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Show r r i SECTION THREE' THE DESERET NEWS SATURDAY FEimiJAHV FIU (CmIiH from NEWS ! . pass rg From the first patriotic speech delivered by Abraham Lincoln, at the age of 28, while a member of the Legislature of Illinois, before the Young Metis Lyceum, at -Springfield, on Jan. 27 1837. ,, bR ,Jtl!oropo re-vth- . - ) hu long NniRlud of tho moot subtle diplomat mad lui had a nwr-Ui- i Wrought him In contact with at-- , 11 Ot tho I A groat capital Httlo man, of distinguished ; manner, ho would bo picked out from a thousand go an diplomat 1 would bo hard to Imagine him In a nr other rolo. He began hla career In 1117 when llyeon old. In the foreign office at Bofla. after hla graduation aa a doe- -' tor of laaro from Vienna university, ho waa appointed Bulgarian la mlnlatar to Bucharest and the follow, tug Tear ho waa mlnleier to Vienna, where ho negotiate tho first commercial treaty Ha then minister to the rear's court at t- Petersburg. - In- - tha-ee40 he negfUlaled treatlee With Russia, England end Italy, and headed the Bulgarian delegation to tha peaee conferenea at The Hague,. where he eerred on the rnmtntuea.at arbitration1 From 0f to he was Rnl- mttan minister for foreign affairs. tter which he went to London end aa. nUnUlsr. - Farl for the Balkan ar of and fourhf aa officer In Macedonia cavalry , against Turkey. The following year - Jl WM T,urn1 ta 1aria and, when war broke out In ,tha he follow- - --Gths French government to At Bordeaux het maSe a speech' in te- Foienee ft waxhTTha art of a speech that, the office at Sofia wanted made foreign at that time. ...hough, since leu. Its tha M on III 192i the"armiba'of EuTop AsiaTand'Africaombihlcd.'lvitKairthT'treasurc ofthe earth (our own excepted) in f their military chest, with a Bonaparte for a commander, could not by force' take a drink from the Ohio. or make a track i: ' on the Blue Ridge in a trial of a thousand years . V FOUSFIOUBES IN 12 11, ,! 2 lo , - tjj ll. tror - "'rJklJd th fit, -r- oewHedr-Hi- f M- -nh frmtned.Atany diillamAt wm-m w.rjaierha signed at Roma. But enthusiastically Roma, got talking about the allies. and government called the Rim home . Bor-deau- x. During the war'h fought In the cavalry or hie country on the- - Macedonian front" Later he wae put In charge of the Allied prisoners, and how that he's la London, every week there's a dinner given by hla former prisoners from the British la hla honor. It haa developed army Into a sort of a. club. So M. Standoff couldn't have been a - bad sort -of a jailor. - , The armistice brought the Among the Bulgars Into powef again, when Stamboliskl. a rebel, was taken out of prison to be made prime minister. M. Standoff beeeme minister fe- - fore Ign -- a rfjti s ar Bona7" and la' 111 he was secretary of tha Bulgar. Ian Peace delegation that negotiated the treaty of Neuilly. He was appoint . ad to London last November. M Standoffs wife is the Count a member of deGranaud, . French family. Bulgaria's attitude during the ear made tnings -- difficult foe tho Con n tees than foe her husband. But with the pro airy dement again in the toddle, all is wall . again, .Their eldest daughter. Mias Madejda Standoff, Is secretary to the 'prime minister, Stamboliskl, and their eon has been working In connection Cross at Varna, Bulgaria. M. standoff speaks German, French. Italian, Russian and English, as well aa Bulgarian. Hes at home in all countries the typical cltixen of the .world. But, back of hla cosmopolitanism. . thwe's a burning fever of patriotism fur hla. fiUberhuKi,- - and. lafindjngexprrralon In hla untiring effort to repair the damage "wrought by the Treaty of Neuilly to Bulgaria. Ie the matter of having an outlet to the sea going to repeat Its historic function of fomenting Edward Marshall iCopyrlghtrbrTh " Syndicate Inc.j pro-Alli- es nn.- e even-mor- N hla first great patriotic speech, now too little known, Abraham I An coin forecasted many. of the present, day .political and sotal conditions Tha theme of this speech wae the danger to American institutions that would come from within We, when mounting the stags of approach of danger? By whtt meins existence, found oiirsetves tho legal i snail wo fortify against It" (Hull we some transatlantic military inberitora of these fundamental tags.