<h3>BOWING TO THE BOY OF BATTLES.</h3>
<p>Congressman W. D. Kelley wished to procure the admittance of a youth
into the Naval School. Though a lad he had "shown the mettle of
a man" on two serious occasions, while belonging to the gunboat
<i>Ottawa</i>. The President has the right to send three candidates
to the school yearly, who have served a year in the naval service.
Thrilled by the recital of the youth's heroic conduct, the President
wrote to the secretary of the navy to have the boy put on the list of
his appointees. But the subject was found short of the age required.
He would not be fourteen until September of that year, and it was but
July.</p>
<p>Lincoln had the hero appear before him. He admired him frankly and
altered the order so as to suit the later date. He bade the boy go
home and have "a good time" during the two months, as about the
last holiday he would get. The President had reconsidered his first
impression that the "disturbance" was but "an artificial excitement."</p>
<p>"And that's the boy who did so gallantly in those two great battles!"
he mused; "why, I feel that I should bow to him, and not he to
me."--(Authority: Congressman W. D. Kelley; the person was Willie
Bladen, U. S. N.)
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