FARMER SHOULD PROVIDE DIPPING TANK FOR SHEEP Advantages of This Treatment Are Great and Not Ex pensive or Difficult to Build—A Hood Plan. (By EDWIN 8. GOOD.) Scabby sheep should he dipped at the first opportunity, for if kept until shearing time most of the wool may be lost and the vitality of the animal greatly reduced. All sheep badly af fected with the disease should, before being dipped, have the thick scabs softened by pouring some of the dip on them and rubbing them with a smooth stick, care being taken, how ever, not to draw blood, for upon co- j agulation it is likely to protect the | mite from the dip. They should then , Dipping Vat. be allowed to stand for at least half an hour before being put into the bath. Each sheep should be immersed in the dip for two minutes by the watch, tho head being ducked at least once just before the animal emerges from the j vat. Within 10 or 14 days the dipping I should be repeated in order to kill j all mites hatched since the first dip ping, as the eggs are more resistant to the dips than are the mites. Sheep may be dipped in the winter in many localities, but warm, dry days must be selected for the purpose and the dipping discontinued in the middle of the afternoon. If the sheep, after being dipped, are allowed to stand for a few hours on the sunny side of a A Sheep Dipping Chute. kirn they will not chill as quickly as it" turned inside a building at once. Dipping vats can be made of wood,! metal or concrete. A farmer owning as many as 25 sheep should have a good dipping vat. For a small number than this the barrel used to scald the pigs will do if the farmer feels that he cannot afford to purchase or build a vat. A good galvanized vat ten feet long and four feet deep, made pur posely for dipping, can be purchased for about sl2. There are smaller sizes than this that can be purchased for less money. Three or four farm ers can club together and purchase PROPERCARE GIVEN SWINE Feed and Attention Must Be Var ied in Accordunce with What Is Desired to Be Done with Animal. (By A. J. LOVEJOY.) The pig that is to be sold for meat has but a few months to live and there should be no let-up in feeding from birth. it will begin to eat shelled corn at three or four weeks' of age, and a lit tle sweet skim-milk or a thick mush of the same material as that given the mother is a great help to hasten growth. Well-bred or even good-grade pigs should weigh sixty to eighty pounds when weaned at three months of age, and should then goon alfalfa or oth er green pasture and have corn twice a day. Late in the summer there should be ready for them a pasture of rape, Held peas or soy beans, besides the corn. If their teeth become sore, change to shelled corn, soaked 24 hours in water slightly salted. It will pay to have a cool, shady place where it it- rather dark, if pos sible, for the pigs to lie in during the heat of the day, with free access to p. mixture of salt, copperas, lime and b.llleS. The feeder should watch closely to see that every pig is eating with a relish If pigs cough it is probably due to a dusty shed. Worms will also cause a cough, and if the hair becomes starv ing and dead in appearance it is well to give a worm powder. In raising hogs to be used as breed ers the object is very different. They are not togo to market at six to ten months of age, but to grow onto ma turity. They should be pushed for rapid "rowth, but must be fed for a growth 112 frame and bone: not fattened on n, but expanded by a feed rich in .otein. At six to eight or ten months of age they should show more length of body and more scale than the market hogs one of the galvanized tanks and haul it to their respective farms as it is wanted. A dipping vat for sheep should be narrow enough to prevent the sheep turning around in it, and deep enough to swim large sheep. The length of the vat should depend upon the number of sheep which can be dipped in a day. There is consid- I erable variation as to the width of vats found on different farms, and as a usual thing they are wider than necessary. Then, too, the narrower the vat the less the dip required to fill it. A vat twenty inches wide at the top and eight inches wide at the bottom is a fair average as regards width, although some very practical sheep men construct their vats as nar row as sixteen inches at the top and six inches at the bottom when the vat is four feet deep. The dipping vat used at the .