* ¡it.Soc., City Hall. s n SHERMAN COUFY OBSERVER. M oro, S h erm an E k s t a b li^ h o d 1 8 8 7 ONE SURE W A Y To have money is to save It. The one sure way to save it is to deposit it w ith Wasco Warehouse M illin g Co, bank. You w ill then be exempt from the annoyance of having it burn holes in your pockets. Aside from the fact that your money w ill be safe from theft; the habit of saving tends to the establishment of thrift, economy, discipline and a general understanding of business principals essen­ To those wishini such relations we heartily eiteiii our services. W W asco M il l in g C o . BY BUFFALO BILL raon'mix talk » or tubh aw T «OmUMCRWOMT WUXlATt ». « O NE of th© most thrilling per­ areh o use , BANK M oro MORO PHARMACY FORMALDEHYDE. RUBBER GOODS. PERFUMERY. BRUSHES. COMBS, SPONGES. CICARS. THE DALLES H O S P IT A L Drs. Ferguson and R euter, H otel M oro Opposite Post Office Moro, Oregon. » W W S F ’W A “WANT” ad in T he M oro O bserver will reach more people in Sherman County than by any other medium available. . A. n rv A A A A A A C- -j- Q /=> A A A A A A A wAere Me poopto A A A A A J »top The Umatilla House T h e D iille e , O rego n, H te a m Heat. Electric Lights Electric Call pells. -H O T E L RATES TO SU IT YOU. All O R & N Trains Stop at Front Door Railway Ticket Office in the T . N. C R O F T O N , PLUMBING P r o p r ie to r . STEAM FITTING All kinds of Reservoir and Cistern work in con­ nection with water systems installed in first ’ class style and all work done guaranteed. ’Dynamite and powder work on all kinds of Rock Excavations H. A. Stuart, Moro, Oregon. P lastering , B rick and C oncrete W ork nluutes the tired and fam ished stir- rIvors of many mental deaths were Hunching crackers and coffee with Captain Varnnm, ,. , De Itudlo's reception by his com­ rades brings (o mind the time when an army was drawn up In battle line to receive me. I will refer to one o f the press dis­ patches sent from Terry’s command to give an account of thia Incident: ’’<)ur march now lay through a suc­ cession of abandoned Indian camps, showing that we were on the trail of the Bloux. The bleached bones of buf­ faloes and now and then the shaggy * ï head o f this monarch o f the plains, testifying to the recent passage o f In­ dian hunters, were met w ith from still around the bushes ana so set nre time to tim e scattered among the to the timber. The smoke aud flames wlcklui*« or temporary shelters made forced them out o f their hiding place o f saplings and tree branch©«, but so Just as Jackson and Gerard Joined far no signs of the hostile Rloux were them, having left their horse« where encountered. Our pk-tureaque Crow they first met, stuffing grass In their and Cree allies had brought Informa­ nostril« to prevent them from attract­ tion of the near approach of the Sioux, ing attention. Wrapping their blouses and are were In hourly expectation that around their beads, they succeed-si In the savages would appear to dispute escaping Into the thick brush along our progress. Plalmt. scarred by deep the bank o f the creek. From here they canyons we passed which might con- saw that McDougall had Joined Reno w ith the pack train. At the finish o f the firing In the direction where Cus­ ter was hundreds o f Indians returned, and the fight on the hill was kept up all night. The tw o scouts got their horses and, with O’Neil and De- Rudlo holding the tails, decided to ford the river under darkness at the place where they had crossed in the morn­ ing. By m aking a detour round the In­ dians and as It w as dark they passed close to three bands o f red men with­ out m olestation, O’Neil and De Rudlo on the occasions keeping alongside the horses and out o f sight. The fourth party cam e along and shouted to them In Rloux, and Jackson and Gerard cut loose aud the tw o afoot dropped and hhl In the sagebrush. The lup in es pursued the horsemen a short distance, firing shots at them, but did not see the tw o men in the sagebrush, although