Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 253, 2 September 1920 — Page 2

PAGE TWO

- THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. RICHMOND. INBU THURSDAY, SEPT. 2 1920.

MARSHALL SPEAKS OH TWO TOPICS AT TEACHERS' INSTITUTE

' EATOX,' O r Sept. 2. Prof. Elmer Marshall, Indiana Central university, " today addressed the Preble County Teachers' institute upon "Studies in ,'' the Merchant of Venice," and "Public "Speaking for the Teacher." Dr. Mo Brien spoken along educational lines A picnic was given this afternoon (or -the teachers. . At a session this evening Prof Mar shall will give, several readings and ;vDr. McBrlen will give a special le ture. T The Institute closes Friday afternoon. A business session will be held v, at 11 o'clock tomorrow morning and the annual election of officers will f take .place. , Temporary Injunction Dissolved. : Dissolution of a temporary lnjuncI tion granted John and Irene O'Dea, of I'Tew Paris, againBt the Liberty Light and Power company and George Fortpey, manager at New Paris, was ordered Wednesday by Judge A. C. " Risinger in common pleas court, after argument of a motion for dissolution, ' filed by Fortney and the company, the court sustaining the motion. The case grew out of the setting of a pole by the company, the O'Deas claiming the pole was on their ground. The pole as set to carry an electric line to the -elevator of the New Paris Equity exchange. Gale for State Committee. a Oscar A. Gale, former Eaton postmaster and former county auditor, has been recommended by the county Republican executive -committee for membership on the state advisory . comlttee. as Preble county's representative. - Irwin at Camp Perry. -w The Rev. Charles F. Irwin, Presbyterian church, is at Camp Perry for a ; two weeks' outing. He was a chaplain X' with the American forces in France. Funeral Service for Coffman. Funeral services for Andrew Coffnr.an, 29, former undertaker, were held this afternoon at the home of his father, Joseph W. Coffman, where lie ,died Tuesday. The Masonic lodge was in charge, assisted by the Rev. A. J. Bussard. Burial in Mound Hill cemetery. Surviving are his wife and vflon. He was an Odd Fellow and K. of P. Miss Stephen Is Buried. Funeral services for Miss Lettie Stephen, 0, native of Eaton, who died Tuesday at Somervllle, O., at the home of relatives, were held here Wednesday afternoon in the Presbyterian church, the Rev. J. E. Yingling, U. B. church, officiating in the absence of the Rev. C. E. Irwin. Burial in Mound Hill cemetery. ,J, Mummect Service Held. Funeral services for Junita Mummert. 10, who died in Chicago while .rn a visit, were held this afternoon at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John H. Mummert, west of Eaton, Rev. Hiley Baker, Christian church, offlclat- : lng. Mn. Huffman Interred. ' Funeral services for Mrs. Margaret Huffman, 92. wife of the late Nathan Huffman, were held Wednesday afternoon at her late home In Camden, . where she died Monday. She was the . flop-mother of W. C. Dove, of Eaton. ' Burial in Concord cemetery.

HILLIARD HAS RETURNED. Professor George H. ; Hillard, head . of the department of Education of Earlham college, has arrived here from Iowa where he spent hia summer vacation. Professor Hilllard will live in Bundy hall this year and act as; men's advisor. Professor Homer Moiris. dean of men. who lived in Bundy - hall last year, will reside outside thia ear.

- Clothes don't make the man, but the price of them sometimes mighty nearlv unmakes him.

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Five Minutes with Our Presidents

By JAMES MORGAN

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ABRAHAM LINCOLN ' From the Last Original Unretouched Negative Made the Sunday Before His Assassination.

