Democrat and sentinel. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1853-1866, October 26, 1864, Page 2, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    gtmctrat anb jStnttiul.
M. IIASSOIf, Editor & Publisher.
WEBNESflAY, OCT 26. UK.
S- M. Pettengill & Co.
Aflverttalng Agents, 37 Park Row
New York, and 10 State street, Boston,
mre the authorized Agents for the "Dem
ocrat & Sentinel," and the most influen
tial and largest circulating Newspapers in
the United States and Canadas. They
are mpowered to contract for us at our
LOWEST TERMS.
Democratic Ticket.
FOR PRESIDENT,
GEORGE B. M'CLELUN,
OK NEW JERSEY.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT,
GEORGE II. PENDLETON,
OK OHIO.
Presidential Electors.
Electors at Large.
Robert L. Johnston, Richard Vauz,
Senatorial Electors.
William Loughlin,
Edw. R. Helmbold,
Edward P. Dunn,
Thomas M'Cullough.
Edward I. lies,
Philip S. Gerhard,
ffoorgo O. Leiper,
Michael Seltzer,
Tatrick. M'Evoy,
Thomas II. Walker,
Oliver S. Dimmick,
Paul Lcidy,
Abraham B.Duuuing,
Robert Swineford.
John Ahl,
Henry U. Smith,
Thaddeus Banks;
Hugh Montgomery,
John M. Irvine,
Jos, M. Thompson,
RasK-las Brown,
James P. Barr,
William J. Kour.fz,
William Montgomery.
COl'STf COMMITTEE.
P. 8. NOON, Chairman,
George Delany, J. S. Mardis, George C.
K. Zahm, Peter Iluber, Philip Miller, John
K. McKenzie, Joseph Bche, John Durbin,
David Farner, Henry, Fried thoof, John
Btough, Elisha Pluramer, Lewis Hodgers,
George Gurley, John McDermit. Simon
Bqnmyer, W. A. Krise, Thos. F. McGnugh,
Jacob I'ronheiber, J. F. Conden, John Ham
ilton, F. O'Frie!, Michael Bohlin,- Vol C.
Diver, John White, Henry Topper, Nicho
las Caiman, M. J. Plott. J. W. Condon.
Daniel Con fair, Wm. McCtoskey. Daniel II
Donnelly, Anthony Long, John Marsh,
John Ryan.
Democratic Meetings
Will be held at the times and places here
ioafter named : at the houe of M. J. Smith,
Galitzin, on Thursday November 3d ; at G
o'clock P. M.; at St. Augustine, on Friday,
the 4th day of November, at 3 'o'clock, P. M.
at Loretto, on Saturday the 5th day of No
vember, at 3 o'clock P. M ; at Carrolltown,
on Monday, the 7th day of November at
3 o'clock, P. M. Able speakers will be
presudt to address the meetings.
PHIL. S. NOON,
Chairman Dem. Co. 0m.
Lincoln's
Crimes and
meunors.
Mode
ls Lincoln guilty of treason to his !
country ? Let us sec how treason is de
fined ; it is defined to bo cither levying war
ngainst one's country, or adhering to its
enemies. We don't blame Abraham for
levying war against his country, but wo
blame him for adhering to its enemies.
The Abolition party arc enemies to the
couutry, not ouly now but always have
been enemies to the Union. Every per
son knows that the Abolition party al
ways did want a dissolution of the Union,
and want it jet if slavery can't bo abol
ished. Does Lincoln adhere to them and
give them aid and comfort. We will not
condemn him without n hearing as he and
bis minions have done with many a better
man. Conic up Tburlow Weed and say
what you have to say, you have been a
friend of the Hail Splitter and still is, what
iay you!
THIKLOW WKEl TESTIFIES.
" We have been involved for nearly
three years in an Abolition war. The
influence that drove North Carolina and
Tennessee from the Union, extorted an
emancipation proclamation ; practical and
rtfective only in giving union, strength and
determination to rebellion a proclama
tion to which Ilio first slave lias not owed
his freedom, for it is oirly operative where
our Jinnies go, and without it the armies
would have gone further. And let it be
remembered that' all the while these Ab
olition demagogues and fanatics were aid
ing both rebellion and slavery. The
North, united (and free of the incubus of
Abolitionism) would have crushed rebel
lion and vnfh it th ni; j institution
which struck at and sought to divide the
Union. If the South avert the punish
ment due to the great national crime of
rebellion, they will owe their escape to
the insanity of Abolitionists. It is thus
that antagonisms work together."
v Before that proclamation the North
was a unit and the South divided, now
the North is divided and the South is a
unit to fight it on to the bitter end. He
is therefore adhering to the enemies of his
country.
