jVegefable Preparalionfor As similating ttieFoodandBeguIa !tng the Stomachs andBowels of Promotes DigestioaCheerful- ness and RestContains neither Cium,Morphine nor Mineral OT NAHC OTIC . fltrnpius Seal' Jlx.Sauut Sred Stfftemtute - Hirm-Srrd-Ctmifiod Sagar hinleyrmenriaror. Apeifecl Remedy forConslipa Tion , Sour Stomach.Diarrhoca TA'orms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss of Sleep. Fac Simile Signature of NEW' YORK. rt ft m Ini For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Bought EincolBi?sBoyhood I Always I Bears the , 1 . fVivV 11 Signature Am m if " Lincoln's Birthplace His Friend. Partner . n.nd Bodyguard ' EAACT COPy OF WRAPPER. Ifl H 1111' EiVi if Tltm OERTMMI IOHMIIT. MM TOHK OITT. LTS ii - J .1.., I I 'l J in I.. . I For Thirty Years 1 lilt To 8J: GAIN PER ACRE. That's what a Spreader will do if used as it should be. One Tie Salemite Insists thnr TW Lincoln told this latter story. ("with tte literary men of Salem. xjtraiura ssuasespejire ana isurns, Mr. Kelso was likewise very' fond of fish ing and could catch his game when no other man could get a bite. Mr. Lincoln hated fishing with all his heart But It Is the testimony of the countryside from Petersburg to Island Grove that Kelso drew Lincoln after him by his talk; that they became exceedingly in timate; that they loitered away whole days together along the banks of the quiet streams; that Lincoln learned to love inordinately our "divine William" and "Scotia's Bard," whom his friend mouthed in his cups or expounded more soberly in the intervals of fixing bait and dropping line. Finally he and Kelso boarded at the same place, and, with another mer- Mr. Lincoln had a hand In originating i. 7 a m? -' or rastes conSen- lt The catalogue of literature in whloh i ouu wlts BS Keen as eiso's, tney he particularly delighted at New Salem Is completed by the statement of Mr. Rutledge that he took great pleasure In "Jack Downing's Letters." Mr. Lincoln still relished a popular song .with a broad point or a palpable moral In it as much as he had ever en- 1rVvl the vrwa I pfFnrta nf nmnio TTonta and his rollicking compeers of the Gen-! i T " , V &pnngDel(l " ly from New Salem and apparently from the recollection of men. Of Offutt not a word was ever heard. To use the expressive language of Mr. Lincoln ABRAHAM LINCOLN AS A SUBVETOR. embezzlements" femhulllsh tnererorene lis nrmiy "convinced" that were always found together, battling and arguing. Bill Green ventures the opinion that Lincoln's incessant read ing of Shakespeare and Burns had much to do in giving to his mind the skeptical tendency so fully developed by the labors of his pen In 1834-35 and in social conversations during many jm uavw loans or mafr. tn nmaH vn. - - t . - - . , i. . K , . -" i iJiam acres 01 corn or wneat, or nave a 25 acre meadow wa wi.l tl! mn hn on -on .i i . ., rrr. u nn q m . . ' '""a ura iw ui fuur crop mis year t per acre or more than enough to pay for a spreader. We issue; a 48-paee book en,,e! Prac."cal Expenenca With Barnyard Manures." which.explaina the whole situation. . Z . eory. " is an actual fact, backed up by actual experiments extending over period of 18 years. To nve yon an idea of what this book imn. . ... ' . . mitinih u f i , pen- nd S 1. .VT- " IT ,uaaB manure were spread, per acre by the old method, This Book will be sent free to an rone writimr nm it l wnwli ciaa nn M i ' . fl'J?,, L'i? ' d. ""f B??d'. il. T9U. any barm. Write ns now and let us mail The Smifii IrsiiiK I Jiirn Endless Apron Manure Spreader try ville grocery. He even continued his own unhappy attempts, although with as little success as before and xjuite, as much to the amusement of his friends. To the choice collection of .miscella neous ballads acquired in. Indiana he now added several new favorites; like Old Sukey Blue Skin," and some selec tions from the "Missouri Harmony," with variations by. himself. He was also singularly fond of an Irish song 'which tells how. St. Patrick came to be born on the 17th.day of March." Shy of the Ladies. 