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Show f UTAH-EVE- BY LAMBS OP WITH SHEEP STEADY; TRADE IS the bloodsucking habit of the worms. Infested aheeji also may have a swelling under the jaw, known TAT CATTLE IN GOOD DEMAND AND HOGS ABE UP. I Market Tone Better Thin Expected All Along Lise Sheepmen Warned To Beware Stomach Worm Lack of Permit Delay Wool Returns Dehorning Solve Forest Trouble. Correspondence The Bun. KANSAS CITY, Mo., May 10. Though receipts today were fairly liberal, trade was active in all department. Fat cattle were stronger and arockers and feeder were earner. Heavy steers were sold up to $8.65, and yearlings up to $8.75. Hogs were ? ? 4 f rents higher, twenty-fiv- e and the highest of the past three weeks, top $8.50, and bulk of sales $8.00 to $8.45. W tailed lambs were eenta higher, and spring twenty-fiv- e lambs and sheep steady. Prices for fat steer today were stronger than last weeks close, a few' eaaea showing fifteen rents higher. Some heavy steers sold at $8.65, or within twenty rents of the high laiiut last week. Yearling ateers sold up to r.3.75, and the bulk of the steer taken by killera brought $7.75 to $8.50. Considering fairly lilteral leceipts at all market today, the tone in the trine was bet-t'- .i than exported. Cow? and heifers and readily a', firm prices. Ii.lv light weight heit'eis were ten to fifteen wen fifty rents highei. Veal rents lower. Trade in thin cattle was quiet at weak prices. The heavy rains of the past few days have kept buy era off the market, but will increase growth of grass and add to demand later. Active demand from both shiprkera sent hog prices up pers and vents to the fifteen to twenty-fiv- e highest aisitioii of the past three weeks. The top prire was $8.55, and bulk of sales $8.00 to $8.50. Parkers top was $8.50 and shipjiers top $8.55. Stork hogs and pigs were in active demand at $8.00 to $9.00. The few wooled lambs here sold readily at fit cents higher, top teen to twenty-fig- e $10.85. Sheep and spring lambs were steady. Clipjied Texas wethers sold at $0.25 to $0.50, and spring lambs at $10.50 to $11.50. Goats are bringing $3.50 to $4.25. fifteen to ca-v- bottle jaw. Stomach worm infection is spread by the droppings of infested sheep. s The eggs of the jwrasites in the hatch out and the young worms, which are microscopic in size, crawl up grass blades and are swallowed by sheep a they graze. In the stomach the worm become mature in about three weeks. If the fourth stomach or reunet of an infested sheep or a Iamb be examined soon after death the stomach worms ean be seen squirming about, slender, reddish in color and about an inch long. One satisfactory remedy for this disease if used in time, Bteeialits say, is a 1 per cent solution of copper sulphate in water. A dose which has been found satisfactory is a hundred mills (about three ounces) fur y earing and older sheep and half as much fur lambs three mouths old or older. o make this solution dissolve pound of eoper sulphate in oue pint of boiling water, then add cold water to make a total of three gallons of the solution. This amount ia sufficient to treat a hundred adult sheep. The use of this remedy once month during the grazing season will prevent or greatly reduce losses :'rom stomach worms. Young animal and uninfested slieep should be seis rated from older or animals. Pastures which have een used by infested animals are dangerous to young suimals and ones. The first essential in preventive measures is to protect the young animals, tor they are more to parasitic infestation than older ones. Consequently the safest jwsture should lie furnished to the anihs, the older sheep taking the more dangerous land, where it ia necessary :'or sheep to go back to old pasture within s year. In a plan of rotating pastures to teep down stomach worms the sheep may he moved over cornfields, and stubble of various sorts. When different kinds of stock are rotated ou pastures sheep may safely ollow hurst's or swine, but not cattle or goats, na the latter.may be infested with stomach worms and a number of other worms common to sheep, goats and cattle. i THOSE WITHOUT FEBMITS DELAY BIG WOOL REFUND In finishing the collection of excess profits irnm the dealers who handltM the 1918 wool clip and distributee one-I'our- th ed ed aus-ceplil- hay-fiel- IS, ig HER CASE WAS PUZZLE, Have You Coal Enough For Summer? SAYS CALIFORNIA droit-ping- ACTIVE FRIDAY, May FRIDAY. ds How to Treat Diseases. IIow to recognize and to treat the more inqiortant diseases and common ailments of sheep is told in Farmers Bulletin No. 1155, just issued by the United States detriment of agriculture. While the actual treatment of disease is primarily a matter for veterinarians, the information given in the new bulletin will enable sheepown-er- s to recognize symptoms early in tbeir development and thus avoid any losses to their flocks. Altogether n kinds of diseases and ailments are discussed. The sheep industry of the eountry has suffered severely from the ravages of infectious and diseases. In addition to the scientific names the bulletin gives the common names by which the various diseases are known. A convenient ar fifty-seve- LADY COULD NOT LEAVE BED FOB SEVEN LONG WEEKS. Because you don't use as much coal during warm weather as in the winter there is a tendency to neglect the coal bin . And the result mag be that some cool evenng your bin will be empty . Mrs. Mabel Copenhagen of Watts In ths Golden State Bears Testimony to Wonderful Belief From Tanlac, To forestall this awkward situation, put in enough coal to carry you through the summer NOW. And, in ordering, insist on Castle Gate or Clear Creek Utah's famous coals uniform, long burning, clean, economical. the Premier Prescription First Bottle Accomplished Very Mach. It certainly is wonderful the way Tanlac i restoring my health for 1 e already gained several. iound iu weight and feci so good I just want to tell everybody about it, said Mrs. Mallei Copenhagen of 731 Stella street, Watts, Cala. At the time I began taking the medicine I had been in an awful condition ffr three years, and at oue time for seven weeks I couldn't leave my bed at alL I lost a great deal of weight and waa so weak 1 couldnt do any of my housework. My case seemed to puzzle everyone for I never could learn exactly