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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY rj MORNING, -- MARCH 11, 1923. In the Footsteps of Abraham Lincoln , Abraham Lincoln, of President Lincoln Grand-Jathe- r rI It U unusual to tart th atory of a Ufa with hi msxrlag license, but. . ' a tniog now stand in th geneajogy I af Abre ha m Lincoln family, th first cartaln dal that w hav concerning hi 1 on which h took that grandfather ar to be married. Th out a l!0ti i IT'S, th plac what I known as ' Rockingham ooutvty. V. fact that this re- , It ia an (wlsreeung era does not give th rum, of th..wO- HUH Whom h to marry, Th daie, prov that at thi timehowever, do eon of John Lin.t. Abraham Lincoln, th coin of Llnvlll Creak, Rockingham coun- ty; Vt, was old enough' to t fnifrioO us y that h pa'd a tee to 'll. th county clerk for th prlvliee and v that th owe man wa 4ndut4 by .clergyman of th Latabltahed ohurch, none Other bing letal. ' With euch a foundation w ran as with that h'a birthplace waa ; either certainty Vt , Lancaster or Berk ' where hi father John had county, lived from 1763 th tint he left New Jeraey until It when fa tUd in Bhenenurah meant much to b born in that port of the th middle of around tha world, eight a land teaming tenth esntury, for it of different aatlontErliah, rwith people , ,8oetch. It waa Iriah, Carman, Dutch fer north and south and east and f highway waat travel home in which industries and art wr taking root, and in which all aorta of political and religion were teething and freakish, wound ' School wer rapidly building up, and r t la certain that young Abraham Lin coin better chanc of schooling ' than had hi father had had. ef Migrating. Danger When John Lincoln fielded to th mi and pulled up stakes In gratnry spirit " Pennsytvankv and moved southward into Aha fhanandoah vaiiey, Abraham waa old t take full part In that serious 'i enough end at th moment dangerous task Th Indians, allied with the French In ' their wai on the English. had for years made Vfe nsky for the scat ter4 aettler andwaatraveler In Pennsylfilled with rumor. vania. Th air v true and falsa. Refugee continually ought eufety In th large towns like Reading and Lancaster ana defense par tie went out to' help those who stayed v at horn to get in their crop. rout Thoe who followed th t South in 176 kPt watchful great eta t pre vent aurpriaa by a marauding band Young Abraham undoubtedly kept his in hand throughout that trip south r gun When the Shenandoah vaiiey waa Reached and tha family settled In the new home, ther was p.enty of opportunity no doubt knew H for work for him omthing of all th trades Probably. grandfather. Ilk hit father and greet-grehe could handle a loom: Ilk hla he and grandfather n Wes something of a blacksmith. Th aet little of everything, and tier had to b Abraham- - Lincoln i. undoubtedly beenyoung a young man who could must have turn ha band to any one of a multitude that ariaa in a family Situated .of things was theirs. ., The marriage license that he took out In 1770 argue that h immediately Im-proved the aoclal opportunities of tha val. lev, for hie bride was Bathsheba Her ring, th daughter of ne of th first famine of Rockingham county There la a possibility, though I have come to th conclusion that It It not a probability, that Bathsheba waa hi "'ond wife. Until om fourteen year ago her nam waa unknown to Lincoln gen-- l' aalogista; th grandmother of President Lincoln, the wife of hla grandfather Ahra. ham, waa supposed to hava been a North Carolina girl, Mary 8hlpley, whom ha hud to tha Tadkln region, found on a th wher hla frisnds and relatives, Boones' lived J. Henry Lea. the most ms-- a .... Ui f & c A . ' o' -- . la.AaavsuA- - fjVw l'r . i v, 'J n pfi I ' .. As i u ;t A fSt'jl id, trCf A 'ifKJ, J Ahoiw. aJ' 'jgvAe Xm A-- r akajA-- gS Am Tell Tou MThen upfia.rs.Pr,t,br,v; ovt hMtye sv lte . .f 8 Can Nobody Darken Gray, faded Hair, Daniel Eucn. J With Sage Tea. What Kentucky Meant. Abraham Lincoln knew how again and n Into th Kentucky ain Boone had Grandmother kent her hsir beautifuland returned without th fur ht ly darkened, g!oy and attractive with had taken and on whlrh he wa dtpend. a brew of Bag Tea and Sulphur. Wheus-eve- r in to support ha fam'ly, snd moreover, her heir took on that dull,, faded w thi'Ut the com anions that n had inor streaked sppearsnee, this simple duced to follow .him But alwava, whatever he misfortune, he eini with wonmixture we applied