'You ask me," says Mr. Ellis, "if I remember the first time I saw Mr. Lin coln. Yes, I do. I was out collecting back tax for General James" D. Henry. I went from the tavern down'to- Jaooh Bales', old mill, and then I first saw Mr: I Lincoln. He was sitting on c saw log talking to Jack and. Kial , Armstrong and a man by the name of Hohammer. I shook hands with the Armstrongs and Hohammer and was conversing with, them, a few minutes, when we were Joined by my old friend and former townsman, George Warburton; rettv tight, as usual, and he soon asked me himself, he literally "petered out Mr. Lincoln was often annoyed by company. His quarters at the tavern Spread all kinds of toms andoommercial fertiliior rry...i'. condition. Sfrods as much in m day a MS men can b hand. Spreads the largest load in 2 to 4 minutes. Makes the same amount of manure go tkrtt timet as fur and produce tetter results; makes all manure fine and immediately avail ab!e for plant life. rton-Bunchable Raka hrmi ... , . ..vftrm., uu.ua all hard chunks in enntnnt wlK huu. thoroughly pulverized. Endlesa Aoron is on, ontinnT. n. is - . ... biiiwiii mui apiuu; inerc.Tore annoys ready to load. You Balanced I on front and rear axles. The team is " o idu bs ( can worK. front and rear aeries are me same tenrt and wheels track; beater shaft runs in ball and socket bearings therefore do friction. Beater is 23 inches in di ameter, seat turns aver when loading. Machine turns in its own length. Simplicity. There are only two levers on our m a-ine" n8 which raises the hood, locks it .- j ."a uufiura ixi gear at me same time. It can then be thrown in and out of gear without lowering the hood. One lever -which changes E v w uun, maaing it so simple back into position after xarh lmrf a U by hand: it it atrreat nu Strentftk and Durfthilifv s. . J . . v ' . . musi luvuiiuiiiiuuianiDg consiaered tn a manure " cautji. j ae ureas urestern Has a good, strong durable wheel. Extra, stronr Books nnA rtm heavy steel tires. Strong, well braced box with heavy oak sill. Oaktommu kL-k Jnnki.t.... malleable castings, gears andstrociett all keyed "- wmnzea nooa. every part is made extra louaraiess oi col. It is made for tke man inn aest, moat t four sues. 3S. so, 70 and too bushel car acity. Immm4aa GL.tJ - . . . .7 I . u- ore ax, wear out or There la no Gearind aVtni to break and cause trouble, , it is always up out of the way of obstructions as it does not extend below axle. Spreads evenly from start to finish and cleans out perfectly clean. Hood and End Gate keeps manure away from beater while loadina : nrevent rhnkinn f Ko er and throwing out a bunch when starting and acts aS Wind shield when nnrAaHin it t- - graduating lever andean be regulated wkiU s e7trA Zr.?Tl' OT menta spread thick or tkin, ,t. S load for of charge. WXc.ThTlateTt LUM Draft because the load is nearly equally .We best results. manura to Write in st theas mnrAu tm m 1- - 1-.. . . perience with RarnrH MnMr. v, ?7i?ll? "uu Tr . rTacacal Ex- Do it now before you baaiyour maiiure owrpaTe f or aw crop. ' 700 free- Smith Manufacturing Co., 162 Harrison St, Chicago Better times were made not long ago when 1,000 pigeons were tossed at Templet ombe to race to Lnmlnn A coictn k n.- .ooieiru UY t SUUlll- west wind, they traveled so rapid ly that many of them had reached their cotes some time before their owners even thought of looking tor mem. une bird actually cov ered 10S miles in 94 minutes. main taining through' the long journev a speed of nearly 69 miles an hour; anomer aid equally well by trav eling to Chelsea at the average rate of 2,018 yards a minute; while one bird out of every ten ex ceeded GO miles an hour. . A very remarkable journey, which illustrates the endurance and courage of a pigeon, was made some time ago by a bird called Silver Queen, belonging to a mem ber of the Homing club of South xnisuurg. un August 7, 1900, this bird, with several others, was liberated from the roof of the Brown Palace hotel, Denver, in the presence of a large gathering of persons, interested. .The pigt eons when released made several. " voawjwar-qf ; xnejr. wer$. first heard of four days later, when a letter dated August 11 reached the Pittsburg club from Henry Homeyer, of Zickrick county South Dakota, saying that a car rier pigeon had arrived at his place that afternoon just after the last of several terrific hail storms had cleared away. Mr Homeyer fed and watered the bird, which, afterward identified as Silver Queen, resumed its flight as though quite refreshed. Three weeks more passed, and as no further news of anv one of the five birds was received they were given up as lost. But on Sei tember 6 Albert Greb, of Pitts burg, the owner of STlvpr Onon i - r-ly-w !n l'Ii . ' ni.c lu U1S ion early in the morn ing was astonished to see his bird perch on the window sill. She had thus accomplished a flight of 1,700 miles within a period of 30 days, during which .she passed through many most severe storms of hail,, rain and,$ut- toitell him' the old story