{en lucky experiment station is located in the driveway of the hoghouse and can be used for the .lfffiug of sheep and young pigs. It is built entirely of concrete, the walls of which are six inches in width, with the excep tion of the partition between the vat and dry chamber, which has a thick ness of nine inches. The end of the vat into which the hogs and sheep are plunged is perpendicular, while the opposite end is provided with an incline which is quite deeply creased so that the animal can walk out. The lloor around the end of the vat from which the sheep emerge is so graded that all drippings return to the vat. There are sewer connections with this outfit, the valve of which is located in the dry chamber. The dry cham ber allows the attendant to carefully control the dripping, break up thick scabs with a brush, and, if necessary help the sheep up the incline, and also goto the aid of a sheep quickly if it shows signs .of strangling. This vat is quite inexpensive. A chute like this can be built with little trouble. The incline to the vat j should be made of smooth lumber and greased when hogs or sheep are dip ped. In dipping animals the second time they usually remember the first experience and endeavor to jump the length of the vat unless the swing door is attached to the end of the chute. As an extra ' blind" to either . sheep or hogs a board can be fixed | 0:1 a pivot and extended horizontally t from the top of the chute toward th* vet. The sheep imagines it a level j surface 011 which to walk, only to fiad, | as one or two steps are taken, that j the end toward the vat tips down, j plunging him quickly into the vat. | and be smooth and well covered, but not 112 o fat as for market. ! This can he very easily done by | feeding a mixed grain ration, with ten | per cent, of tankage or ten per cent I of oil ineal. I'se corn, barley and oats ground | together, mixed thickly with water and 1 fed at once while sweet. It is much better to mix three pounds of milk to one pound of grain. !f one has no milk the next best feed is ten per cent, of tankage. If one has the corn and does not want to buy the mill feeds, he can use 80 per csnt. of corn and 20 per cent, of tankage and have a well-balanced ration. The summer treatment of young pigs sheuld be about the same as for the I market pigs. For late summer and | fall I have made it a practice to have | a field of Evergreen sweet corn to feed I in the roasting ear. I begin by adding one stalk and ear for each pig in addition to his other feed; in a few days, two stalks and two ears, and gradually increase this amount to a full feeo, while diminish ing the other ration. In winter the brood sows shouia have something to take the place of the green pasture. I know of nothing that will equal alfalfa, bright and green, run through a cutting machine. Two-thirds chaffed alfalfa and one-third shelled corn, mixed together and ground in a steel | bur grinder, makes an almost ideal j ration, which can be fed dry or mixed ; thickly with scalding water; a littlo J salt adds relish, it. is a cheap ration I and has just bulk enough to take the j place of grass. If one cannot have alfalfa, bright, ; well-cured clover is good. Sorghum J cane is a good fall feed until heavy | freezing. Mangles or sugar beets are | of course very good. Our Wheat Crop. j Considerable more than 50 per cent, of the entire wheat crop of 1007. estimated in round numbers at 631,800,000 bushels, was grown in 15 j of the older states east of the Missis ! sippi. their gross yield being placed at | 382,000,000 bushels. This is more than three times as much as the largest wheat crop ever grown in the 1 Canadian northwest. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY. 17, 1910 CLIP THIS OUT Rtnowned Doctor's Prescription for Rheumatism and Backache. "One ounce Syrup Sarsaparilla com pound; one ounce Toris compound; Add these to a half pint of good whis key: Take a tablespoonful before each meal and at bed time; Shake the bot tle before using each time." Any drug gist has these ingredients in stock or will quickly get them from his whole sale house. This was published previ ously and hundreds here have been cured by it. Good results show after the first few doses. This also acts as a system builder, eventually restoring Btrength and vitality. CALLOUS TO CRITICISM. The Husband—As far as I am con cerned, you may scold as much as you like. lam by nature thick-skinned. SCRATCHED SO SHE COULD NOT SLEEP "I write to tell you how thankful I am for the wonderful Cutlcura Rem edies. My little niece had eczema for five years