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TWICE-A-WEEK PLAIN DEALER TUESDAY, FEB. 22, 1910. BY MEAD PUBLISHING CO Official Paper ot City and County Will Carry Cattle Through the Southern Part of Iowa. FEBRUARY 19 TO MARCH 2 State Dairy Expert Van Pelt Makes Announcement of Special Train Through Southern Iowa February 19. Des Moines, Feb. 12.—For the pur pose of Improving the dairy industry in southern Iowa, Hugh G. Van Pelt, state dairy expert, has made arrange ments with the C., B. & Q. railroad to run a special dairy train through that part of the itate from February 19 to March 2. The train will start from Burlington on the former date, run west on the main line to Glen wood and return on the Keokuk & Western. Stops of from thirty min utes to three hours will be made in every town where sufficient interest is shown. In all about 100 towns will be visited. Mr. Van Pelt Is to be In charge ot the tram, which will be run under tne auspices of the Iowa State Dairy as sociation. Authorities on dairying ol state, national and international fame are being secured to give lectures and demonstrations in each -of the towns where stops are made. According to Mr. Van Pelt this will be the most completely equipped spec ial train ever run in Iowa for educa tional purposes. It will consist of an engine, baggage car, an Arms palace car, two lecture coaches, and a com bination diner and sleeper. In the Arms palace car will be carried dairy animals of the most approved types, and at each town, demonstrations will be given to Illustrate to the farmers In attendance the essential points to be observed in selecting dairy animals to improve their herds. The audienc es will be seated in the lecture carB. In order to secure the best lecture talent obtainable, the combination din ing and sleeping car was obtained to make the speakers comfortable and permit of a greater number of stops. Already great interest is being shown in the proposed trip by farm ers of southern Iowa, and Mr. Van Pelt is receiving numerous letters from persons interested in dairying, asking that the train stop in their town. "Every farmer in southern Iowa will have an opportunity to obtain some facts relative to the improvement that Bhould and will be made in milk and butter production," said Mr. Van Pelt in speaking of the purpose of running •"the dairy special. This train repre sents a portion of the campaign being -carried on by the Iowa State Dairy ".men's association for the betterment of dairy conditions, made possible by the $10,000 appropriation of the last general assembly. "With the Iowa cow yielding an in come to the state of $50,000,000, the possibility of increasing her produc tion to insure an income of $100,000, 000 lies within easy reach of the Iowa farmer. The speakers will make plain •to the farmer how this result may ue accomplished. The fact that one-third of the 1,410,000 cov.g now being milk ed In Iowa are scarcely paying for their teed illustrates the possibility of improvement. The average pro duction of the Iowa cow is 140 pounds of butter per year. It should be 300 pounds, and can be made to reach that point if the man who milks the cows will heed suggestions offered for Improving their herds." Corn Gets Right of Way Officials of the 'Milwaukee, Burling ton, Northwestern, Wabash and St.: Paul & Des Moines railroad compan-! ies sent word to the state railroad commission that they will give corn shipments the right of way over every other kind of freight, except perish able stuff. Their decision to comply with the request of the board means another complete tie-up of stock cars and a crippling of the freight service generally, the same as was experienc ed during the coal famine. Prouty Estate Worth Half Million. An Inventory ot the real and per sonal property of the lately deceased beginning March 1 Captain C. C. Proutv, filed with Pro bate Commissioner J. E. O'Brien by the administrator. W. R. Prouty, indi cates the total valuation of the es tate will reach approximately a hail million dollars. Wants List of Wife Seekers. Anne M. Miller. 