they passed In sin­ gle file within three or four fe<-t o f them. O’Neil and he reached the ford and decided to secrete them selves and wait until daylight. The moon cam e out but dim ly, and they saw a party that look­ ed like American cavalry, us they were on American horses and dressed in the soldier’s uniform, the leader,xWUUi-.S, sorrel horse with four w hite legs. He wus sure that it was Captain Tom Cus ter. Elated, he cried out, "Hello, cap­ tain!” oT.be rider stopped, and, although they could not see him, a fiendish yell A tingle horteman advanced from the and a volley o f bulleta told them they • timber. were .Indians. They rushed through the brush, the Indians firing at the real an army from view and yet were moving bushes'' volley after volley k n islb le at a few hundred yards dis tftnt. Right and left ran continuous Tlielr escape w as miraculous. It turned out afterward thai thesi lines of bluffs’ on either hand, offering Indians by their firing spoiled n blf of positions that, defended by resolute stratagem they had arranged to deceive and well armed men, would be almost Reno by dressing In the clothes of Impregnable. 'Suddenly, while standing around a dead soldiers of t ’uster’s eonimand. anil, equipped with clinging sabers and fire at a temporary stopping place, we on American horses, the;, exp© ted to were startled by a quick succession of deceive him in the night by pretend unearthly yells, and soon after a band Ing to l»e men o f t ’uster’s party. Tills of Crows, painted hideously, buret Into firing nt De Rudlo and giving (he In caiijp nt full gallop. They reported (Run -yell- | ©H -the Hen n men nn TtiOlr ‘heap Rloux’ com ing toward us, more guard. ITis-eedlug on their w ay, two Sioux than they had ever seen before. Indians cam e hunting for the fugitives, This our Informant expressed clearly believing, o f course, that It w as only In sign language, show ing us the Rloux som e wounded soldier. While; hunting mounted aud coming to cut our throats. for them they approached within five The Interpreter soon after arrived and yard», and, evidently having •1 seen confirmed our Interpretation o f the In­ them, one Jumped from his horse, dian sign language. Soon we were when De Ruillo fired and dropjied lilm startled by a sim ultaneous rush of fiend, O’Neil's carbine knocking the the Cree scouts, who announced the other one out of his saddle and killing Rloux. The troopa Immediately formed« him. The Indians In the hills saw the In line of battle, and the scene was an flash and puff and tired another volley animated one. Two com panies of the In that direction, but the two desperate Seventh cavalry, under Captain French men hastily concealed them selves be­ and Lieutenant De Rudlo, were to sup­ hind a big log which several ballets port the scouts In case o f attack, while liad struck. The bullets struck the the column waa properly arranged a« ground within a few feet and even well as the difficult nature of the ground would permit. Inches of them continuously. “One battalion o f the Seventh cav­ Again the woods were fired at this point, but as It bud been rainy In the alry, under Captain Weir, formed a evening the smoke w as stronger than mounted skirm ishing line at full gal­ the flames and w as thus tlielr salva- lop, aided by the Recond cavalry, tlou, and they hid In a deep |>art of drawn up In column on their flank un­ the creek with only their bends out of der General Grishin and Lieutenant water, but with their cartridges and Low's battery of three guns. , The firearms on the bank ready for action. trains were closed up, and the com­ They remained there and In a little panies o f the F ifth Infantry, under oasis of bushes that the fire had not General Mile«: the Hlxty-sixth, under touched, without moving or speaking, Colonel Moore, and the Twenty-second, until 0 o’clock on the 2flth of June. under Colonel Otis, were extended About 4 o'clock there were two signal along the flanks and moved In the pistol shots fired, the Indian vedette rear as supports. For a few minutes left his |x>st at the ford and a loud all was expectation and anxiety. "A single horseman advanced from voice was heard haranguing the In­ dians, and ft band of three or four hun­ the timber, and there w as a muttered dred passed closely and rode off. They exclam ation from many mouths. T h ere could see them for miles down the they come!’ As we «trained our ears rlvec/M id beard them singing a pecul­ for the report o f the first gun the iar chant. By 6:30 they had gone aa horseman advanced toward the skir­ far as ,they could see, and It was evi­ m ishers, making algna o f friendship. dent that som ething hnd caused them It proved to be Bill Cody, the scout, to move aw ay, ns It appeared to them better known as ‘Buffalo Bill,’ dressed that the troops must have also left the In the magnificence o f the border fa sh ­ ion. H e announced that we were In hill. Hungry, exhausted and dispirited, front o f General Crook’« command and their condition can be Imagined -the said w e might put k off all bloody command gone, rflitl they a hundred thoughts for that day. Ruch a recep­ miles from the Yellowstone riverl tion probably no man ever received, as However, when everything was quiet warm In Its greeting aa would have In the dark night they started In the been the warmth o f the reception of direction of Reno’s retreat, and after the hostile Rloux.” about five miles they came to a high hill, from which they saw a fire. At tim es the fire disappeared, and they cqncluded that there must be human beings passing around It, which hid It occasionally from sight. But what kind of human beings—Indians or Th« Thundering Legion. In the year A. D. 174 a Roman legion white? There w as the rub. They crawled on w ith great cautiousness, made up wholly or In part of Chris­ fearing the Indiana would have to be tiane fonght under Marcue Antonlue crawled through even to reach Reno, against the Marcomannt. The Roman if It w as Reno, when their hearts were arm y were shut up In a defile and ready raised by the braying o f a mule. Still, to perish from thirst When a severe be mljrht be a captured mule, so they thunderstorm, with heavy rain, reliev­ crept along on their bellies cautiously ed them of their dlstreee end at the until they got so near that they heard name time eo terrified their enemlee voices talking In English. They that a great victory was gained. The crawled within a hundred yard» of Christiana attributed their deliverance the visible party and called out to the to the prayers they had Just presented ptefcet who they were, De Rudlo and and .considered It miraculous, and the j m "thundering lefftoa” i the call. An the men had "n't;;.« f '.'i. ’• ’ —e —i*; r.ncere- inoulously left.' ami De Kudin; seeing Expert, Experienced, Registered Pharmacists the. gulden left behind, r a le buck to .get It. which he did, but saw thirty-live fledicines Carefully Compounded. or forty Indians com ing, lie dashed off, and they tired a volley; but, lean­ Complete Assortment of Silverware and Jewelry ing low on bis horse, It went high over him. He r<»d© Into the tilled under brush, when they final many rhots Into the woods, the bullets «u’tliig the branch«'« all around hltn. lie cronsed the creek, scramldlng u|» the* Ixiuk, A n y a n d a ll K in d s o f P a te n t M e d ic in e A lw a v s In S to ck w h en suddenly he *ka \v. hundreds o f In­ dians hi front of hltn, not fifty yards distant, shooting at the retreating sol­ diers, with their backs toward him.- He Instantly saw that he \vm entirely cut off. While thinking how ‘desperate a run for it It would be. the thought of w ife and children nerved him, ami he "was about to brave It when n young Indlnn about thirty yards distant on his right fired nr:«l killed his horse. The shot nttr;icli.