- We toiled-no- t iir the acquire-- ' j giant -- to step the ocean and rroffi us establishment of them; theyiala blow! Navsrl nsatw All tho armies of Europe 'Asia are a legacy bequeathed to us . by I once a hardy, brave, and patriotic, 'and Africa combined, with all the but now lamented and departed, race treasure of tha earth tour van exof our ancestors. Theirs was the task cepted) in their nilhtan chest.' wiih a Tend nobly they perforated m w law end order. not by farce take a drink frohi the possess tbemselvea and through-them- In the great Journal of things hap- - selves us. of this goodly land, and Ohio or make a track on the Blue Be luMssed Us valleys.- find a political edifice of liberty and equal At what point It the approach ol coin, we, the American our account running the peopleours dale of the rights; only to transmit these danger to be expected? 1 answer, if nineteenth century of the Christian tho fncr.d?7 profs fjo ., by tho foot It ever reaches us ft must spring up ra. We find ourselves In the peace- of an Invader, from tWisetOMinderayed by amongst us, it cannot come ful possession of the fairest portion tho lapse of time and untorn by usur- - abroad. If destruction be our lot wc of thsrarth as regards extent of ter- patlon to the latest renerattorr - that- must ourselves be Its author and jTIn- ritory. fertility of soil, fate shall permit the world to know isher. X a Helton of free men we of climate.- - We find ourselves under This task of gratitude to our fathers. must live through all time, or die by the government of a system of po- Justice to ourselves duty to posterity, suicide. litical Institutions- - conducing After giving some examples of the more and love for our specie In general, all essentially to the ends of the civil Imperatively require us faithfully-t- o evil effects upon the tnnocent as well and religious liberty than any of perform. .at the guilty- - which occurred In the which the history of former times shall we perform It? operation of mob violence, Mr. Lintells us. , At what point shall we expect the coln continued bless-expe- I know the American people the support o1 tho Declaration of and now that they have crumbled arojto much attached to fheir government) j Independence, and so to the rmpport away that tenSple must fall unless we, I know they would suffer much for) of the Conethution and law, let their, .descendant suppty their places It sdker I know they would ehddreJ every American pledge- hla liferhlg with other pillars, hewn from tho evils long and patiently beforW-the- yf property, and hla sacred honor let solid q carry .of - so be reason- - Paastonr would ever think of exchanging tt'every'raan remember that to violate has helped ua, but can do so no more. for another jet. qotwlthstanding all the law la to trample on tho blood It will In future be our enemy. Resthis, if the laws be continually disro et his father, sod to tear the char-- 1 son cold, calculating un Impassioned furnish all Lb.rpy'e- tarded and display'd, if their rights to ler of hls own and childrens liberty. r- -f be secure in their persona and prop, our future support snd Let reverence' for tbc law bo j rial erty are held by no better tenure than by every American mother tense. Let those materials be mo'.ned the caprice of a mob. the alienation of ( to the lisping babe that prattles on into general Intelligence, sound me ltt-Tailtheir affections fiom Jn her tapy-lc- t In schools r particular, a reverence snd is the natural consequence, and to, in seminaries and la colleges, let it fur the constitution and laws; sooner or later it mud come, I'be written in primers in spelung that we Improve to the last, Hist Here, then, is one point from which I books, and In Almanacs; let It be remained free to the last, that we rev- -danger must be expected. from the pulpit, proclaimed I ered hla name to the last, that during "The question recurs How shall preached In legislative halts and enforced In hla long sleep we permitted no bosMle tre fortify against it?' m ttiwet'Txto" his 'The answer Let every jet lit become the political religion of 'the ' reeling place, shall be that which.