E 450 .P512 Copy 1 « THE UNDERGROUND • RAILROAD. We cut 1>li<^ following sketct from the Fkedonia Censor, being a part of fhe best liistory of that Institution ever published: Sketches from the History of the Underground Railroad. — No. XIII. TiiK Escape ob' Jim and his Compan- ions — NiGUT Meetings among the Slaves — An Angry South- erner IN Fkedonia. Three fugitives arrived at our station about 8 o'clock one night in January, 18 — . They came in a sleigh, covered with robes and blankets so that no person was to be seen. The load had the appear- ance of a load of grain protected from the snow on a stormy day. They had been pushed forward from Painesville, Ohio, in a very secret way, changing conductors every day, or at midnight as was the case sometimes ; the conductor who brought them to our place, had started ia the afternoon and had driven 20 miles through the drifting snow. As the night was dark and the road toward Black Eock not well beaten, we thought we might venture to wait until 5 o'clock in the morning before we »ent them forward. They had been obliged to deviate from the most direct line two or three times, be- ing closely chased by an experienc- ed hunter who had "bought them running," or at his own risk. Our detectives had misled the fellow, and although we hoped he had be- come discouraged and gone home, we determined to be careful, and it was well we did. Rev. Mr. F was in our vil- lage that evening on a visit to his brother who lived there. Mr. F kept u ttation op the U. Gr. R. R., in Chautauqua Co., therefore I in- vited him to have a talk with the fugitives, and also to give us the benefit of his counsel about getting them through. One of the boys, named Jim, gave us an interesting account of their adventures. He was a shrewd fellow, and had not intended to run away until the day they started, when he decided to come for the sake of flhe other two, for, said he, "They couldn't come without me, they didn't know how." They were his particular friends ; he thought a "heap" of them, and their mother had learned tTiat they were to be sent South in a drove soon after Christmas. The two boys had always been kept on the plantation, had seldom been be- yond its boundaries, while he (Jim) had been a kind of sub-oyerseer, had been sent to market to assist in driving mules, sometimes had charge of a gang of hands, and was therefore more competent to "find the way out" than the other boys were, and was finally persuaded by their old mother to go with them. They had been provided with passes to spend Christmas with their relatives on another planta- tion, but hoping to find friends in another direction they started to- wards the Ohio River, sixty miles off. The Christmas festivities, which Were being celebrated by the slaves Oil all the plantations, en abled them to supply themselves with food and shelter at the slave quarters along the way. The weather was uniumally cold and they expected iTonblc in crowing L^ iR. PEnrrs medicines. Itui Having, through an exteusi;re medical piactiGfe, deyoted much consideration lo treatment of that painful and dangerous disease, NURSING SORE MOUTH, Also, the remote and proximate diseased influence on the numerous fibres and nervous tis- sues, suffering under diseased action, with the repeated failure iu the use of the usual cm-- ative applications of borax, vegetable styptics, solutions, washes and tinctures, I commenced a series of experimemts, aided by close observation, and a knowledge of the origin of the distressiii| symptoms accompanying the disease, which resulted in the combination of the "CANKER BALSAM." This is the article I have used in my practice, with unJaUinq sticcess, for twenty yeare. It always cures "The Nursing Sorb I^outh "—the most ag- gravatiag cases yield to its soothing influence and healing power. The occasional use of mild, saline cathartics is often appropriate. For the cure of INFANTS' SORE MOUTH AND SORE NBPPLES, It should be applied with a feather; a few applications will effect a perfect cure— it never fails. The Canker Balsam applied to Inflamed or Swelled Gu»is, particularly to the gums of Childre)} when Teething, will afford knmediate relief ; frequent application will re- duce the inflammation and keep the patient quiet. CANKER in the moiit/i, throat, stomach nr bowels, accompanying CANKER RASH OR SCARLET FEVER, I'eiiuires but a few doses of this remedy to remove it entirely. ENLARGED TONSILS.