In managing the country store, as in everything that he undertook for
others, Lincoln did his very best. He was honest, civil, ready to
do anything that should encourage customers to come to the place, full
of pleasantries, patient, and alert.
On one occasion, finding late at night, when he counted over his cash,
that he had taken a few cents from a customer more than was due, he
closed the store, and walked a long distance to make good the
deficiency.
At another time, discovering on the scales in the morning a weight with
which he had weighed out a package of tea for a woman the night before,
he saw that he had given her too little for her money. He weighed
out what was due, and carried it to her, much to the surprise of the
woman, who had not known that she was short in the amount of her
purchase.
Innumerable incidents of this sort are related of Lincoln, and we should
not have space to tell of the alertness with which he sprang to protect
defenseless women from insult, or feeble children from tyranny; for in
the rude community in which he lived, the rights of the defenseless were
not always respected as they should have been. There were bullies then,
as now.