■Oa T37 /9r. U. B. X)E3>AETX1.ENT OF AGRIOULTI)K,E^ UURDCAD Qy ANIMAJ^ IND17STEY Orukhs Noe. 343, 144, 146, und 146 \ ;; ;: KEGULATIONS OF THK Vi 8EOEETA31Y OF i^GBlCULTURi GOYBBNING THJS INSPECTION. ETC.. OF IJ^?E STOCK WHICH IS T]IE SUBJECT OP INTERSTATE COMMERCE BULES TO PKEYEN'J^ THE S]niBAD DP SPLE- NETIC PEYEB IN CATTLE ANI) SCABIES IN CATTLE ANJj SHEJEP • ^ .V//^ v> .V V Order No. 144 : Rule 1, Revision 2. — To prevent the spread of splenetic fever in cattle 2S Order No. 145 : Rule 2. Revision 1. — To prevent the spread of scabies in cattle 4.' Order No. 146 : Rule 3, Revision 1. — To prevent the spread of scabies in sheep 17 Acts of Congress 49 Index 57 (3) (B. A. I. Ordee No. 143.) REGULATIONS OF THE SECRETARY OF AGRI- CULTURE OOYERMNG THE INSPECTION, DISINFECTION, CERTIFICATION, TREAT- MENT, HANDLING. AND METHOD AND MAN- NER OF DELIA ERY AND SHIPMENT OF LIYE STOCK WHICH IS THE SUBJECT OF INTER- STATE COMMERCE. U. S. Depaetmext of Agriculture, Office of the Secretary. Washington. D. C, ilarch .22, 1901. The following regulations governing the inspection, disinfection, certification, treatment, handling, and method and manner of delivery and shipment of live stock which is the subject of interstate commerce are issued for the guidance of all persons and corporations concerned in the handling or movement of live stock. For purposes of identification these regulations are designated as B. A. I. Order No. 143. The regulations heretofore issued by the Secretary of Agriculture on this subject, under date of :May 1, 1905, effective on and after June 1, 190.5, and all amendments thereto, are hereby revoked, to take effect April 15, 1907, on and after which date the regulations herein published shall become and be effective until otherwise ordered. James Wilsox, Secretary of Agriculture. GENERAL REGULATIONS. Effectire Airril l-j, 1907. Regulation 1. Wherever in these regulations, or in the rules based thereon, the word ** interstate " is used, it shall be construed to mean " between one (5) 6 state or Territory or the District of Columbia and aiiotlier State or Territory or the District of Co- luiiihia." Regulation 2. When the Secretary of Agriculture shall tleterniine the fact that rattle or other live stock in a State or Territory or the District of Columbia are affected with any contagious, infectious, or com- nuuiicable disease notice will be given of that fact. A rule will be issued placing in quarantine all or a portion of the State or Territory or the District of Columbia in which the disease exists, and this rule will either absolutely forbid the interstate movement of live stock from the quarantined area or will in- dicate the regulations under which interstate move- ments may be made. Regulation 3. Before offering cattle or other live stock for interstate transportation, or so transporting them, or introducing them into any public stock yards or upon routes of traffic for interstate transportation, all persons or corporations are required to exercise reasonable diligence to ascertain that such animals are not affected with any contagious or infectious disease, and have not been exposed to the contagion or in- fection of disease by contact with other animals so diseased or by location in or upon pens, premises, cars, or other vehicles that have contained diseased ani- mals. Regulation 4. Premises, cars, boats, and other ve- hicles that have contained diseased or exposed cattle or other live stock shall not be used in the interstate transjwrtation of healthy animals until the said premises, cars, boats, and other vehicles shall have been cleaned and disinfected as hereinafter provided. If the facilities for cleaning and disinfecting cars can not be provided at the point where the diseased or exposed cattle or other live stock are unloaded there- from, the transportation company shall seal and for- ward the infectious cars to a point to be agreed upon l>etween an agent of the company and a representative of the Bureau of Animal Industry, and shall there clean and disinfect the said cars in the presence of an employee of the Bureau of Animal Industry. Regulation 5. Cars, boats, and other vehicles for use in the interstate transportation of healthy and iionexposed cattle or other live stock within or from a qiiarantiued area shall first be cleaned and disin- fected as hereinafter provided, nnless it shall be shown to the satisfaction of the inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry either that said cars or other ve- hicles have been cleaned and disinfected under Regu- lation 4, and have not carried or contained diseased or exposed animals since that cleaning and disinfec- tion, or that the cars have never been used for the transportation of diseased or exposed animals. Regulation 6. Public stock yards, feeding stations, and approaches, chutes, alleys, and pens thereof which have contained diseased or exposed animals shall, be- fore healthy or nonexposed animals for interstate transportation are placed therein, be cleaned and dis- infected as hereinafter provided. Failure to clean and disinfect said places will subject them to quarantine. Regulation 7. When deemed necessary, interstate shipments of live stock will be stopped in transit for inspection and disposition, and all persons and cor- porations having control of the transportation of such live stock shall cease the carriage or transit thereof upon receipt of an order from an inspector of the Bu- reau of Animal Industry, and shall submit the shi])- ment to inspection. Regulation 8. When in order to prevent the spread of a disease it becomes necessary to slaughter any dis- eased or exposed live stock, and the pur<:-hase of such live stock by the United States is authorized by law and an appropriation is available therefor, the value of the live stock shall be ascertained and compensation made therefor either by agreement with the owner or by appraisement in the manner provided by the law of the State or Territory wherein the owner of the live stock has his legal residence. Regulation 9. Where inspection and certification are required by the regulations of the Secretary of Agri- culture, inspection and certification by an insi)ector of the Bureau of Animal Industry are meant, and such inspection and certification will be furnished without tlie payment of fees or charges of any nature. Regulation 10. Interstate shipments of live stock of any quarantined area that are not accompanied by a certificate of an inspector of the Bureau of Animal 8 Industry, showing freedom from disease or from ex- posure thereto, shall not be diverted eu route to feed lots or to other States for feeding, stocking, or breed- ing purposes unless first inspected and certified by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry. REGULATIONS TO PREVENT THE SPREAD OF SPLENETIC FEVER OF CATTLE. Effective April 13, 1901. Regulation 11. Whenever any State or Territory located within an area quarantined by the Secretary of Agriculture for splenetic, southern, or Texas fever shall duly establish a State or Territorial quaran- tined area different from the quarantined area estab- lished by the Secretary of Agriculture, and shall ob- tain the legislation requisite to enforce said State or Territorial quarantine strictly and completely within the boundaries of said State or Territory, the Secre- tary of Agriculture will, if the said State or Terri- torial quarantine be satisfactory, adopt by a rule said State or Territorial quarantine, and the State or Territorial quarantine thus adopted shall define the limits of that portion of the Federal quarantined area, which shall thereafter be knowu as the modified quar- antined area. The expiration of the time fixed in the rule, the revocation of the rule, or a failure upon the part of the State officers to enforce the adopted quarantine shall restore the quarantined area to the territory quarantined by the Secretary of Agriculture before the adoption of the State or Territorial quar- antine. Regulation 12. Whenever any State or Territory under authority of law shall establish a State or Territorial quarantine for splenetic fever which dif- fers from the quarantine established by the Secretary of Agriculture for the said disease, and shall desire a modification of the area quarantined by the Sec- retary of Agriculture, the proper officer of the said State or Territory shall forward to the Seci'etary of Agriculture a true map or description of such State or Territorial quarantine and a duly authenticated copy of the laws and regulations relating to the es- tablishment and enforcement of the (piarantine. I 9 Regulation 13. From the 1st d;iy of February to the :n>it day of October, inclusive, of each year no cattle shall be transported or driven or allowed to drift from the modified quarantined area in any State or Terri- tory or the District of Columbia to any point in any other State or Territory or the District of Columbia not included in the modified quarantined area, except as hereinafter provided. During the months of Jan- uary, November, and December of each year inter- state movements of cattle from the modified quaran- tined area may be made without restrictions other than those imposed by State or Territorial officers at point of destination. Regulation 14. Interstate shiimients of cattle from the modified quarantined area may be made at any time, by rail or boat, to a recognized slaughtering center for immediate slaughter, but cattle shall not be trailed or driven or hauled in private conveyance from the modified quarantined area in any State or Territory or the District of Columbia to any point in any other State or Territory or the District of Colum- bia not included in the modified quarantined area. When transported for immediate slaughter, as herein provided, the following rules regarding their move- ment shall be observed : (a) Cattle of the modified quarantined area which in course of interstate transportation therefrom are unloaded at a point not within the modified quaran- tined area to be fed or watered, or for other pur- poses, shall be placed in pens or yards reserved for cattle of the modified quarantined area. Such pens and yards shall be separated from the pens and yards used for cattle that are not of the modified quaran- tined area as hereinafter provided, and shall be marked with a conspicuous sign bearing the words *' QUARANTINE PENS," Or " QUARANTINE YARDS," ill let- ters not less than 10 inches in height. If cattle not of the modified quarantined area shall be placed in the said pens or yards, such cattle shall thereafter be treated in all respects as if they were actually of the modified quarantined area. At points of destination, chutes and alleyways and pens, maintained as herein- after provided and marked with a sign as herein- before specified, shall be set ai)art to receive cattle of the modified quarantined area, and no other cattle 10 shall be admitted to said clintes. pens, and alleyways. The recrnlations relatin.i? to the movement of cattle of the nKKlitied (jnarantined area as prescribed by the proper State otficers at destination shall be carefully observed. (h) The cars or boats which have carried cattle of the modilied (piarantined area shall be cleaned and disinfected as hereinafter provided as soon as possible after miloadinp: and before the said cars or boats are asain used in the interstate transi)ortation of live stock or merchandise. (c) Where cattle of the modified (luarautined area in course of interstate transportation and cattle not of the modified quarantined area are yarded in adja- cent pens, there shall be a space not less than 10 feet wide between the pens, which space shall not be occu- pied by cattle, and there shall be on each side of this space a tight board fence not less than 5 feet high : Providech That the pens used for cattle of the modi- fied quarantined area shall be inclosed by a tight board fence not less than ♦> feet high on the inside. (cl) The ])roper officers of the transportation com- panies shall securely affix to both sides of all cars carrying interstate shipments of cattle from the modi- fied quarantined area, except as hereinafter