3122 Avenue B, Council Bluffs, is in the market for a husband. She read in the papers of Mayor Mathis' municipal matri onial bureau and has written him a letter asking for the names of the "gentlemen candidates" on his list. Delegates Are Named. The Polk county delegates to at tend the good roads convention callcd by Governor Carroll, have been nam ed Need Co-operation. Z. C. Thornburg, assistant superin tendent of schools, in an address be fore the city Union of Mothers, urged them to attend school more often and watch tbe. work of tbe puplli, State Gets Portrait of Famous Prison. Kinsman Post, G. A. R. has present ed the state historical department with a large picture of Andersonville prison as drawn from memory by Private Thomas O'Day. The picture shows the prison at the time when 85,000 union soldiers wore confined there. It is said by critics and vet erans who suffered the tortures of that prison to be an accurate portray al of the scenes enactcd there and the prison, itself. It shows soldiers being beaten because of their refusal to take the oath of allegiance to the southern confederacy it depicts un ion soldiers in the agonies ol death, brought on from lack of food and wa ter. The bull pens of the prison are depicted in all their horror. The pic ture was drawn many years ago and some 16 years ago found its way into the hands of a Chicago art dealer, where it was purchased by Maj. A. S. Carper, now of the archives depart ment. He presented It to Kinsman post, where it has been kept since. The picture is framed in oak and is considered a valuable addition to the historical department. Earliest Easter In Many Years. Lent began just fifteen days earlier this year than it did last, which neces sitated those of the faith to don sack cloth and ashes two weeks in advance of the beginning of penance a year ago. Easter in 1910 falls on the 27th of March in comparison with April 11 last season. As this day Is fixed as the Sunday following the first full moon after the vernal equinox, which falls on March 21 of each year, it is evident that this year will be near the record for early dating. Easter for 1910 will be the second earliest East er in a quarter of a century, viz., that of March 25, 1894, which period was still nearer the vernal equinox. Ash Wednesday, the beginning of Lent, is on February 9. Washington's birtl.day will be on Tuesday this year Memorial day on Monday, as well as the Fourth of July. Labor day Is always on Mon day and this year will be September 5. Thanksgiving day, always on Thursday, will be November 24 while Christmas, the last and best, will also be on the best day, Sunday. lowans Win at Cat Show. At the show of the Beresford Cat club at Chicago the following awards were made: Orange Tabby, female, ab., Dorothy May, Misses Prouty, Humboldt. Brown Tabby, male, 3d prize, Af fectionate Boy, Mrs. F. S. Withington, Des Moines. Black Tabby, Pluto, Mrs. F. S. Withington, Des Moines. Brown Tabby, male, 1st prize, Af fectionate Boy, Mrs. F. S. Withington, Des Moines. Brown Tabby, female, 2d prize. Ba by Sioux, Mrs. F. S. Withington, Des Moines. Any other color tabbv without white, V. H. C. Baby Sioux, Mrs. F. S. Withington, Des Moines. Laborers Demand Justice. "What the laboring men want Is not charity, but justice," said Miss Kate Bernard, commissioner of chari ties and correction in Oklahoma, ad dressing the Farmers' Grain Dealers' association at the auditorium. She de clared it was co-operation between farmers and laboring men that en abled Oklahoma to secure a statute that has become a model for reform measures. Harry F. Atwood, of Chicago, as sistant attorney general, stated that Hotel Keepers to Meet. More than 200 hotel owners of the state are expected to come to Des Moines on Feb. 23 to attend the two days' session of the first annual con vention of the Iowa State Hotel Keep ers' association. They are Lafayette Young, Sr., started HII utrly sore. Many salves and Harry Ingham, W. G. Hale, Jamea G. Berryhill, A. B. Elliott and Jerry O' l.eary. Those who will speak are Ma.vor A. I J. Mathis of Des Moines, F. J. Dona-1 hue of Sioux City, F. J. Taggart of Omaha, W. E. Johnson of Ida drove, W. W. Witmer of Des Moines, John Wiley of Chicago, I. A. Medlar of Omaha, John J. Bohn of Chicago, R. W. Johnson of Waterloo, G. M. Christ ian of Des Moines, T. E. Vietch of Des Moines, and W. L. Brown ot Des Moines. Worth $26,000,000 to Land Owners. Iowa is credited with 70,000 miles of roads. If th'irty feet of them were taken off and restored to the adjacent property owners as proposed by Wil liam Larrabee, Jr., in the legislature several vears app, it would amount to 268,000 acres or about $26,000,000 gain to the land owners. Voldeng is Reappointed. Superintendent, M. Nelson Voldeng of the state hospital at Cherokee has been reappointed by the state board of control tor a term of four years, New Club House Plans. Plans lor the Des Moines club build ing, to be ericted at tin* southwest corner of West Eighth and Locust streets, will be completed within a few weeks by the architects- Won't Need a Crutch. hen Editor J. P. Sossman, of ir nclius. N. f'., bruised his leg barllv. it. IV sal ointments proved worthless. Then Hucklen' Arnica rfalve heated it thor oughly. Nothing, is so prompt, and sure for Ulcers. IJoils, Burn Rruises Curs, Corns. Sores, -zcrna or Piles. 