Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 218, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 September 1913 — Lincoin Tells Story. [ARTICLE]
Lincoin Tells Story.
“It seems to me,” remarked the president one day, while reading over some of the appealing telegrams sent to the war department by General McClellan, “that McClellan has been wandering around and has sort of got lost. He’s been hollering for help ever since he went south —wants somebody to come to his deliverance, and get him out of the place he’s got into. “He reminds me of the story of a man out in Illinois who, in company with a number of friends, visited the state penitentiary. They wandered all through the institution, and saw everything, but Just about the time to depart this particular) man became separated from his friends, and couldn’t find his way out. “He roamed up and down one corridor after another, becoming more desperate all the time, when at last die came across a convict who was looking out from between the bars of his cell door. Here was salvation at last Hurrying up to the prisoner, he hastily asked: “ ‘Say, how do you get out of this place?’ ”