provided, durable placards not less that 5* by 8 inches in size, on which shall be printed with permanent black ink and in bold-face letters not less than U inches in height the words " southern cattle." These pla- cards shall also show the name of the place from which the shipment was made, the date of the ship- ment (which nmst corresi)ond with the date of the waybills and other i)apers), the name of the trans- portation comi)any, and the name of the place of destination. Each of the waybills, conductors' mani- fests, memortmda, and bills of lading i)ertaining to such shii)ments by cars or boats shall have the words "southern cattle" plainly written or stamped upon its face. Whenever such sliii>ments are transferred to another trans])()rtation company or into other cars or into other boats, or are rebilled or reconsigned from any point outside of the modified quarantined area to a point other than the original destination, the cars into which said cattle are transferred and the new waybills, conductors' manifests, memoranda, 11 and bills of lading covering said shipments by ears or boats shall l>e marked as herein specified for cars carrying said cattle from the modified quarantined area, and for the billing, etc.. covering the same. If for any reason the placards rerovided for yarding exposed cattle. When " uninspected clean cattle " or " uninspected exposed cattle" are shipped interstate without inspection un- der the terms of this regulation the proper officers of the transportation company shall affix to both sides of each car carrj'ing such cattle a durable placard, not less than 5^ by 8 inches in size, on which shall be printed with permanent black ink in bold-face letters not less than 1^ inches in h:^ight the words " unix- SPECTED CLEAN CATTLE " or "' UNINSPECTED EXPOSED CATTLE," as the case may be. These placards shall also show the name of the place from which the shipment was made, the date of the shipment (which date uuist correspond with the date of the waybills and other papers), the name of the transportation company, and the name of the place of destination. Each of the waybills, conductors' manifests, memo- randa, and bills of lading pertaining to such ship- ments by cars or boats shall have the words " unin- spected CLEAN CATTLE " Or " UNINSPECTED EXPOSED CATTLE," as the case may be. plainly written or stamped upon its face. ^ Whenever such shipments are transferred to another transportation company or into other cars or into other boats, or are rebilled or reconsigned to a point other than the original destina- tion, the cars into which said cattle are transferred and the new waybills, conductors' manifests, memo- randa, and bills of lading covering such shipments by cars or boats shall l)e marked as herein si>ecifled for cars first carrying said cattle, and for the billing. 16 etc., covering: the same. If for any reason the plac- ards recjuired by this regulation are removed from the car or are destroyed or rendered illej^ible, they shall be innnediately replaced by the transjmrtation company or its a.ucents, the intention beinf^ that legible placards shall be maintained on the cars from the time of shipment until they arrive at destination, and until the disposition of the cars is indi(.'ated by an inspector of the liureau of Animal Industry. Reg-ulation 22. Cattle diseased with scabies which have been dipped once in either the lime-and-sulphur or the tobacco-and-sulphur dip under the supervision of an insi)ector of the Bureau of Animal Industry within ten days of date of shipment, may be shipped inter- state for immediate slaughter to a recognized slaughtering center, and when so shipped the said cattle shall not be diverted en route and shall be slaughtered within two weeks after arrival at desti- nation. If cattle diseased with scabies are to be shipped interstate for stockers or feeders, they shall be dipped twice, ten days apart, under the supervision of an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry, in either the lime-and-sulphur or the tobacco-and- sulphur dip ; or they shall be either dipiped once in, or sprayed once with, a properly prepared emulsion of Beaumont crude petroleum or similar oil under the supervision of such inspector. After dipping or spraying they shall be submitted to inspection before shipment. Cattle not visibly diseased, but which are known to be part of a diseased herd, intended for stockers or feeders, shall be dipped once under the supervision of an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry in either the lime-and-sulphur or the to- bacco-and-sulphur dip before being shipped inter- state ; or they shall be either dipped once in, or sprayed once with, a properly prepared emulsion of Beaumont crude petroleum or similar oil under the supervision of an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry. However, diseased cattle may be dipped once in either the lime-and-sulphur or the tobacco- and-sulphur dip under the supervision of an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry at the point of origin and shipped interstate for stocking or feeding purposes if arrangements have been made for the 17 second dipping en route or at destination at the re- quired time after the first dipping at a point where there is an inspector stationed and under his super- vision. Cattle not visibly diseased, but which are known to be part of a diseased herd, shipped to an- other State or Territory for feeding or stoclving pur- poses, may be dipped or sprayed en route instead of at point of origin by special permission first had and obtained from the Chief of the Bureau of Animal In- dustry. Reg-ulation 23. Healthy cattle in a State or Terri- tory not quarantined by the Secretary of Agriculture for scabies in cattle may be shipped interstate in clean cars, without inspection, for slaughter or for stockers or feeders ; but if the said cattle be unloaded en route or at destination and placed in infectious premises, they shall be treated as exposed cattle, and shall not be forwarded to destination for purposes other than for immediate slaughter until they shall have been dipped or sprayed once, under the supervision of an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry, in any dip or mixture herein approved. Regulation 24. When diseased cattle that have been dipped once in either the lime-and-sulphur or the to- bacco-and-sulphur dip, or that have been either dipped once in,, or sprayed once with, the petroleum or oil emulsion, or when cattle not visibly diseased but which are known to be a part of a diseased herd, are shipped interstate in accordance with Regulation 22, the proper officers of the transportation company shall aflix to both sides of each car carrying such cattle a durable, conspicuous placard, not less than 5* by 8 inches in size, on which shall be printed with perma- nent black ink in bold-face letters not less than li inches in height the words " dipped scabby cattle," or " CATTLE EXPOSED TO SCABIES,'' as the case may be. These placards shall also show the name of the place from which the shipment was made, the date of the shipment (which must correspond with the date of the waybills and other papers), the name of the transpor- tation company, and the name of the place of destina- tion. Each of the wayl)ills, conductors' manifests, memoranda, and bills of lading pertaining to sucii shipments by cars or boats shall have the words 29990—07 2 18 ii DIPPED SCAI5RY CATTLE. Ol' " CATTLE EXPOSED TO SCABIES. "' Jis the case may be, written or stamped upon its face. Whenever such shipments are transferred to another transportation company or into other cars or into otlicr boats, or are rebilled or reconsigned to a point otiier than the original destination, the cars into whicli said cattle are transferred and the new waybills, conductors' manifests, memoranda, and bills of lading covering sm-h shipments by cars or boats shall be marked as herein specified for cars first carrying said cattle and for the billing, etc., covering the same. If for any reason the placards required bj^ this regula- tion are removed from the car or are destroyed or ren- dered illegible, they shall be innnediately replaced by the transportation company or its agents ; the inten- tion being that legible placards shall be maintained on the cars from the time of shipment until they arrive at destination or point of dipping or spraying, and the disposition of the cars is indicated by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry. Regulation 25. The dips now approved by the De- partment are the lime-and-sulphur dip. the tobacco- and-sulphur dip, and Beaumont crude petroleum. The lime-and-sulphur dip is made in the proportion of 12 pounds of unslaked lime and 24 pounds of flowers of sulphur to 100 gallons of water. The tobacco-and- sulphur dip is made with sufficient extract of tobacco or nicotine solution to give a n.iixture containing not less than five one-bundredths of 1 per cent of nicotine and 2 per cent flowers of sulphur. Proprietary diiis may be used under provisions similar to those set out in Regulation 33. When Beaumont crude petroleum or similar oil or an emulsion thereof is used as a dip or spray for cattle diseased with or exposed to scabies, one dipping or spraying only is necessary. The De- partment disclaims responsibility for any loss or damage resulting from the dipping or spraying. Regulation 26. Cattle shipped interstate under a certificate from an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry are not guaranteed uninterrupted transit, for in the event of the discovery of scabies or of exposure thereto en route the cattle shall thereafter be handled as diseased or exposed cattle, as hereinbefore pro- vided, and the cars or other vehicles and the chutes. 19 alleys, and pens whic-li have been occupied by them shall be cleaned and disinfected as hereinafter pro- vided. Reg-ulation 27. Public stock yards shall be con- sidered infectious and the cattle yarded therein as having been exix)sed to the disease, and no cattle shall be removed therefrom to another State, Terri- tory, or the District of Columbia, except for imme- diate slaughter, without dipping. Where, however, a part or all of the stock yards is reserved and set apart for the reception of uninfected shipments of cattle and is kept free of disease, cattle may be shipped interstate from the uninfectious yards or portions thereof without dipping. If diseased cattle are introduced into the uninfectious yards or portions thereof, they shall be immediately removed therefrom, and the chutes, alleys, and pens used by them thor- oughly cleaned and disinfected. No cattle shall be shipped interstate for feeding or stocking purposes from any stock yards where an inspector of the Bu- reau of Animal Industry is stationed without a certi- ficate of inspection or of dipping or spraying issued by the said inspector. Regulation 28. Cars and other vehicles, yards, pens, sheds, chutes, etc.. which have contained diseased cattle shall be cleaned and disinfected in the follovr- iug manner : Remove all the litter and manure and then saturate the interior surfaces of the cars and woodwork, flooring, and ground of the chutes, alleys, and pens with a 5 per cent solution of pure carbolic acid in water, with suflicient lime to show where it has been applied, REGULATIONS TO PREVENT THE SPREAD OF SCABIES IN SHEEP. Effective AiJril 15. 