Is Abraham Lincoln accessory to the
fact of the slaughter of one hundred
thousand men on "my plan" from the
Rappidan to the James. Suppose those
hundred thousand men were decently
buried and a head and foot stone put at
their graves telling their age, birth place
and cause of their death, would it not
have to be inscribed on each of their
graves, " Died ot wounds received from
the enemy on account of " my plan."
Abe Lincoln.
What will be said of those prisoners
left unexchanged in the South to die and
rot in Southern prisons, " Died of the
heartlessncss of Abraham Lincoln and
his Government." liecause the Southern
people would not exchange the negroes
first.. They had enough prisoners to ex
change for all the white men and leave
enough of white men left for negotiation
for the negroes. Still they choose to let
them rot there if they did not get the
negro Flavcs first. Hear
PECKSNIFF BUTLER SHEDS TEA Its.
The wrongs, indignities, and
privations suffered by our white soldiers
would move me to consent to anything
to procure their exchange, exceit to bar
ter away the honor and faith of the go
vernment of the United State?, which has
been solemnly pledged to colored soldiers
(!) in her ranks.
(Signed) IJknj. F. Buti.kr,
Major-Gen. and Agent of Exchange.
All oilier questions between us
may be postponed for future settlement,
but the fair exchange of colored soldiers
and of their white officers trill be insisted
on by the government before another rebel
scldier or officer will be exchanged.
William Whiting,
Solicitor of the War Department.
We could multiply his felonies to any
amount. Let us take a hurried glance at
his misdemeanors. He rode into jower
under tho hypocritical cry of free sjeech,
free press, free ballot, &c, uud one hun
dred and fifty-five newspaper editors and
offices has Iktii Flopped or partially inter
fered with by him. Twenty-two editors
were imprisoned. One of them died a
maniac of the three that were banished
out of tho United States. Eifty-Uvo
printing offices were mobbed by Lincoln's
retainers. ( )f the incarceration for the ex
ercise of free speech, there is no necessity
to speak.
Lincoln and hi? aiders and abettors were
guilty of robbery by law. Thy put a man
by the name of Clapp, into Fort Lafay
ette, for some offence, for which he never
was tried, and he bought his redemption
for alarge sum of money.
Did Lincoln keep his oath to defend and
protect the Constitution? He did not,
he does not pretend to have. Military
necessity made him, break it and there
fore made him a perjurer. If they
would elect him they would put him
over the same farce again. These are all
crimes and misdemeanors at common law
and they can all be substantiated and
many more. If elected he will want five
hundred thousand more men in less than
30 ilays so as they will be ready for the
shambles in the spring.
Democratic Meetings.
Sec the calls by our talented and wor
thy Chairman of the County Committee,
for the different meetings in the north of
the County. Let them be well attended,
we will see that you will have speakers to
address you at all those meetings, men in
whose doctrine you can implicitly rely.
So surely as the sun rises in the east and
sets in the west, so surely will wc out
flank these Union men as they call them
selves now.
They are like Penitentiary birds they
never appear two years under the same
name. They are always adopting the
name of the party that opposes them
stealing the livery of heaven to serve
the devil in." Why don't they come out
under their own true name Abolitionists?
Do they not know that that is their righj
name, if so, then they have no appellation
but plunderers. Were they to call them
selves Union men without slavery then we
could say that there was something in i
That is the doctrine of their great leader
Abraham Lincoln, in his manifesto, " To
whom it ny concern. " They don't wish to
meet us in a fair open field and tell the
people their name and what they are
fighting for. They are fighting behind a
battery of falsehood as they always have
done, and can be easily routed before the
invincible column of truth. Then let us
have no fear, McCIellan is a gentleman,
a soldier, a statesman and above all an
honest man. Lincoln is a clown, a pal
troon, a truckster and above all a dishon
est man. If the fiat of destruction to
this country has not been willed by
Omnipotence, then there is no danger, we
have nothing to fear, if it be otherwise,
let us do our whole duty and wo have no
person to blame.
Election.
