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About The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.) 1895-1896 | View This Issue
The Wickes Pioneer (Wickes, Mont.), 26 Oct. 1895, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053310/1895-10-26/ed-1/seq-7/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
t, II 1. • r p. as He 't of iy II - In •r - ell Hy h• 00. nd to rt- en. In let to - ho ad en. III- de. yes SNAKE FARM IN EAST I of pelts, I'd go to New Yerk with *em • myself. 1 fixed up and went down, and when 1 kern baek I lied a clean $300 in my wallet. While 1 wuz down there the feller who bought my pelts says to me: 'If you keep on this way YOU won't hey no snakes left In the counties' of Otsego or Chenango. You hey brought more pelts to me than any perfessional trapper on my list, an' rye got lots of men ketchln' snakes. Why don't You build a snake house an' raise em'?' Waal, I laughed at that, but the ides struck me that I'd try anyhow, so I asked if he could reccomend any one to me as had a snake house, an' he told ITS UNCOMMON LIVE STOCK. BREEDING METHODS. The Possibilities of the Suakeskin In- ds/try Suggested to Kra Haskins by the Belts and Pocketbooks of Sum- mer Boarders In Cooperstown. (Special Correspondence.) P in the Otsego Hills In New York State many strange Industries are car- me to go up to Central Park an see reed on, but there how they kele snakes there. I went up Is none stranger there an' seed the glass place where than that of Hiram they kep' the snakes, an' the keeper Haskins and none says to me, says he: \rhe rarmiuts that returns a bet- 'ud breed here, it we wild let 'em, but ter profit. Mr. Has- we don't want any young snakes.' kins is a snake There wuz all kinds of snakes there, farmer, and so an' the idee struck me to build a profitable has his business become that glass breedin' house. 1 seed a power - he has undertaken to domesticate the ful sight of other kinds of varmints up reptiles and breed them. While travel- at Central Park, but I s'pose you hey tag through Otsego with wheel and seed them, too. Howeemever, we're on camera a few weeks ago the writer snakes now. I reckon we'd better sticl to snakes. \When I kern home I went to work to build a snake house. I made a purty good one, as you'll see. There lA'UZ no more snakes to ketch that fall; so I rested until spring, when they kem outen their holes. I hed good luck an', ketched a lot of young ones an' soon hed my snake house stocked. I hed all kinds, but didn't know much about; the nature of puttin' the wiong kinds of snakes together. I ketched one of them big ringed neck racers -black- snakes, you know -an' he wuz a fighter. No sooner did I let him into the cage than he tackled a rattler I hed there an' in a switch of a lamb's tall he hed grabbed that rattler in the back of the neck, jumped into the air with hint, aa coiled around him, squeezin' the life outen him. That giy me a lesson, an' I didn't put rattlers ad' racers in the saree cage ag'in. \Waal said the old man, as he looked up at the sky, \I think mebbe we'll hey rain; let's go an' see the snakes,\ He led the way to a frame shanty with double walls like an ice house. In- side was a row of wire -netting cages, covered with glass. In the cages were as choice an assortment of snakes as one would care to see. In one compart- ment were spotted adders by the score, little and big, all coiled and twisted in a squirming, wriggling mass. In an- other compartment were twelve or more copperheads -the old man called them pilots. In still another compart- ment were all kinds of snakes of the garter and whiplash species, green sealed, brown and white mottled, and of nearly all shades of drab and gray. Another compartment contained fully twenty rattlers, all lying still, as if dead. In the fall, the old man said, just before the snakes were ready to hiber- nate, he culled oat all the big ones, and, after killing them, stripped off the heard at Cooperstown of this strange man who had gone to raising rattlers and pilots for the market. His place was found up in the hills near Schuyler Lake. He lives in a comfortable frame dwelling, where the writer was invited to partake of a meal of fresh milk and , boiled cracked corn. \Kern up to look for snakes, did yeou, neow?