25c at P. A. Clemrner's. A heal'hv man a king in his own right: an unhealthy man is an unhappy slave Kurdock Blood Bitters build up .sound l)04lth keeps you well, YES, SHE EMERGES OCCASIONAL Thought Evidence Looked Bad For Bailinger and Dennett. the solution of the present economic Atty. Vertrees, for Bailinger, start problem in America. lies in co-opera- I ed cross-examining Glavis as to his tion such as exists among the Farmer knowledge of the Alaska coal fields. grain dealers. Washington, Feb. 15.—The Pinchot Bailinger investigation committed re sumed its inquiry before the largest crowd that has yet been present at the hearings. IJ. R. Glavis, former chief of the Seattle field service of the general land ofllce, was again on the stand. I have here," he said, "a copy of Collier's Weekly for Nov. 13, entitled 'The Whitewashing of Bailinger, or Are the Guggenheims Charge of the Interior Department?' Did you write that article?" I "Yes, sir," answered Glavis, "but I did not write the heading." Then followed a long colloquy be I tween Glavis and Vertrees, the latter trying to get. Glavis definitely to charge officials of the department with wrong doing. Finally the witness declared, "I thought the evidence established the misconduct of Secretary Bailinger and Commissioner Dennett." "1 did not say 'corrupt conduct'," Glavis corrected. "I said misconduct. As to corruptness I have not made any such charges. If I had such evidence I would have made It to a grand jury." IF OME WERE HONEST. I cannot Rive vou all the love And heart's devotion That poets call "the measure of The plumbless ocean." I can be loyal, tender, true, And love^ you solely. But none—"no, dear, not even Can own me wholly. World Tour Ends Quickly. Emma Rowland, the 15-year-old girl And vet I'm sure I wouldn't die, from Cedar Rapids, who had got as! far as Des Moines in her tour of the 1 rRCiAOSt* MODERN METHODS ON THE HIGHWAY Holdup Men Have Taken to Automobiles—In Chicago. BMiin THOUGHT UNSAFE GLAVIS ADMITS WRITING AR TICLE IN MAGAZINE. yon- think of you each hour, of course^ But if (his flatters I nlso think each hour, perforce, Of other matters. You get a minute of the time. My daily task, all The rest. Say. does this prove that I'm A heartless rascal? Id crrlpve If vou should leave mo—ay, Weep for a season: 0r ,0M" 1,ly "-as-on. 1 |n""~lT w',.m"nn"y world, was sent to the school for girls put I'm hn'lt on the oorniron plnn at Mitchellviiie. Tho girl seems to W-»wllv hm'n.n' have an unconquerable desire to travel. man HOWARD Land & Investment Co Krai Estate and Insurance In\v,i yiul Canada Lands our specialty. We have contracts with over 101) sub-agents throughout Iowa and Illinois to bring us buyers the coming season. We want your farm on our list. K.J. BKCKRK, Supt. I'. G. WHITE, Mgr. TRADE IN FROZEN TURTLES Tortoises Are Shipped from Australia to England—Agent Tells of the New Industry. London.—Turtle soup need no long er be the exclusive dish of well-to do epicures. A trade in frozen turtles from Queensland was started in Lon don, the result of which will be that the chief delicacy at civic banquets will be brought within the means of thousands by whom hitherto it has been unobtainable. A large consignment of frozen tur tles reached this country a few days ago and was conveyed in refrigerator cars to Birmingham. Two previous trial shipments on a small scale had proved successful, and thus this third venture practically ini tiated what is expected to be a large and increasing branch of Australian commerce. Until then Birmingham was the center of the frozen turtle trade. Messrs. C. Woodhouse & Co., of Kinghorn street, Smithfield, have, however, become the London agents for these turtles, and their first day's business was exceedingly promising. Mr. Woodhouse said that the turtles are killed soon after capture, bled, frozen and shipped to England by mall steamer. There are about 400 of them in England at present. "They weigh from 160 to 300 pounds each." he continued. "This one (in dicating a show turtle on the floor ol his establishment), turns the scales at 27% stone, and is worth, at 7% pence a pound, about $35. Its value alive would be about $100, owing to the great difliculty experienced in get ting live turtles to England. Frozen turtle has given every satisfaction at the leading hotels and clubs, so that the future development of the Queens land