and when her mother died I took care of the child. It was all over her face and body, also on her head. She scratched so that she could not sleep nights. I used Cutlcura Soap to wash her with and then ap plied Cutlcura Ointment. I did not use quite half the Cuticura Soap and Ointment, together with Cuticura Re solvent, when you could see a change and they cured her nicely. Now she Is eleven years old and has never been bothered with eczema since. My friends think it is just great the way the baby was cured by Cutlcura. I send you a picture taken when she was about 18 months old. "She was taken with the eczema when two years old. She was covered with big sores and her mother had al 1 the best doctors and tried all kinds of salves and medicines without effect until we used Cuticura Remedies. Mrs. H. Kiernan, 663 Quincy St., Brooklyn, N. Y., Sept. 27, 1909." Knew the Calendar. They were little girls, so small that the teacher was telling them about di visions of time, and receiving all sorts of answers to her simple questions. The little girl who lived in a board ing house was a year older than any of the others. "We have learned that years are di vided into months, months into weeks, and weeks into days," said the teach er. "Now can any one tell me how the days are divided?" The little girl who lived in a board ing house raised her hand, and was asked to speak. "Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, beef," she said, glibly; "Friday, fish; Saturday, corned beef and beans; and Sunday, chicken."— Youth's Companion. Jim's Cost a Dollar More. Richard Le Gallienne, the noted poet, was entertaining a group of magazine editors at luncheon in New York. To a compliment upon his fame Mr. Le Gallienne said, lightly: "But what is poetical fame in this age of prose? Only yesterday a schoolboy came and asked me for my autograph. I assented willingly. And to-day at breakfast time, the boy again presented himself. " 'Will you give me your autograph, sir?' he said. " 'But,' said I, 'I gave yoti my auto graph yesterday.' " I swapped that and a dollar,' he answered, 'for the autograph of Jim Jeffries.'" HARD TO DROP But Many Drop It. A young Calif, wife talks about coffee: "It was hard to drop Mocha and Java and give Postum a trial, but my nerves were so shattered that I was a nervous wreck and of course that means all kinds of ails. "At first I thought bicycle riding caused it and I gave it up, hut my con dition remained unchanged. I did not want to acknowledge coffee caused the trouble for I was very fond of it. At that time a friend came to live with us, and I noticed that after he had been with us a week he would not drink his coffee any more. 1 asked him the reason. He replied, 'I have not had a headache since I left off drinking cof fee, some months ago, till last week, when I began again, here at your table. I don't see how anyone can like coffee, anyway, after drinking Postum!' "I said nothing, but at once ordered a package of Postum. That was five months ago, and we have drank no coffee since, except on two occasions when we had company, and the result each time was that ray husband could not sleep, but lay awake and tossed and talked half the night. We were convinced that coffee caused his suffer ing, so he returned to Postum, con vinced that coffee was an enemy, in stead of a friend, and he is troubled no more with insomnia. "I, myself, have gained 8 pounds in weight, and my nerves have ceased to quiver. It seems so easy now to quit coffee that caused our aches and ails and take up Postum." Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason.'" Ever rend the above Ifltcr! A new one nppenrM from time to time. The; nre Eeuulac, true, and full of human Interest. EIGHTEEN YEARS AGO HE HAD LESS j THAN 3 DOLLARS HE IS NOW ONE OF THE RICHEST FARMERS IN SASKATCHEWAN, CENTRAL CANADA. Arriving In Canada in 1891, Just eighteen years ago, E. A. Guillomin could speak but his native language. He Is a Frenchman. He had but a little over two dollars in his pocket, thus being short over seven dollars of the ten dollars required to secure en try for a homestead of one hundred and sixty acres. He eventually bor rowed the money and near Forget, J Saskatchewan, he started life in Can- I ada on the homestead in which to-day ! he is the fortunate possessor of fifty : Quarter sections of land, or 8,000 acres. ! Now Mr. Guillomin did not acquire ; all these acres as a result altogether of j his farming operations, which were extensive. He looked with