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Compiler of" Moody's Anecdotes; "Moody's Child Stories; Edison and His
Inventions;" Entertaining Anecdotes; Mistakes of Ingersoll;"

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"Ingersoll's Answers; etc., etc.

CHICAGO:

RHODES & MCCLURE, PUBLISHERS.

1879.
H.

B

L736m

ELAND STANFORD

PARY

415463

Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1879, by

J. B. MCCLURE & R. S. RHODES,

In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington, D. C.

All Rights Reserved.

Electrotyped and Printed by

OTTAWAY & COMPANY.

DONOHUE & HENNEBERRY,
Binders.

EFACE

SAID Mr. Lincoln, to Dr. Gulliver, on a certain occasion when the versatile Doctor had highly complimented the then coming President concerning one of his speeches:

"I should very much like to know what it was in my speech which you thought so remarkable, and which interested my friend, the Professor (of Yale College), so much?"

"The clearness," answered Dr. G., " of your statements, the unanswerable style of your reasoning, and especially your illustrations, which were romance, and pathos, and fun, and logic, all welded together."

The great Lincoln thanked the clerical celebrity, and said: “That reminds me of a story," and then proceeded to tell how the Yale Professor had taken notes on his New Haven speech, and had lectured his class, and had followed him to Meriden for further " notes," etc.

Thus is demonstrated the superior value that attaches to Mr. Lincoln's illustrations," which, as all the world knows, were made of pointed, pungent, pithy and practical stories, drawn from an inexhaustible source, and always available on every possible occasion. Perhaps there never lived a greater story-teller than Abraham Lincoln, and one who told them always with such magic effect. With him, the "appropriate story was a power, and his remarkable faculty in telling them was an essential factor in his greatness.

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In this volume the compiler has aimed to present, in a conveniently classified form, the Anecdotes and Stories of this wonderful man, as narrated by him to the lowly and the great, in peace and war, at the fireside and bar, in the wilderness and White-house, with that zest and potency which made Mr. Lincoln such a remarkable man. It is our sincere desire that in this form the book may be of real interest and prove a further means of usefulness to every reader.

Our indebtedness is specially acknowledged for aid found in F. B. Carpenter's "Six Months in the White-house;" J. G. Holland's "Life of Lincoln;" the Press, and to the many friends who have contributed. J. B. McCLURE.

CHICAGO, ILL., July 4, 1879.

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