OCR Text |
Show Mrs. Lincoln at Lnree. Chicago, 21. A postal correspondent, corres-pondent, writing from St. Charloa, III., in the vicinity of Bellevue asylum, asy-lum, sayB that Mrs. Lincoln is pronounced pro-nounced well enough to leave the asylum and viait her sister, Mrs Edward, Ed-ward, of Springfield. It is not likely that she will return to Bellevue, ui there is some feeling evinced in the matter ol her incarceration by friends who refuse to believe her insme. A leading lady lawyer of Chicago has been with her much of late, and with the assistance of her legal husband hus-band will assist Mrs. Lincoln's restoration to the world. She is decidedly de-cidedly better, Bleeps and eats well, and shows no tendency to any mania; but whether the cure is permanent or not the test of active life and tune will prove. |