Aegetable Pr eparafionforAs siMating thcFoodandBcgula linr the Stomachs andBowels of Promotes Digcstion.Ch?erfuI ness and Rest. Con tains neither 0pium3forphine nor Mineral Kot "Narcotic. BoMtUSmlm- ftfptrmiitt - . CfaifUd Sugar norm A perfect Remedy forConstipa Tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature ot NEW YORK. JUS .BKItJB- EXACT C09y OP WRAPPER. incoln's Lincoln But this practice of preaching and political speaking Into which Abe had fallen at length became a great nui sance to his father. It distracted every body, and sadly Interfered with the jwork. If Abe had confined his -discourses to Sunday preaching, while the bid folks were away, it would not have teen so objectionable. But he knew his power, liked to please everybody, and would be sure to set up as an orator wherever he found the greatest num ber of people together. When it was announced that Abe had taken the "stump" in the harvest field there was an eud of work. The hands flocked around him and listened to his curious speeches witn infinite delight. "The sight of such a thing amused all," Bays Mrs. Lincoln, though she admits that her husband was compelled to break it up with the strong hand, and poor Abe was many times dragged from the platform and hustled off to his work In no gentle manner. Abe worked occasionally with his fa ther in the shop, but he did it reluctant ly. The rough work turned out at that shop was far beneath his ambition, and he had made up his mind to lead a life as wholly unlike his father's as he could possibly make it He, therefore refused to be u carpenter. Cut he could not afford to be idle, and as soon as he was able to earn wages he was hired out among the neighbors. He worked for many of them a few months at a time and seemed perfectly willing to transfer his services wherever they were wanted, so that his father had no excuse for persecuting him with en treaties about learning to make tables and cupboards. "Abe LinkemV Wit Abe was now becoming a man and was in fact already taller than any man in the neighborhood. He was a Universal favorite, and bis wit and hu mor made him heartily welcome at ev ery cabin between the two Pigeon creeks. Any family was glad when "Abe Linkern was hired to work with them, for he did his work well and made them all merry while he was about It. The women were especially pleased, for Abe was not above doing any kind of chores for them. He was always ready to make a fire, carry wa ter or nurse a baby. But what manner of people were these among whom he passed the most critical part of his life? We must know them if we de sire to know him. There lived in the neighborhood of G entry ville a Mrs. Elizabeth Craw ford, wife to the Joslah with the sour temper and the blue nose. Abe was very fond of her and inclined to let himself out in her company. We have from her a great mass of valuable and sometimes extremely amusing . infor mation. Among it is : the following graphic; although rude, account of the Pigeon Creek people In general: "We thought it nothing to go eight or ten miles to .meeting. The old ladies did not stop-Xor the want of a shawl or clQatr.-rtdjjif Creg.or tiro 11 ildren. bull ForlnfY The Kino You Have Always Bought In Use For Over Thirty Years IS) 1U Boyhood WARD HILL LAMON, His Frlead, Fattaer txnd Bodytfaard Birthplace tffe -winter time, but they would put on their husbands' old overcoats, wrap up their little ones, take one or two of them up on their beasts, and their hus bands would walk. They would go to church and stay in the neighborhood until the next day and then go home. The old men would start out of their fields from their work or out of the woods from hunting, with their guns on their shoulders, and go to church. "Some of them dressed in deerskin pants and moccasins, bunting shirts, with a rope or leather strap around them. They would come in laughing, shake hands all around, sit down and talk about the game they had killed i or some other work they had done and smoke their pipes together with the old I ladies. If in warm weather, they would : kindle up a little fire out in the meeting i ' house yard to light their pipes. If in winter time, they would hold church in some of the neighbors' houses. "At such times they were always treated with the utmost kindness. A bottle of whisky, a pitcher of water, sugar and glass were set out, or a bas ket of apples or turnips or some pies and cakes. Apples were scarce, them times. Sometimes potatoes were used as a treat. I must tell you that the first treat I ever received in old Mr. Lin kern's house, that was our president's! father's house, was a plate of potatoes washed and . pared very nicely and handed round. It was something new to me, for I never had seen a raw po tato eaten before. I looked to see how they made use of them. They took off a potato and ate them like apples. "Thus they spent the time till time for preaching to commence; then they would all take their seats, the preach er would take his stand, draw his coat, open his shirt collar, commence service by singing and prayer; take his text and preach till the sweat would roll off in great drops.