1901. Regulation 29. No sheep which are diseased with scabies shall be shipped, trailed, otherwise removed, or allowed to drift from one State. Territory, or the District of Columbia, into another State. Territory, or the District of Columbia, except as hereinafter pro- vided : and no sheep shall be shipped, trailed, other- wise removed, or allowed to drift from a State or Ter- ritory or portion thereof ciuarautined for the disease 20 of scabies iu sheep iuto another State, Territory, or the District of Columbia, except as hereinafter pro- vided, initil the sheep shall have been inspected by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry, found to be free from the disease and from exposure thereto, and are accompanied by a certificate from the said in- spector. All of the sheep in a certain flock or ship- ment in which the disease is present shall be classed as diseased sheep, and none of them shall be removed or offered for interstate shipment until dipped as hereinafter provided. The practice of " picking " a flock — i. e., removing sheep which are visibly diseased and then offering any portion of the remaining sheep for either inspection or interstate shipment, or both — is directly and positively prohibited. Regulation 30. Healthy sheep iu an area not quar- antined for the disease of scabies in sheep which have not been exposed to the disease may be shipped or trailed interstate without restriction by the regula- tions of the Secretary of Agriculture to prevent the spread of scabies in sheep; but if said sheep be un- loaded en route or at destination and are placed in infectious premises they shall thereafter be treated as exposed sheep and shall not be forwarded to des- tination for purposes other than immediate slaughter until they shall have been dipped under the super- vision of an inspector of the Bureau of Animal In- dustry. Regulation 31. Sheep that are diseased with scabies and that have been dipped once in one of the approved dips, under the supervision of an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry within ten days of date of shipment, may be shipped interstate for immediate slaughter to a recognized slaughtering center, and when so shipped the said sheep shall not be diverted en route and shall be slaughtered within two weeks after arrival at destination. If diseased sheep are to be shipped interstate for stocking or feeding purposes they shall be dipped twice as above indicated, ten days apart, and shall be submitted to inspection before shipment. Sheep that are not diseased with scabies, but which have been exposed to the contagion of the disease, may be moved interstate for feeding or stocking purposes 21 after one dipping, or they may be shipped interstate by rail or boat to a recognized slaughtering center for immediate slaughter without dipping. Reg-ulation 32. When diseased sheep have been dipped once and are shipped interstate for slaughter in accordance with Regulation 31, or when exposed sheep are shipped interstate without dipping for im- mediate slaughter in accordance with Regulation 31, the proper officers of the transportation company shall affix to both sides of each car a durable placard not less than 5^ by 8 inches in size, on which shall be printed with permanent black ink in bold-face letters not less than lA inches in height the words " dipped SCABBY SHEEP '' Or " EXPOSED SHEEP FOR SLAUGHTER," as the case may be. These placards shall also show the name of the place from which the shipment was made, the date of the shipment (which must corre- spond with the date of the waybills and other papers), the Jiame of the transportation company, and the name of the place of destination. Each of the waybills, conductors" manifests, memoranda, and bills of lad- ing pertaining to such shipments by cars or boats shall have the words " dipped scabby sheep '' or " ex- posed SHEEP FOR slaughter," as the case may be, written or stamped upon its face. Whenever such shipments are transferred to another transportation company or into other cars or into other boats, or are rebilled or reconsigned to a point other than the original destination the cars into which said sheep are transferred and the new waybills, conductors' manifests, memoranda, and bills of lading covering such shipments by cars or boats shall be marked as herein specified for cars first carrying said sheep and for the billing, etc.. covering the same. If for any reason the placards required by this regulation are removed from the car or are destroyed or rendered illegible, they shall be immediately replaced by the transportation company or its agents, the intention be- ing that legible placards shall be maintained on the cars from the time of shipment until they arrive at destination, and the disposition of the cars is indi- cated by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal In- dustry. 22 Regulation 33. The dips now approved are : (a) The tobacco-and-sulpbur dip, made with suf- ficient extract of tobacco or nicotine solution to give a mixture containing not less than five one-hun- dredtlis of 1 i>er cent of nicotine and 2 per cent flowers of sulithur : Provided, That for the first dip- ping of infected sheep, in lieu of the suli)hur herein prescribed, a sufficient additional amount of extract of tobacco or nicotine solution shall be used to give a mixture containing not less than seven one-hun- dredths of 1 per cent of nicotine. (6) The lime-and-sulphur dip, made by mixing 8 pounds of unslaked lime and 24 pounds of flowers of sulphur and boiling with 30 gallons of water for not less than two hours. All sediment should be allowed to subside before the liquid is placed in the dipping vat. This liquid should be diluted sufficiently to make 100 gallons before use; And pending further investigation, the following- described dips : (c) The cresol dip, which consists of a mixture of cresylic acid « with soap. When diluted ready for use this dip should contain one-half of 1 per cent of cresylic acid. (d) The coal-tar creosote dip, which is made by mixing coal-tar creosote or coal-tar oils and cresylic acid separately with resin soap in varying propor- tions. This dip should contain when diluted ready for use not less than 1 per cent by weight of coal-tar oils and cresylic acid. In no case should the diluted dip contain more than four-tenths of 1 per cent nor less than one-tenth of 1 per cent of cresylic acid ; but when the proportion of cresylic acid falls below two-tenths of 1 per cent the coal-tar oils should be increased sufficiently to bring the total of the tar oils and the cresylic acid in the diluted dip up to 1.2 per cent by weight. The cresol dip and the coal-tar creosote dip should alwavs be tested on a small scale with the water and « By the term cresylic acid as used in tliese rej?ulations is meant cresols and other phenols derived from coal tar, none of which boils below 185° C. nor above 250° C. 23 under the conditions to be employed in dipping in order to avoid possible injury to stock. The diluted sample should be allowed to stand for at least an hour. If after this leng1:h of time there is a separa- tion of an oily layer the dip should not be used with that kind of water. Especial care in this connection is necessary where hard water is to be used. In the undiluted coal-tar creosote dips there may be, in cold weather especially, a separation of naph- thalene and other constitutents of the dip. Care should therefore be taken to see that the concentrated dip is homogeneous in character before using any portion of it. Manufacturers who desire the Department to ap- prove their dips for official dipping should submit a sample of their product to the Bureau of Animal In- dustry in Washington and accompany this with the formula used in preparing the dip. Before a proprietary substance is approved for use in official dipping the manufacturer must agree as follows : (1) To recommend for sheep scab a dilution of his product which is approved by the Department of Agriculture. (2) To maintain his product of uniform composi- tion. (3) To place on packages of dips which have been approved the following statement: A sample of this product has been submitted to the Department of Agriculture for examination. AYe guarantee the contents of this package to be of the same composition as the sample submitted to the De- partment, and that when diluted according to the directions printed hereon for the treatment of sheep scab it will give a dipping fluid of the composition required of a " dip by the regulations of the Secretary of Agriculture governing sheep scab. (4) To have on containers or advertising matter no reference to the United States Government or any of its Departments except as provided in the preceding paragraph. " There should be inserted here the name of the class of dips to which the product belongs, such as '* cresol," or •• lime and suiohur." etc. 24 Regulation 34. Tho dipping shall be done carefully and tlu' slieei) handled as humanely as possible. The l)t'i)artment disclaims responsibility for any loss or dama.i^e resulting from the dipping, and those who wish to avoid any risks that may be incident to dip- ping at the stock yards, as well as to avoid liability to prosecution, should see that their sheep are free from disease before shipping them to market. Regulation 35. Sheep shipped interstate under a cvrtiticate from an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry are uot guaranteed uninterrupted transit: for in the event of the discovery of scabies or of exposure thereto en route the sheep shall thereafter be handled as diseased or exposed sheep, as herein- before provided, and the cars or other vehicles and the chutes, alleys, and pens which have been occupied by them shall be cleaned and disinfected, as herein- after provided. Regulation 36. Public stock yards shall be con- sidered infectious and the sheep yarded therein as having been exposed to the disease, and no sheep shall be shipped interstate therefrom, except for immediate slaughter, without dipping. Where, however, a part or all of the stock yards is reserved and set apart for the reception of uninfected shipments of sheep anil is kept free of disease, sheep may be shipped inter- state from the uninfectious yards or portions thereof without dipping. If diseased sheep are introduced into the uninfectious yards or portions thereof, they shall be immediately removed therefrom and the chutes, alleys, and pens occupied by the said sheep shall be thoroughly cleaned and disinfected. No sheep shall be shipped interstate for feeding or stocking purposes from any stock yards where an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry is stationed without a certificate of inspection or of dipping issued by the said inspector. Regulation 37. Cars and other vehicles, yards, pens, sheds, chutes, etc., that have contained diseased sheep shall be cleaned and disinfected in the following manner: Remove all litter and manure and then sat- urate the interior surfaces of the cars and the wood- work, flooring, and ground of the sheds, alleyways, and pens with a solution containing 5 per cent of pure carbolic acid or with a solution containing 2 per cent 25 of cresol. When cre.sol is used it must be mixed with soft soap in order to reuder it easily soluble in cold water. Cars and premises are not required to be cleaned and disinfected on account of their having contained " dipped scabby sheep " tliat have been dipped within ten days or sheep that have been ex- posed to scabies. In determininir exposure, all sheep in a flock or shipment in which disease is present shall be classed as diseased. REaULATIONS TO PREVENT THE SPREAD OF MALADIE DU COIT. Effect ice April 13. 