— The use of the needle and knife, so much (headed by chil- dren, is entirely guperseded by a new application of this safe, easy and powerful remedy. Irritation of the Bronchia, better known as that uneasy sensation usually tenned "tickl- ing in the throat," producing COUGH, is relieved by the use of this remedy— relief is in- stantaneous. Small spots of CANKER appearing on the tongue, lips and cheeks, are cured by apply- ing a single drop of this article at a time, seldom requiring a repetition. For removing HOARSENESS, nothing can compete with this article ; the usual reme- dies, such as hot drinks, hoarhoimd candy, cough lozenges, etc., bear no comparison with it ; exceedingly pleasant in its taste, mild, though active in its effects— it is administered to childien or aduhs, attended with less unplaasant results, and more certainty of restoring a liealthy action of the mucous membrane than any medicine heretofore known. DIPHTHERIA. Use the CANKER BALSAM freely as a gargle. It has never been known to fail when used in its early stages. BURNS AND SCALDS. Saturate a lincu cloth with PETTIT'S CANKMi BALSAM, and lay upon the Bum. It will never blister. E. M. PETTIT, Svpt. American Eye- Salve Co., FREDONIA, N. Y. a_g. r :t - ;:~ ■ ; '■:.: : '.'...-..-' ■:■■■.-.-•,■ • ■, - -r PETTIT & BABKEB, Proprietors, Central Avenue, FREDONIA, N. Y. UNe^ERGROUNI) RAIHtOAD SKETCH. tihe horses and take care of the old man when he gets drunk, and of course they hear it all, and when we have a meeting they tell all about it. We can't understand what it all means, but one thing is sure, they got madder and madder every time, and when they come to blows, I always intended to help the side that would help us, which ever that was," | A few weeks after tliis I was re- i minded of what Jim had said about those meetings in the night, by reading in one of our popular mag- azines an incident related by a slave- holder to a gentleman who was vis- iting at his plantation in the Sea Island cotton region. The slave- holder, whose name was Poindex- ter, said to his friend, Mr. Hill, "I am exceedingly perplexed about what course to pursue with my ne- groes. I was surprised and not a little amused by what I saw last night. My boy Tom oversees all my hands on this plantation, is the best manager in the county, makes the best crops with the least trouble ; he never whips, and there is no skulking and no sham sickness. He is a Baptist preacher, and all the slaves for miles around come every Sunday to hear him preach. There is as Tom says a 'powerful revival' in these parts, and he has many times during the past month as]ced for a pass to go to an Island near at hand to hold a meeting in the night, and as he is always on hand in the morning I usually let him go. Having noticed an unusual sadness in Tom's countenance of late, and other things in his deportment that seemed peculiar, mr cin-iosity was excited and I concluded to follow him last night to witness his man- ner of holding his meeting. He crossed the narrow inlc.t to the island "on the trunk of .a fallen tijee, and instead of going towards the plantation he struck into a narrow path leading through thick bushes towards a dense forest. I managed to follow him niearly half a mile into the woods, when I saw the liglit of of a large lire shining on the tall trees. A few men were sitting around on logs, and others constant- ly coming, but no woinen or chil- dren. I kid myself near the cleared spot and waited until almost mid- night, when I saw a man approach the fire towards whom the neijroes (as many as a hundred had arrived,) showed a marked respect. He im- mediately stepped on to a stump and commenced a speech, having first called on Tom to say if any spies were about. Tom's answer being satisfactor}'-, he said, 'I have come a long way to-night to hear your decision. Tom, we will hear from you.' "Tom came forward and said in a firm voice, 'I cannot consent to this rising. It can do no good. True, word comes all the way from Virginia and Missouri, that if we will commence here where there are few white folks, we can make a geod start and soon an army will fill the land and nothing can stand before us ; but, ray friends, it isn't so. "We can d# nothing to better our condition ;' and after repeating a part of tlie Sermon on the Mount he sat down. **Then the stranger came for- ward. He was very black, his fare shone in the light of the fire. He stood like a statue, his eyes turned toward the