about- Ben Johnson and Mrs. Dale's blue dye, etc., which I didi And then Jack Armstrong said, 'Lincoln, tell Ellis the story about Governor J. SIchner, his city bred son and his nigger Bob,' which he did, with several others, by Jack's calling for them. I found out then that Lincoln was a cousin to Charley Hanks of Is land Grove. I told him I knew three of fco boys Joe,- Charley and John and Ms uncle, old . Billy Hanks, who lived np on the north fork of the Sangamon river, afterward near Decatur:" This Interview took place shortly aft 2C the Black Hawk war,.but It was not until the next year (1833), the period at which we have now arrived, that Lin coln and Ellis became. Intimate. At that time Ellis went there to keep a store and boarded at the same log tav ern where Lincoln was, Lincoln, being engaged In no particular business, merely endeavoring to make a lawyer, ORAVE; OF LINCOLN S . MOTHEBV NANCTC HANKS LINCOLN. afforded him. little privacy, and the saaae or tne tree m rront of the grocery was scarcely a suniclently secluded sit uatlon for the purposes of an' ardent student There were too- many people to wonder and laugh at a man studying law with his feet up a tree; too many to worry him for the stories and jokes ' which it was supposed he could furnish on demand. Lincoln Breaks Down. . For these reasons it became necessa ry that he bhould retire to the country occasionally to rest and study. Some times he went to James Short's,, on the sand ridge, sometimes to Minter Gra ham's, sometimes to Bowl in Greene's, sometimes to Jack Armstrong's and as often, perhaps, to Abie's or Row Hern don's. All of these men served him faithfully and signally at one time or another, and to all of them he was sin cerely attached. , When Bowlin Greene died, in 1842, Mr. Lincoln, then in the enjoyment of great local reputation, undertook to de liver a funeral oration over the remains cainoun was the type of a perfect gentleman, brave, courteous, able and cultivated. He was a Democrat thpn and&Daii6crat-!wnen hS'diecL t the time we spealCof che , was one of the most popular men In the state of Illi nois and was one of the foremost chief- I tains of the political party which In variably carried the county and the I district In. which Mr. Lincoln .UecL tie Knew Lincoln and admired him lie was well assured that Lincoln knew nothing of surveying, but he was equally certain that he could soon ac quire it He wanted a deputy, with common sense and common honesty. He chose Lincoln because nobody else possessed tnese qualities in a more em inent degree. He hunted him up, gave nun a book, told him to study it and said that as soon as he was ready he snouia nave as much work as he could do. Abe Becomes a Surveyor. Lincoln took the book and retired to the country that is, he went out to Minter Graham's for about six weeks, in which time, by the aid of that good master, he became an expert surveyor ana was duly appointed Calhoun's dep uty, or course he made some money, merely his pay for work, but it is a re markable fact that, with his -vast knowledge of the lands in Sangamon and adjacent counties, he never made a single speculation on his own ac count ' . It was not long until he acquired a considerable private business. The ac curacy of his surveys were seldom, if ever, questioned. Disputes regarding "corners" and ."lines" were frequently submitted to his arbitration, and the decision was invariably accepted as final. It often happened that his busi ness kept him away from New Salem and his other studies for weeks at a time, but. all this while he was gather ing friends against the day of elec tion. In after years from 1844 onward It was his good or bad fortune fre quently to meet Calhoun on the stump, but he never forgot his benefaction to him and always regarded him as the ablest and best man with whom he ever had crossed steel. To the day of Calhoun's death they were warmly at tached to each other. In the times when it was most fashionable and profitable to denounce Calhoun, when even Houglas turned to revile his old friend and coadjutor, Mr. Lincoln was never known to breathe a word of cen sure on his personal character. On the 7th of May, 1833, Mr. Lincoln was appointed postmaster at New Sa lem. His political opinions were not extreme, and the Jackson administra tion could find no man who was at the same time more orthodox and equal ly competent to perform the duties of the office. He was not able to rent a room, for the business is said to hav been carried on in his hat; but from