1907. Regulation 38. No horses or asses shall be offered for interstate shipment, shipped, transported, driven, or trailed, or otherwise removed or allowed to drift interstate from an area quarantined by the Secretary of Agriculture for maladie du co"it. without inspection and certification of freedom from the disease for the purpose of the particular movement by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry. Owners and cus- todians of horses or asses for whom inspection is made shall provide such reasonable facilities and render such assistance as may be required by the inspector. Regulation 39. If stallions or jacks shall be allowed to run at large in an area (juarantined by the Secre- tary of Agriculture for maladie du coit. or if there shall be any breeding of horses or asses in a herd in an area quarantined by the Secretary of Agriculture for maladie du coTt in which there is a horse or an ass which has been exposed to the infection of maladie du coit within eighteen months after the said exposure, a rule will be issued forbidding absolutely the inte- state movement of any horses or asses from the said area. Regulation 40. When it is necessary in order to prevent the spread of the disease and to aid in its extermination, and an appropriation is available therefor, the Department of Agriculture will purchase a diseased or exposed animal at a price based upon its actual value for work purposes at the time of pur- chase. When, however, the owner or owners will not 20 accept the hidcinnity price (»ttVred by the Departinent, the inspector shall arraiij^e for a b(jard ot three ap- praisers, who shall detenniue the price to be paid for the condemned animal. This board shall be consti- tuted as follows: An inspector or other employee of the Bureau of Animal Industry, one person chosen by the owner of the animal or animals to be appraised, and the third member to be chosen by the two herein provided for. Regulation 41. The Department will pay the sum of $50 for authentic information leading to the dis- covery of the ownership and location of a stallion or a jack affected with the contajjious venerenl disease known as maladie du coit, and the sum of $25 for authentic information leading to the discovery of the ownership and location of a female animal affected with the disease: Provided, That when such informa- tion is received from more than one person as to the location of the same animal and owner, tlie sum above named shall be paid to the first informant, and when doubt exists or a dispute arises as to who was the first informant, no reward shall be paid. \Yhen more than one diseased animal is found belonging to the same owner or on the same premises, only one reward shall be paid. REGULATIONS TO PREVENT THE SPREAD OF HOG CHOLERA AND SWINE PLAGUE. Effective April 15, 1907. Regulation 42. No swine which are diseased with hog cholera or swine plague, or which have been ex- posed to either of the diseases l)y contact with dis- eased animals or by confinement in infectious cars, pens, or other premises, shall be transported, trailed, or driven from one State or Territory (ir the District of Columbia into another State or Territory or the District of Columbia, except as hereinafter provided. AH persons intending to shii) swine interstate shall ascertain before offering them for such shipment that the animals are not diseased and have not been ex- posed to the contagion of either disease. Regulation 43. Swine which are not diseased with hog «holera or swine plague and which have not been 27 exposed to the infection thereof may be shipped from one State or Territory or the District of Columbia into another State or Territory or the District of Columbia without restriction by the regulations of the Secretary of Agriculture and subject only to such restrictions as maj' be imposed on the shipment by State or Territorial or District of Columbia officers at destination. Regulation 44. Public stock yards shall be con- sidered infectious, and no interstate movement of swine therefrom shall be made for feeding or stock- ing purj.oses. Diseased swine shall not be shipped interstate from the stock yards, but shall be slaugh- tered, subject to condemnation on post-mortem in- spection ; and all swine in a certain lot or shipment shall be classed as diseased when one or more of them show evidence of the disease. Swine that are not diseased and have been merely exposed by being in_ the yards may be shipped interstate to a recognized slaughtering center for immediate slaughter. Where, however, a part of the yard is set apart for the re- ception of uninfected shipments of swine and is kept free of infection, swine may be shipped interstate from the uninfectious portions thereof without re- striction. Should such part be contaminated by the introduction of diseased swine, said animals shall lie immediately removed therefrom, and the chutes, alleys, and pens occupied by them thoroughly cleaned and disinfected, as hereinafter provided. Regulation 45. Cars and other vehicles and pens or yards which have contained interstate shipments of diseased or exposed swine shall be cleaned and disin- fected as soon as possible after unloading. Cars that have contained interstate shipments of swine shall not be removed until the inspector has ascertained the condition of the live animals and either released the cars or given notice that they shall be cleaned and dis- infected. Cleaning and disinfection shall be done by first removing all litter and manure and then satu- rating the interior surfaces of the cars and the wood- work, flooring, and ground of the chutes, alleys, and pens with a 5 per cent solution of i)ure carbolic acid in water, or with a solution containing 2 per cent of cresol. When cresol is used it must be mixed with soft soap in order to render it easily soluble in water. (B. A. I. Order No. 144.) RULE 1, REVISION 2.— TO PREVENT THE SPREAD OF SPLENETIC FEVER IN CATTLE. Effective on and after Ai)ril Id, 1901. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Office of the Secretary. The fact has been determined by the Secretary of Agriculture, and notice is hereby given, that a con- tagious and infectious disease, ivnown as splenetic, southern, or Texas fever, exists among cattle in the following-named States and Territories, to wit : California, Oklahoma, Indian Territory. Texas. Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi. Tennessee. Ala- bama, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. Now, therefore. I, James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture, under authority conferred by section 1 of the act of Congress approved March 3, 1905 (33 Stat., 1264), do hereby quarantine the following area, to wit : All territory situate within the boundaries of Cali- fornia, Oklahoma, Indian Territory, Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Virginia. North Carolina, South Carolina. Georgia, and Florida. It is ordered by this Rule 1, Revision 2, under the authority and discretion conferred on the Secretary of Agriculture by section 3 of the act of Congress approved March 3, 1905 (33 Stat, 1265), that the interstate movement of cattle of the area herein quarantined to any point not located in the said quarantined area shall only be made in accordance with the Regulations of the Secretary of Agriculture designated as B. A. I. Order No. 143, promulgated (28) 29 March 22, 1907, and efifective April 15, 1907, subject to the following exceptions, to wit : Exception 1. The States of California, Texas, Ten- nessee, Georgia, North Carolina, and Virginia, and the Territory of Oklahoma, having fixed quarantine areas within their respective boundaries which differ from the quarantined area fixed by the Secretary of Agri- culture, and having enacted laws necessary to enforce the quarantine of such areas, the said State and Ter- ritorial quarantined areas, which are limited by the line described below, are hereby adopted, to continue as provided in Regulation 11 of the Regulations of the Secretary of Agriculture promulgated March 22, 1907, and effective April 15. 1907. Except as hereinafter provided in Exceptions 3. 4, and 7, the area hereinbe- fore quarantined is modified accordingly. The following is a description of the line which modifies the quarantined area and fixes the limits of the modified quarantined area : CALIFORNIA. Beginning on the Pacific coast where the northern boundary of San Luis Obispo County connects with the Pacific Ocean : thence easterly along the northern boundary of San Luis Obispo County to its junction with the western boundary of Kings County ; thence northwesterly along the western boundary of Kings and Fresno counties to the northwest corner of Fresno County ; thence northeasterly along the southern boundary of Merced County to its intersection with the right of way of the main line of the Southern Pa- cific Company ; thence southeasterly along the right of way of the main line of the Southern Pacific Company to its intersection with the southern boundary of Fresno County ; thence northeasterly along the south- ern boundary of Fresno County to the northeast corner of Tulare County ; thence southerly along the eastern boundary of Tulare County to the southeast corner of said county : thence easterly along the southern boundary of Inyo County to its intersection with the eastern boundary of the State of California. TEXAS. Beginning at the intersection of the southern boun- dary of New Mexico with the international boundary at the Rio Grande River ; thence following along the said international boundary to the southwest corner of the county of Terrell ; thence northwesterly along the boundaries of Terrell and Pecos counties to a 80 point whoro tlio roadbed of the Galveston, llarrisburg and San Antonio Uailroad Company crosses the west- ern boundary t»f I'eeos County; thence in an easterly direction with the center of said roadbed to a point on Section No. .*>(). lilock A2, Galveston, llarrisburt; and San Antonio Railroad Company; thence north with the pasture fence, runninj? in a northerly direction throujj^h the eastern part of Sections Nos. l-'i and 12 of said Block A2 and across Section 1, GuK", Colorado and Santa Fe liailway Company; tlience continuing north with said pasture fence through the easter^i parts of Sections Nos. 1(>, 17, 4<), 47, 7(), 77, lOH, 107, laO, 187, 142, 14;), and 194, Block D, Missouri, Kansas and Texas Extension Railway Company ; thence con- tinuing in a northerly direction to a point on the northern Itoundary of Section No. 6, Block 160, Gulf. Colorado and Santa Fe Railway Company, same be- ing corner of pasture fence ; thence east along the northern boundary of Sections Nos. 6, 9, 10, 11, 12. 15, 10, Block 100, Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Rail- way Company, to the northeast corner of said Section No. 16, the same being corner of pasture fence; thence in a northerly direction with the eastern boun- dary of Sections Nos. 22, 21, 20, 23, 24, 25. 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, and 32, Block 1, Corpus Christi, San Diego and Rio Grande Narrow Gauge Railway Company, to the northeast corner of said Section No. 32 ; thence west with the northern boundary of Sections Nos. 32 and 33, same block, to the northwest corner of Section No. 33, Block 1, Corpus Christi, San Diego and Rio Grande Narrow Gauge Railway Company, corner of fence ; thence north with the eastern boundary of Sec- tions Nos. 1, 12, 13, 24, 25, 36, 37, 48. 49, 60, 61, and 72, Block 2, Corpus Christi, San Diego and Rio Grande Narrow Gauge Railway Company, to the northeast corner of said Section No. 72: thence in an easterly direction with the pasture fence to the southeast cor- ner of Section No. 9, patented to James E. Evans; thence north along the eastern boundary of said Sec- tion No. 9 to the northwest corner of Section No. 100, Block A2, Texas Central Railway Company; thence east with the northern boundary of Sections Nos. 100 and 89, same block, to the northeast corner of said Section No. 89, Block A2, Texas Central Rai-lway Com- pany ; thence north ahmg the eastern boundary of Sections Nos. 90, 91, 92, and 93 to the southeast corner of Section No. 94. Block A2, Texas Central Railway Company; thence northwest diagonally across Sec- tion No.^ 94 to the northwest corner of said section; thence continuing in a northwesterly direction diago- nally across Sections Nos. 14, 18, and 28 to the north- east corner of Section No. 29, Block C4, Gulf, Colo- rado and Santa Fe Railway Company; thence west with the northern boundary of said section No. 29 to the northwest corner of said section; thence north- west diagonally across Section No. 1. Texas Central Railway Company, Section No. 97, Block 194, Gulf, 81 Colorado autl Sautu Fe liaihva.v Company, to the northeast comer o£ Section No. 90 ; thence in a north- erly direction across Section No. 94 to a point on its northern boundary GOO varas west (jf its northeast corner; thence continuing north through Sections Nos. 93, 90. 89, 86. 85, and 58. Block 194. Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe Railway Company, to a point on the northern, boundary of said Section No. 58; thence northwesterly with the pasture fence through Section No. 59 to the northeast corner of Section No. 82 and the southeast corner of Section No. 81.