\ said the old man as his bright, gray eyes twinkled, and he chuckled: \Waal I guess I kin show yeow a pow- erful sight of them.\ \What induced you to go into the snake trapping and breeding business?\ \Waal about free years ago Mrs. Has- kins an' me was down to Cooperstown, HOME OF THE SNAKE FARM. an' we seed so many ladles at the hotel with snakeskin belts an' pocketbooks that we wondered If they was common rattler skins. One day some weeks later I was cratilin' late oats an' I killed a spotted adder with the blade of the cradle. I took him home and skinned him jist like I would an eel, that is, stripped his hide off whole without splittin' it. Then I cleaned it and cured it with white oak liquor, and when It was dry and cured it was soft and shiny like. Mandy, that Is, M's. Ilaskins, says, says she, 'Hiram, I'd send that pelt down to New York to some pocketbook maker and see if it's worth anything.' Waal, I sent it to a feller on Mercer street that deals in fancy leather an' in a few days I got a letter with a check for ;3.50. He said If I had any more spotted snake pelts to set, them along. I didn't hey any, but Mandy says, says she, 'Hiram, you kin git some more, can't you?' I dun - no,' says I. 'but I guess I kin when buckwheat mowin' begins, as ther'll sure to be some snakes in the ten -acre buckwheat lot or I'm mistaken.' Then I begin to think an' to ruminate around In my mind how I cud git a lot of snake pelts. A few days later I got a regular windfall. I run into a den and killed eve full-grown spotted adders, a rattler, and a purty brown mottled sarpInt that I didn't know the name of. I cured these skins an' sent 'em to New York an' my returns was $21. The man that bought the pelts said he'd take all 1 cud ketch. \ 'Mandy,' says I, \do you think I could trap snakes in a trap? I'm going to try anyhow.' 'I don't see why not, Hiram,' says Mandy; an' then I made up my mind to to try an' ketch snakes In traps. A few days later I went to Cherry Valley an' bought one of them big wire French rat traps. It's like an etril pot; the snakes could slip easy like into the trap but cutin't get out, as the wires stuck into them. They cud 'tit into the trap, but cridn't rench the halt. Then I ketched a couple of them Eng- lish sparrers in a snare an' baited the trap an' put it out in the long grass In the east medder, where I had heard an adder hiss a few days before. \The' next mornIn' I went down to the trap, and, Mous me. If there wiisn't an - - ‘). -- THE SNAKE I Adder full eix feet long ete big us my wrist crowded tip in the trap. 1 run R bodkin through him behind the head itnil took him olefin the trap and Set it Agin and went away. Before night I bed km 'heti a beeutifill brown pilot, full of shiny green scales, that is, they looked iv Pen when the sun fell on 'em eitleways I killed him, an' went en that way ketchlti . snakes nil over the farm until It was time fer 'PM to go In their holes I bed over 100 pelts WI dem pilots, a couple of green mocca- sins, rattlers, and several green an brown mottled pelts of snakes I cudn't stall by name, \I thought, now that I hed a fine lot HASKINS AND ASSISTANT. hides and salted them dry. He did not tan -cure them now, as the purchas- ers preferred to dress them, as they could dye them in many colors at the game time, lie got Just as good prices for salted skins as for cured ones. The remark that there were no blacksnakes In hie menagerie caused Bask ins to ex - plain: \I kill all them fellers. They scales, an' only the snakes as hev puny skins bring big prices. When I ketch a good -stye' rarer in my traps I send him down to York for breeders. but I jinerally kill the no-good things,\ Girdled with bight ning. not I One of the most untireeti and (rimiest escapes from death from lightning eu or recorded was witnessed at Gray Eagle, Minn. During a heavy electrfral storm, while Otto Huffman stood on hie porch. a bolt of lightning struck the top of his heal, tearing his hat to ple-en and tear- ing off a lock of hair on the back of his head, near the haye of the brain. After this act the electrical fleid passed around to his breast, blistering it, and on down his right leg to the foot, where it tore off the shoe, and passed into the the ground. Huffman wee made um. conscious but DI recovering. Conk' Vora me,,,.' Mrs, M n ha t tan I read in one of your chlea go pa w l-, of an old cotiple? over seventy yeare of age getting divorced. Mrs. Lakeside Well, why not They ntay still enjoy several years of mar rled life. Sh e triad the floor. ChM)) . Chtimpleigh--We have met be- fore. I think, Miss Coldeal. 