heavens for so long a time that the silence seemed pain- ful. Til en the tears started iwm his eyes; he commenced in a low, musical tone, 'It's all over, no man will stand by me ! God help us !' He then began to speak of the. in- justice of slavery, the cruelties, the DH. PETTIT'S MEDICINES. In ofEcriug this article to tke public, the proprietor takes the liberty to say that a class of diseases incident to the Hoof of the Horse and destructive to the use of the animal, or greatly depreciatin? his A-ahie as a roadster, ma}' be cured by a proper and discreet appli- cation of the Hoof OrsTMKXT, or, that which is better, if applied in proper time, may be prevented. The horse which is kq^t on dry food, and when at rest stands on a dry lloor, is liable to a ;6everish state of the foot, causing the hoof to become contracted, hard and brittle, and cqfisequently liable to cracJc, forcing an unnatural pressure upon the Navicular Joint, CollinJ Bone and Bars. The delicate frame-work of the foot becomes diseased, and the horse is crippled and" stiif » in his movement, and often becomes useless or nearly so to his owner, to prevent which, a more rapid growth of the horny portion of the foot needs to be excited, and the hoof rendered more soft and elastic, and brought to its original shape and sixe. To effect this, the Hoof Oint.mext should be applied to the Coronar}^ I^'iig, (the point between the hair and hoof.) once in three days. In a few days the lioof will be- come soft and elastic, and an entire new lioof, sound, smooth, and of its original shape, will be gi"own in from three to six mohths ; durhig which time the horse may be kept at moder- ate labor, due attention being given to his shoeing, leaving out the nails toward the heel. Prevention Better Than Cure. By ajiplying the OiHtment two or three times per month, the inflammatory action which causes the desease will be abated, and a sound and healthy hoof constantly secreted. Care should be exercised, and his floor and bed kept clean and dry as circumstances will allow. Sand and Quarter Cracks require no other treatment than the application of the Ointment as directed. Cutting the foot above the crack should never be allowed. Apply the Oint- ment and allow the horse to stand ciuietly upon a dry clean floor until the new hoof has grown an hich or more, when, if desired, he may be put to modci'ate work, but not to hard drafts. The proprietor deems it uselees to add Testimonials and Cerfcificates, thinking it sufficient to say, "Try it at his expense if it fails to do as he promises." He will state three cases Avhicli came under his own eye, and which he can vouch for or substantiate. The Hrst is of a Qr.MiTEi: Sakd Cn.vcic. The hoof was cracked from the shoe to the hair, and along the coronary ring to the heel, and the entire quarter was loose. By treating it witli theOintment as directed, the horse was put to work in fom- weeks, and has not lost a day's work in eight months since. His fool now (March, 1854:,) is sound and smooth, and pronounced by Ills blacksmith to ])e as soft, tough and pliable a foot as he drives a nail in. TBT' MiSt .'MiiE. laCT @a^ JEES:® The second case is of the TnRrsn. The horse's foot seemed to be entirely rotten, and the stench arrising from it was so bad. Uiat the blacksmith almcst refused to shoe him. By applying the oiulmeut as directed, the disease was entirely cured by loosing the diseased frog and its dropping off and forming a new. sound frog, perfectly healthy. The third case is of Contkacted Feet. This c'asc seemed to baffle the usual practice of taking off Iws shoes and letting him run to pasture for a season, for when taken up and his shoes put on, bis feet seemed to grow worsen instead of belter ; in fact, he became useless, and almost wortliless. Two months application enlarged his feet to their natural size, and the horse can be driven to the top of his speed without flinching, upon" the plank or pave- ment. The Hoof Ointment, in addition to its soothing and healing qualities, has a tendency constantly to secrete and excite a more rapid growth of the crust or wall of the foot, and thus overcome the elTects of standing upon dry floors, bard driving upon pavements and plank roads, either of which tend to dry up, harden and make brittle the hoof, oatising fre- quent shoeing, thus continually cutting off the hoof and leaving the horse without that which Nature gave him to stand upon. Jr".ArM OJS. SO C^lEnXTTS. All Orders for DR. l^ETTirS MEDICINES, addi-essed 'to PETOT y tlie next stage he went to Buffalo, but he was too late. Jim and the boys vrph safe under the protection of the BriliBh Ltou. Conductok. TE:STIM:0]Nri^LS Gentlemen— I enclose you this letter (one of mauy,) believing it my doty to do so that you might know the reputation Pcttit's Eye Salve is gaining in this section. 