-xl. thy other Indians, and DA Rudlo jumju'd down the bank, hiding In nnoexen ration, and several volleys were fin'd, so accurately seem ­ ingly that the Indians thought he must be killed. , - . A terrible yelling began among the Indians, and all at once the firing ceased. Peering oat, he saw the cause. A iiuxleru hospital for the treatment of all medical and su rgije Captain Benteen’« column was com ­ ing over the hills and hud attracted dixeaxes, except auch an «re contagious. , their attention. It aroused the hope R a te s , fro m $ 1 0 .0 0 to $ 2 1 .0 0 p e r w e e k , a c c o r d in g to room that they would com e near enough for him to join them, but In a few m inutes Ambulance will meat all trains and boat« if hospital ia notified. they disappeared, and the Indians all started off in that direction. Reno’s F o r F u rth e r In fo rm a tio n A d d re s s command had evidently rallied, and they all got together, so his only hop© w as to crawl around under the under­ brush and* get ns near Reno’s com ­ , M e d ic a l D ire c to rs . mand ns he could, which he -could plainly see. At the sam e tim e there w as a m ovement on another hill on the right, and he thought he saw for a moment flencraLfUHter and some of­ ficers, and then they disappeared. W hile quietly going through the brush -he heard a whispered "Lieutenant, lieutenant!’’ Then he reeognlxed P ri­ Nea-aat Hotel to Business Center, Banka and Depot. vate O’Neil o f O troop and Gerard, In­ terpreter, and Scout Jackson. The tw o latter had horses, but O’Neil’s had S u t îd a y Dinner 35 cents. been killed. i ~ Gerard and Jackson would not desert First Class Barber Shop in the Hotel. their horses, fearing they would neigh or be seen, as Indians were passing tial to your success. C o u n t y , O r e g o n , K r id a y , TV pril 2 , They hid in a deep pa rt of the ereek. hack and forth, attracted by heavy firing on the village, which must have been the Custer fight. As they refused to leave the horses, he started with O’Neil afoot on.their own hook. ■ J At one time an Indian rode within a few fpet of them, cut a sw itch and went on. They were then at the edge o f a clearing, which they dared not eroaa until dark, gnd they hid them- selvea between som e driftwood in a hole, placing their cartridges all around handy and ready for the expected at­ tack. Tw o shots were fired In close prox­ im ity, and they thought they wars gone. Peering out, they snw that it w as Indian women who were m utilat­ ing the bodies of som e dead, sold leys-- Searching around the ground, they cam e so near that they were tempted to fire at them. The Indiana seemed to be. although bat «me A etom tom the Bletat aM to a tow O ’" ’’very Description to Order Quick and Cheap! lblkur Stum p« FurnichtxL . — J for Typewriters, Typewriter Supplies, Rlbboua, ¿to. 1909. V iv e C e n t s A BRILLIANT SHAM. 1 8 0 9 —T h e L in coln C e n t e n a r y —1909 Lincoln as a Story Teller P art Second — C re a m o f l i a a t ♦ By James A . Edgerton A necd otes — B rig a d ie rs V e r- ewe Bocees - B ooster a n d G in - C o p y r ig h t. 1900. b y t h e g e rb re e d — A a P k r o o e m e k e r A m e r ic a n Press A s s o c ia tio n N E t i m e a his tired eye« nnd the sadness would O Confederate teasel with foreign consul« on b o a r d steamed out of the port of Charleston nnil re- malued outside for twenty-four hour«. T b e Charleston papers therefore claimed that ac­ cord liig to inter­ national law the blockade waa bro­ ken and c osi 1 d thereafter be dis­ regarded. Lincoln looked into the 1 a w, co u clu d ed there was noth­ ing In the claim and Illustrated his view of the case thus; be smoothed from hl« furrowed face.-- Many men have left their testimony of Lincoln's narrative gift. It’ la well that we let a few of these speak here. General Ia»w Wallace, the famous author of ”Ben:IIur.” said of Llfi- coln's conversational power: ”1 have never heard anything that Approached tt. The Ingle, the wit. the pertinent anecdote poured out In an unceasing stream .” Schuyler Colfax, speaker 6f the house and Inter vice president, one night visited the president when Im­ portant new« wua e x p e cte d .