-tlover of - liberty.; nalinn: snd let the old and American, '.every trumpet, to hla every the rich and poor, the grave and Ihe our Washington swear by the bjood of the posterity Ihe proud fabric of Kevolu-iga- y let this of all sexes and tongues and col- 'Tpen I on never to violate In the least par-josacrifice uieasingly upon It freedom rest, a the fork of Its basis: licular the laws of the country, and aa truly a It ha been said pf y.4..w never to tolerate their violation andjaltars ThyJf,5fTt'S veewtutiofraty farhere) the only greater Inr'itufTort the rr?T by ohers. As the patriots of 7 did I were pillars Tf the K mple of liberty: of hell shall not prevail sralnt 1T ct - fr 1 ght 'ti J vaiMyc-and-- tI ; J 1 , - -- o and-salub-rity . the-yoos- g. Icsen-she-- -- tsst shali-awak- en well-wish- rs 1"- How.-then- ) : , - -- her good fortune and her heart's Monday, is her lucky day and t her lucky number. The chrysantho-mu! her flower. 7 Lincoln had on anguiahed hou( cunfirnvl traut he never lost. Tt Ur rarrt by there who knew them wlt1iAnn In brjef retarn to conrcloua new. ltwaa in the Tlvmg room of aToth that her "death taught him grace or pawion artd gave hlmthe trengtJtO pioamcabin untouchedMrs.by Saunders endure all the sorroai that hll . to beauty. Accordingto farm- - his lot after the backwoods boy nad the house oleven the ae!-become-th- e first cltiaea ofthe lanr err in those pioneer days were dom more than two bfg rooms and lcd Her Memory Chert (Copyr.ght, lkior Tao Wheeler and privnc the rarest a leepu.gioft, .left- - lamg j fears after Ip speaking of Ann Syndicate. Inc.) . pTFrUegfamily a cold, grey. February morn- - urlvin? member of the famoua Rut-- . fesendanti of m dltjnruljhed family, them, however, for this hour of part- - to a friend, he U reported to bavo the irl ancestor waa one of tha spiid ,ruly Ioved alone. What waa said between them one hundred Lincoln Indiana Home. and twelve ledge family, revive newinteret ' moment ha n!.V of ihe Declaration of Independence ing imnurul loe atory. no one ever knew: hot when Ann fell hitaung jra ago today Abraham Lincoln, ting 1 years the name Ruth- loved have Ann wan a very beautiful jrtrl with into a coma. Lincoln stumbled out of The aiater. Sarah Rutledfce fiainOn the ' aoujhwest ' elope of this destined to bo thq. 16th president of dera. or she ia hair of pale cold, and eyes Urge and the death chamber like a sou blind edre ever since. Facts abonr your name; Its hisAunt Saille, knoIU they 'made their camp," writes the United The Saunders family moved to Cal- and (deep blue. 8he wa alight, graceful and groping States, first saw the light loviny called by her friend tory; Its meaning; whence it Ida! If. Tar hell of the first Lincoln from Illinois In ltll, th bun ifornia Ann and her Two lover died, later eon.. lives with her James, of Rutledge above days aupple. J . towering , at derived; iu .significance; day. neighbor, home in Indiana in being Sarah . Rutledge - of weeks oysL!fe hi in- three townwth i)w.in wedding day great height Kivquoet gant what and waa It Heart throbs qulclteir io thi niem- - ) Barbara your lucky day the woodsman knows ae lucky jewel. dera. James the son with whom she ( Her altera remember her aa county, (California f !JfKvitnrMooriilnirTorTTcf: orr-oher"fiome. and another son, remakes B MTLDRED MARSHALL gfdu'p"brTiWory bat lTcerly rIicioua and unWhen Lincoln, then a lanky grocery . tree about fourteen feet apart, stand Who aittharTiaTocd the verge of madness. Dr. H, G. Saunders of Santa Barbara. Lincoln at of best gave their coun that 2 this came a, of to live at the Kut clerk ing to the cast and west, were chosen A week after the funeral a friend en- - m Aunt Sallie recently sent to the Old , and trimmed and hewen to serve as fry might hold "tho proud and unstai- - ledge- - 4ver-l-th- eOPHEMA. pioneer --vi Lincoln League a Rich is countered him wandering In the woods-Salelittle Sarah wae, C New Salem, corner posts. The vast, west and north Of all the names which jinois. fanciful, the tonti to It original the river Squrmuring to but a tot creeping about the floor, j Quilt, that . He aat for hours In brooding tours, a llk, hand-mad- e appeal to feminine taste Ophelia sides wore then enclosed in log cabin ld boarder eight-woua, remained thef