the evidence before us, we imagine that ho kept the office In Mr. Hill's store. Mr. Hill's partner, McNamar, having been absent since 1832. He held the place until late In 1836, when New Sa lem partially disappeared, and the of fice was removed to Petersburg. . For a little . while, before his own appoint ment he is said to have acted as deputy postmaster under Mr. Hill. The mail arrived duly once a week, and the labors of distributing and de livering it were by no means great. Eat Mr. Lincoln was determined that "the t-ignity of tlie p!ace should not suf fer while he was the incumbent. He therefore made up for the lack of real business by--deciphering t'ae letters of the uneducated portion of the commu nity and by reading the newspapers r.Ioud to th? assemble J inhabitants in tront of mil's store. iuSSIHtb flOVtHIIStMENlS ... - CLAssnrniiw.;u)visjuoafTs :'" Fifteen worda or less, 25 cts for three successive insertions; or 50 eta pei month; for all op to and including ten additional words. cent a word for each insertion. For all advertisements over 25 words, I ct per word for the first insertion, and i ct per word for each additional inser tion. Nothing inserted for less than 25 cents. Lodge, society and church notices, nther than strictly news matter, will be charged for." FOR SALE BiLPHAY FOR SLE INQUIRE P. O. box S44. or Ind. 'pfcone 429. OorvaUiB, Oregon. . 23 tf. HOMES FOR SALE. WILL SELL LOTS IN CORVALLTS. Oregon, on instalment plan and as sist purchasers to build homes on them if desired. Address First National Bank, Corvallis, Or. WILL SELLMY LOTS IN NEWPORT. . ., iw ,ui, ubbii, oaiance install merjts, and help parfes to build homes thereon, if desired. Address M. S. Woodcock, Corvailis, Or. Veterinary Surgeon DR. E. E. JACKSON. V. R Mnpwra blacksmith shop. Residence, 1011 Mam st. Give him a call. 12tf PHYSICIANS 3. A. OATHEY, M. D., PHYSICIAN and Surgeon., Room s 14, Bank Build ing. Office Hours : 10 to 12 a. m , 2 to 4 p. m. Residence: cor. 5th and Ad ams Sta Telephone at office and res idence. Corvallis, Oregon. House Decorating. FOR PAINTING AND PAPERING SEE W. E. Paul, Ind. 488. Htf MARBLE SHOP. a purveyor ana a politician of himself. , of his beloved friend, but when he rose f l -f , ! f to ;t E!nS t0 speak Qis ico was choked w?S and Ellis' business. fleen pmrrfw ha 1 He also used to assist me in the while his lips quivered In the effort to TrZYlZ "55 S . -rds of fervent praised ""j "i ninaa w Walt. One of Lincoln's Jokes. Cut his easy good nature was some Lines imposed upon by inconsiderate acquaintances, and Mr. Hill relates one of the devices by Which he sought to stop the abuse. "One Elmore Johnson, an ignorant but ostentatious, proud man, used to go to Lincoln's postoffice every day sometimes three "or f oui times a day, if In town and inaulre MARBLE AND GRANITE MONTJ xients; curbing made to order; clean ing and repariDgdone neatly: save agent's commipsion . Shop North Main St.. Frank Vanhoosen, Prop. o2tt ATTORNEYS J- F YATES, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office pp stafrs in Zierolf Building.' Only eet of abstracts in Bentoi, County S. R. BRYSON' ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office in Poet Office Building, Corval lis, Oregon. WANTED WAiTTE 0 500 SUBSCRIBERS TO THE Gazette and Weekly Oregonian at $2.55 per year. BANKING. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Corvallis, Oregon, transacts a general conservative banking buaineBs. Loans money on approved eerurityi Drafts . bought and fold anl money transferred to the principt.1 dtme of the United States, Europe and foreign countries. ng for meV This bored Lincoln, i I i on the ladles. He preferred trading with the men and boys, as he used to sayv I also remember that he used to sleep In the store, on the counter, when they had too much company at the tavern. "I well remember how he was dress ed. He wore flax and tow linen panta loons I thought about five Inches too short In the legs and frequently he had but one suspender; no vest or coat He wore a calico shirt, such as he had In the Black Hawk war; coarse brogans, tan color; blue yam socks and straw hat old style and without a band. Mr. Lincoln was in those davs a very shy man of ladies. On one occa-' " "i-iv. nu uvcu ucu m mis -tavern there came a family, conslstins of an old lady and her son and three stylish daughters, from the state of Virginia and stopped there for two or three weeks, and during their stay I do not remember of Mr. Lincoln ever eating at the same table when they did