with wonderful of- derful tale of the r'Ti f kt .KJl-c,aBy'ieirit'jeByeWiSWF!9aw-anethers like hra preparation 'for a home for h'a family, lucky Jana. Boon Wyeth 's fcego and (sulphur C'om-l- e had firauy worn ih Vy I tir.iuun The next year. J7sl, Abraham jd' coin of Cumberland gap. north weaivrard. Into wV back W YlifTniA Settling vv imerues aometliins Ilk a road tn had ceen Hi, 'hi Bathsheba, wife, road. They' had carried en the r danger- - that tha deed for the farm h had sold addition of other ingredients, alt ready 5 ous work untU pey actually finally had had not before he wept t Kentucky to uee, at verv little eost. This aim- won the'outhern Indiana, wno bee properly recorded Indeed it wae'nl mixture eaa be depended upoa Unclaimed the . tlvntucky Jar th Rockingham eeuft Ao7,tBtt,rc natBTaL- - VOlef"e-- l ViUmry..ciry and considered thslr fairest hunting send gentlemen to examine EaThsfieBa fit y a to whether h waa willing to reiln- tf a f A druggist qulsh her r.ht of dower to thejand.came sv everybo.lv usestVveths Bag aad the reeordt show, thev went and Below, life mask of President of dav Sept4th because fleclare to "the back it Lincoln, made bp the sculptor, LeonSulphur Compound now tember, 1781, that she fre y A volun- darken to naturally and eveolv that 4 ard Volk, of Chicago, In I860. tarily relinquished th esme u It non me uobodv ran tell it has been applied ij ' fere threat of Compulsion of her aaia to to use. too. You simply damp husband. a eomb or soft brnth and draw th Wlldernets. It was (n 1712, If the best tradition through your hair, taking oas strand la to, b believed, that Abraham Lincoln st a time. By morning tat grav heir set dut for Kentucky w.ih his wif ana disappears i after soother application er hit! family of probably lour children two it is restored to its natural color Mordecel, aged le, Josiah, aoout i; Mary, and looks glossy, soft and bosutifuL about t. ana Thome, . . Advertisement.) Of teurse, thty did not etert ovsr th N famjly venWiiderness road alon without tured on that dangerous I trip a tradition did wer usually within eagy Peach many companions. There among the Herrings of th Phsrendoah some kind of garrison, of Bathaheba brothers, that Abraham Klllsd by Indiana op valley 1782. with large faml'r, went west" In wer Desperate thing hd happened in th then that they It ia not. improbable of Abraham Lincoln a isnu, fairly certain, too. that ce.gnjornooJ with her. It but he. lik so many of th settlers, Wa on of th party wa Captain Hanan.ah of dinger. It wa hard to keep Lincoln, a cousin of Abrhm. In 1774 impatient Inalds the stockauc the ieaties when he rewgred from the army after whatever the pioneer He possible danger without. he visited couid not resist th battle of Brandywine, as well a ti.e desire, the Daniel Boon In North Caroline, and J necessity, to open up his tract, and thus inclined to think that h wa th it wa that one dav. wall he was woik-Ilend I Llnceln for whom Boon entered on his ciearmg. an Indian dashad bethat year. At all events, h.a- - nem soon from th woeos and killed him. .reoord tn Ksntucky Hi gin to appear three l.ttle boys, Hordeosl, now 14; John, U, and Thom, 4. were afIr wa"nOt difficult for the Lincoln ebout at th ttm. Th two older with him Merdecai Seised party to make It way toa the beginning escaped to th stocked road, point known a gun and ahot th Indian, who wa earof the WIidern tern aa thS Block House, in th north Th exact brothr. e .ns cuatom ning ofoffthltheir little haa corner cf lenne never tragedy spot two years, was for th travelers to watt until enough In last settled. tn ; in their paran Inveit'gation gun wer gathered a gun however, ther ha ; lance being en armed man to make carried on by mtmbera of th Ftlaon club 4 r word until toe, watted, fair guard. They of LoulavUl lo (lx by documentary evicame back from the settlement along dence th exact boundarie of Abrham ' - 5 were comparaIndian th V" th wey that Linooln tract and Re relation to Hugh v autet. they knew w-- 'l enough Station. The tract lisa been laid Off and tively -- that whatever th It ,,, . i hiatorv since It was enured bv Abrab an never hour would there ham Lincoln worked out. Personally. I report that there would not be danger of at- am inclined to bellev that these careful tack. Without thla fear, the Journey investigators will a non ba able to prov - J ,S , wae hlrd enough particularly with wom- that Hughe Station wa close to tne en and Children to protect. There