1 have sev- eral letters Irom other parties who have used it, they all speak in the same tenus of the Salve. Very Respectlully, D. V. MoCoKKLK. Druggist, Chattanooga, Temi. Athens, Tenn., Jan. 27Lli, ]S(JH. D. V. McCoKKLE, Esq., Chattanooga, Teuu. Deai: Sip..— I enclose one dollar for four boxes more of Pettit's E5'e Salve, per mail. It is gradually restoring the eyes of my daughter, who lias suffered with sore eyes for more than two years, and after av« had tiied almost evciything else and failed, in- cluding cauterization of the lids. For si.\ months before commencing the use of the above Eye Salve she was almost totally blmd, could only dbcover the bulk of a per- son m the doorway ; but can now, after a litUe more than a month's use of it, tell the hour on the face of the clock, and it seems that she will certainly be fully restored to sight. It is certainly a wonderful change under Providence after years of suffering. Very Tiiily Yours, A. H. Gkegort. E. M. Pettit, Sup't Amejican Eye Salve Go. :— For the enclosed 25 cents jileaso for- ward me a box of the American Ejc Salve. Two years ago I was very much troubled witli weak and uiHamed eyes ; I obtained a box of your Salve, and to my great pleasure found that it was all that it was recommend- ed, and now send for another box. Yours Kespeclfullv, MLss LAURA A. MALLORY, Hamdeu, Del. Co., N. Y. SnARON, March 6th, 1867. American Eye Salve Co. : — Please find enclosed one doUar imd thiily cents, for which please send the worth of it in Dr. Pettit's American Eye Salve, as I think it the best medicine for the eyes that 1 have found, and if it conthiues to do as well as it has done it is likely I shall send for more to use in l)ractice. Please send it all in one box, as it will come some, cheaper. Please direct to "James Randolph, Sharon, Noble Co., O." Respectfully Y'ours, ■JAMES RANDOLPH. Save enough to pay postage. Double Pipe Creek, Carroll Co., Md., Dec. 12th, 1867. American Eye Salve Co., Fredonia,N.Y. —Enclosed please find (81.75) one dollar and seventy-five cents, for which please send one do/en boxes Dr. Pettit's American Eye Salve, to the addi-ess below. I sold him one box some time ago. and how he wants a dozen boxes for himself and friends. He says they Avon't do without it ; that it is the best Ejc Salve they ever used. Y'ours Respoctfullv, WILLLN3I II. RENNER. Send to the address of '-Levi Baker, J«hns- ville, Frederick Co., Md." Register Office, U. S. Treasury, Jan 2-^, 1863. American Eye Salve Co.— Please find en- closed 155 cents, for which send me a box of Dr. Pettit's Canber Balsam. I have been buying the Eye Salve, Avhich my wife finds helps' her eyes more than any tli'ing she ever used before, and I have bought two boxes and srnl North to her sister. I called on all Druggists here for the Bal- sam, and they havo nane. Two have written to New Y'ork for it, so they say, but have not received it. I now make direct application t« you, 25 cents for BiUsam. and ten cents for postage, sent by mull. Please remit on receipt of en- olosecl Yours, Wm. BLASLAND. P. S.— Balsanj, not Salve. VVeatiierly, Cai-bon Co.. Pa., June l8t, 1868. / A.MERICAN Ete Salve Co.— Having opened a Drug Store in this place, I would like to keep some of your Eye Salve for sale. Hav- ing used it mvself , I can recommend it favora- bly. I would like to have one doz«ri boxes to begin with ; I will send you the money oh receipt of goods and bill, or you can send them C. O. D. Hoping to hear from you soon, I am your obd't scrv't, ^ ^^ ^ DR. J. B. TWEEDLE. Weatherly, Carbon Co., Pa. South Hai>ley Falls, Mass., April li.', 1S6',). American Eye-Salve Co.— I enclose $3 00 and want you to send me some Eye Salve.—- I had some from you last summer and it did wonderful cures. It cured sore eyes for eight persons that were nearly blind for a long time. My friend, Horace White, w.-vs visifmg me two yeais ago. I had sore eyos and he sent me one box by mail and it cured me. S«nd by Exi>rcss. Truly y'>urs. E. C. WHITE. [ Note : Horace Whit-e of Laona.— Am. Bye 1 Salve Co. PETTIT'S EYE SALVE tlii