- Shaking hands and singing then ended the service. The people seemed to enjoy religion more in them days than they do now. They were glad to see each other and enjoy ed themselves better "than they do now." Carried-Their : Shoes. Society about Gentryville was little different from that of any other back woods settlement of the same day. The houses were scattered far apart, but the inhabitants would travel long dis tances to a log rolling, a house raising, a wedding or anything else that might be turned into a fast and furious frolic. On such occasions the young women carried their shoes in their hands and only put them on when about to join the company. The ladles drank whisky toddy, while the men took It straight, and both sexes ' danced the livelong night barefooted n puncheon floors. The fair sex wore "cornfield bonnets, scoop shaped, flaring In front and long, though narrow, behind." Shoes .were the" mods when entering the bail room, hot it -was "not at all fashionable to scuff them oat by .walking or danc ing to them, . rfouc yards of Kneer- Bears the Jr. Signatur mi tm Mmn rnvmnon. mtm rbr any "worn" an. The waist was snort and terminated just under the arms, while the skirt was long and narrow. "Crimps and puckering-frills! It had none. . The coats of the men were home made; the materials jeans or. linsey i.vroolsey. The waists were short, like ; the frocks of the women, and the long ! "claw hammer" tail was split np to the waist. " " - The Pigeon Creek farmer "tickled two acres of ground in a day with his old shovel plow and got but half a crop He cut one acre with his' sickle. With his flail .and horse tramping he thrashed out fifteen bushels of wheat He "fanned" and "cleaned with a sheet" The minds of these people were filled with superstitfons, which most persons Imagine to be at least as antiquated as witch burning. They firmly believed in witches and all kind of witch doings. They sent for wizards to cure sick cat tle. There, were "faith doctors" who cured diseases by performing mysteri ous ceremonies and muttering cabalis tic words. If a bird alighted in a win dow, one of the family would speedily die. If a horse breathed on a child, the child would have the whooping cough. Everything must be done at certain times and seasons, else it would be attended with bad luck. They must cut trees for rails in the early part of the day and in "the light of the moon." They must make fence in "the light of the moon, otherwise the fence would sink. A Noble Stepmother. ' Such 'were the people among whom Abe grew to manhood. With their sons and daughters he went to srJhool. Upon their farms he earned his bread by daily toiL From their conversation he formed his earliest opinions of men and things , the world over. Many of their peculiarities 1 became his, and many of their thoughts and feelings concerning a multitude of subjects were assimilated - with his own and helped to create that unique character which, in the eyes of a great host of the American people, was only less curi ous and amusing than it was noble and august His most intimate companions were of course for a long time the members of his own family. The reader already knows something of Thomas Lincoln and that pre-eminently good woman, Sally Bush. The latter, we know, wash ed, clothed, loved and encouraged Abe in well doing from the moment he fell in her way. How much he owed to her goodness and affection he was himself never able to estimate. That it was a great debt fondly acknowledged . and cheerfully repaid as far as in him lay, there can be no doubt. : His own sister, the child of Nancy Hanks, was warmly attached to him. Her face somewhat resembled his. In repose it had the gravity which they both, perhaps, inherited from their mother, but it was capable of being lighted almost into beauty by one of Abe's ridiculous' stories or rapturous sallies of humor. She was a modest, plain, industrious girl and is kindly re membered by all who knew her. She was married to Aaron Grigsby at eight een and a year after died. Like Abe, she occasionally worked out at the houses of the neighbors, and at one time was employed in Mrs. Crawford's kitchen, while her brother was a laborer on the same farm. She lies burled, not with her mother, but in the yard of the old Pigeon Creek meeting house. It is especially pleasing to read the encomiums lavished upon her memory by the Grigsbys, for be tween the Grigsbys