'Twat; in a crowd Miss coldeal It was. A rrowdett ear. I 3 4 11)011 ilrearlfnl Anapielon. Be I had a beautiful dream last night I dreamt that we wore walking In a garden and I gave you a klg. She html are you sure nobody saw it? A FAIR FORGER. LILLIAN VINCENT IS HANDY WITH THE PEN. With Her Country Aletitais Vienna. Father She Travels from to 4 ountre, Leaving Many on Her Trall—Foreed to Quit ILLIAN VINCENT, who is also known as the entilaceiS of Savoy, Marie No- ble, Sibyl St. John and by other names which have been used by her ill carrying out lea many schemes as a blackmailer and adventuress, has tome to Wet in New York city. She was frustrated in probably the most pretentious scheme that she ever un- dertook In all her dazzling career --a scheme which if it had gone through as it had been planned would have de- pleted the vaults of one of the largest national banks In the city in the neigh- borhood of Wall street, ruined the house and wrecked the life of one of the officials in the bank and created no end of scandal and disgrace. Lil- lian is as beautiful as she is wicked. She seems to have a peculiar power over men that is akin to hypnotism. Her pathway is strewn with victims, and the long list is occasionally ac- centuated with a suicide. She is a queea of ruin, and yet her face is as LILLIAN VINCENT. Innocent and guileless as a child's. She is somewhere between 30 and 40 years old, but it is not hard for her to pass at times for a young and innocent maiden. She gets her dark complex- ion from her mother, who was a Span- ish lady of high degree. Lillian created a scandal in court circles by ruuning away with a dowdy Englishman named Vincent, who had the stamp of the ticket -of -leave man upon him. Her eyes are as black as night, her bair is raven and falls in graceful ringlets upon a low, broad forehead. Her lips are as perfect in outline as Cupid's bow. She is well educated, an ac- complished musician, a wonderful lin- guist and has traveled around the world several times. Her companion always, except when she Is working up her swindling schemes, Is Theodore Vincent, her father, who lays out the plots which she is so well qualified to work out In her own way. Lilian and her father arrived in New York from London, several months ago. They hired a suite of rooms In a swell house in Thirty-ninth street, near 'Fifth avenue, under the name of St. John. The father passed as a retired hanker. Lillian and her father had to leave Vienna, Austria, a year ago sud- denly between sunset and sunrise to escape a call from the chief of pollee. Lilian had caught In her snares the count Leonhard', a worthy son of a family as old as the kingdom. The count Intended to make Lillian a coun- tess, and she was willing. Ile show- ered presents of diamonds and pre- cious stones upon her as if they Were only pehbles, and when the wedding day was near at hand she induced the count to advance her a large sum of money to clear off her inulebtedness, which haul come to her with her an- etre' halls in Naarry England. She THE0DOttE VINCENT. sad letters to show that there were very urgent calls for this loan. The ootint Was Lillian's slave, anatewould have given up thc largest patt Of his life for her ilk , Ybg were opened hy in English friend to whom he spoke at the gentle Lilllan's relation , ' with !he nobility and her landed rststea, anti a•as a it: shocked to learn that they i, a d exi.teut only in the Imagination She count rueteed to Lillian for an ex eianat ton, anrCent it elm telt' him that his Infoemant WAR 11 loan Who was a rejected suitor for tier hand, and was circulating the acandalume reports Omit her for revenge. She asked to be confronted with her arc - neer, and the bluff N1 Jr` so well put up that tele count belit•tal that his sweetheart haul been insulted Ind grievously wronged. and fortheith sent a challenge to the Englishman to meet ham on the field of honor. During the 'excitenient and confusion attending the preparations for the duel Lillian and her faithful seeent turned everything she had got from the count into cash and left Vienna without giving the Count Leon- hardi