>From Grandfather's Journal, page 60: "As there were no barbers the men cut hair for each other with the family shears. As a result the tendency to wear long hair and mustachios and beard was prevalent. Older men got their wives to trim the edges of their hair and beard which, as most men chewed tobacco, was usualy stained by its juice (older women smoked clay or corncob pipes and their teeth and lips were nicotine stained - so it was six of one and half a dozen of the other." Kay