The election is now fully ascertained
and the Democratic party have carried
the State by something in the neighbor
hood of two thousand on the home vote.
There was a vote against us last year of
fifteen thousand and upwards. This is a
great change in one year. We will do" a
good deal better for McCIellan. The peo
ple know what they are about to do, they
have no local issues to disturb them,
nothing but the Presidential candidate to
vote for on the square.
Indeed we have done admirably at the
last election, when we consider the weight
we had to contend against. The country
was flooded with money, offered to the
Democracy as bribes. Money that the
corrupt minions of Lincoln had wrung
from the people themselves under pretence
of supporting the government, was offered
back them in part as bribes. Our own
man Barker dealt it out with a loose hand
if our information be correct. It appears
lie could not secure the vote of the dis
trict, (although he had upwards of a
thousand votes to start on from last years
vote,) if he had all the money that passed
through the delicate fingers of those la
dies of easy virtue who worked in Chase's
establishment, and were clothed like tho
lillics of the field, and toiled not, neither
did they spin. The people of this con
gressional district did themselves immor
tal honor.
Our County did nobly, particularly
where they had to pass through a file of
soldiers to go to the polls. We were told,
that in Carrolltown soldiers planted them
selves on each side of the window to
watch the voters as they came up, and
another had the impudence to go into the
election room and pore -over the assess
ment and order the board to call out the
names so as they would distinctly hear
them. He was politely ordered to leave
the room, and he had good sense enough
to do so. The poor soldiers arc not to
blame, it is those minious who manipu
late them and who are hoverin"- around
the body politic, like leprosy on the hu
man frame, and are not only nauseous to
the sight but enemies to their country and
the human race. When soldiers appear
before the polls, the Act of Assembly
"ought to be reod to them telling them of
the illegality of it. We take it that there
is some law in Pennsylvania yet, if they
would not decently retire from the election
ground, then let the Sheriff be called on,
and let him raise a posse which he has
authority to do, should it take every man
in the County, and put them where they
ought to be. Should they refuse, then
the ball might open. The election ground
is no place to hunt conscripts, and the
sooner it is known to the public the better.
If there are deserters in the neighbor
hood, an honest voter has no riht to be
put in bodily fear when he is going to ex
ercise the right of suffrage. There are
bad men in the country now, that would
not care how many soldiers or citizens
would be killed, provided they attained
their own aggrandisement. They are
foolish for it. It may be good sport for
them while they are hunting the lion, but
when the lion begins to hunt them it is
then not such good sport.
It was some of the ignorant Buroes of
the undercrust that got the soldier to at
tend on the election ground in defiance of
the laws of Pennsylvania, none of the
intelligent men would advise such a thing,
and thus produce an uncalled for collision
at the present time. Through this opera
tion they have succeeded in murdering
two men in Blair county, the particulars
of which wc are unable to tell, but we
are becoming familiar with crimes of all
grades during this God-fearing administra
tion of Abraham .Lincoln.
er Dont forget to see all the careless
and doubtful, and bring them out to the
election. This is a struggle between des
potism and a free goveonment, and may
be the last vote ever they will cast.
A Sew Coin!
Mr. Lincoln, the poor Parvenue wishes
to hide his obscure and illiterate origin by
getting a new coin made with his effigy
stamped upon it. He is as fast as he can
adopting the customs of royalty, in imi
tation of George the Third, Queen Victo
toria, Emperor Nicholas, &c. The one
side of this coin is exactly like the old
cent, and the other side has the picture
of Lincoln, with these words around iu
Iro Gratia Dei et Populi, Lincoln. "By
the grace of God and of the people, Lin
coln, President of the United States."
This is another step he has taken towards
monarchy. He has also got a splendid
car built for his own use with sixteen
wheels at the enormous cost of eighty
thousand dollars, almost equal to his four
years salary. If these strides towards
royalty don't open the people's eyes, they
are no longer fit for a Hopublic and should
be ruled by a monarch and that with a
rod of iron. And such a monarch as we
would have, and such an aristocracy as
would surround the throne. Let us take
a view of them in this country as we are
best acquainted with them. Barker would
be on the wool-sack or Lord High Chan
cellor. Ilarr would be Lord High Con
stable. Strohecker would be master of
the Queen's bed-chamber. John B. Por
ter would be the King's huntsman.