^ same block : thence continuing northwesterly to Section No. IT, Houston and Great Northern Railroad Company; thence north along the eastern boundary of said Sec- tion 17 to the Pecos River ; thence northwesterly along said Pecos River to the northwest corner of Crockett County ; thence east along the northern boimdary of Crockett and Schleicher coimties to the southeast corner of Irion County : thence north along the eastern boundary of Irion Coimtj' to the north- east corner of said county ; thence continuing due north to the southern boundary of Coke County ; thence west along the southern boiuulary of Coke County to the sotithwest corner of Coke County ; thence north along the western boundary of Coke County to the southern boundary of Mitchell County : thence east to the southeast corner of Mitchell County : thence north along the eastern boundary of ^Mitchell County to the northeast corner of said county ; thence east along the southern boundaries of Fisher and Jones cotmties to the southeast corner of Jones County ; thence north along the eastern boimdary of Jones County to the northeast corner of said county : thence east along the southern boundary of Haskell County to the southeast corner of said ci»unty: thence north along the western boundaries of Throckmorton and Baylor counties to the northwest corner of Bay- lor County ; thence east along the southern boundary of AYilbarger Counts' to the southeast corner of said county : thence north along the eastern boundary of Wilbarger County to the Red River : thence continu- ing in a northwesterly direction along the course of said river and the northern boundary of Texas to the southwest corner of Greer ( 'ounty. Okla. : thence north. following the eastern boundary of Texas to the north- west corner of said Greer County. OKLAHOMA. Beginning on the Red River at the northwest corner of Wichita County. Tex. ; thence northwesterly along the course of said river to the southwest corner of Greer County : thence north along the western boimd- ary of Greer County to the northwest corner thereof; thence easterly and southerly along the southern 32 boundary of Ro^or Mills County to the southeast cormT of said county; thence east alonj:; the southern boundary of Washita County to the southeast corner of s;iid county : thence north along the eastern bound- aries of Washita and Custer counties to the Canadian River ; thence in a southeasterly direction along the course of said river to the southeast corner of Ca- nadian County; thence north along the eastern bound- ary of Cana(iian County to the northwest corner of Cleveland County; thence east along the northern boundary of Cleveland County to the middle of the right of way of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway ; thence northerly, following the middle of said right of way, through Oklahoma. Logan, Noble, and Payne counties and the Otoe and Missouria and Ponca Indian reservations to the northern boundary of the Ponca Indian Reservation ; thence east along the northern boundary of the Ponca Indian Reserva- tion to the Arkansas River; thence in a northerly direction following the course of the said river to its intersection with the thirty-seventh parallel of north latitude at the southern boundary of Kansas. TENNESSEE. Beginning on the Mississippi River at the southeast corner of the State of Missouri at the western bound- ary of Tennessee ; thence southerly along the west- ern boundaries of the counties of Dyer and Lauder- dale; thence following the main channel of the Mis- sissippi River (leaving Island No. 37 to the north and west) to the northwest corner of Shelby County, on the Mississippi River; thence east along the northern boundary of Shelby County to the northeast corner thereof ; thence southerly along the eastern boundary of Shelby County to its intersection with the Nash- ville. Chattanooga and St. Louis Railway; thence northeasterly along the Nashville. Chattanooga and St. Louis Railway to the town of Somerville: thence northerly along the Somerville and Brownsville wagon road to the northern boundary of Fayette County; thence easterly along the northern boundary of Fay- ette County to the northeast corner thereof; thence northerly and easterly along the western and northern boundaries of Hardeman County to the Illinois Cen- tral Railroad; thence along the Illinois Central Rail- road to the corporate limits of the city of Jackson ; thence westerly and northerly along the corporate limits of the city of .lacksou to the Jackson and Spring Creek public road; thence northerly along the Jack- son and Spring Creek public road to its intersection with the southern boundary of Carroll County ; thence westerly, noi-therly, and easterly along the southern, western, and northern boundaries ot Carroll County to the northeast corner thereof; thence northerly along 33 the eastern boundary of Henry County to its inter- section with the Louisville and Nashville Railroad; thence easterly along the Louisville and Nashville Railroad through Benton County to the Tennessee River ; thence southerly along the eastern boundaries of Benton and Decatur counties to the nin-thwest cor- ner of Wayne County : thence easterly along the northern boundary of Wayne County to the southeast corner of Perry County : thence northerly, easterly, and southerly along the western, northern, and eastern Ijoundaries of Lewis County to the northern boundary of Lawrence County ; thence easterly along the north- ern boundary of Lawrence County to the northeast corner thereof; thence southerly along the eastern Itoundary of Lawrence County to the southeast corner thereof; thence east along the southern boundary of Giles County to the Elk River: thence northeasterly along said river to the point in Franklin County where Big Hurricane Creek empties into said Elk River ; thence northerly and westerly along Big Hurricane Creek to the eastern boundary of Moore County ; thence northerly along the eastern boundaries of Moore and Bedford counties to Duck River : thence easterly along Duck River to the Manchester and Woodbury public road : thence northeasterly along the Manchester and Woodbury public road to the southern boundary of Cannon County : thence east- erly, northeasterly, and northwesterly along the south- ern, eastern, and northeastern boundaries of Cannon Comity to the west prong of Dry Creek near the southeast corner of the third civil district of Dekalb County; thence northerly along said creek to its in- tersection with the southern boundary of the twenti- eth civil district of said county ; thence easterly and northerly along the southern and eastern boundaries of said twentieth civil district to the southern bound- ary of the tenth civil district of said county near Cap- ling ; thence southeasterly along the southern bound- ary of the tenth and twenty-second civil districts of said county to Big Hurricane (or Harrison) Creek; thence northerly along said creek to Caney Fork River; thence northwesterly along Caney Fork River to the eastern boundary of the eighteenth civil district of said Dekalb County : thence northerly along the eastern boundary of said eighteenth civil district to the southern boundary of Putnam County ; thence northerly along the eastern boundaries of the ninth, eleventh, and tenth civil districts of Putnam County to the southern boundary' of Jackson County ; thence easterly and northerly along the southern and east- ern boundaries of Jackson and Clay counties to the northwest corner of Pickett County ; thence easterly along the northern boundary of Pickett County to the northwest corner of Scott County ; thence southerly, westerly, and southwesterly along the eastern and southern boundaries of Pickett County to the Obey River ; thence southeasterly, southerly, and southwest- 29990—07 ?> 34 erly alon;^; the Ol)oy River and the East Fork Ohey River to tlie point where the East Fork Obey River in- tersects tlie western boundary of Fentress County ; thence southerly and easterly along the western and southern boundaries of Fentress County to the north- ern boundary of Cumberland County ; thence westerly and southerly along the northern and western bcnind- aries of Cumberland County to the northwest corner of Bledsoe County ; thence easterly, northeasterlj% and southeasterly along the boundary of Cumberland County to the southwest corner of Roane County ; thence northeasterly, southeasterly, and southwesterly along the western, northern, and eastern boundaries of Roane Connty to the Tennessee River ; thence fol- lowing the Tennessee River to the southeast corner of Rhea County ; thence southeasterly along the northern boundary of James County to its intersec- tion with the western boundary of Bradley County ; thence northerly and easterly along the western bound- ary of Bradley County and the northern boundaries of Bradley and Polk counties to the northeast corner of Polk County ; thence soutlierly along the eastern boundary of Polk Countj' to the southeast corner thereof at the State line. GEORGIA. Beginning at the intersection of the western bound- ary of Union County with the boundary between the States of Georgia and North Carolina ; thence south- erly along the western boundary of Union County to the southwest corner thereof ; thence northeasterly and easterly along the southern boundaries of Union and Towns counties to the western corner of Rabun County ; thence easterly, southeasterly, and north- easterly along the western, southern, and eastern boundaries of Rabun County to the northeast corner of said county, on the boundary between Georgia and North Carolina. NORTH CAROLINA. Beginning on the boundary between North Caro- lina and Tennessee, at the northwest corner of Cher- okee County ; thence southerly along the western boundary of said county to the southwest corner thereof ; thence following the State line easterly along the southern boundaries of the counties of Cherokee, Clay. Macon, .Jackson. Transylvania, Hen- derson, Polk, Rutherford, Cleveland, Gaston, and ]Mec]denburg to the western corner of Union County ; thence northeasterly along the western boundaries of I'nion and Stanley counties to the northwest corner of Stanley County ; thence easterly along the southern boundaries of Rowan and Davidson counties to the 35 southeast corner of Davidson County ; tlienoe north- erly along the eastern boundaries of Davidson and Forsyth counties to the northeast corner of Forsyth County : thence westerly and northerly along the southern and western boundaries of Stokes County to the northwest corner thereof at the State line; thence westerly along the northern boundary of the State of North Carolina to the southwest corner of Patrick County, Va. VIRGINIA. Beginning at the boundary of Virginia at its south- west corner (Lee County) ; thence east along the southern boundary of Virginia to the southwest corner of Patrick County; thence northerly and easterly along the western boundary of Patrick County to the northernmost point of said county ; thence easterly and northerly along the southern and eastern bound- aries of Franklin County to the northeast corner of said county : thence easterly along the northern bound- aries of Pittsylvania and Halifax counties to the southeast corner of Campbell County ; thence northerl:/ along the eastern boundary of Campl)ell County to its intersection with the southern boundary of Appo- mattox County ; thence easterly and southeasterly along the southern boundaries of Appomattox, Prince Edward, and Nottoway counties to the southeast corner of Nottoway County : thence northerly, east- erly, westerly, and northeasterly along the eastern boundaries of Nottoway. Amelia, and Powhatan counties to the James River; thence following the James River to the southeast corner of Charles City County ; thence northerly and easterly along the west- ern and northern boundaries of James City County to the York River ; thence southeasterly along the bound- aries of James City and York counties to the northeast corner of Elizabeth City County ; thence westerly, northwesterly, and southerly along the boundaries of Elizabeth City and Warwick counties to the James River ; thence southeasterly along the course of the said river