their Address. They knocked about Europe for a while, and when luck went against them in Monte Carlo they came to thus country for a [reel, HE DIDN'T DARE DROWN. EVen When she Had Permitted Him to Bathe Sh, kept Hint Under Her 11 4e. A fat, middle-aged woman, with a voice between a grunt and a groan, sat on a bench at Piedmont with her la - year -old boy and watched the battlers splashing and spluttering around the tank, says the San Francisco Post. The heat was sweltering and the boy begged and pleaded to be allowed to go into the water. lie promised tq pull all the weeds out of the garden, to carry in wood for a week without being told and to wipe the dishes every night. \No; I'm afraid you'll drownd,\ declared the cautious mother, but there were evidences of indecision in her voice. If she had said, \Shut up: you shan't,\ the boy would have known his fate wet sealed. \I'll wheel the baby every morning,\ he added, by way of a further bribe. The fat woman mopped her perepir- * ing face, looked at the crowd and snapped: \Well go on; hut if you drownd you can't blame me.\ The boy wail soon splashing and paddling around. He had assured his mother that he could swim a little, and she eyed him narrowly to find out if he had been lying. The boy had got into deep water , when his head went under. Ills mother thought it was merely one of the bm.'s tricks and kept her seat. He came up all right, but looking frightened, floundered a moment and went down again. He was tinder a little longer and bubbles came up where his head ought to be. Up he bobbed again, splashing and trying to cry for help. He was just sinking for the third time when his mother sprang to the edge of the tank, and, shaking her fist at the boy, screamed: \You Simon Peter Bates! Don't you dare drownd, or I'll skin you alive.\ The boy saw the flat and heard the threat, and with his face contorted with fear, kicked out desperately and kept afloat till some of the bathers saved hit life. He didn't dare drown. A BRAVE WOMAN. She Is FAMOUS for Her Conduct During tile Recent Campaign. The aceompanying portrait is that of a remarkable Peruvian woman wht M \ IITHA, THE VIVANDIERE. has beeome a celebrity in the country from her bravery awl attention to the wounded during the recent revolution- ary campaign, which culminated in the attack and rapture of Lima um mar c h 17, 18 and 19 Dna. To -day the name of Martha, the vIvandlere, who accom- panied the division of the retention army under the command of Colonel Philip Ore, is a household wogd in Lima Martha is a MOM n of about 35 years of age, and of Indian blood. She is rather tall for one if her rare, and not at all had -looking From first to last since Colonel ore encamped in Lurtn. about 211 miles fromb Lima. Mar- tha, in a brilliant uniform and mounted on a splendid horse. was always to be seen e hen fighting was going on some- times at the front orging on the sol- diers. at ether mini\ at the rear, assist- ing the wounded. x . the taking of I •Tiorril los and in the attack on I AMR SI/train. by her example, encouraged the soldiers of colonel Ore's el:vision and led them to the attack. During the fierce fighting at the entrance to I,ima. Martha e.14 s - otincied by a bul- let in the right sea, She mort g a ge d a RI11311 bOlifte she owned in calla° and a eon the coalition ((trees corn menced what Was virtually the 'lege of Lima, she employed her little fund in the pute base of revolvers and other ar- ti c l e s. These she managed to smug- gle out with her when she joined colo- nel Ore's division as a vivandIhre There were three day tremendous fIghting in Lima. over 1,1(110 men D Dig dead in the streets. About I per eent of filo eornbat ants engaged \ere plaeed hors d e combat. By ti: it will he easily mid/ • toed how the .ttultict of Martha the .oldlere ha , r le her famolia. I errihle of a Child. .11I, I I iihn. lit itug near wa resport, Ind eald to have bound and gagged his children. aged 4, and taken it to an •Itl deeterted honse, where he left It to ele The remalo4 were found hy n0 ighlora, who were attracted to the house lie a large number of buzzards that had collected there 1Ittlan die clatmg uny kno*letige of the ehlItt. His mottle) however, identified the dead child as that of Dolan Ilninn is now i n e noody. Highest Oiall in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Report ABfoOLUTELY PURE _ Afternoon Tea. They were at an ate•rneen tea. and each hold in her delicately gloved halal a cup of amber third, whiell she hipix•d daintily with a euervenir spoon. But their tachnical knowledge of tea would have made a tea expert's hair stand on end. -I like Fedora best,\ one of them was saying sweetly. -Do you?