Bio: |
Cauley, Squire (pre-1895) |
contact: |
Pat Kay |
Email: |
pat2@ix.netcom.com |
Surnames: |
CAULEY THOMPSON MEEKS |
----Source: Greenwood Gleaner 27 OCT 1954 Smith H. Miller (LaConner, WA)
OUT OF THE PAST
Squire Cauley I wonder how many
left there who would remember a kindly be-whiskered old gentleman
by the name of Squire CAULEY. The Squire lived in a little log
cabin on the
extreme Northeast corner of Ben THOMPSON's farm on the main
highway.
I never knew where he came form or any of his previous background. We just knew that he was very interesting character and we would stop in at his place in the afternoons on the way from school and listen to his stories of which he seemed to have an endless variety. His cabin was small and quite neatly kept and he always had a small garden. There was one thing he was particularly adept at and that was baked beans. The secret of those beans was that they were baked in a bean hole in the front yard. He would put a bed of hot coals in the hole and set the old iron kettle on them and cover it all up an let them bake. Many times I have partaken of those delicious beans that were second to no other beans in the world except Mrs. MEEK'S beans.
We always looked forward t seeing him
sitting on a bench inform of his cabin. He would be sitting there
smoking the old clay and briar pipes, Adams Standard smoke
curling there from.
Sometimes he would get a job looking
after logging camps. One summer my Father had him look after his
camps over west of town on Rocky Run. There was the usual camp
outfit. The oxen were usually left there also. There were also lots
of
blackberries in the slashings so my Mother... Aunt and cousin and
one or two others went over to pick them. The Squire had the usual
tobacco box of Adams Standard and some of his old pipes laying
beside it and my cousin and I watched our chance and each took a
pipe and filled it and went into the men's bunkhouse and up in an
upper bunk and started smoking. I remember we had tried smoking
before bit something happened that day and it was not long before
the old cabin took to rolling and rolling like a terrible heavy
sea. I can't remember if I was ever so sick in my life and my
cousin seemed to be in about the same condition. Well, we went
outside the snack and my Aunt found us doubled up on a
bench and took pity on us and rummaged around the cook shack and
found some liniment or something and made us the familiar drink
called painkiller and then we speedily recovered. It would seem
that once would be sufficient to try such but youth recovers
swiftly. I don t think that the youth of today can realize the
power in those old pipes permeated with Adams Standard tobacco. It
has the kick of about two big Missouri mules.
Finally that old log cabin of the Squire's was empty. There would be a cow standing looking out the door calmly chewing her cud but it was not hard to see her fade away and still see the old Squire sitting on his bench calmly smoking his old clay pipe.
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