to the northwest corner of Norfolk County ; thence southerly along the western boundary of said county to its intersection with the northern bound- ary of North Carolina ; thence east along the southern boundaries of Norfolk and Princess Anne counties to the Atlantic Ocean. Exception 2 — California. The island of Santa Rosa, a part of Santa Barbara County, on account of being free from Texas fever infection and being sepa- rated from the mainland, is not to be regarded as a part of the modified quarantined area. During the continuance of the quarantine as herein established 36 aiul nioaified no c-attle of the modified (luarantined area of any State or Territory other than California shall he moved or allowed to move into the counties of Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, Kern, Kings, Tu- lare, and those portions of Madera and Fresno coun- ties located west of the main line of the Southern Pacific Company. No cattle of the counties of Santa Barbara (ex- cept the island of Santa Rosa), San Luis Obispo, Kern, Kings, Tulare, and those portions of Madera and Fresno counties located west of the main line of the Southern I'acific Company shall be moved or allowed to move except as provided for immediate slaughter, to any point in the United States, not in the State of California, which is located outside of the 'modified quarantined area, until the said cattle shall have been inspected and found free of infec- tion and a written permit for the shipment issued by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry, nor until permission shall have been obtained in ad- vance of the movement from the proper official of the State or Territory into which the cattle are to be shipped. Exception 3 — Texas. During the continuance of the (luarantine as herein established and modified no cattle of the modified quarantined area of any State or Territory other than Texas shall be moved or allowed to move into the counties of Baylor and Throckmorton. No cattle of the counties of Childress, Cottle, Har- deman, Foard. Wilbarger, King, Knox, Haskell, Stone- wall, Jones, Fisher, Scurry, Borden, Howard, Mitchell, Glasscock, Sterling, Irion, Reagan, Upton, Crane, Throckmorton, Baylor, and those portions of Pecos, Terrell, and Tom Green counties lying north and west of the quarantine line described in Exception 1, shall be moved or allowed to move, except as provided for immediate slaughter, to any point in the United States, not in the State of Texas, which is located outside of the modified quarantined area, until the said cattle shall have been inspected and found free of infection and a written permit for the shipment issued by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry, nor until permission shall have been obtained in advance of the 37 movement from the proper official of the State or Ter- ritory into which the cattle are to be shipped. Exception 4 — Oklahoma. During the continuance of the quarantine as herein established and modified no cattle of the modified quarantined area of any State or Territory other than Oklahoma shall be moved or allowed to move, except as hereinafter provided, into the counties of Greer. Cleveland. Pottawatomie. Lincoln, Pawnee, those portions of Blaine and Cana- dian counties south of the Canadian Pviver. that por- tion of Caddo County north of the right of way of the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway, and that portion of Kiowa County lying north of Comanche County and the line between townships 4 and 5 north, extended westward to its intersection with the North Fork of the Red River, those portions of the counties of Oklahoma, Logan, Payne, and Noble lying east of the right of way of the Atchison. Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, or into the Kansas Nation or Osage Nation : Provided, That from October 1 of each year to May 15 of the following year cattle of the modified quarantined area of any other State or Territory may be moved into the above-mentioned counties, parts of counties, and nations, after having been satisfactorily dipped in Beaumont crude petroleum, or otherwise properly treated, under the supervision of an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry. No cattle of the counties of Greer, Oklahoma. Logan. Payne, Cleveland, Pottawatomie, Lincoln, Pawnee. Canadian, that portion of Noble County in- cluded in the Otoe and Missouria and Ponca Indian reservations, and that portion of Noble County bounded on the north by the Otoe and Missouria Indian Reservation, on the east by Pawnee County, on the south by Payne County, and on the west by the right of way of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, that portion of Blaine County south of the Canadian River, that portion of Caddo County north of the right of way of the Chicago. Rock Island and Pacific Railway, that portion of Kiowa County lying north of Comanche County and the line between townships -1 and 5 north, extended westward to its intersection with the North Fork of the Red River, or in the Kansas Nation or Osage Nation, shall be 38 moved or allowed to move, except as provided for immediate slaujiliter. to any point in the United States, not in the Territory of Oklahoma, which is located outside of the modified quarantined area until the said cattle shall have been inspected and found free of infection and a written permit for the shijtment issued by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry, nor until permission shall have been obtained in advance of the movement from the proper official of the State or Territory into which the cattle are to be shipped. Exception 5 — Tennessee. During the continuance of the quarantine as herein established and modified no cattle of the modified quarantined area of anv State or Territory other than Tennessee shall be moved or allowed to move into that portion of Lincoln County south of the Elk River and that por- tion of Coffee County south of Duck River and east of the Manchester and Woodbury public road. No cattle of that portion of Lincoln County south of the Elk River and that portion of Coffee County south of Duck River and east of the Manchester and Woodbury public road shall be moved or allowed to move, except as provided for immediate slaughter, to any point in the United States, not in the State of Tennessee, which is located outside of the modified quarantined area until the said cattle shall have been inspected and found free of infection and a written permit for the shipment issued bj'- an inspector of tho Bureau of Animal Industry, nor until permission shall have been obtained in advance of the movement from the proper official of the State or Territory into which the cattle are to be shipped. Exception 6 — Georgia. During the continuance of the quarantine as herein established and modified no cattle of the modified (juarantined area of any State or Territory other than the State of Georgia shall be moved or allowed to move into the counties of White, Stephens, and Habersham. No cattle of the counties of White, Stephens, and Habersham shall be moved or allowed to move, ex- cept as provided for immediate slaughter, to any point in the United States, not in the State of Georgia, which is located outside of the modified quarantined 39 area until tbe said cattle shall have been inspected and found free of infection and a written permit for the shipment issued by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry, nor until permission shall have been obtained in advance of the movement from the proper official of the State or Territory into which the cattle are to be shipped. Exception 7 — North Carolina. That portion of the line described in Exception 1 limiting the modified quarantined area of the State of North Carolina beginning at the intersection of the northwest corner of Union County. Ga., with the North Carolina State line and extending easterly along the southern bound- ary line of North C'arolina to the northeast corner of Rabun County. Ga., is hereby suspended during the enforcement of the quarantine as established by the State of Georgia. During the continuance of the quarantine as herein established and modified no cattle of the modified quarantined area of any State or Territory other than North Carolina shall be moved or allowed to move into the counties of Union. Anson, Stanly. Stokes, Rockingham, Guilford, Caswell, Alamance, Person, Orange, Durham, Granville, Vance, Warren, and Franklin. No cattle of the counties of Union. Anson, Stanlj', Stokes, Rockingham, Guilford, Caswell, Alamance, Person, Orange, Durham, Granville, "^^ance, Warren, Franklin, Yadkin. Cleveland, Rutherford, that part of McDowell County south and east of the Catawba River, Crooked Creek, and the eastern boundary of Crooked Creek Township, that part of Davidson .County south of the main line of the Southern Rail- way and east of Abbotts Creek, and that part of Rowan County included in Morgan and Providence townships shall be moved or allowed to move, except as provided for immediate slaughter, to any point in the United States, not in the State of North Carolina, which is located outside of the modified quarantined area until the said cattle shall have been inspected and found free of infection and a written permit for the ship- ment issued by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry, nor until permission shall have been ob- tained in advance of the movement from the proper 40 ollic'ial of the State or Territory into which the oat- tie are to he shii)i)ed. Exception 8 — Vjkginia. That portion of the line described in Exception 1 limiting the modified ciuar- antined area of the State of Virginia beginning at the southwest corner of Virginia (Lee County) and ex- tending east along the southern boundary line of Vir- ginia to the southwest corner of Patrick County. Va., is hereby suspended during the enforcement of the quarantine as established by the States of Tennessee and North Carolina. During the continuance of the quarantine as herein estal)lished and modified no cattle of the modified quarantined area of any State or Territory other than Virginia shall be moved or allowed to move into the counties of Patrick, Henry, Pittsylvania, Halifax, Charlotte, Mecklenburg, Lunenburg, and Brunswick. No cattle of the counties of Patrick, Henry. Pittsyl- vania, Halifax, Charlotte, Mecklenburg. Lunenburg, and Brunswick shall be moved or allowed to move, except as provided for immediate slaughter, to any point in the United States, not in the State of Vir- ginia, which is located outside of the modified quar- antined area, until the said cattle shall have been inspected and found free of infection and a written permit for the shipment issued by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry, nor until permission shall have been obtained in advance of the movement from the proper official of the State or Territory into which the cattle are to be shipped. Exception 9— Arkansas, During the months of January, February, and March of each year cattle may, after inspection and certification of freedom from ticks {BoopUUus annul at us) by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry, be moved from the counties of Benton, Washington, Carroll, Madison, Boone, Newton, Marion, Searcy, Baxter. Fulton. Izard, Stone. Sharp. Independence. Randolph, Lawrence, Clay, and Greene to points in the United States not in Arkansas, located outside of the modified quaran- tined area, for feeding and stocking purposes, subject to the following restrictions, to wit : The cattle shall have been continuously in said counties for not less than thirty days immediately next preceding the date 41 of inspection. Proper facilities sliall be afforded foi- making sucli inspection. After inspection said cattle shall be moved immediately, without exposure to the infection of splenetic or Texas fever, direct to pas- tures or feed lots, without dividing the herd or ship- ment. The cattle shall be kept continuously in the State into which they are moved for at least three months after arrival. Permission shall have been obtained in advance of the movement from the proper official of the State or Territory into which the cattle are to be forwarded. No cattle of said counties shall be moved or allowed to move, except as provided for immediate slaughter, to any point located outside of the modified quaran- tined area in any State or Territory other than Ar- kansas, unless accompanied by a written permit for the movement from an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry. Exception 10— Indian Tekbitoey. During the con- tinuance of the quarantine as herein established and modified no cattle of the modified (luarantined area of any State or Territory other than Indian Territory shall be moved or allowed to move, except as herein- after provided, into Registration Districts Nos. 1. 