EIGHTEENTH ANNUAL YEAR BOOK— PART VIII 



457 



not a method of treatment for the greenhorn to go monkeying with. 

 But with the prevailing high values for hogs we can't understand how 

 any man would be willing to allow a greenhorn around his hog lots in 

 any capacity. Every pork producer in the Corn Belt country is within 

 easy reach and communication with a competent veterinary practi- 

 tioner and there is no excuse for indulging in any false moves. The 

 simultaneous treatment is long past the experimental stage. There is 

 no doubt about its efficacy. It is safe, it is sure, and it brings perma- 

 nent immunity to every animal treated. If every animal in the United 

 States could be given the simultaneous or double treatment for cholera 

 during the next ten days, Mr. Hoover could sleep undisturbed by haunt- 

 ing dreams or any possible shortage of pork. He would get that second 

 pig just as sure as pigs grow into hogs. 



"A nice, juicy bone," says the stray dog, "I'll carry it 

 and straightway carries the disease to his master's 