Michaels would be Lincoln's game-keeper
and Peter lU'Cuy would be master of the
King's household. Why should not Lin
coln raise a dynasty as enduring as the
Bourbons or the Hapsburgsorlhe Guelphs?
We have no doubt he lias an idea of that
kind, if he is not too ignorant ever to have
read their history. Why should not Bar
ker, or Ilarr, or Stowhecker, or Porter,
or Michaels, or M'Coy, be the origin of a
'stock of aristoctracy sis well as the liona
parte's, the Howard's, the Wellesley's and
others. Everything that has a beginning
must have an end, and everything that
grows decays.
Where could there be a better origin to
raise a race of Kings from than Abraham
Lincoln ? His compact and manly form
and brilliant intellect would indicate roy
alty to a stranger had they never hoard of
him. And then his Queenly mistress, not
a whit behind him in everything that ap
pertains to nobility. She is said to be
somewhat careless in her morals, but so
was Elizabeth the vircin Otieen of Kim-, j
c v r:
land. And w here could there be more
perfect gentlemen by birth, by education,
by the associations of life, and evorvthin"
that ennobles humanity, than Barker.
Ilarr, Stowhecker, Porter, Micchaels and !
mi 7
M'Coy. We will not attempt to delineate
their -!iaracter individual!-, suffice it to
say, that it would be hard to designate
the good qualities of the one without de
rogating from the others. "There is a
tide in the affairs of men which taken at
the flood loads on to fortune, omitted all
their voyage of life, is bound- in shallows
and in miseries."
'I hose gentlemen seem to have swam
with the tide for the present, and if it does
not re?cde too fast and leave them on
shore bare in their naked ugliness, they
will be fortunate indeed.
Things look well now as they think,
but all human events are precarious, and
everything future is doubtful. " There is
many a slip between the cup and the lip.''
And if those fine projects would miscarry
with those scions of nobility, we trust,
they will not do as Judas did, go and
hang themselves.
Arming liicir JWegroes.
The proposition, now under discussion
in the rebel States, of bringing half a
million of negroes into the field to fight
for their masters, is beginning to alarm
even some of the bloodiest minded Aboli
tionists. The New York Times, the lead
ing organ of Lincoln calls it " a new and
startling development."
Erom what we have already seen in
relation to this question, we are satisfied
that by next spring the South will have
several Hundred thousand of. its slaves
iSS. JI ri-?-e 5 if thc mOSt !
mtense Abolitionist in New England, will j
soon after have his fill of the negro. The
-. v. ii mtu vao iuc nisi.
paper to suggest the arming of thc negroes,
returned to the subject in an article on the
2Sth inst., in which it says that the sug
gestion has been favorably received even
by the largest slaveholders. The Inquirer
continues :
" We learn that the planters in the ex
treme Southern States favor the proposi
tion, and some have signified their readi
ness to free five, ten or fifteen of their
slaves if they will enter the army.
m m
The conscription Nof negroes should be
accompanied with freedom and the privi
lege of remaining in the States ; this no
part of Abolitionism, it is tb exercise by
' the master of the unquestionable right of
manumission; it is remunerating those
who defend our cause with the privilige
of freedom. Nor should this important
subject be prejudiced with questions about
putting the negro on an equality with our
friends, brothers and fatheres. Many
I of the soldiers in their childhood were
! fondled and nursed by faithful negro nurses
j and yet no question of equality was ever
i miapil MAnv a man has manumitted
j sI;lveg w;tuout ever being subjected to
the suspicion of being an Abolitionist."
Correspondence.
The following short letter from Ed
ward Burk will explain itself. We have
known Mr. Burk for a quarter of a cen
tury, and during that time he has been
rich and poor, and getting to be pretty
well off ajrain. In all his vicissitudes of
fortune, he was a free man, entitled if he j drels, bartering in the lives of their fellow,
did anything amiss or contrary to law, to j c'lt'iZs (generally, if not always, Demo
, . . , , , r i crats), or thev are the most miserah'v ;,.
speedy trial by an impartial jury of his J .... , A . -
1 J J . . ,. norant quacks. hy do not the ecu: r7
peers in his own vicinage, according to J press gather up tJ)e factg of guch
the Constitution of his country. Jle was ' and ventilate them ?
under a Democratic government all his ," " '
i life and could not be kidnapped from his
own county by all the powers of earth or
under the earth. But he has outlived
that, he has lived to see the days ofAbra-
ham Lincoln, these dark and bloody days
of the nation's degradation But these
days are numbered, or . else the days of
the existence of the United States are
numbered. We no have doubt but thev
will resort to the old dodge of Thaddeus
... . .
otephens of carrying the election by fraud,
but it will not avail them. Let tyrants
beware.