satisfac- j tion upon what he was doing on his j limited area, he was saving, careful, j and had foresight. Surrounding land 1 could be had for about $3.00 per acre, and he continued buying as his sav ings would permit, until now he has fifty quarter sections, some of which he can sell at $25.00 per acre. Threshed Fifty Thousand Bushels. This year he was engaged in thresh- \ ing on his place for 54% days. He j threshed out 50,000 bushels of wheat, of which he sold 34,000 bushels, one train load, at a price varying from 84 to 87 cents per bushel. He has on hand still 16,000 bushels. In addition to wheat he raised 30,000 bushels of oats, 7,000 bushels of barley and 500 bushels of flax. He owns 104 horses j and a number of cattle, but since the construction of the railway he has been engaged chiefly in raising wheat. This year he bought his first thresh ing machine, paying for it the sum of $2,100. He estimates that the ma chine earned for him this fall $3,000, thus paying for itself in one season and leaving S9OO to the good. The weather was very propitious for farm threshing, not a single day being lost in the two months which were spent ] In this work. The wheat averaged 23 j bushels to the acre and graded No. 1 and No. 2 Northern. In the past nine years seven good crops have been har- j vested on this farm. For six succes- j elve years the returns were excellent, j that is in the years 1901, 1902, 1903, | 1904, 1905 and 1906. In the two fol lowing years there was a partial fail ure. As the years have passed the quality of the buildings on the farm have been steadily improved, and are ! now as good as can be found in the j district. About SIO,OOO has been in- j vested in this way by Mr. Guillomin. The farm consists of 6,880 acres, of which about 6,000 acres were under crop this season. They Win. "Do you look for a favorable out come to your lawsuit?" "No, but the lawyers do." -Houston Post. ONI.Y ONE "BROMO QUININE." That is I.AXATIVK llttOMo yUI.NINK J.onk for tin* signature of K. \V. (jfIUV £. I'boU thw World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. He loves his country best who strives to make it best.—lngersoll. DOCTOR YOURSELF when yon foci a cold cuuiiiiKnn by taking a few doses of /Yrry UIII'U' /'miikl'ler. It I sbetter than (Juinino and safer. The large 50c bottles are the cheapest. Health may be wealth, but that isn't what makes the doctors rich. Mrs. Wlnnlow's Soothing Syrup. Forctaildren teething, softens the gums, reduces in tlainmatiun.aHays pain. cures wind colic. 25c a buiUu. A friend is merely a person we can tell our troubles to. The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Grer. Cure Vf ITTLE WsT RIVER I aeu, and Indigestion. They do their duty. Small Pill, Small Dose. Small Price. GENUINE must bear signature: ilk A TrilT Hook and Advice FREE. Hatoa. r A IpN I F*nairk u Uawnw, Washington. I 1 I kll I JJ.C. Kbt. 4U y rs. Best references W. N. U., CLEVELAND, NO. 6-1910. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Colo* more oooda brighter and latter coloi* than anj other d»e. One (Oe package color* all (Ibert. Ther d*e in cold water better than an»other dva Vatican*™ Ml eannsnt without rippina apart Writ* tor Ira* booklet-How to Die. Bleach and Mu Color*. MONROE DRUG C 0., Qufncy, ttllnolm* Pleasant, tyteslgg fetie/icial. Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna appeals to the cultured , and the well-informed and the > r healthy because its component parts are simple and whole- -igf some and because it acts with- , substance. In its production a | ' pleasant and refreshing syrup of the figs of California is unit- BHbJe SqDW ed with the laxative and car- ' M/y minative properties of certain (>■ W&L plants known to act most bene- /ffi- \ '< ficially, on the human system, /.IF *: ; when its gentle cleansing is de- . MaP?' ** | sired. To get its beneficial ef- /&^• ; fects, always buy the genuine, j for sale by all reputable drug- A I gists; one size only, price 'm | fifty cents a bottle. The name VF ;of the company California jy^ap/ Fig Syrup Co.