The country lawyer in the white house, who had never set a squadron in the field, turned at last the tide of battle when It had been running for two years against the union. As Lee's army swept nodthward after smashing the federal forces at Chancellorsville, General-Hooker, the Union commander, proposed to stay behind and take Richmond. Lincoln's common sense rejected that absurd plan and ho ordered the army to follow Lee. But after beating the Confederates at Gettytburg. it let them retreat in safety, and the president impatiently exclaimed, "If I had gone there, I could have whipped them myself." The next day after Gettysburg, Grant took Vicksburg. and that wasanother victory which Lincoln made possible. He had stood by Grant, whom he had never seen, when the General had hardly another supporter in Washington. "I cannot spare this man; he fights." The president expressed in these few words the, great significance of the fall of Vicksburg: "The 'Father of Waters' again goes unvexed to the sea." A few months afterward he compressed the meanin of the whole mighty struggle Into a few simple sentences of his noble Gettysburg address. After more victories by Grant around Chattanooga, the victorious general was brought East, and under his command, Lincoln started his fifth drive on Richmond. Then came the darkness before the final triumph, and 1S64 was in some respects the most trying year of the war. A presidential election was at hand, and leading Republican politicians were for "anybody but Lincoln." Some were for Grant. "If he takes Richmond, let him have it," said the president. Above the whisperings and plots of the politicians, tbe voice of the people rose in a chorus for the renomination

1863 July 1.. 2.. 3.. Battle of Gettysburg. July 4, Grant took Vicksburg. November 19, Lincoln's Gettysburg address. 1864 May 4,Grant opened the Wll derness campaign. June 8, Lincoln renominated. -July 10, Conferedatee in sight of Washington. July 16, Gold rose to $2.85. August 23, Lincoln forecasted hia defeat in the election. August 31, Democratic National Convention declared the war a failure. September 2, Sherman entered Atlanta. September 19, Sheridan won Battle of Winchester. November 8, Lincoln reelected. 1865 February 3, Met the Confederates at Hampton Roads Conference. March 4, His eecond inauguration March 22, Arrived at Grant's headquarters. April 4, Visited Richmond. April 9, Returned to Washington.

of-Lincoln. Finding themselves without followers when the Republican convention met, the leaders clamored only for the chance to second the popular motion. The president modestly accepted the uprising for him as simply an evidence that the people did not believe it "best to swap horses while crossing the river." Even Lincoln's faith in the people was shaken in that summer of despair. He doubted if they would go fin longer beneath the crushing burden. A Bhud-

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der of horror ran through the . land at the frightful slaughter under Grant in the .Wilderness. "I. cannot bear it," the president said, as he turned his face away from a long . line of ambulances. . Nevertheless he , did not flinch in the midst of his campaign for re-election from making the staggering demand for 500,000 more recruits. . A Confederate army boldly advanced within sight of the capital. A gold dollar was worth in July $2.85 in greenbacks. Under the thickening clouds In August. Lincoln eat down and wrote and; sealed a forecast of his own defeat in the November elections, and also his resolve to co-operate with McClellan, the Democratic candidate, as soon as the latter should have been elected. Equally certain that the president was in a losing fight, the Democrats adopted a platform which declared the war a failure and which called for peace by negotiation. But in two days more Sherman was in Atlanta, and in two weeks more Sheridan won the battle of Winchester. . . j The war was not a failure and Lincoln was a success. Carrying all but three of- the states that took part in the election, he could say in truth to the serenaders at the white house, "it is no pleasure to me to triumph over anyone." Victory in the war was to call out the noblest qualities In the man. No sooner was he assured that the Union was saved than peace and forgiveness became his ruUng passion. In the hour of assured victory he did not hesitate, for the sake of stopping the bloodshed, to go Into conference at Hampton Roads with the leaders of the doomed Confederacy. After his return from the. fruitless parley, he wrote a message to congress, proposing to pay the slaveholders $400,000.000 for their slaves if the south would only cease fighting. All the cabinet objecting, with a sigh he put the mes sage In his. drawer. "With malice toward none, with charity for all." came forth from Lincoln's soul like a chant at his second inauguration. As the curtain was lifted in the spring for the closing scene of the great tragedy, the voice that had never faltered In the dark days of the war pleaded at Grant's headquarters, "Can't this last bloody battle be avoided?" Richmond fell, and the conquerer, who had hurled so many armies against the stubborn defenses entered the conquered capital afoot, leading Tad by the hand. He had not come to triumph over a vanished foe, and as he sat In the "White House of the

Confederacy," from which Jefferson Davis had fled 36 hours before, he sa4d to a man who cried 'out for vengeance against toe fugitive, cnlef tan of the south, "Judge not that ye may not be Judged." As the presidential boat returned to Washington, and the white dome of the capltol swam into' the horizon, the haunting shadow of dread revisited Mrs. Lincoln's face.-"That city is filled with our enemies," she said. "Enemies!" Lincoln protested, as if

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