Camp Ccitnx, near Hairisburg,
Oct. 20th 1&G4. j"
Eriend Hasson : I tend you thos
few linos to let you know that I was ar
rested last Monday morning, suiu :iui now
here. It was said it was for contending
against the draft. I wanted them to take
me to Ebensburg for trial, if I did anv-
tliiiiii wronsr. but thev hurried me eft h.-rp
and I don't know what they intend to do I chosen Lader MXiehan, send conratulH
with me. They will give' me no satis- tit,rs to uur "M'ers in IVnnsyh -ar,ia vh
faction. j their hard earned and triumphant success.
I write this to let you know my situa- j . AutiLvr Belmont.
tion, and throush vou that mv friends i Chairman of Democratic Natiomd Coir.-
may Know where l am, lost they should
not get a letter from me. if I would write
to them.
Yours truly,
Edward Bitkk-
"To All Whom It JIaj Concern."
It is a well known fact, that at the last
election, a certain Board of Election oili
cers, in this County received and counted
the votes of several soldiers icm icere
T!(-t
citiccns r' t'tis State. In as much as the
counting of these votes could not change
the result, no objection was made to the !
reception of the return at the meeting of
tilC re,l,m Jug-s. ihe ollicers of the
Election Board referred to, knew
,.
ought to have known, that the votes of j
these soldiers were clearly illegal. Wo
desire now merely to warn them and all
those who may be disposed to follow their
example, that the provision of the Ul-t
, r i t-i r c t i . i
section of the Election Law oi July 2nd
. .
1S39, in reference to prosecutions against
election officers, will be promptly and
literally enforced, in eacli and every in-
stance nvhere they are violated.
Impositions on Strutted Aien.
We have been informed of two draft-
inc
cases in the county of Cambria,
which boar a very strong resemblance to
other prevalent species of "loyal" rob
bery. A poor man, who is a small far
mer, in CroyIe township, was drafted at
the last spring draft ; he reported and
was put into service. lie was a man of
weakly constitution, and had been pros
trated during all last winter with a dis-
eased lung. His physician informed him
and every one so believed that he was
unfit for service, yet he was accepted by
mo examining surgeon. lie was sent
to Carlisle and his wife and lijtie children
were left to shift for themselves. Beinr
unable to harvest the meagre crop, the
most of it has been lost tc them. In the
meantime the poor conscript was kept for
weeks at Carlisle, until, finally, he was
examined by it is presumed an intelli
gent and regular army surgeon and dis
charged. Being poor and without monev
he was compelled to walk the whole dis
ion r-wl- ft Ina t rvtvwxa- .1 n .1 P
strickcn mountain home a victim either
to th0 quackery of a village doctor, di-ni-
fied into a "surgeon of an enrolTin
bo;m,, or to a to extort f -
the people ' for the support of the Gov
ernment." Let either be the correct so
lution, and the case looks vcrv bad.
Another case ij that of a young drafted
man, in the same township, who had the
disease called " white swelling " to such
an extent as to incapacitate him for ac
tive employment, ami he had received
strong assurances from a physician in
Johnstown thwt he was unfit for military
service. Yet he was passed by the Board,
and sent to Carlisle, where, after being
detained for several weeks, he was ex
amined and discharged, and left to find
his way back home as best he might.
These are two case from among others
that might be mentioned of a similar
I character. They prompt the inquiry
as inis course aaopieu ior tne purpose
of frightening men into the payment of
the three hundred dollars exemption t
so, then there is every reason to brieve
there has been a preconcerted plan, unlet
the oeration of the - old law, to extort
money from those who were really unS;
for service. If this is the game that ha
been played off on the people, there a-
evidently hundreds who have been de
frauded ; men being unfit and yet pas
as" fit for service, who, rather then r.a
the fearful risk of once getting into sr.
vice they felt they were unfit for, Lave
paid exemption instead of allowing thea.
selves to be taken to Carlisle or elsewhere
for adequate and scientific examination.
There are but the two ways about the
matter, as we have ptated either a lar
number of the examining surgeons of th
i countv boards of enrollment are a.m,n.