\ said the other; -now I prefer ' Soiong, because there is no nicotimi In it.\ -Talking of tea brand.- \ asked a society bride flutteringly, -I just adore Booboo' it's made in China, , you know.\ -Well, afternoon tots is I g ood enough for me,\ warbled a socie- ty bud who didn't know anything but real knowledge, and wouldn't bother her wavy heal with tea kinks. lint the hostess, who hail served Formosa. and Souehong, and Bolles sighea to think of the ignorance that seine - tidies existed in social eireles.-De- troit Free Pees's. Bork Candy /a Pore. Rock candy, iyhich Is only sugar in large, hard crystals, is now produced wholesale in tin buckets inclosed in wooden firkins. Strings are stretched across the buckets and upon these the crystals form. It happens often that the rock candy of to -day ta not the white, semi-traneparent pro- duct of twenty -live years ago, but a cloudy, reddish -brown crystal, as if made from cheap sugar. It is not easily adulterated, and crystalization is an essentially honest preemie. Keep Your Weather Eye Open. Fraud loves a shining mars. Occasionally spurious imitations spring up of Hostetter s Stomach Bitters, the great Atnerican family remedy for chills and fever. dyspepsia, oon- etipation. bilionsness nervousness. neuralgia. rheumatism and kidney disorder Triese imitations are usually fiery local bitters full of high wines. Look out for the firm signature on the senuine Intel and vignette of St. George and the Dragon. _ Likes and Dislikes of Animals. Herbivorous animals do not eat all of nature's menu. The horse refuses the water hemlock that the goat eats with avidity and, on the other hand, the goat retirees some plants that are eaten by tho sheep. The tobacco plant is avoided by all save the g oat, man, and the tobacco worm. That Joyful Feeling With the exhilarating sense of renewed health and at and internal elean- liness which follows the use of Syrup of Figs is unknown to the few w have not progressed beyond the old time medicines and the cheap substitutes sometimes offered but nev r a ,a•pted by the well infotmed, lent,' of Them '(here. Spencer --Show me a man who likes to be interrupted in the middle of a aentence. Ferguson -Ali right. I'omo along with me to Sin , Sing. Truth. _PITS -AliFitkktopped free by line's Ores r.erre Restorer. Si, Fits at er toe Moo ma) n pew Xn.rvrriorinr urea. TI $ . 2 I mil tan I C.fre• to . jilthr,1/61 b 51 ,1i.11.4.,1 . 11. The Bashful One They say that there are / n S wornen's Bis I at onder what they are like' She , en sairagingly Why don't you try and find out' Piso's Cure for CooktiMption lots saved me many a doctor's bill.- -S. V Maio, Hopkins Place, Baltimore, Ma , Deo '2. ' What do you think of your engagement ring?\ - You dear, sweet old to, it's the handsomest I ever had -I mean Hike it over so much.\ \114611111011'S Magic Corn Salve,\ Warrssied to clue or MOM,' refunded Sal you, &west for It. Pries 11 ess Husband -Weil, it's strange I can never flail anything Wite-You MO always find fault, it , eenas to me. Owes Vessel lastississ 1. 11,. ohlekt lied Met. It will break up q •Ark er than t.nYttlinit NM It is saws,. o•Ilithle I ra it Nov. mu inch ribbon in Idg with ahot folded ends, are on the new (at. Inelelon of Labor. \When it comes to traveling,\ eK• claimed the had of the family. \a man ilkle to do all the real work My wife has only paeked the trunks, dressed the children, spread clothe over the furniture. and a few things like that, while every bit of informa- tion that has treen got front the time table 1 higl hi, attotal to myself.- De- troit Tribune. Kate Field In Denver. Denver, Sept. 10. My joucney trona Chicago was over the Chicago Burl- ington & Quincy•railroad. one of t h e best managed systems in the t•oun try, 1 siumld say. judging by the civility of the employes, the comfort I experi- enced. the excellence of its roadbed, and the punctuality of arrival. I actually reached l!enver aheati of time. Tbe Burlington Route k must, I lie best to St. Cattl. Minneapolls, oinaha a re; Kansas city rreeaut ion. After a row with his wife, who vio- lently expressed a wish that he was dead, an Irishman said; ''Oh, it's a widow you're wantin' to be. is it? 13ediul, I'll take good care you're no widow as long as I lire.