wer line of th Lincoln tract and cios to tne Wv b crossed to easy river Lincoln waa buddAbraham cabin which Bumbepleae in V ing The sit of a cabin long known ' the neighborhood as th "Lincoln cab n , note of survey of Lincoln field Below, known of -- v and a spring "h. , Ther are hsv been decided land nefjr Louisville, Ky., bought la spring unmistakable remains of th chimney on 1782 by Abraham Lincoln, grandth cabin it,and if on will dig a bit. father of President Lincoln. From aa I did last fall. In tha ground about ths record of purveys In ths surb will turn up bit of yellow crockery n lines of yellow, with ths veyors office of Jefferson county, and blue There la little doubt brown Kentucky, book B, page 60. that her Abraham Lincoln was building . his home. mor Interesting deductlro But even the Fllson from th investigations of cluoy is that not over 400 feet awev, and Just are the unneyond the Linooln wspring, us th word, may mistakable mine, If of a strucof chink and chimney stony an open 100 with feet square, ture fullv court within. It seem reaaonabl to bewae th Hughe Sutlon lieve that In which Abraham Linooln end hla family ' W"were living, at th lime of hi death. But what became ef Abraham s body . . A-? mile away from Perhaps e quarter of Acabin and th pos S' S r ;.th ait of tn Lincoln U o at th endtwo of stockade, th tbl site t a high tongue of land, lying between , overand Run of greek Long tributaries and on looking th valley of that etreem, r' to th hilia beyond, stand a famous eld church, surrounded by an ancient grav-)rth Long Run Bgptiat meeting J-dating back to 179 . The land of house, the church end th burial ground .occu400 pied a corner of Abraham Linooln vRp. C, Ars, , CL v siOeiwtteSe. wArawA,3e.WeiA '' jfC'H Syndic. I Vr tti AriZSr X'J by th McClure Newspaper and relative, f Jt 1 KacvwP ktafw S..-- 4panU t&AciSr ' several 1 " ' ? " ; ',s S ry -- vlt ' HCmL vu V r.w A 1822. belter than Abraham Liresln whsi it pad cost, tor tne meat plorsr of that tenr,ury bi friend facsimile of hitherto unpublished Lincoln letter. Thl letter, owned by John W. Lincoln of Pa., waa written to hla father, Richard V, B. Lincoln, ft show both President Lincoln Interest in nd something of hla knowledge of th Lincoln family. It Is th only letter of which I know in which mentioned. Hananlah Lincoln is CHAPTER V 1 By IDA M. TARBELL Copyright. ji dc A r' . , ni f f AM ' , vi,,' , t T , , aa raiW,aaftaBifaUhaatjaut bn H-- important to dat4 of th Lincoln genealo-flet- a be'ieved that Wary Shipley waa a rirst wife, though it waa he who proved that, whether thi waa true or not, he certainly did marry a Bathaheba, believed to be a Herring According to tha member of the Her ring family still living lit th Shenandoah vallev, at reported bv on of them to Wr. Lea. in l!hS, Abraham Lincoln, who married Bathsheba Herring, was a poor and rather paln man. Her aristocratic father looked with scorn on th aUianes and gave hi daughter the choice cf giving up her lover or being dlsln, d hertied Th young woman did not hesitate. Rhe married the man she loved and went with him to the savd age wilds of Kentucky in J7S2. Her waa afterward killed hy an Indian, 14 of lad and ont of her son. years, hi) d the Inman avenging his faihurs death. Bathsheba. Herrin waa a. woman of fine intelligence slid strong character. 8h grratly loved wnd respected by all who knew her. Poor and plain" though Abraham Lincoln may have been, he aeems lo have been able promptly to establish himself in thf vallev. Three years after the license was taken out, hla father, .John Lincoln, deeded to him Ho acre or tha SCO he bought when he first ctlme Into Five ehlllinga and "on th oountry. peppercorn on Ledv Dav next If th same th shall he lawfully demanded" wa To this lsnd, six years paid price he added fifty-tw- o acres adtoln ng, later, he mv'ne for the seme the sum of 5ftk in hue-ban- an the depreciated currency of th colony equal lo About 60. Abraham Captain, But he w doing (nor than growing in property In th valley. Th danger from to India ne had mad It necessary to organise a strong militia In a remote vaiiey like that of the 8hnandoh toon after Ra settlement. When th Lincolns arrived they found th Augusta county militia a body. Abraham Lincoln soon became a member of this mint. a, and as early at 1774 wa a captain. At least a part of hi company in th aummer of that took part In an expedition Against ytaf tn Cneroke In, diana Whether Captain Abraham Lin. oo.n himself commanded hla troops we do not know thoueh w do know In th year 1776. 