Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1898, by RHODES & MCCLURE PUBLISHING COMPANY, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. All Rights reserved. PLYMOUTH PRINTING & BINDING CO. CHICAGO. JAN 1 3 1922 INV. 38 38 E 457.99 MII 1983 REFACE In his speeches—and we may add-his stories, the great Lincoln "still lives," with an influence for good among men. 66 Whatever may attach to his mere biography, that reveals a life of struggle and disadvantage in early years-unparalleled in fact in this respect-the truth is the MAN LINCOLN is not in the "early cabin home," but in words that never die "-in the compiled utterances of this volume, that reveal and perpetuate the soul life of him who spoke so often, so fully and truly, of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, and of a government "that is of the people, by the people, and for the people." In this form these stories and speeches, whose radiance lightens all pathways, are dedicated to the world, in the firm faith that in the fulness of time, the knowledge of the truth shall make all people free. J. B. McCLURE. EARLY LIFE STORIES. An Honest Boy; Young Lincoln "Pulls Fodder" An Incident of Lincoln's Early Hardships and Nar- .... A Pig Story; Lincoln's Kindness to the Brute Creation.... A Hard Tussle with Seven Negroes; Life on a Mississippi Flat-boat..... A Remarkable Story; "Honest Abe" as Postmaster. A Humorous Speech; Lincoln in the Black Hawk "Clarey's Grove Boys"; A Wrestling Match.. Elected to the Legislature.... Gen. Linder's Early Recollections; Amusing Stories. 55 How Lincoln Earned his First Dollar.... 17 How Lincoln Helped to Build a Boat: and How he Loaded the Live Stock... How Lincoln Resented an Insult. How Lincoln Treated His Early Friend, Dennis How Lincoln Piloted a Flat-boat Over a Mill Dam. 42 How Lincoln Became a Captain. 45 Hanks, in Washington. Judge Moses' Early Recollections of Lincoln. . . . . Little Lincoln Firing at Big Game Through the Lincoln and his Gentle Annie; A Touching Inci- Lincoln Splits Several Hundred Rails for a Pair of Mrs. Brown's Story of Young Abe; How a Man 36 Splitting Rails and Studying Mathematics; Simmons, 42 How Lincoln Kept His Business Accounts. How Lincoln Always Turned a Stury to His Advan- A letter to His Beloved Stepmother.. ✓ An Amusing Story Concerning Thompson Camp- An Incident Related by one of Lincoln's Clients.... A Revolutionary Pensioner Defended by Lincoln... IoI How Lincoln and Judge B. Swapped Horses... Lincoln and His Stepmother..... Lincoln's Story of Joe Wilson and his "Spotted Lincoln Defends Col. Baker.. Lincoln in Court... Lincoln Defends the Son of an Old Friend Indicted for Murder.... |