(roin An­ tietam. He remarked ns he went In that no news had eome. He went out nnd returned at 3 In the morning, and theae was still no news. » “Schuyler, what doe« lt*iVTT inenh'.” said Lincoln wearily. “Are we not on Ood’s side? We have thought that we were.” Then, with a gesture of de- spnlr, he addl'd. “I would gladly ex­ I t la v ery much change places tonight wltli any dead “H I WOULDN'T h k aa If a m an had LOOSE, WOULD H i t ” been h o o p e d up soldier hoy on the battlefield.” The next morning Colfax went to tig h t In a hogshead and should contrive In aorne w ay to knock the enpltol nnd nsked several repre­ the bung out and then lsaue a proclam a­ sentative« If they hail any new« of tio n through the bunghole th a t he waa the battle. free. H e w o uld n't be loose, would he? “No,” was the reply, ‘“but we have When Mr. Lincoln became prominent In Republican politics In Illinois one seen Lincoln, and InAtogetu« to be feel­ old Whig friends upbraided him ing so good nnd tolu so many storh'S laving gone In with “them nboll- that everything must be all right.” In recounting 'this story Robert C. tSontots.” This friend said he had come all the way to Springfield to find Ogden, lecturer and philanthropist, why he had done It. Mr. Lincoln said It “Illustrated the wonderful evaded an argument and satisfied the power of President Lincoln In the old Whig by an Inevitable and charac­ dark days of the war cloaking' his real feelings lu order tbnt the country teristic atory: >• You and I . ar« like the boy and the might not suffer from depression.” Frank B. Carpenter, who spent six tanner. A coun try boy ran off to the city. H e w a lk e d a ll day and came to the o u t­ months In the White House painting skirts of a sm all town. Th e first build- the famous picture of the reading of in « he encountered waa a ta n n e ry, and through the hole of khe door protruded the emancipation proclamation, said of the popular view* thatvsome of the ta ll o f a cat which waa used in a this _ la to h atrln « Th e boy stopped to eye It w l* M - |g jr E f i» c o llr rU« were broad Paris Under the Rule of the Third Napoleon. Never was there-so pleasure l<^lng and so easy going a court, and seldom has there been one which w as exter­ nally so splendid. The emperor spent money like water and thereby produc- ♦•d a prosperity for the tim e and with It popularity for the government. Hnndreds o f millions were lavished ujM>n Purls, much of It being wasted, yet none the less w ith the result that the eliy really deserted Its title la vllle lumlere. In these days It has gone to sc<>d and grown shabby, but In IStKl everything seemed fresh and new nnd brilliant nnd Imposing. The army was Toften to the core! Yet the emi>eror's cent gnrdes were splendid soldiers to the eye. Society w as rio less demoralised, yet Its gayety was exhilarating. These were the days when It was said that good Americans when they die go to Paris. The em- t>e ror ©onfarred.. distinction by reddg- nlzlng any foreigner. The em press s e t ’ th«' fashions for the world, It was all a sham, but It wak thoroughly mng- nbw-eitt In Its way. It can heat b*- underetnod at present by reading 7x> '.'is early novels, by recalling some hnpters oT DSTOSTi ”Le Nabab” nnd >y remembering .Ineques Offenbach, whose opera bouffe was the most char­ acteristic pnslnctlon of nn empire which Itself was bouffe. That shal­ low and yet catchy nmslc was a tonal sneer. Every libretto was a mock at the old time virtues e f chastity nnd honor and courage.