Duf the with possess perhaps the fenderest mem fashion, Tighter timber being cut melancholy which h&, friends feared she pieced together since her cries. Though the name signifies then for a permanent building. These famuy for eeveral yearn and duringIn suicidal mania. Many ieth year, unaided by glasses. The , end the last car of that time, she clear- j 'serpent." only romance, youth, and sides were made tight with clay, tho times he 'was found in the lonely quilt is to be sold and the proceeds Mr. Lin- ly recall the tall, kindly tragic misfortune ie ever connected roof with sod and branches, of frees. burial grounds, seven- miles from the used towards the erection of od tendv and the gold-- j There was' no chimney, In the halfwit h It ril luge,. with one arm across her grave marks. en haired Ann the eldest of five f The Rutledge feerern with the old Etymologists declare that Ophelia faced Camp, but In front on the fifen his little pocket TestameQL reading . is an Invention ofShak south ride a big fire place waa mide. girls - speare. . Certainly her claim to im- - and here a fire was kepi burning night Although I was just a little girl, years later td practice law, he disap- - such a large part 4n the life of for- mortalltv Is based upon the touching and day. Whatever the weather, a a ! to be preserved Mr. Lincoln lived, with, .ua ind.L limea. JEveryone.knew that. tyred. Xincohu-ia hen Avnn who makes guard wolves. bears story-o- f the trard-courted my sister, said Aunt ttallie.y he was with Ann. ruling for hours ever as a public snrine where all . , the gentle maiden a striding contrast and wildcats. bv the grassy mound that covered her. A meric may pay tribute to Lincoln, when visited in her little California Vr loir the melancholy Dane of Hamlet. Most of the cooking was done in -hi there li the grave with ihe beloved. home. 1 distinctly recall bis presence. 5My heart was what reraemknown ae oven Dutch New &!em, revived will be to tha for the Without "rosemaryhe told his friend William Breen. .her He was just like one of ua .. ... brance." Ophelia, would still exist a. large iron pot standing on three he went hack to hie old meiftory of Lincoln whaf Mount Kventually time when of One handle the among three who.' are readers of long legs and furnished with an iron bearing himsetf simply, non is to the memory of Washington. father's butcher's Steel had worn off, cover and a handle. A big bed of coals ? a mn, nd c,l!;jeiu:.MonUceIto jo Jvfferyi xnd Tbe Shakespeare IH riuiy. iMirJc-bo. - Horfashioned one of fws if of WM raked in 'front of' Ihe-higrrtarn.a: a milage to Jackson. 'vOphelta' ut hi fil of ro.!an-holpile on and it was He steel. put the ' ' translationpossible of the old Ormllda, a logs which were alwayr burning in the home In our kitchen just asihemuch atroom northern appellative derived from the fireplace, and oa these the pot was and we all loved as in living placed. No better cooking utensil waa SHU have the steel. MV m There Is po other explana- ever devised for stew or roast than the ophlA I have other mementoes too, whioh i. tion of her existence unices she wae Dutch oven, but you must have a lied cherish groatly, 'one a lrutanla only a fireplace will ley an Invention of Shakespeare, of coals sucheas pur v - although a woman does appear in the give. . coffee pot of which he was particularly d 'A fond and in which my motner often camp Could be made old dory of Amleth. The curious colivable even under master in brewed coffee for him. I also have a that the incidence is, however, winter, except placed her in two. conditions w hen a. south .wind sb- -. dramatist should, .hav quilt made from pieces of his clothing and many other little things by which the land chiefly favoring serpentine blows the smoke into the shelter and ' when a drenching rain soaks everynames. t my memories of him are refreehed. SARAH RUTLEDGE SAUNDERS, Until recently I had an old grammar The Opal Is the gem assigned to thing, inside and out Then camp life SMen of Idneola's .Swwettmrt and which he and Ann used to study earn- usually genii and tenderhearted. influence becomes a test of courage and cheerOphlia. 