1777 and 1771 h served a a Judge advocate of th court. The court waa composed of th oolonel, lieutenant-colonel, major and a captain of the county militia Charle Kemper, th present leading authority en the August county records tells m that they represented th best elsment of cltltsnshlp of ths county. Among th Captain wer many- - whose names art still well known. That Aoraham Lincoln waa chosen from this group to serve on tha oourt shows that h moat hava been, If "poor and man of aa good or better eduplain, cation than molt of th others, and a man. too, that had won th respect of hla fallows. No document that we have concerning him t a better indication ofth standing of th president grand- k bn v-s- , a v ' -- e r tnt c' iifx t ' Jf ' lilt C I ' - i4Pt it 4 Her Dream Realized - t' - T ' W , f cfs&'Cf " 'j H'h hr - " ' f MltudL SSt 'f iZ' d, ere. Keeping Company With pld Men Linkthe first, Was he th first, or one. of So far as (o lie In the enclnt ground or three 1 know, it was not until of wjier he year ago that the question to wee buried wae ever raleed. Uoedared have not th stockada tnav would men hav said, farther hia body to taka that. But two or and they let it go at waa quesHire year ago tn Fllson Club tartd,to tioned aid on investigation wa tradition local with th result that a wae a Lincoln grandfather effect that the burled in lb old graveyard wae untoldofhear-in- e Oldpopl ef th locality that wy of thi Of comthtr grandparents that h was keeping wriy Lon in th pany with old man Unkom A trioltico id Run buG 1m tround." Could not be widespread and peralaUnt on studies th more disregarded, end th d yard and ita headstone and ns relaprohtion to the Lincoln horn, th moi I ibit it seem that th tradition correct end that tn on 6f tne long aunken pteee marked, if at all, by rude Abraham Linnative red sandstone coln body wa laid away. old unmarked. these not open Why as gravei? was my Instant question, old went about th yard.Of J3ut a wts the ?!1 trapper and explorer wrapped in hint up They at the query, blanket ha had no coffii. a Vematn or a ton turned ago, .are That You would find nothing vender if true. And yet on cannot but Bathsheba that It might not be possible some of their nr voung MordeeH or fr'.ende might have burled with Abrahama Lincoln Some mark Ofon Identlfiratlon which his nsm stone or a bit of metel was Scratched.' it wa the pracUvs of the time to put whe-- e, I can scarcely believe that there would not have te-- n put with the body tdsnt fy K of th. mn somethin least the possiblPty I sufficient to 3'ielllv Bu. & thorough Marc. In probability is thatRun fled or nil. th of th ard ancient this grave) nty. Ky.. Baptist church in defferaon ia thi reftt.n plac t tha grandiatnaf of l.intO.ii. MxtaantU praaldaJH of Aralv'-the United Butt. to rtvv"V' iT - L - XllirCtiUPP yw z v '(A i ' - rf AitU'Si'l'' - ,, 5 A V S' C , M AkjT S9 I ..J j enough if the water was low, but difficult indeed If there was a freshet. Ther were mountains to he dimbed, long marehes to be traversed. But, sndiee as the difficulties were, th extraordinary beauty and Interest of th country its great forests, the thrill of adventure, the promise of future wealth and comfort, the realleatlea that they, who were taking their live in their hands, wer doing something for th future, something big ard important ail of Ihia Carried them .through wnatever had to encounter from the) mity hsv day to dt.y. Then, too, to cope w!h dan. ser and twriirhlp we the habit of thair lives. They wer Schooled to It. If they kpew ft terrois and sorrow, they knew alrO its Jovs and ita hopeA What Happened en Jou'ney? What happened to the Lincoln party in lie journey triyn tha Block House ot Something over 200 mile to the central iveotutky Stations, We do not knOw. vl do not even know what time of toey m4d the r Journey, nor when they arilved. Were the Lincolns at Bryant si of J.SJ 'when a great Fist 'on In number of Indian from the north aud- frte IHJ lilt t tv ttfflty faVUp? AllJ was FaUisheba One of that couiagvoui body of wonen win. knowing thai tuev had net Water In the slot, sad sufficient to stand siege, boldly went out with pail on their hids, Hugh nz and talk-n- g as It llierk we.e not an Indian within fill nt ths r pans and came back m.ia, before the watch ng eve of the savoger la the forests? Or had they reached were Abraham and tiarrodsbuigf And Hananlah