2, 3, 4, and 5. being that portion of Cherokee Nation bounded on the south by the northern boundary of the Creek Nation and a line extended from the northeast corner of said Creek Nation due east to the Arkansas State line: Provided, That from October 1 of each year to May 15 of the following year cattle of the modified quarantined area of any State or Territory other than Indian Territory may be moved into the above-mentioned registration districts (Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5) after having been satisfactorily dipped in Beaumont crude petroleum, or otherwise properly treated, under the supervision of an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry. No cattle of said registration districts shall be moved or allowed to move, excei)t as provided for immediate slaughter, to any point in the United States, not in Indian Territory, which is located out- side of the modified quarantined area, until the said cattle shall have been inspected and found free of infection and a written permit for the movement is- 42 sued by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal In- dustry, nor until pernnssion shall have been obtained in advance of the movement from the proper official of the State or Territory into v^-hich the cattle are to be shipped. Exception 11 — Open Season. During the months of January, November, and December of each year cattle of the modified quarantined area of any State or Territory shall not be moved interstate therefrom for purposes other than immediate slaujihter into the States of Missouri and Kansas, the Territories of Arizona and New Mexico, and those portions of Cali- fornia, Texas, Tennessee, and Georgia not included in the modified quarantined area until the said cattle shall have been inspected and found free of infection and a written permit for the movement issued by an inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry or by a duly authorized inspector of the State or Territory to which the cattle are destined, nor until permission shall have been obtained from the proper official of the said State or Territory. During the months of January and February, the first fifteen days of March, and the last sixteen days of December in each year cattle of the modified quarantined area of any State or Territory may be moved interstate under the above-mentioned restrictions into those portions of the States of Virginia and North Carolina not in- cluded in the modified quarantined area. During the months of January and December in each year cattle of the modified quarantined area of any State or Territory may be moved interstate under the above- mentioned restrictions into that portion of Oklahoma not included in the modified quarantined area. Cattle of the modified quarantined area that have been shipped interstate to a point in any State or Ter- ritory outside of the modified quarantined area, other than those States and Territories and portions thereof set out in this exception, shall not be moved into any of the States or Territories or portions thereof here- inbefore set out in this exception within three months of the date of the movement from the modified quar- antined area. Cattle which are moved interstate from the modified quarantined area of any St.-ite or Territory into those 43 states or Territories or portions thereof hereinbe- fore set out in this exception, under certificates from Inspectors either of the Bureau of Animal Industry or of the States or Territories to which the cattle are destined for feeding or stocking purposes, shall not be placed in stock pens which have been reserved for cattle originating in the modified quarantined area. FEEDING STATIONS. Cattle not of the modified quarantined area, which are transported interstate by rail through the modi- fied quarantined area, may be unloaded for rest, feed, and water into noninfectious pens set apart for such cattle at Polk Stock Yards and Union Stock Yards at Fort Worth, Tex. ; the stock yards at Baird, Tex. ; the stock yards of the International and Great North- ern Railroad at Laredo, Tex. ; the Southern Pacific Railway Stock Yards at Los Angeles, Cal. ; the stock yards at Colton, Cal., and Bakersfield, Cal. ; the Sapulpa stock yards of the St. Louis and San Fran- cisco Railroad at Sapulpa, Ind. T., and at the stock yards of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway at Muscogee, Ind. T., subject to the following restric- tions, to wit : The cattle shall be free from ticks (Boophilus an- nulatus) and shall not have been unloaded at any point in the modified quarantined area other than the authorized unloading points named herein. The cat- tle shall be reloaded into the same cars from which unloaded or into other cleaned and disinfected cars and reshipped as uninfected cattle. INTERPRETATION. This Rule 1, Revision 2, shall be construed in con- nection with the Regulations of the Secretary of Ag- riculture promulgated March 22, 1907, and effective on and after April 15, 1907, and is subject to amend- ment or revision on statutory notice. Rule 1, Revision 1, dated January 2.5, 1906, effective February 1, 1906, and all amendments thereto, shall cease to be effective on and after April 15, 1907, on and after which date this Rule 1, Revision 2, which 44 for purposes of idontification is desijjnatcd as B. A. I. Order Xo. 144. sliall become and be effective until otherwise ordered. Done at Washington this 22d day of March, 1007. Witness my hand and the seal of the Department of Agriculture. [seal.] James Wilson, Secretari/ of Af/riculturc. (B. A. I. Order No. 145.) RULE 2, REVISION 1.— TO PRETEXT THE SPREAD OF SCABIES IN CATTLE. Effective on and after April 15, 1901. U. S. Depart ME^T of Agriculture, Office of the Secretary. The fact has been determined by the Secretary of Agriculture, and notice is hereby given, that a con- tagious communicable disease known as scabies ex- ists among cattle in the following-named States and Territories, to wit : * Montana. North Dakota, South Dakota. Ne- braska. Kansas, Colorado. AYyoming, Texas, New Mexico, and Oklahoma. Now, therefore, I, James Wilson, Secretary of AgricultlTvE, under authority conferred by section 1 of the act of Congress approved March 3, 1905 (33 Stat, 8(>4), do hereby quarantine the following ter- ritory, to wit : The State of Nebraska ; the counties of Teton. Chouteau, Valley, and Dawson, in the State of Mon- tana; the counties of Williams, Ward, Billings, Stark, Mercer, Oliver, McLean, Morton, Burleigh, Wells, Eddy, Foster, Kidder, Stutsman, Emmons, Logan, and Mcintosh, in the State of North Dakota ; that part of the State of South Dakota lying west of the Mis- souri River ; that part of the State of Kansas lying west of the western boundary lines of the counties of Barber, Pratt, Stafford, Barton, Russell, Osborne, and Smith ; the counties of Sedgwick, Phillips, Logan, Weld, Morgan, Washington, Yuma, Boulder, Gilpin, Jefferson, Arapahoe, Douglas, Elbert, Lincoln, Kit Carson, Teller. El Paso, Cheyenne, Custer, Pueblo, Otero, Kiowa, Bent, Prowers, Huerfano, Las Animas, and Baca, that portion of Larimer County lying east of the Medicine Bow Range of mountains, and that (45) 46 portion of Fremont County lyiniy; east of the Ninth Guide Meridian West, in the State of Colorado; the counties of Natrona, Converse, Carbon, Albany, and Laramie, in the State of Wyoming ; that part of the State of Texas lying north and west of the southern boundary lines of the counties of Andrews, Martin, Howard, Mitchell, Nolan, and Taylor, and the one hundredth meridian of longitude west of Greenwich, and also the counties of Nueces, Cameron, and Hi- dalgo; the counties of Colfax, Mora, San Miguel, Union, Guadalupe, Quay, Chaves, Roosevelt, Eddy, that portion of Torrance County lying east and south of the El Paso and Rock Island Railway, that portion of Lincoln County lying east and south of the El Paso and Northeastern and tlie El Paso and Rock Island railways, and that portion of Otero County lying east of the El Paso and Northeastern Railway, in the Ter- ritory of New Mexico ; the counties of Woodward and Beaver, in the Territory of Oklahoma. It is ordered by this Rule 2, ;ftevision 1, under the authority and discretion conferred upon the Secretary of Agriculture by section 3 of the act of Congress ap- proved March 3, 1905 (33 Stat, 864), that cattle shall be moved from the quarantined area of any State or Territory to any other State or Territory or District only in accordance with the regulations of the Secre- tary of Agriculture, designated as B. A. I. Order No. 143, promulgated March 22, 1907, and effective April 15, 1907. This Rule 2, Revision 1, is subject to amendment or revision on statutory notice. Rule 2, dated May 1, 1905, effective June 1, 1905, and Amendment No. 1 to Rule 2, dated August 30, 1905, and effective September 15, 1905, and Amend- ment No. 2 to Rule 2, dated August 30, 1906, and ef- fective September 15, 1906, shall cease to be effective on and after April 15, 1907, on and after which date this Rule 2, Revision 1, which for purposes of identi- fication is designated as B. A. I. Order No. 145, shall become and be effective until otherwise ordered. Done at Washington this 22d day of March, 1907. AVitness my hand and the seal of the Department of Agriculture. [seal.] James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture. (B. A. I. Order No. 140.) RULE 3, REVISION l.-iO PREVENT THE SPREAD OF SCABIES IN SHEEP. Effective on and after Ai)ril Lk 1001. U. S. Department of Agriculture. Office of the Secretary. The fact has been determined by the Secretary of Agriculture, and notice is hereby given, that a conta- gious, communicable disease known as scabies exists among sheep in the following-named States and Ter- ritories, to wit : Washington, Oregon, Montana, North Dakota. South Dakota, California, Nevada, Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska. Kansas, Texas, Ari- zona, and New Mexico. Now, therefore, I, James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture, under authority conferred by section 1 of the act of Congress approved March 3, 1905 (33 Stat, 864), do hereby quarantine the following area, to wit : All territory situate within the boundaries of Wash- ington, Oregon, Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, California, Nevada, Idaho, Utah, Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas, Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico. It is ordered by this Ilule 3, Revision 1, under the authority and discretion conferred upon the Secre- tary of Agriculture by section 3 of the act of Con- gress approved March 3, 1905 (33 Stat, 864), that sheep shall be moved from the quarantined area of any State or Territory to any other State or Terri- tory or District only in accordance with the regula- tions of the Secretary of Agriculture designated as (47) 48 H. A. I. Order No. 14:J. i)r<)imili,'at(Ml Mnreh 22, 1007, and effective Ai>ril 15, 1J)(»T. This Kule .'5, Revision 1, is subject to amendment or revision on statutory notice. liule :>. dated May 1. 