on one side and Abe and his stepbrother on the other there once subsisted a fierce feud. . As we have already learned from Dennis Hanks the two families the Johnstons and the Lincolns "got along finely together." The affectionate rela tions between Abe and his two stepsis- DENNIS HANKS. ters were the subject of common re mark throughout the neighborhood. One of them married Dennis Hanks and the other Levi Hall, or, as he is better known, Squire Hall, a cousin of Abe. Both these women have given an account of him which shows that the ties between them were of the stron gest and tenderest kind. But what is most remarkable in their statements is that they never opened their lips with out telling how worthy of everybody's love their mother was and how Abe re vered her as much as they did. They were interesting girls and became ex emplary women. John D. Johnston, the only son ot Mrs. Lincoln, was not the best boy, and did not grow to be the best man, in all the Pigeon Creek . region. He had no positive' vice except idleness and no special virtue but good temper. Mr. Lincoln all through John's life had much trouble to keep him on his legs and succeeded indifferently In an his attempts As youths toe Intimacy be tween John and Abe was very close, and Ahe nadertook his second voyage to-Mew; Orleans onlyoa eeoOitfcB'QMrt : Jolly Dennis -Hanks. . But the most constant of his eompan .ions was his jolly cousin, Dennis Hanks. Of all the contributors to Mr. Herndon's store of information, good, bad and Indifferent concerning this pe riod of Mr. Lincoln's life Dennis is tha most nmnsintr Instnnnttne nnrl nmllAo He would have it distinctly understood4 that the well of his memory is the only proper ; source whence anything like truth may be drawn. He has covered countless sheets of paper devoted to in discriminate laudations of Abe and all his kindred. " When Thomas and Betsy Sparrow died in the fall of 1818, Dennis was taken from the "little half faced camp" and became one of the Lincoln family. Until Thomas Lincoln's second : mar riage Dennis, Abe and Sarah were all three poor, ragged and miserable to gether. After that Dennis got along better, as well as the rest He was a lively, volatile, sympathetic fellow, and Abe liked him well from the beginning. They fished, hunted and worked in company; loafed at the grocery, where Dennis got drunk and Abe told stories, talked politics with Colonel Jones, swapped jokes with Baldwin, - the blacksmith, and faithfully attended the sittings of the nearest justice of the peace, where both had opportunities to correct and annotate the law they thought they had learned from the "Statutes of Indiana." Dennis was kind, genial, lazy, brim ming over with humor and full of amusing anecdotes. He reveled in song, from the vulgarest ballad to the loftiest hymn of devotion, from "The turbaned Turk that scorns the world" to the holiest lines of Dr. Watts'. These qualities marked him wherever he went, and in excessive good nature and in the ease with which he passed from the extreme of rigor to the extreme of laxity he was distinguished above the others of his name. There was one Hanks, however, who was not like Dennis ; or , any other Hanks we know anything about. This was "old John," as he is familiarly call ed in Illinois, a sober, honest truthful man, with none of the wit and none of the questionable accomplishments of Dennis. He was the son of Joseph, the carpenter with whom Thomas Lincoln learned the trade. He went to Indiana to live with the Lincolns when Abe was fourteen years of age and remain ed there four years. He then returned to Kentucky and subsequently went to Illinois, where he was speedily joined by the old friends he had left in In diana. The Rail Splitter. When Abe separated from the family and went in search of individual, for tune it was in company with "old John." Together they split the . rails that did so much to make Abe presi dent and "old John" set the ball in motion by carrying a part of them into the Decatur convention on his own broad shoulders. John had no educa tion' whatever except that of the mus cles and v the heart He could neither read nor write, but bis character was pure and respectable, and Lincoln es teemed him as a man and loved him as a friend and relative's In 1825 Abraham was employed by James Taylor, who lived at the mouth of Anderson's creek. He was paid $6 a month and remained for nine months. His principal business was the man agement of a ferryboat which Mr. Tay lor had .plying across the Ohio, as well as Anderson's creek. But in addition to this he was required to do all sorts of farm work and even to perform some menial services about the house. He was hostler, plowman, ferryman, out of doors, and man of all work within doors. He ground corn with