. , ,, .... ! , .
! ti,e gallant State of Pennsylvania, over
J combinations of fraud, Government pa.
tronage, and the most lavish expenditure
of ne-v- T1,,e caiiSe f E UsiI0!i
Tee battle has been the South Moun
tain of the campaign, which will be
j lowed in November by another Antietia
i fur tlie Lnion and the Constitution.
rtJBl " "S!"re8 1
Clellan aud Pendleton,
exectation of triumph
I I he result assures the state feril'-
and .justifies our
pectation of triumphant success in the
national election in November.
It is recommended to the various Bvmu-
J emtio and Union organizations in the c::v
! of New York to illuminate their rf-epet-
j tive headquarters and to assemble thtr.ut
I on Monday evening the 17th w.l , in
! I.. .... . c t i.n. ...!. :.. .i . -l
stone State : that natiemd salutes be r.rod
in ihe public squares ; r.nd thut the t";'v
of New York, true to the cause of iu
! Union and tiiu Constitution, under thr-ir
)
liutlee.
Pennsylvania fur M"Clellan. The
g-dbitt Democracy of this State, covere-J
j themselves with glory in the Lite Slat'.-
contest. In ?-pite of all discounij
I oi.,l t. .. l; ., ... 1 . n i : ... : .
decided victory over the cohorts of t-hod.iv
and niggers, and have carried their tick-.:
by two thousand clear niajuuty on the
Consjxos-Monal home vote, ut leust. :.r,1
. .....v ........ ..i. . . . 1.-LV. 1 1 V 1 1
ollicers making a clear Democratic p?in
of over 21, 000 since last October. Thov
ire braciisr thimselves for tho :f;H ir. r.
j important ti-ht in November, a triumph
so decided that even Abolition aritLui.'ii-
I cians will not stop to count the vote M -
Clellan and Pendleton will carry Peni..-vi-vania
by thirty thousand majority.
I NEW GOODS ! I NEW GOODS!.'
E. J. Mill & Co., have just received
j 11 IKW i 1 ot gt l,-s cciiMstirg in nrl ct
i calicoes, winter delaines, plaids, iLiine!,
, , , r , , .
1 hoods, a complete assortment ot hosiery,
j al .0 dothmg of all kinds for men's wear,
j persons in need of any of the above good.
j will do well to call and see them, as they
are offering them very cheap for etith.
Don t faiLto call and examine their goods.
Highest prices paid for chestuuL, and all
country produce.
0
II I O
TETKOLIUM
COMPANY.
Tl
undersigned having been appointed
an Agtnt for the subscription i f SI'OCK to
the Companj-, l egs leave to fcuL:.: the fol
lowing statement :
j This company is chartered by the Legist
j Iature of New York 'in conformity with the
; laws of Ohio. Its capital stock in one mil-
I Hon of dollars in shares of one hundreJ dol
I lais each. A portion of this ttocK is open
i for subfcription. The property is situated
in Morgan county, Ohio, and embraces abeut
fifteen huudred acrs of land, the mot f it
held in fee simple and the balance held by
lease. Two miles of broad rallej land suit
able for boring wills. There art- sixteen
wells in fcucced.sful operation producing 295
barrels per ilay, selling at $8 per barrel,
rapidly and mccefully increasing their
wells.
To ary person wishing to invest in this
enterprine, I will show them a map and give
them a pamphlet detailing the whole opera
tion. M. UASS0N,
Oct. 26, lSG4-tf Agent.
E
DITOR DEMOCRAT & SENTINEL,
Dear Sir - With j-our permission I wish
to say to the readers of your paper that I
wi1! send, by return mail, to all who wish
it (free), a Recipe, with frill directions for
making and usiiiga simple Vegetable Balm,
that will ffectually remove, ia ten days.
Pimples, Blotches. Tan, Freckles, and all
Impurities of the Skin, leaving the same
soft, char, smooth and beautiful.
I will also mail free to those having Bald
Fleads, or Bare Faces. 6imple directions and
information that will enable them to start a
full growth of Luxuriant Hair. Whisker,
or a Moustache, in less than thirty days.
All applications answered by return mail
without charge. Rpspeftfully yours,
TII0S. F. CHAPMAN, Chemist.
831 Broadway, New York.
-Oct. "TO, 1364-8m