—Harry Thurston- Peck In Bookman, BELUNI’S- BEST OPERA. “ N o rm a ” W a s H issed a t F irs t— T h e C om poser's D e a th . Bellini w as lxirn In Sicily, ffe died nt I’ureanx, near rnrls, under some­ what strange circum stances, lu 1830. Baron Aytne d'Aipnio wrote ton friend: “I rode out to call on him; hut. ns usu- rfl, the gardener of his houfifc’ refused to let me In. I.nter on In the day thfire .was a heavy storm, and nt nbout 0, o’clock I once again tried to see him. As no one answered the l»cll I pushed against the gate, and It gave wny, so I got Into the house. I found Bellini on a bed, abandoned by alt. At first I thought that he was nsleep. When I touched his hnnd. It was-quite cold, for he was dead.” A curious letter Is puhllsheei't. .Every boy? W h a t do you w ant?” he asked. foul mouthed man In the country gave nt the first representation: "I have Just " N u th ln ’." said the boy, "only I wan won­ Would you currency to the slim e and filth of his own returned from the Scaln. d e rin ’ how th a t goldarned cat got through Im agin ation by a ttrib u tin g It to tilo presi­ believe It? ‘Norma’ was hissed. 'L n o th a t hole and w h at It w ent in fo r.” dent. It Is but sim ple Justice to Ills m em ­ The president often Joked about the ory th a t I should state th a t during the longt>r recognized (he friendly Milan­ number of brigadier generals he was entire period o f my stay In Washington, ese, who received with enthusiasm and making. To a gentleman who was one a fte r witnessing his Intercourse with delight the II I’lrata,’ ‘La Strnnlern.’ n early a ll classes of men, • • • I c a n ­ day urging the appolutment o f another not recollect to have heard him relate a TjitSor.haiihuln.’ I have deceived nay- Lincoln objected that there were al­ circum stance to any one of them that Melf. I have niajle a great mistake. All ready more generals than they knew would have been out o^ place uttered lit, my progi'iiRorj, have been wrong. All my expisdAtlons have been UliMtoDS. what to do with. The visitor still In­ a lady's d ra w in g room. I)r. Stone, Lincoln’s fam ily physi­ But, I assure ypu’froin my heart, there sisted, whereat Lincoln sa|d: are morsels In It that I shall he proud N ow * look ¿here, you ar« a fa rm e r. I cian, ««Id the president was "the believe. Suppose you had a large c attle purest hearted man with whom I ever If I can ever excel.. DM not the Ro­ y ard fu ll of a ll aorta of cattle—o o w i, oxen, came In contact.” mans hiss ‘L'Olyinplaile’ of the divine > . bulla—and you kept k illin g and disposing William II. Reward pronounced hltn Pergolesl? In all theatrical pn«luc-„„ o f your cows and oxen, but took good tTons‘tia«~puf>ilc Is the supreme Judge. care o f your bulla. B y and toy you would J “th e best man h r had known, Judge Bates, his attorney general, The public will reverse Its Judgment. find th a t,y o u had noththg but a yard fu ll o f old bulla, good fo r ntjRiIng under heav­ said: “Mr. Lincoln comes very near It will rts'ognlze that ‘Norma’ Is the en. N ow, It Will be Juat ao w ith the being a perfect man, according to my best of my operas.”—Argonaut. a rm y If I don’t atop m aking brig ad ier Ideal of manhood.” Gf the presiden­ generals. W h e re P a rlia m e n t F a ile d . Another time It was reported that tial story telling Judge Rates re According to all at*counls. the Cnm- a detachm ent o f cavalry nud a youth­ marked: "The character of the presl- ful brigadier from New York had been deura mind 1« such that bis thought w n hrgtitanders ifiimni ar« a fine captured. Mr. Lincoln said he wim habitually takes on this form of Illus­ Ixsly of men physically. Not long ago tration, by which the point he wishes four of them occupied the least crowd­ sorry to lose the horses. "What do you mean?” he was asked. to enforce 1« Invariably brought home ed sent In a full .compartment on a “Why,” he rejoined, “I can mako a with a strength nnd clearness Im­ Scotland rail w ny. Just as the train brigadier any day, but those horses possible In hours of abstract argu­ was moving off a diminutive little cler­ gyman Jumped Into the compartment ment.” coat money.” » The m eekest o f modern men was not and tried to edge him self In between Despite the brilliancy of Senator Charles Sumner, be was cordially dis­ the first who taught In parable. The two of the highlanders. Not finding liked by President Lincoln. In the power of his stories Is showu by the It very comfortable, he