a hand mill or "grated" it when too young to be ground; rose early, built fires, put on the water in the kitchen, "fixed around generally" and had things pre pared for cooking before the mistress of the house was stirring. He slept upstairs with young Green Taylor, who says that he usually read till near midnight notwithstanding the necessity for being out of his bed before day. Green was somewhat dis posed to ill iise the poor hired boy and once struck him with an ear of hard corn and cut a deep gash over his eye. He makes no comment upon this gen erous act except that "Abe got mad," but did not thrash him. Abe was a hand much in demand in "hog killing time." He butchered not only for Mr. Taylor, but for John Woods, John Duthan, Stephen McDan iels and others. At this he earned 31 cents a day, as it was considered rough work. For a long time there was only one person in the neighborhood for whom Abe felt a decided dislike, and that was Josiah Crawford, who had made him pull fodder to pay for the Weems "Washington-" On that score he was hurt and mad and often declared he would have revenge. But being a poor boy, a circumstance of which Crawford had already taken shameful advantage to extort three days' labor, he was glad to get work any place and frequently hired to his old adversary. Abe's first business in his employ was daubing his cabin, which was built of logs, unhewed and with the bark on. In the loft of this house, thus finished by his own hands, he slept for many weeks at a time. Hfc spent his evenings as he did at home, writing oh 'wooden shovels or . boards with "a coal or keel from the branch." This family was rich in the possession of several books, which Abe read through time and again, according to his usual custom. Twenty-five Cents a Day. I One of them was the "Kentucky Pre ceptor, from which Mrs. Crawford- in sists that he learned Ids chooi ora tions, speeches and ' pieces to write. She- tells us also that "Abo was ft sensi tive lad. "never coming where he was not wanted,- that he always lifted his hat arkl tKrwed when im jomQ titew. rjearanee, tfna that ne was tender and kind, like his sister, who was at the same time her maid of all work. His pay was 25 cents a day, "and when he. missed time he would not charge for It" This latter remark of good Mrs. Crawford reveals the fact that her hus band was in the habit of docking Atw ou hi3 miSOTle wages whenever he -ned to lose a few minutes from ,y work. ' ' Tn time came, however, when Abe rf his revenge for all this petty brutal Ly. Crawford was as ugiy us he was surly. , His nose was a .monstrosity, loug and crooked, with a huge, mis shapen stub at the, end, surmounted by a host of pimples, and the whole as blue as the usual state of Mr. Craw ford's spirits. Upon this member Abe leveled his attack in rhyme, song and chronicle, and, though he could not re duce the nose, he gave It a fame as wide as to the Wabash and the Ohio. It is not improbable that he learned the art of making the doggerel rhymes in which he celebrated Crawford's nose from the study of Crawford's own "Kentucky Preceptor." At all events his sallies upon this single topic achiev ed him great reputation as a poet and a wit and caused Crawford intolerable anguish. It is likely that Abe was reconciled to his situation in this family by the "BIiTJE nose" cbawfokd and house abb - IiINCOIiN HELPED TO BUILD. presence of his sister and the opportu nity it gave him of being in the com pany of Mrs. Crawford, for whom he had a genuine attachment for 'she was nothing that her husband was and ev erything that he was not According to her ; account he split rails, plowed, thrashed and did whatever else he was ordered to do, but she distinctly affirms that "Abe was no hand to pitch into work like killing snakes." He went about it calmly and generally took the opportunity to throw Crawford down two or three times before they went to the field. It is fair to presume that when Abe managed to Inveigle his disagreeable employer into a tussle he hoisted him high and threw Mm hard, for he felt that he had no reason to be careful of his bones. After meals Abe hung about, lingered long to gossip and joke with the women; and these pleasant stolen conferences were generally bro ken up with the exclamation, "Well, this won't buy the child a coat!" and the long legged hired boy would stride away to join his master. (To be Continued.) Ancient Delhi. The city of Delhi, India, and what was formerly that city, was somewhat hoary with antiquity at the time America was discov ered, its history, dating back to a period about as much before, as the discovery of America dated after the Christian era. This is a statement comprised in a few words, but overpowering in its impressiveness, as one walks among the ruins