I then thought it was on account of bis awkward appearance and his wearing apparel." Offutt "Petered Out There lived at New Salem at this time and for some years afterward a festive gentleman named .Kelso, a schoolteacher, a merchant or a vaga- sought to utter, and the tears ran down his yellow and shriveled cheeks. Some of those who came to hear him and saw his tall form thus sway In silence over the body of Bowlin Greene say he look ed so helpless, so utterly bereft and i pitiable that every heart In the audi ence was hushed at the spectacle. Aft er repeated efforts he found it Impossi ble to speak and strode away, openly and bitterly sobbing, to the widow's carriage, In which he was driven from the scene. Mr. Herndon's papers disclose less than we should like to know concerning this excellent man. They give us only this burial scene, with the fact that Bowlin Greene had loaned Mr. Lincoln books from their earliest acquaintance and on one occasion had taken him to his home and cared for him with the solicitude of a devoted friend through several weeks of great suffering and peril. The circumstances of the at tempted eulogy are mentioned here to chow the relations which subsisted be- j tween Mr. Lincoln and some of the ' benefactors we have enumerated. ' But all this time Mr. Lincoln had a living to make, a running board bill to pay and nothing to pay It with. He was, it Is true, in the hands of excel lent friends, so far as the greater part of his Indebtedness was concerned, but yet it amused Urn. Lincoln fixed plan wrote a letter to Johnson as com ing from a negress In Kentucky, say Ing many good things about opossum, aances, corn shuckings, etc.; 'John's, come and see me, and old master won'1 kick you out of the kitchen any more Elmore took it out, opened It couldn'1 read a word; pretended to read it, wenl away and got some friends to read it They read it correctly. He thought th( reader was fooling him and went tc others, with the same result At last h said he would get Lincoln to read it and presented it to Lincoln. It was al most too much for Lincoln, but he read It The man never asked afterward 'Anything here for me? " It was in the latter part of 1834 thai Mr. Lincoln's personal property was sold under the hammer and by due process of law to meet the judgment obtained by Van Bergen on the note assigned to him by Radford. Every thing he had was taken, but it was the surveyor's instruments which it hurt him most to part with, for ,by theii use he was making a tolerable living and building up a respectable business. This time, however, rescue came froir an unexpected auarter. To be Uontiuntrij.) HELP WANTED. A MIDDLE AGED LADY TO DO house work on a farm near Corvallin, Oro.. and ssrist. in arinor f.-r fl.ma 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'. he a husband, son, or other male relative, who is a good workpr in farm work, he can have work at least part of the time. In answering send refer ences. Address: P. O. Box 344, 37tf Corvallis. Oregon. Postmaster Robbed. G. V. Fonts, Postmaster at River town, la., nearly lost his life and was robbed of all comfort, according to his letter, which says : "For 20 vears I had chronic liver complaint, which led to punh a severe case of jaundice that even my nnger nails turned vellow: when rav "doctor perscribed Electiir Bittern- which cured me and have kent me well for eleven years.'- Sure cure for Billions ness, Neuralgia. Weakness and all Stomach, Liver, Kidney and Bladder derangement. A wonderful Tonic. At Alien & Woodward Drug store 50c. A Happy Mother bond, according to the run of his borm- : De wa3 Industrious by nature and want- what variable lock. When other people : to working and paying as he got drunk at New Salem It was the ' went- He "would not have forfeited the usual eastern, tp tussle and fight and' Eood opinion, of those confiding nelgh tramp oties for a lifetime of ease and luxury, otoet noses but i when ,Keten. ant V lt wai taeref ore a most nappy thing rn-fciuriBBis1i6& H&i aadb lett lt tp be v wheal CASTORIA For Infants and Children. Tbe Kind Yoa Hays Alwajs Bought . Bears the Signature of Will see that her baby is properly- aied for to do this a good purgative is ueccessary. Many babies sulfer from AOrms and their mothers don't know it. if your baby is feverish and doesn't, aleep at nights, it is troubled with worms. White's Cream Vermifuge will clean out these worms in a mild pleasant way.. Once tried always need. Give it a trial. Price 25 cents. Sold : by Graham &. Wortham, , oml