o 



92 Missouri Agricultural Report. 



strain off the infusion. Mix the same number of pounds of flower 

 of sulphur in water sufficient to make a liquid of creamy con- 

 sistency. Pour this into the tobacco infusion, stirring thoroughly, 

 and add enough warm water to make 100 gallons. This dip is ef- 

 fective but somewhat troublesome and expensive to make. Care 

 should be taken to keep the animals housed until the fleeces are 

 thoroughly dry. 



BOOKS AND BULLETINS ON SHEEP HUSBANDRY. 



Books : 



"Sheep Farming in America," by Jos. E. Wing. 

 "The Domestic Sheep," by Henry Stewart. 

 "Modern Sheep, Breeds and Management," by "Shepherd 

 Boy." 



Bulletins : 



Illinois Experiment Station: Circular 125, Bulletin 129. 



Wisconsin Experiment Station: Bulletin 95, Annual Reports 

 1893 and 1905. 



Nebraska Experiment Station : Bulletins 66 and 71. 



Colorado Experiment Station : Bulletins 38 and 52. 



Minnesota Experiment Station: Bulletins 31, 57, 59, 75 and 

 78. 



Ohio Experiment Station : Bulletins 117 and 187. 



Iowa Experiment Station : Bulletins 33, 35 and 63. 



Michigan Experiment Station: Bulletins 84, 107, 113, 114, 

 128. 



Farmers' Bulletins, U. S. Department of Agriculture, Wash- 

 ington D. C. Bulletins 22, 49, 96, 98, 117, 119, 159, 162, 

 224, 226, 267. 



Missouri State Board of Agriculture Reports 1906, 1907 and 

 1908. Bulletin, "Parasitic Diseases of Sheep." 



Acknotvledgments : 



I am indebted to Chester G. Starr, an advanced student in 

 the Department of Animal Husbandry, for the data recorded in 

 several of the tables accompanying this article. — The Author. 