of Old Delhi, and reflects upon its former grandeur and the generations, long cen turies ago turned to dust, that have trodden these byways for a period reaching back 3,0p0 years, seeing the same planets, doubt less having much the same ambi tions, and playing tVeir little parts with the same exaggerated views of their own importance, as we, who follow them 30 centuries later. From "Ancient Delhi," by W. D. Faris, in Four-Track News. The Lllo Icsnrnctf Muddle has 8trteri i,- i- ;i i thinking. The wond''fn mich-h- ihat has met BallnnlV ' un.i Kvri in its crusaae on Coutfhn. IofiMnza. Bron chitis aud all Pulmonary troubles tmS started tne public to thinking ot i wonderful preparation. Tley are all using it. Join the Drrcessinn and din with sickness. ' Price 2on, 50c and $100. Sold by Graham & Wort ham ' ' uSSIFltD AUVtKIISlMEIIIS CLAsurtsn advxrtisemxnts : Fifteen words or less, 25 cts for three s M-cessive insertions, or 50 rts 'per ; onth; for all np to and including ten rtrtitional wor-ls. cent a word for nrh ;tiwrtion. s .. ... , .-. . For all advertisements over 25 worrfe, l ot per word for the first insertion, and H ct per word for each additional inner- f'on. Nothing inserted for less than 25 onta. ; ' Lodge, society and church notices, her than strictly news matter, will be ""reed for. FOR SALE " " -MISCELLANEOUS LOT OF ' WIRE . oahle new and second hand, anv length, pi,B of anv description and eize. ma ' ohmery to suit anvbodv, write for n prices on anything; metal, scrap iron nd all kinds of junk and machinery bought and sold. Address: 37-44 M. Brde & Son. Portland, Or. DTSPARENE SPRAY FOR FRUIT trees and shrubbery. See Montgomery . "cwiuu. xor raie ny rnatenpr & Johnson.: 81-8f BALED HAY FOR SALE INQUIRE P. O. box 844 or Ind. 'phone 429. CorvaUis. Oregon. - - 23 tf. HOMES FOR SALE. HOMES NOW COMPLETED, OR ; will build them to order in CorvaUis. Or., and sell same for cash or install ments. Address First National Bunk, Corvallio, Or 3tf WILL ' FURNISH LOTS AND BUILD houses t order in Newport, Lincoln Co., Oregon, asd sell same for cash or installments Address M.. S. Wood cock, CorvaUis, Or. 34tf HELP WANTED. A MIDDLE AGED LADY TO DO house work on a farm near Corvallip, Ore., and sspist in caring for three children. She can arrange if she de sires to assist in caring for chickens and other duties in farm work com- ' monly done by ladies; If the lady has a husband, son, or ether male 1 . x i ; - . work, he can have work at least part of the time. In answering send refer ences. Address: P. O. Box 844, 87tf CorvaUis, Oregon. ATTORNEYS J. F. YATES, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office np stairs in Zierolf Building Only set of abstracts in Benton County K. R. BRYSON ATTORNEY AT LAW. vrart m rosi umce uuiiaing, uoivai , lis, Oregon. WANTED WAiTTE D 500 SUBSCRIBERS TO THE Gazette and Weekly Oregonian at 2.55peryear. BANKING. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ' CorvaUis, Oregon, transacts a general ' conservative banking business. Loans money on approved . security. Drafts ' bought and Fold and money transferred to the principal cities of the United Rtotes, Europe nnd foreign countries. Veterinary Surgeon DR. E. E. JACKSON. V. WINEUAR A. Snow lirery barn. Give him a call. Phones, Ind., 328; Residence, 389 or Bell phone. 12tf PHYSICIANS 8. A. OATHEY, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon. Rooms 14, Bank Build ing. Office Honrs : 10 to 12 a. m , 2 to t p. m. Residence: cor. 5th and Ad ams 8ts. Telephone at office and ree nrt. f!orvn,,?B. Orwnn MARBLE SHOP. MARBLE AND GRANITE MONU meBts ; curbing made to order ; clean ing and reparing done neatly: save agent's commission. Snap North Main 8t-,Frank Vanhoosen, Prop. o2tt House Decorating. FOR PAINTING AND PAPERING SEE W. E. Paul, Ind. 488 Htf ot!ce to Creditors. Notice is here by given that the undersigned hag been duly appointed by the County Court of the State of Oregvn, for Benton County, administrator of the estate of Henry Holroyd, deceased. All persons having claims against said estite are hereby required to present the same it the office of J. P. Yntes. properly verified is by law required, at Cor vallis. Oregon, within six months from the date hereof. Dated this 13th day of February. 1906. W. S. McFadden, . Administrator jol the Estate ot Henry Hoi- -royd, deceased. Do You Love Your baby? ' You wonder why' be cries. Buy a bottle of White's ? Cream Vermifuge and he will .never cry. Most babies have worm, and the mother don't knw 5t. White's Cream Vermi fuge rids the child of worms and cleans out its system in a pleasant way. Every mother should keep a bottle, of" this medicine in the hons. With it fear need ever enter her mind. ; Price 25c. Sold by Graham & Wortham. ' Take.THE Gazette for all the-