frozen turtle trade certainly seems bright." Room for Improvement. "I see," Kaid DeBorum, who- was making a prolonged call,"that an Ohio genius has invented a telephone at tachment that will enable one to see a person miles away." "That niav be all right as far as il goes," rejoined Miss Wearyun, "but it doesn't go quite far enough. An attachment that would keep some peo ple nnles away„would be wore prac tical FINAL KEPORT. ln-ihe District Court ofllo\\ !ird ounty, Iowa Notice of Hearing of Final Jieport. in the matter of the Kstatc ol Mary Ann Wcssel, Deceased. To KredcrJcka MuKKchnun. Lewis MDKRUI, man, Mr«. iMiimlo Walters, Jolin A. Wessel KateMufHclman, Arthur Mustselman, Fred MuKKclmnn. Keiimin, William ft. WGHHUI. Ilnrry MUK* IAA/AQ .stander. Henry Wetsftcl and all other person** Interested in said estate: You and of you arc hereby notified that there Ieach now-on iile in Vho ofllce of the ul«rk of the District Court of Howard County, Iowa, the final report of A. W. Isbell, executor of the estate of Mary Ann WesHel. deceased. Haiti report asks that said executor he authorized to pay the ainotrtit due Henry Wessel from nald estate to the Clerk of the District Court of Howard County, Iowa, and that unless you appear thereto and show cause why said Una! report should not he approved on or before noon of the 2nd day of the next term of said court, appointed to he held in the Court House in said county, commencing on the 7th day of March 1910, said report will he approved and said administrator discharged, and bondsmen released. A. W. JSBKIjL, Home Course In Live Stock Farming XII.—Horse hlK Kxeeulyr, For Sale. 40 acres in Paris twp., being the sei of the ne of section 36-99-12, joining Albert Hovorka's farm. J. J. KRAL, 37tf Eastman, Wis, Management. By C. V. GREGORY, Author of "Home Course In Modern Agriculture." "Making Money on the Farm/' fitc. Copyright, 1909. by American Press Association HE horse stable, like the cow stable, should be well venti lated and have plenty of light. If the floors are of cement they should be well bedded as a protection both to the floor nnd to the horses' feet. A false floor of plank is often used over tbe cement floor. Stable Construction. Tbe stall partitions should be made especially strong to keep the horses from kicking one another. Two by fours set (bitwise up to about four and a half feet in height, with a heavy ready made wire partition above that, S-MN-K SB# -uc' PIG. XXII.—THREE OP A EKD. make a neat, durable and not overex pensive partition. The length of the stall should be about nlhe feet ten iDclies from the manger back. The floor should slope slightly back to the gutter. Chutes from which the hay can be pitched from the mow directly Into the manger are a great conven ience and aid in keeping the barn clean. One or more box stalls should be pro vided for the use of the mares at par turition time. They are convenient for sick horses nt any time and are almost a necessity if a stallion is kept. A small room should be provided near the horses in which the harness can be hung. The ammonia from tbe ma nure is very destructive to leather. Besides this, when the harness hangs directly behind the horses it is occa sionally kicked down and trampled on, tbe colts get tangled in it, and It causes trouble generally. The young borses do not need an expensive shelter. Horses stand cold weather better than auy other class of stock. The most they need Is a good shed with a tight roof and kept well bedded. They can run on the pasture in winter as well as in summer if part of the grass has been allowed to grow up during tbe fall. One of the greatest objections to letting colts run In this manner is I he liability to wire cuts. Where the pasture is fenced with barb ed wire, especially If (he fence is not kept in first class repair at all times, wire cuts arp inevitable. The loss on oner or two colts is enough to pay for puttiDg a good woven wire fence, like that described in article 1, around the entire horse pasture. Three years is usually the best age to breed mares for the first time. Where they are very large for their age breeding at two years is an advan tage. as it broadens (hem out and at the same time gives them more grace and symmetry. In this case, however, they should not be bred the following year, so that they may have an oppor tunity to complete their growth. It is best to so manage the breeding that the colts will come at different times, so that only one of the mares will be out of use at a time. The colts should come at times of the year when the work is slack, as far as can be ar ranged. Feeding. There