'The unfortunatp was over the only . which it is said to exirt fur others. fulness. Before the winter Together Ihe lovers studied grammar Swilling Member- of Ratlcdgc estly together. often to had suffer Lincoln that talisman a very family will prove was "always kindly and gentle and spelling during' the long mint against He Family.', a 'gift evil If Ophlia wears It., It Witt bring1 this testr when not and evenings studying with evenings. The, totiUie grammar, Anh, was preserved Ued place among my sister, he Would stretch his long- from IeLtnrfjjn the, nations of the leg ,in one of the historical mu from a chair In front of Ihe fire- aBl world that is hers today. um of the country. Inscribed On and keep everyone in an uproar place, - BUt to noneof these 'do the inner-mo- with hi funny tales ihe fly leaf In his handwriting are the heartstrings of Amerlcans re- - Rerhap? the most beloved memen word. ' Ann Ruthledge Is learning spond as m the name end memory of the martyred Lincoln. "Honest Abe to fir the possession of lira Saunders grammar.' On occasion they traversed the I. a Wife daguerreotype; of Lincoln, M be Ie lovingly known, wooded slope- -. In the outskirts of the l m while In Z'.,;' w and taikeo of the future. Alw.y, tc her brother. SoCIrt KuJh' Ttr,e love of his fellows -girl fired him to bigger ambitions xhs-- during' the Civil war the M . "Tit,ra enemy to non Is said that ahe waa his greatest It and Robert through With each page aesed to t appointment by- Inspir-Viaraa United In afl pf hi wier labors Staten marnlficcht' htelory of the United' gtatea. the presidentstate of low. A little, old- Died et Twenty-Twand with the ushering in of each new ahal for the d year on the calendar of time, there fashioned jrM laframe encircles The Tlie Ruthledge were p 4 yee a ftse kM said to be aa unAP I west b yew tbst 's ail oe of hla people picture, liwhich family, but It fell to Ann beloved-o- f Prinf, in th I wsatyMtssttoWT this tnaboeri lik l nans of the don Of.. ut fuller approcintioM of 'the great-nea- n usually awnls. to be Ihe exception. Deeth ioshwa tor yesf. Issa Ke and immeasurable kindness of This was many yearn' after the premature and tragic overtook her and 1rrawketsUprs- lt - Ow Ann. Then-- it showed the man. Th record of ever, net and w of he when rhe was but 21 year of age. bow death ' ' deed of hie It significance targe or cherished thaold memories, and clung fiarah. the sister, la now in her of rettw ayy o&y wS5SeSclldte ostMds msmoen mnatl. become a matter of keen and to the different of the family ninety-firs- t year; and elill active and hr this tnstwset' Worn I Srdwsdc tbi. Warning! Unless you sgg the name fBayer on tablets, taring Intrfem to his countrymen. " of her whom he had ae loved. full of keen interest In life. Bhe plate- Ifvoehe1 and reorentelBy of the Of fateful day when that Joy the Love at His Smb- - .. malb thtly of Linewia nod Aon. Sarah which wae you arc not getting genuine. Aspirin prescribed by earthly of Ann' poaeed out orr Of the loir of courtship heer r hss often mother and the of her life Rutledge the of family, for tho mow. , Ann Rot. MoyopOi physicians for 21, years and proved safe by millions. - . gaunt man who loved her1 with th when soerted such an btfio-h- . speak.. Meg, of heart. hi wounderful blgneae . I. C. Whole after lif. loom Drmtg. of BayefT ablets of Accept- - only aa 7unbroken package aw ptps ties rsssf 1 In a rational moment, Ann aent-faoe parity, and PIsms Ml witteet asst or ebllsstMe Ie With Liocoiu tiring tn their heme. end-w- a jaty near-- . directions contains which for Coidl, Hod tneriSkhls the 'WheiT'stTe knew Aspifin, proper Bttrf abn knd was Vssmmsm'Ut. It - riionldtfqrTtS be drawn the eldest ?arhtw- alee The knewtedge that every impor. together A a student by Unt tktsMr in Lincotn'e life la om nature, awWKf nPd natd to bo eop-ort- the animal on tn frantic premonition Lincoln bad of what awaited him a: h Journey s to un petoated la the oatstewee ef tide over kass The de-at- ra m s? new-war- well-to-d- n Whats in a Name? ifihoe 'rlng. r. j -- fkfLnr . 1 lo, sir ng con-sei- ' sweet-tempere- d, 1 ut 1 aL , of against-prowltn- g we . ills' t'l tht .da-'ri- rn h half-face- . - st CAN DETOURED ca 7., i. FrooProof To Yon Snrfauiws 1 -- ' o. long-live- hrt -1 w is Genuine ft ifwlr.p WmU M ot Ndik imtaj,.' t a- - tflhl I |