Lincoln m the company of Captain Jthn Todd, whu, when th rumor of what h.d happened at 8 reached h m, quickly Collected 1,10 or guns and auacaed tn bevivx-ln- g Indiana With terrible result to both aides? These things we do not know, but we can be certain that all the facts of thee horror and many others of the terrlbis year of 1782 wt- -t fammur enough to the 'Lincolns, and that little Mordecal, Joenth and even Thomas then began to learn something of what Indian warfare a meant. We pun he sura too, that Lincoln, living in th midst cf constant alarm and threat, must manv a ttm hav gathered a child to her boeom,, ready to Hy; meny a time Jure loaded her husband' rifle aa be shot through (oophMcs st prowling Ihdians, even herself aimed th rifle. possibly At least four years, and possibly six, after p ltd hi family over the Wilderness road. Ahmhsra Lincoln fought to protect wif and children and labored to make them a ham. W have onlv th me rarest detail of what he did. Ve do know that he cnpUnued bujdng land on treasury warrants, principally along th Green river. Th Rv. Lew. A. Wrrn of Kentucky, who bae followed th Lin-cl- n through th State with (nor intelligent patience than any other recent Investigator, save that h has found svi-dthat Abrshim Lincoln took u? ovr 5006 acre on the Green river. All th's douhtiee meant frequent trip wv from his fam'ly. W do know that lit th fail ot 1784 the tract Of 8o0 acres he bought on hie flrel trip loto Kentucky In 17'0 was surveyed for him. and that In Msv Of 1764 th 4 06 acres rear Louisville were surveyed, he acting aa marker and It's eous.n- - Hananlah end us eon Jonah as chain carrier The probability is (hit in th aummer of that veer h took hi family to a stockade railed Hughe known to hava been near hi tract. VdRtMAWw j tW -- lit! MRS. JACK HOUK ITh UWMMI. KA. TINNIMCI P'VERY young woman like Mrs. Houk before her marriage--- il A ' dreams dreams and has visions of her ideal home with her husband, and healthy, happychildrcn to make her joy complete. But as time goes on her dreams are not realized, she has no children, her life is embittered and it is hard for her to be reconciled to the conditions as they exist. To every young woman who is in this condition the following letter should bring hope and encouragement, as we know of numberless homes that have been blessed with children, just as this home was, after all hope had been abandoned. )ar Au-tt- Outline map showing the Wildornees road. Virginia home of Abraham Lincoln, Er. Blockhouse In which ptonoers gathered for trip over the Wilderness road. C Where settlement of estate of Abraham Lincoln, Er. was made. D Where Abraham Lincoln, Er., was kUed by Indians. A B Here Follows Mrs. Houles Personal Letter: t "I wu cf a nervous disposition and sJwavs had a tired, Penn-Sjivan- worn-oafeeling. X would get sharp pains in wr aiddwhen working too hard or when walking too much and sometimes I would have those awful dragged down feelings. I car had such trouble nine I was a very young girl and had got very httl result from all th medicine I bad taken, and on doctor told m that I would never hav children unless I had an operation. I had heard a great deal about Lydia E. Pinkham' Vegetable Compound o I thought I would try it. By tha tima I bad V finished the fourth bottl I noticed a change in my health. took a trip to California at this time and I kept on with th medicine. My health continued to now hava a big, healthy baby boy six months old. I aa not improve and I doing my own housework yet a I want to get good and strong first a it mean a lot to my baby for me to be well while h is nursing. 1 hav spoken highly of th Vegetable Compound to my friends, and I am more than willing for yon to us these facts as a testimonial. lira Jack lioux, ISIS Tennessea EL, Law renoe, Kansas. Ailing Women are advised to try Lydia E. Pinldiams , stalls Compound lyca e. Pinkham MCD,ciNS co Lynn ma3T 322 I father than this from th court mllit.e reoord of Augusta count). What Lincolns Did In Rsvolution. Whether he saw service In the field In th revolution, 1 do not know, but be was doing his part. Jut so many of bU relations in Mssuchuse.ta and in were dong. A first cousin of Hananlah Lincoln, by name, living hi. back In Berks county, near Abraham t early home, had been lu the Reading company of rifle which reported' from the In 1?'