—is always plain- }lj j ly printed upon the front of ev- V ery package of the genuine. (p/orr\iajs Syrup (o. J LOUISVILLE, KY. SAN FRANCISCO. CAL. NEW YORK. N. Y. WITH A JAR OF ECZEMA BMk BM £3Skk HHk B jEHte 18 INETTLE RASH I < ERYSIPELAS 1M B ■* M m■■ RINGWORM HERPES IHBI II ITCHING POISON IVY HDi mllraSHH BURNS | ERUPTIONS ■ B ■_■&/»■ ■BH CHAFING SCALDS ■ n B ggj WOT 081 ABRASIONS j , , in the house you have a quick, certain remedy for all kinds of Skin Diseases. < > < > A few applications will relieve the worst case of itching piles. < « 50 cts. a Jar of all Druggists, or sent direct on receipt of price. ; £ ! ! RESINOL CHEMICAL COMPANY, BALTIMORE, MD. « ! Resinol Medicated Shaving Stick makes shaving easy. < > $125,000 net from 1200 acres grapes* $15,000 from 22 acres peaches. $3,200 from 20 acres raisins, in the San Joaquin Valley, California A cow and an acre of alfalfa will earn $l2O a year in the San Joaquin Valley. Grapes will yield from SIOO to S3OO per acre; peaches and apricots, $l5O to $500; while oranges will produce from 1250 to SSOO. and in many instances more than siooc an acre. There are ten million arable and irrigable acres here. You still may buy unimproved land for SSO an acre. Ten acres are enough to comfortably support a small family. Twenty acres afford a fine living, with money in the bank. Forty acres should make you rich. You pay from one-fourth to one-| thiril down, balance eaMily can be paid! for out of the eropn. Almost anything can be raised in the San Joaquin country—oranges and wheat, figs and apples, delicate grapes and hardy potatoes. Products of the temperate and semi-tropic zones flour ish .<»ide by side. Plenty of water for irrigation drawn from the near-by Sierra snows. It In eauy fur one to make a mart. l>and be tween the rows can be used, while or chard is young, for many profitable crops. The point is to make every ■quare foot bear something. \\ bnt ho me farmer* have done: Frank Thomas, of Fresno, Cal., bofight twenty acres of land five years ago. He had but S3OO to start on. To day his place is paid for anil he has an income of over $2,000 a year. William Shrayer. R. P. D. 7, Fresno, Cal., bought his first ten acres six years ago. Now owns sixty acres all paid for, and refuses $12,000 for his place. M. F. Tarpey, of Fresno, owns vine yard of 1,200 acres, from which he takes an annual profit of $125,000. On the Harold estate, twenty-two acres of peaches yielded a $15,000 crop. I (THE HOT SPRINGS OF ARKANSAS More than a mountain resort, more than a fashionable playground—these wonderful springs, with their mysterious health-giving waters, have become world famous as I NATURE'S GREATEST SANITARIUM set apart by the United States government for the benefit of humanity. Where modern medical aeunce Jo(os hands with the wonderful curative agencies of nature—a retreat for the careworn or suffering in the exeat,"beautiful out-of-doors. Water the greatest eliminator oF tvnman ills and the ■! Hot Springs of Arkansas are the greatest waters known to mankind Patronized every year by more than 150,000 people from every part of the woild —the recuperating station of our army and navy, the training ground of the world's greatest athletes, the assembling place of statesmen and the rendezvous of society. There is no Substitute for the Hot Springs Baths The marvelous cures cannot be exaggerated. No one can afford to deprive himself of the qniet rest, the exhilarating joy and the wonderful toning-up that comes from a course of these baths, coupled with the rehabili tating influences of the mountain ozone and woodland landscape. Luxurious hotels, medium-priced hotels and high class boarding bouses with every modern convenience. BEST REACHED MISSOURI PACIFIC IRON MOUNTAIN MRRGMJK I Let us tell you more about it and belp you plan K your 17aVJi HE For train time and railroad rates, address m B. H. PAYNE, Till fil#i 11 General Passenger Agent, St. Louis, Mo. | Carson Reed, Reedley. Cal., from a I twenty-acre crop of Sultana raisins netted $3,200. I know tbl* valley from end to end. I have seen crops planted and harvest ed in every one of its counties. X have interviewed farmers, ranciiers and mer chants. 1 have collated the testimony of crop experts. All this valuable information is con tained in the San Joaquin Valley land folder issued by the Santa Fc Railway. Write for it. giving full name and ad dress. I will also send you our immi gration journal, The Earth, six months free. The Santa Fe employs me to, help settle up its Southwest lines. The Com pany has no land to sell, but I will gladly refer your inquiry to reliable land owners who have. Low fare* nre offered by the SurUa Fe daily. Comfortable tourist sleepers and chair cars. The journey also may be made at other times for a reason able cost. Santa Fe tourist service to San Francisco is quickest. C. L. SEAGRAVES, General Colonization Ajeal A. T. & S. F.Ry. Syttem 1150 Railway Exchange Chicago, UL 7