what ailed me, but whatever it was nothing helped me and I became very much discouraged. ASK YOUR But I finally got started to taking Tanlac and the first bottle just heated me wonderfully, and now I m so much lietter 1 hardly feel like the same person. My nerves, which used to bother me a great deal, are improved and feel much stronger and better in every way. Tanlae is the best medicine Ive ever seen or heard of. Advt. UTAH FUEL CO. Miners and Shippers of Castle Gate and Clear Creek Coal exclusively Kf rangement of cause, symptoms, jxist mortem appearance, diagnosis, treatment and prevention makes it possible for owners to obtain a practical knowledge of the best means for preventing and controlling aickness in the flocks. Numerous illustrations add to the clearness of the discussion. As a companion bulletin to Diseases of Sleep, the department ia distributing also FarmenBulIetin No. 1150, entitled Parasites and Parasitic Diseases of Sheep. This bulletin explains methods for controlling various jiests and parasites that attack sheep and points out the advantage of pasture rotation, feeding from racks and ether measures of value in parasite y i pi Delights JSitr 37iozds Ul fe Coffee Delicious1 control. Dehorning Solves It. Young red cedar trees in the Wichita (Kan.) national forest are no longer injured by the herds which graze there. The solution of the problem waa simple the cattle are now dehorned. One of the drawbacks to pasturing national forests has been the injury which was apt to result to the young growth from the grazing animals. AfUr fire protection methods (Continued on Pace Eight) them to growers the bureau of markets of the United States department of agriculture has discovered thirteen small country hundred and sixty-nin- e dealers who oersted without permits. In the year 1918 the United States government bought the entire woo clip of the eountry as a war measure. Dealers were allowed serifle profits and certain items of exienditure. A1 surplus at the end of the season con stituted the excess that ia now being TIIE CAIIBOV WATER, IjASI) AM) POWER COMPANY (A CORPORA-tlonLocation of PrlncipaJ Place of UuiineM, Price, Carbon County. Utah. collected and distributed in the interThere ere delinquent upon the following described stock on account est of s square deal all around. This of Notice: aaneaament levied on the 19th dey of March. 1921, the eeveral amounta aet work was begun by the war industries opposite the names of the respective shareholders aa follows: board, and when the board was dissolved the bureau of markets inherited it as still unfinished. And this consisted for the most part of the Now that we are short on booze The feet that a fellow is married is Anyone can afford to eat eggs transactions of smaller dealers living there is no reason why we eant be not proof conclusive that he is the hut the hen finds it just as much Wool east of the Mississipiri. from the head of a family. long on snooze. , to produce them. plains and ltocky Mountain districts most was handled for the part on consignment, basis, and this type of transaction yielded no excess profit. A More than thirty-si- x hundred smal X $100 JOOO.OO $10100.00 country dealers obtained permits from the war industries board and have rendered accounts, but the discovery of this additional number has alowea up the completion of the work. Scrupulously exact, and with the desire to be just to all concerned, the govern' ment is securing reports from these additional dealers as they are discovered. Distributions to growers amount WITH THE to more than $101,000 and have gone to 3430 individual woolgrowen. Another half million dollars of excess profits are shown by the audits thus far made but have not been paid, am the government is instituting s num ber of suits to compel strict eompli once with the regulations. non-infecti- Fin NOTICE OF SALE .) b- i '1 if P?g CAPITAL, t 8 r VI SURPLUS, START AN ACCOUNT f H SHEEP RAISERS WARNED TO WATCH FOB STOMACH WORMS With the approach of warm wea' ther therpraiwrs are warned by bjhc i :.jli J. ialists of the United States depart ment of agriculture to watch for stomach worms and put into practice every known preventive measure. The stomach worm, they say, is one of the most serious parasites of sheep, occurring over almost the entire world where there are sheep, cattle and any other suitable host animals. In the United States i is most plentiful in the South, where it is favored by an abundance of warmth and moisture, but it is also quite common and serious in the Middle West anil in low, wet areas throughout the entire country. It is present in smaller numbers and does less damage in the high, dry and cool areas of the llocy Mountain States. The first things noticed about sheep infested with stomach worms are dullness and lack of thrift. Later the skin becomes pale, as do the linings of the moutb and eyelids, which is due to impoverishment of the blood And. in accordance with law and an order of the board of directors made on the 19th day of March. 1921, no many shares of each parcel of such stock as may he necessary will he sold at the rrlce Commercial and Savings Hank, Price. Carbon county, Vtah, on the 28th dsy of Mar, 1921, at the hour of 4 o'clock p. m.t to pay delinquent assesaments thereon, together with the costs CAUL. It. MARCl'SEX, Secretary. of advertising and expenses of sale. Price Commercial and Savings Bank, Price, Utah, First pub., Apr. 29; last May 20, 1921, PRICE, UTAH Let Us Help You to Real Banking Service member federal reserve To the Trade: Seduction in prices by agricultural implement and steel manufacturers waa anticipated by ua early in January last. At that time we adjusted prices on our entiro line. We are again making an adjustment in line with the redaction recently announced. This last adjustment brings the prices on our entire stock in line on a basis of the latest raw material and of transportation costs. Quality of goods, service and the advantage of quick delivery on complete goods and extra parte considered, warrant ns in asking for continuation of your very much appreciated business. Consolidated Wagon & Machine Co. G. G. Wright, Vice President and General Manager. J5YSTEM. W. A. LOWRY President R. M. MAQRAW, Vice President BERGERA Vice President E. BOTTEEW0ET nov, vork |