turned to the early part of the war Sumner, Wade fact that they have passed Into the one on Ills right and said: "RU up, please. You know that, according to , and Thad Stevens pestered the pa­ folklore of the race. The narrative faculty Wns not the act o f parliament, the seat holds five.” tient Lincoln much on the subject of emancipation, for which he was not only one In which Mr. Lincoln excelled. The highlander looked at hlfti for a '- huuiorlst moment nnd then replleetltlon, beginning with Lincoln, familiar of his f'nsc to a person who has not the dis who w h s at the head o f the class. proverbs, such as rase without passing through an inter- Thereupon the small boy at the foot “You can fool tiHxllary medium, as In tulx;rculosls. began to cry. When asked w hat was sou'te. pf I he peo­ for example. Malaria, on (lie other the matter he blubbered. “Don’t you ple all of the hnnd. Is an InfectMus disease, because see them three cusses are com ing this time and all of the organism which produces It Is tak­ way again?” (he people some en from a r person by a mosquito, to* In the darkest and most troublesome of the time, hut produces Itself In the mosquito and Is’ days of the war a symjMithetlc friend > you cannot fool transmitted by the mosquito which remarked to Mr. Lincoln: all of the people mny never have been In contact with - “This being president Isn’t all It Is all of the time,” the person by whom the original or­ cracked up to be. Is ItY’ which was > un­ ganism was given off. — New York “No,” said Lincoln. “I feel some- ' doubtedly L 1 n- American. tim es like the Irishman who after be­ c o I n’s despite ing ridden on a rail said, 'Regorry, If It A nother W ay. ••- doubts to the con­ w asn’t for the honor av lh ’ thing I'd A well known London physician was trary: also "gov­ rather walk.’ ” ernment of the lnvlt«sl out to the country for some This recalls another story of the ,.a e a « a s n» people, by the «hooting; but. although he tried sev­ dark days when one generous soul “ a r i wk no t on people nnd for eral times, he could not ’hit « silngle came to the president with sincere o o d ' s si h e ?'4 th e p e o p 1 e,” rabbit. and heartfelt words of praise. Lin­ ‘•‘I’m very unlucky.” he exclaimed. coln thanked him cordially aud re­ which, even If not orlglnnt«sl by Lin­ marked that he did not receive too coln, was given currency by him; like­ “I’ve killed nothing all day.” “Never mind,” said his host. “W rite m any such compliments. Then he wise “God muat love the common peo­ told one o f the best and most popular ple, he niado so many of them .” T hese the rabbits one of your prescript Iona” e f all the characteristic Lincoln anec­ are known to all, but other remarks quite as pat nre to lie found through­ Foul. dote«: “Foul tactics.” declared tYie halflmck. One w e should be on the Kansas City J o u rn h l. oontlnued his feast u n til H was a ll gons. f ly jr J ’g g|de . Then he b ru sh ed s w a y th e c ru m b s fro m his m outh anil rem arked w ith a satisfied sigh: •I reckon I like gingerbread better than any m an tn In d ia n a and get Isas o f It.*' If Abraham Lincoln loved praise, or, rather, appreciation—aa what Gosd behavior. There Is also IBs world famous retort Employer—Why were you discharged to th© UmpeMlnent questioner who wanted to-hnow how long a man’s legs from your last place? Applicant—For should be. ”^x»ng enough to reach the gixxl behavior. Employer— What do I ground.” said IJncoln. r»u mean by that? Applicant—They [ To one of, his generals who complain­ wit three months off my eentencu.— ed o f an Insurmountable obstacle In Cleveland lender. the way o f his advance cam e the pres­ To make lumlnois paint, mix • smell idential advice: r- I healthy, candid man does not?—he died too soon to get his fill of It. Yet If he could live now. when the whole world to rtafftog w ith hto ptoudlta. eer- I "Well. If you can’t plow through the quantity of eeleluta sulphide w ith eto < dm IB M w m M M aya 1 f f i