&. camp si Csmrridge, Mass.,-Hansnlah became a lieutenant n th Twelfth Pennsylvania regiment, but, disgusted because he was not promoted after the battle of Brandywine, he resigned. He wee back again th next yeer, however, and promoted to Up captaincy. In Massachusetts, Amos Lincoln, like Abraham a or Samuel Lincoln, the first of the family to come to the I nlted State, had been member of th Boeton Tee Party and afterward a captain of artillery. That ther wa opportunity for Abraham Lincoln In Rockingham county, the who staved be history of the Lincolns hind prove With 260 acres of rich land, a creditable record of local service, he might have goes far. H s brother Jacob who remained In the vallev, certainly d.d so. But Abraham Linen. n was like hi father John, hi grandfather Mordecal Ha had th Imaelnotlon the independent and reetlc-- s spirit and th dirtn of th pioneer He lived, too, tn, one of the most Irres'.etib'e migrator currents that ever ran across this country, somethin: that n4 th had more of th daeh pnl of California in 49 thin eny'hing that we hsv ever eeen. It wr Kentucky that pulled Abrsham L'nooln. Reading th record todav of th year Of suffering disappointment and murder that th pioneers of that state went through. It ts bard to undece'and how anv man ph a voung fami.y and a fair chance would risk everything In a venture which had cost eo many lives, over So long term of years. A h'oodv vronnd Hi Aif- - ! .s c- grounds, to five them an enormous tract oetwesn tha Kentucky and the Cumberland rivers It wea a vicious contract they mad with the Indians a cabin full of pain, Lnrlish goods for thousands upon thousands of acres of the beat of Kentucky's .sods. To handle this great tract the) formed a companv known a the Transylvania, and hastened to establish sett menu there, in th meantime advertising their undertaking fat sad wide had no Tha Transylvania company sanction from any oolonlal government North Carolina Virginia Ined,them a band of land and called pirates, po.nt-ir- y out that they wer v.oiating th to Jet th western kings express order lands alcre. It did not disturb tha proIt was nor did It deter settler moter, a great chance. Tou could go to Transylchain and a lay vania and with compass off aa much or a lirt-- t land a you All you needed to do was to pv rhoe th land offc fee that were required by the company. That th adventurers whe came to obtain lands paid no attention to on anotners surveys, that they lapped and overlapped seem at th moment to have gone unnoticed. Transylvania wae one of the Prat ef those magnificent land schemes that even today fascinate American speculators and are th easiest bait for American investor. The Thl undertaking was short-live- d revolution had led the Br.tlsh to attempt the colonies. They a backfire a officered the Indian tribe and set them on brutal raids, Into Pennsylvania, th Phenandoah valley, and particularly Into settleand th Kentucky Ags'n again y ments which had been formed in No man. woman Of were raided child waa safe jet. In spit Of the danFinally, in gers, th ee tiers Increased I7v. Virginia took th matter in hand, She aubttshing her own lsnd olftpew Pecan about th's var also to improve the Wilderness rod, the Only half-aaf- e entrance at that time into tn country, the Ohio river being practically In the bands of the Indian and the rmt Ken-tuck- na m Bath-heb- n, 81'; f? tdu.J J L Th nxt artleU In thla wrlrt vllt ttl hef the story of Bathsheba Lincoln and followfamily in the years immediately a death. .. ing her . Cocoanut Oil Fine , for Washing Hair It vou want ta keep your hair Ja good condition, be careful what you aib it with. Maay soap and prepared shampooi Contain toe much tree alkali, this c alp, unset the .hair brittle, dries th and it vert haimiul. Multified oil shampoo (which is 'pure aud entirely greasetets), is inueb usebetter fob than anything else you can shampooing as thu cannot poisitly in- jure the hair. Simply put two or three teaspoonful of Mulsifiei ih a cup or glass with a little warm water, thed moisten the hair with water and rub the Muljtfied. ia. It will make u abuodane of rich, creamy lather, and cleanse the hair and The lather rinses snip thoroughly. Out easily, and removes etery particle of dqst, dirt, dandruff aad excess oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves it fine and silky, bright, fluffy and easy to manage. You ita get Mollified tocoinut oil shampoo at any drug store. It ia verv will last cheap, and a few ounce evervone in the family for months. Be sure rnnr drov-'-- t piv vou Mulsified. |