is no better feed for mares or for borses of any kind than oats. In addition to their high feeding value they seem to have a stimulating ef fect. keeping the animals in better spirits than any other kind of feed Oats are usually too expensive to be fed exclusively, however. There Is probably no better ration for draft borses (ban one part bran, two parts corn and three parts oats. Ground barley may be used in place of tbe corn. If oats are exceptionally high two parts instead of three may be used. A handful of oilmeal once a week in the winter will add to the thrift of the animals. The amount of the grain mixture fed should vary from one-half to one and a quarter pounds to the hundred pounds of live weight per day. The first amount is about right for idle horses, while the latter is for animals nt hard work or nursing a foal. Do not feed too much hay to work horses. It makes them paunchy and listless. A horse has a comparatively smnII stomach and when at work needs most of the room there for his grain From three-quarters to a pound Of good clover or timothy hay or a mix ture»of tbe two per hundredweight is plenty when at work. In the winter he cati use more roughage and lesb grain. Never feed horses dusty hay or straw,-as it will ruin their wind. Horses should have plenty of water. They will staud the work a great deal better in warm weather if they are given water in the middle of the fore noon and afternoon. If they are to be kept at work they may be given all the water tliey want, but care should be taken not to till a warm horse up with cold water and then let him stand and cool off rapidly. It is an excellent plan to have a yard near tbe barn into which the borses can be turned after they have is-* had their supper. They can roll ana drink and. if the yard is large euough, find a little grass. They will feel a great deal better in tbe morning than if kept in the barn all night. Care at Foaling Time. The mare may be safely worked up to withiu ten days of foaling. In fact, light work is better for her than idle ness would be. A mare heavy in foul should not be required to back, how ever, uor to exert herself too much in pulling heavy loads. Working in the mud is also bad for her and if kept up for any length of time is likely to cause abortion. The surest Indication of the ap proach of foaling time 'is the appear ance of wax on the teats, which oc curs about three days before parturi tion. At this time the feed should be reduced in amount and a warm bran mash given at night. The addition of a little ollmeal will clean out the in testines and makes foaling easy. For several days previous to foaling the mare should be kept in a box stall, so that she may becomc accustomed to the now location. Some one should be at hand when the colt is born to give assistance if necessary. Do not both er the mare unless it is absolutely nec essary, however. As soon as tbe colt is born the navel cord should bo tied tightly, about two Indies from the body, with a string which has been soaked in some disin fecting solution. The cord should be cut just below the point where it is tied and the remaining portion wet with some of the disinfecting solution. The udder of the mare should also be washed with the same solution. At tention to those details will do much to prevent the attack of scours and joint ill which so often proves fatal to young colts. Do not be in too big a hurry to get the mare on feed after foaling. A lit tle laxative feed for the first day or two after foaling is all she needs. In pasture season the mare and colt may be turned out on grass for a few days, gradually increasing the grain ration at the same time. In case work is pressing the mare may be put to work In two or three days after foaling, but two precautions must be strictly ad hered to—first, do not allow the colt to follow the mare in the field, ex hausting bis puny strength in fighting flies and following his mother up and down the rough furrows second, do not allow the colt to suck while the mare is very warm. He will be hun gry when his mother comes from the field and anxious to satisfy his appe tite at once, but a little wholesome re straint at this time will teach him a lesson that he must learn some time that bis master's will is superior to his own. cv Care of the Colt.•-•: In two or three weeks the colt will begin to nibble at the hay in his moth er's manger, and if given a feed box of his own out of reach of the other horses he will soon learn to eat oats. He can be turned out in the pasture with his mother when she is not busy, and after awhile, if the pasture is l'IG. XXIII.