\ -London Tit -Bits. it the Baby le gutting Teeth. ha sure sad use that old and urn tlie.1 remedy, ilea liteciLeR's BOUT RING Syucr for Children T e ethin g . Among the new fashionabIe gray -blue dyes the Vi u miuie named Napoleon tin& great - eat f4\ 1711 . ere In pleasure and profit Ind no .11.11 .11t1hrural, sad painfoi by Onrter'• (Ansi , Tonle- Al1 the Fren h gown. now fasten at the s back soul skirts rindleeves are wider than ever. It Is so easy to remove Corns with Hinder - /turns 'ia, ,, e ci adir in many will it, IJirr rh,m. Get Binderuorur.mi.re how nicely It takes oT White satin cellars covered with !es passementeme are now dress accessories. The Greatest nedical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY'S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discos ered or ene of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofub duan to a common Pimple. He has tried it in touter eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in te I :ASPS (both thunder humor). He has teas in his possession over twii hundred u.ertiticates of its value. all within twenty miles of Boston. Send pu istal cerd fia book. A benefit is alWlyS experienced from the tirst brittle, and a perfect uelre is war- ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes sikeeing reins. like needles passing through them. the same with the Liver err Bosse's. This is caused by the duets being stepped, and always disappears in a week after taking it, Read the label. It the stiumach is fuiul er bilious it will cause squeamish leelini4's at last, change it diet ever necessary. Eat the hest you can get and enough of it Lkise, one tahlespeuintui in water it bed- time. Sold by all Druggists. GUINAN 1108PITUONIC PURE MALT and HOPS A Great Nourisher for Mothers and Nurses. • Wholesome Fluid Extract of Malt and Bops Cores Dyspepsia, Sleeplessness, In- digestion. Soothes the Nerves Rod la the Best Appetiser. Trade supplied by H. T. CLARK DRUG Ca. LINCOLN. NEBRASK& frittssttt ft tt tt tti• tt tt MT* *tire* ; floats of people go to work in the wrong way to cure a S Te.A_ $ •W boa St. Jacobs Oil r,vtdcr rtt 44: lob 4444444444444444444444444444 44444 iiithishisithili 1111111111111111111111 11111111111111111M illiall111111111111111111111111111111111111 IIIIIIMIIIIIINIZIIIII11111111181116/ 1011/10111911f /MIIIWNIIIIMIIIIIND 811111M111111111111 MIIIIIIIIIIIIIN/ 1111101111111 1 / 1 141 11 / 111001•11121111011 SONIDEIK1111IMIIMINUIR/111111/1M1 •111111111MMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIR 4111•11411111M/M11111111 1 / 1 I1111-11111— STEEL WEB PICKET FENCE. CABLED FIELD AND HOG FENCE. Al.,, 4 *milts) rot 444 *Data 4.11 D Ks SUIT Wee( Ilt, 14, niornrt'r, ta • orm\ Pb ln. leerin g an.I •,•.• •rticie I.. be a• repro\ .5101 If .-...1.1•r ,4 it, Iwo. •••, J.11 money C•11111) 0, UP fr.,. De Kalb Fence Co., I 21 High Street, DE KALB, ILL. Keep the Baby Fat. \CArY SPAT NO, GA.. May 21, 11494. \ My baby w: - L a a living skeleton. The do, tors said he Was dying i•f itralr- VIVIS. Indigent Ion. et e variton1 foods I Itted seemed to keep him alive, hue did net 'armlet hen or fatten him. At thirteen months old iieughed exactly whet he did at, birth seven puuurrIc I beKati n.uung ticoTe`i Elit'I.SIoN.\ some- timeg rutting - R few drop, in his bottle, then again feeiliorul with n minion; then again by the iithsorpt method of rulthitut it into his bodv 0 .0(1 was mar- velous IIiu began to intouten and fatten. and became iit trill dimpled boy. a weeder to all. Sce Elf/CLOWN Supplied the one f hitir 11...11(111 111174. iikreoriat Scott's Emulsion eepecially 'useful for sickly, delkate children when their other food fails to nourish them. It supplies in a concentrated, easily digestible form, just the nourishtnent they need to imild them up and give them health and strength. It is (orl-liver Oil made palatable and easy to assimilate, combined with the Hypophosplutc!., both of which are most temarkable nutrients. Pon 't he persuaded to accept a substitute/ Scott & flowne. New York. All Druggists. 50c. and SI. a.tv