The Abraham Lincoln Myth. By Bocardo Bramantip (Oliver Prince Buel). New York: The Mascot Publishing Co., 1894. A reprint from The Catholic World of November and December, 1893, intended as a satire upon the Higher Criticism. Apparently suggested by the famous essay "Historical Doubts Concerning the Existence of Napoleon Bonaparte."
The Mythifying Theory; or, Abraham Lincoln a Myth. By D. B. Turney. Metropolis, Ill. B. O. Jones, Book and Job Printer, 1872. Photostat from copy in Library of Congress, Washington, D. C.
XI. Lincoln and Temperance.
Lincoln's First Address Delivered in Springfield, February 22, 1842. The Union Signal.
A Discourse on the Bottle: Its Evils and Its Remedy. By Rev. James Smith. Sermon delivered in the First Presbyterian Church, Springfield, January 23, 1853. Reprinted 1892. A surprisingly straightforward plea for legislative prohibition, printed at the request of a committee who heard it, among them being Abraham Lincoln.
Lincoln a Temperance Man. By Howard H. Russell. The Interior, February 11, 1909.
The Lincoln Legion. By Howard H. Russell, Westerville, Ohio, 1913.
Lincoln and Temperance. By Rev. Thomas D. Logan. The Advance, February 11, 1909.
XII. Lincoln and Slavery