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'll take the risk of his coming out all right." Then, slamming his great hand upon the Secretary's desk, he said, "Schim-mel-fen-nig must be appointed." And he was, there and then. A REALLY GREAT GENERAL. "Do you know General A--?" queried the President one day to a friend who had "dropped in" at the White House. "Certainly; but you are not wasting any time thinking about him, are you?" was the rejoinder. "You wrong him," responded the President, "he is a really great man, a philosopher." "How do you make that out? He isn't worth the powder and ball necessary to kill him so I have heard military men say," the friend remarked. "He is a mighty thinker," the President returned, "because he has mastered that ancient and wise admonition, 'Know thyself;' he has formed an intimate acquaintance with himself, knows as well for what he is fitted and unfitted as any man living. Without doubt he is a remarkable man. This War has not produced another like him." "How is it you are so highly pleased with General A---- all at once?" "For the reason," replied Mr. Lincoln, with a merry twinkle of the eye, "greatly to my relief, and to the interests of the country, he has resigned. The country should express its gratitude in some substantial way." "SHRUNK UP NORTH." There was no member of the Cabinet from the South when Attorney-General Bates handed in his resignation, and President Lincoln had a great deal of trouble in making a selection. Finally Titian F. Coffey consented to fill the vacant place for a time, and did so until the appointment of Mr. Speed. In conversation with Mr. Coffey the President quaintly remarked: "My Cabinet has shrunk up North, and I must find a Southern man. I suppose if the twelve Apostles were to be chosen nowadays, the shrieks of locality would have to be heeded." LINCOLN ADOPTED THE SUGGESTION. It is not generally known that President Lincoln adopted a suggestion made by Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase in regard to the Emancipation Proclamation, and incorporated it in that famous document. After the President had read it to the members of the Cabinet he asked if he had omitted anything which should be added or inserted to strengthen it. It will be remembered that the closing paragraph of the Proclamation reads in this way: "And upon this act, sincerely believed to be an act of justice warranted by the Constitution, I invoke the considerate
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