—EXTRA GOOD DRAFT STALLION, fenced with something besides barbed wire, he may be turned out with the other colts without his mother. With nil the grass and oats be can eat, in addition to his mother's milk, his growth will be rapid. A colt that lenrns to eat well before weaning time will suffer little check in growth at that time. The first winter is a perilous time for the colt. Too often he is given the run of the farm, with little roughage other than cornstalks and straw and only a very small allowance of grain or none "t all. Many farmers hold up their minds in horror at the thought of giv ing a colt grain every day from the time he is big enough to eat until he is marketed. These same farmers, however, think nothing of feeding their calves liberally for two or three years and then selling them for one-third what the colt will bring at the same age. Size nnd development count for more in a horse than in a steer, and the cost of feed is small compared with the results obtained from liberal feed ing. Some farmers think that a colt will get to be Just so big anyway and that liberal feeding only hastens the process a little. This is a mistake. A colt that is stunted when he is young will never attain the size that he would if properly fed. Additional weight in a draft horse is worth at least 25 cents a pound, and it is. a mistake not to develoo the colt to the limit. PASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of J^OW YOU CAN GET YOUR SUIT PRESSED every week at 1 lie rate of $1.00 per ii.until. You are invited to come in and j*ive me a trial order. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Will Hamilton, Prop. AT THE KRAFT CLOTHING STORK. American Loan and Investment Co. CRESCO, IOWA. J. C. WEHSTEK, I'res. C._W. REFD, Vice-I'res. -j B. F. DAVIS, Secretar Owner and Proprietor of tin? only Com plete SI OF ABSTRACT BOMS in Howard County Abstracts of Title to Lands and Town Lots furnished on short notice. Special advantages for making Farm Loans and selling Real Estate. Coal, Wood, Posts Lime, Cemint tisii. Market Street, Cresco, Iowa. DELIVERED FREE IN TOWN •. 2000LBS For a Ton Everv 1 »me. Quality, Honest Weight and Accurate Measurement Guaranteed. WM. F. RATHERT JOSEPH (iSUFFLV Attorney and Couuselor *&f at Law. CRESCO, I A Office over Cresco Department Store. Will Practice in All the Courts *, of the State. $ P. G.BUTTON.V.S Assistant State Veterinary Surgeon. aonnr Graduate of the' Ontario Veterinary College, Toronto. Canada member of the Ontario Veterinary Mt'dloal Association, Treats all ilieesseH of the domesticated animals by tbe most approved methods. Special attentl given io surgical operations and horse dentistry. All calls, day or night, promptly attended io Charlies moderate. otlice a»d Hospital first door west of Armory Biillntni:, rrvco. Northern Iowa Telephone Office No. WX JOHN MoCOOK Attorney and Counselor at Law CKESCO, IOWA win prHctlce in aJMhe courts of Hie *inie make lonns, and attend to Duying »nd SPHIUK real PBtotc and sfCurlileB. Ofllce over oreBCO Union itavlngs Rank. GEO. H. OWENS REAL ESTATE Otlicc over First National Bank CBE8CO. IOWA. W.C.Hess,M.B. Physician and Surgeon N. (Successor to Dr. Scripture.) Office in Thompson Building. 1. Phone, office 1J residence 1J INTER STA1E COLLECTION N. I inuiipv N.I. 'Phone, Abyii CRESCO, IOWA Weroilwt mono} lir lioods sold. Services per forimm. Money luuncd, or «ny torm of debt, from A YON R. A f- YWHERR. I ITIGATBD MATTERS carried tli.ough all courta. Wrltp (or particulars. K. A. CHURCH, Attorney for Ageney. ARLINGTON HOTEL $1 PER DAY. Corner of Marketand Elm Sts. ThU House has been New atted and he furnished. Bleotrlc U*nte. Good 'Stabling in Connotlon. L. J. LONCF, Proprietor. W. J. MEAD'S o, Glass' Hestaurant. Special violin, over W. A. attention given to beginners on the .u.iu, and will also accept tho somewhat advanced pupils on that Instrument. Can accept pupils on some band Instruments. INSURANCE "V L. E. EATON, AGENT Office over tbe Freehauf Cafe Cresco, Iowa. 9 a Dr. G. H. Kellogg DENTAL SURGEON CKESCO, IOWA Any work In HLB line will receive Prompt Attention, Office tn rear of Clark's Music Store. HOLLI8TEFf« Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggeis A Busy Medicine (or Bu«y People. Brings Golden Health and Renewed Vloor. A specific for Constipation, Indigestion, Liver: and Kidney troubleu, Pimples, Eczema, Impure Blood, Bod Breath .Sluggish Bowels, Headache and Backache. Its Rocky Mountain Tea In tab let form. 36 cents a box. Genuine made by HOIAISTKH DBUG COHPAKT, Madison, Wis. G0LPEM NUGGETS FOR SALLOW PE0K6