revolutionized science and wrote the word evolution into the lan guage and thoughts of men Lincolns fame has grown with ev ery hour since his death and Is yet growing His hold on tae hearts of men comes not alone from hiM nets These but brought him Into the public eye It was the sweetness of his char ncter his mercy and simplicity his loyalty to truth his homely common sense his literary quality nnd his per fect democracy that have given him second If not first place among the great men of his own land and won him the affection of all lauds e The centenary of his birth on Feb 12 will be celebrated as has been that of no other American On the birth place farm In Kentucky a memorial building will be dedicated speechos being delivered by President Roose telt Secretary df ° War Luke E Wright Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Cardinal Gibbons and Governors Folk of Missouri and Wlllson of Kentucky The address of President Roosevelt while short will be It is believed one of his most am bitious efforts It will constitute prac tically his last important utterance as president and he designs to place It as nearly In the class with Lincolns Gettysburg address as he is able The memorial building itself is small and of simple but classic design Sur rounded by Greek pillars and up proached by broad flights of steps It makes n striking appearance on tho humble Kentucky farm U complete ly surround and Incloses the little log cabin In Which Lincoln was born which after its wanderings has been reerected on its original site At the foot of the steps are a broad sward and driveway with a flagstaff in the cen ter Near by Is the rock spring which was famous even in Lincolns day All of this with the remainder of the farm which will bo left much as it was before is to be thrown open to the public as a national park on Fob 12The The Lincoln centenary will also be elaborately celebrated at the tomb of the martyr president and his former home in Springfield at most of the large cities and in the churches and elsewhere all over the United States and in some form throughout the world Two men whose lines of fate cross ed those of Abraham Lincoln in a strange and one of them in a sinister way were Stephen A Douglas and John Wilkes Booth Lincoln and Douglas were lifelong political foes rivals for the hand of the same girl rivals for the senatorship rivals III debate and rivals for the presidency Lincoln won in every case except In a ItE A DOUGLAS the empty honor pf the formal elec tion to tho sonatorshlp Even there i ho had the popular majority and the i month effect of victoryr t oddly enough It was Douglas who fifty years ago first pave Lincoln his opportu nity iu achieve national fame The debates between the two giants were I the most celebrated In American po po11tlcul cola t pralMsttal candidate u 1SW A II slid Indirectly contributed to thojiDllN ting of the Dernoohuio party j he deciding of the election Od fwrtto the two men ycsro personal friends and in the test df war Judge Douglas came valiantly tp President Lincolns support As for Booth his motive In slaying Lincoln has always been something of a mystery That there was a con spiracy and that bd entered into it there seems little doubt but his rea son for the step has never been made clear Whether he had a private griev ance acted through sentimental sym pathy with the south or simply was crazed by the great events of t nod is yet a matter of contn and doubtless will always reward o Considering his talents and brilliant family connections the last supposi tion Is the probable nnd certaInty the charitable one Lincoln said that his early life might be described in a line from Gray The short and simple annals of the poor Ho came of English Quakers His parents while of good family belonged to tho frontier had little or no education and no money The son was never burdened with i those things himself His schooling altogether did not amount to a year I Yet ho taught himself rending omniv 1 orously such books as be could pro I cure Fortunately these were the bestthe Bible Shakespeare Aesop Pilgrims Progress Thomas Paine Robert Burns and the lives of Wash ington nnd Clay In 1810 the LIncolns left Kentucky for Indiana and two years later the mother died It was a time of Intense I misery and saddened the boys life 1 LINCOLN IN 1801 All that I nm all that I hope to be I owe to my angel mother he after ward exclaimed In a year Thomas Lincoln married a second time and the stepmother came as near supply ing the vacant place in young Abra hams heart and life as any other be ing could have done For the boy the stay In Indiana consisted chiefly of hard farm work with one flatboat trip down the Mississippi near its end Following his pioneer Instincts Tom Lincoln In 1830 moved to TomI That winter Abraham now his own man split rails and started out In the world for himself Tho next year he took a second flatboat trip to New Orleans and returned to clerk In a grocery at New Salem In 1832 he served as a captain in the Black Hawk war and ran for the legislature but was defeated In 1833 ho started In the grocery business for himself but his partner ran off poor Lincoln failed and It took him years to pay the debt Lincoln tried for the legislature a second time in 1834 and was elected remaining In the house eight years a part of which time he was minority leader His chief acts as a legislator were his advocacy of Internal Im provements his protest against slav ery and his leadership of the fight to remove the state capital from Van dally to Springfield Other events occurring contempora neously with this legislative experi ence were briefly as follows 1ft 1834 and 1835 he acted as deputy Qvor and ntudled law In Aut 1835 Ann Rutledge died throwing Lincoln Into Indescribable gloom In 1830 he was admitted to the bar forming a partnership with John T Stuart In 1840 he was an elector on the Harri son ticket In 1841 he formed n part nership with Judge Stephen T Logon and onNov 4 1842 he was married to Miss Mary Todd of Kentucky At the end of his legislative career Mr Lincoln in 1843 formed his final law partnership that with William H Horndon which lasted to the end of his life In 1844 ho was an elector on the Clay ticket and in 140 was3ect i rYltrlYspeaking speaking the beginning ol fiuan tlonal career although his real advent 4 as a national figure did not come until a decade after his one term In congress Vas ftnIJMAd I colnModesty In 1tJ when his bame was being mentioned as n prospectivo candidate for president Abraham Lincoln wrote to nn editor who had suggested the advisability of announcing his name I muot In all candor par that I do not think myself fit for the preaiden y adt J