11)05, and effective June 1, 1905, sliall cease to be effective on and after April l.!, 1007. on and after which date this Rule 3, Revision 1, which for purposes of identification is designated as B. A. I. Order No. 140, shall become and be effective until otiierwise ordered. Done at Washington this 22d day of March, 1907. Witness my hand and the seal of the Dei)artment of Agriculture. [seal.] James Wilson, Secretary of Agriculture. ACTS OF CONGRESS. [Public — No. 41.] An Act For the establishment of a Bureau of Animal In- dustry, to prevent the exportation of diseased cattle, and to provide means for the suppression and extirpation of pleuro-pneumonia and other contagious diseases among domestic animals. Be it enacted hij the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress a ssemhled. That the Commissioner of Agriculture shall organize in his De- partment a Bureau of Animal Industry, and shall appoint a Chief thereof, who shall be a competent veterinary sur- geon, and whose duty it shall be to investigate and report upon the condition of domestic animals of the United States, their protection and use, and also inquire into and report the causes of contagious, infectious, and communica- ble di.seases among them, and the means for the prevention and cure of the same, and to collect such information on these subjects as shall be valuable to the agricultural and commercial interests of the country : and the Commissioner of Agriculture is hereby authorized to employ a force suffi- cient for this purpose, not to exceed twenty persons at any one time. The salary of the Chief of said Bureau shall be three thousand dollars per annum ; and the Commissioner shall appoint a clerk for said Bureau, with a salary of one thousand five hundred dollars per annum. Sec. 2. That the Commissioner of Agriculture is author- ized to appoint two competent agents, who shall be prac- tical stock raisers or experienced business men familiar with questions pertaining to commercial transactions in live stock, and whose duty it shall be. under the instructions of the Commissioner of Agriculture, to examine and report upon the best methods of treating, transporting, and caring for animals, and the means to be adopted for the suppres- sion and extirpation of contagious pleuro-pneumonia, and to provide against the spread of other dangerous, contagious, infectious, and communicable diseases. The compensation of said agents shall be at the rate of ten dollars per diem, with all necessary expenses while engaged in the actual per- formance of their duties under this act, when absent from their usual place of business or residence as such agent. Sec. 3. That it shall be the duty of the Commissioner of Agriculture to prepare such rules and regulations as he may deem necessary for the speedy and effectual suppression and extirpation of said diseases, and to certify such rules and regulations to the executive authority of each State and Territory, and invite said authorities to cooperate in the 29990—07 4 (49) 50 cxocution and onforctTucnt of this act. Whenever the phms and methods of the Commissioner of Agriculture shall be accepted by any State or Territory in which pleuro-pneu- monla or other contagious, infectious, or communical)Ie dis- ease is declared to exist, or such State or Territory shall have adopted plans and methods for the suppression and extirpa- tion of said diseases, and such plans and methods shall be accepted by the Commissioner of Agriculture, and whenever the governor of a State or other properly constituted authori- ties signify their readiness to cooperate for the extinction of any contagious, infectious, or communicable disease in con- formity with the provisions of this act, the Commissioner of Agriculture is herel)y authorized to expend so much of the money appropriated by this act as may be necessary in such investigations and in such disinfection and quarantine meas- ures as may be necessary to prevent the spread of the dis- ease from one State or Territory into another. See. 4. That in order to promote the exportation of liv? stock from the United States the Commissioner of Agricul- ture shall make special investigation as to the existence of pleuro-pneumonia, or any contagious, infectious, or commu- nicable disease, along the dividing lines between the United States and foreign countries, and along the lines of trans- portation from all parts of the United States to ports from which live stock are exported, and make report of the results of such investigation to the Secretary of the Treasury, who shall from time to time establish such regulations concerning the exportation and transportation of live stock as the re- sults of said investigations may require. Sec. 5. That to prevent the exportation from any port of the United States to any port in a foreign country of live stock affected with any contagious, infectious, or communi- cable disease, and especially pleuro-pneumonia, the Secretary of the Treasury be, and he is hereby, authorized to take such steps and adopt such measures, not inconsistent with the pro- visions of this act, as he may deem necessary. Sec. 6. That no railroad company v/ithin the United States, or the owners or masters of any steam or sailing or other vessel or boat, shall receive for transportation or transport, from one State or Territory to another, or from any State into the District of Columbia, or from the District into any State, any live stock affected with any contagious, infectious, or communicable disease, and especially the disease known as pleuro-pneumonia ; nor shall any person, company, or corpo- ration deliver for such transportation to any railroad com- pany, or master or owner of any boat or vessel, any live stock, knowing them to be affected with any contagious, in- fectious, or communicable disease ; nor shall any person, company, or corporation drive on foot or transport in private conveyance from one State or Territory to another, or from any State into the District of Columbia, or from the District into any State, any live stock, knowing them to be affected with any contagious, infectious, or communicable disease, and especially the disease known as pleuro-pneumonia : Pro- vided, That the so-called splenetic, or Texas, fever shall not 51 be considered a contagious, infectious, or communicable dis- ease within ttie meaning of sections four. five. six. and seven of this act. as to cattle being transported by rail to market for slaughter, when the same are unloaded only to be fed and watered in lots on the way thereto. Sec. 7. That it shall be the duty of the Commissioner of Agriculture to notify, in writing, the proper officials or agents of any railroad, steamboat, or other transportation company doing business in or through any infected locality, and by publication in such newspapers as he may select, of the ex- istence of said contagion ; and any person or persons operat- ing any such railroad, or master or owner of any boat or vessel, or owner or custodian of or person having control over such cattle or other live stock within such infected district, who shall knowingly violate the provisions of section six of this act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and. upon convic- tion, shall bo punished l\v a fine of not less than one hundred dollars nor more than five thousand dollars, or by imprison- ment for not more than one year, or by both such fine and imprisonment. Sec. 8. That whenever any contagious, infectious, or com- municable disease affecting domestic animals, and especially the disease known as pleuro-pneumonia. shall be brought into or shall break out in the District of Columbia, it shall be the duty of the Commissioners of said District to take measures to suppress the same promptly and to prevent the same from spreading ; and for this purpose the said Com- missioners are hereby empowered to order and require that any premises, farm, or farms, where such disease exists, or has existed, be put in quarantine ; to order all or any ani- mals coming into the District to be detained at any place ov places for the purpose of inspection and examination : to prescribe regulations for and require the destruction of ani- mals affected with contagious, infectious, and communicable disease, and for the proper disposition of their hides and carcasses ; to prescribe regulations for disinfection, and such other regulations as they may deem necessary to prevent infection or contagion being communicated, and shall report to the Commissioner of Agriculture whatever they may d<. in pursuance of the provisions of this section. Sec. 9. That it shall be the duty of the several United States district attorneys to prosecute all violations of this act which shall be brought to their notice or knowledge by any person making the complaint itnder oath : and the same shall be heard before any district or circuit court of the United States or Territorial court holden within the district in which the violation of this act has been committed. Sec. 10. That the sum of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, to be immediately available, or so much thereof as may be necessary, is hereby appropriated, out of any moneys in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, to carry into effect the provisions of this act. Sec. 11. That the Commissioner of Agriculture shall re- port anntially to Congress, at the commencement of each session, a list of the names of all persons employed, an item- 52 ized statement of all expenditures under this act, and full particulars of means adopted and carried into effect for the suppression of contagious, infectious, or communicable dis- eases among domestic animals. Approved. May L'".\ 1S84. [Public — Xo. 49.1 .\n Act To enable the Secretary of Agriculture to more effect- ually suppress and prevent the spread of contagious and infectious diseases of live stock, and for other purposes. lie it enacted hy the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assernhJed, That in order to enable the Secretary of Agriculture to effectually suppress and extirpate contagious pleuro-pneumonia, foot- and-mouth disease, and other dangerous, contagious, Infec- tious, and communicable diseases in cattle and other live stock, and to prevent the spread of such diseases, the powers conferred on the Secretary of the Treasury by sections four and five of an act entitled "An act for the establishment of a Bureau of Animal Industry, to prevent the exportation of diseased cattle, and to provide means for the suppression and extirpation of pleuro-pneumonia and other contagious dis- eases among domestic animals," approved May twenty-ninth, eighteen hundred and eighty-four, twenty-third United States Statutes, thirty-one), are hereby conferred on the Secretary of Agriculture, to be exercised exclusivelj'^ by him. He is hereby authorized and directed, from time to time, to estab- lish such rules and regulations concerning the exportation and transportation of live stock from any place within the United States where he may have reason to believe such dis- eases may exist into and through any State or Territory, in- cluding the Indian Territory, and into and through the District of Columbia and to foreign countries, as he may deem neces- sary, and all such rules and regulations shall have the force of law. Whenever any inspector or assistant inspector of the Bureau of Animal Industry shall issue a certificate showing that such officer had inspected any cattle or other live stock which were about to be shipped, driven, or transported from such locality to another, as above stated, and had found them free from Texas, or splenetic, fever infection, pleuro-pneu- monia, foot-and-mouth disease, or any other infectious, con- tagious, or communicable disease, such animals so inspected and certified may be shipped, driven, or transported from such place into and through any State or Territory, including the Indian Territory, and into and through the District of Columbia, or they may be exported from the United States without further inspection or the exaction of fees of any kind, except such as may at any time be ordered or exacted by the Secretary of Agriculture ; and all such animals shall at all times be under the control and supervision of the Bureau of Animal Industry of the Agricultural Department for the purposes of such inspection. 53 Sec. 2. That the Secretarj- of Agriculture shall have au- thority to make such regulations and take such measures as he maj' deem proper to prevent the introduction or dis- semination of the contagion of anj- contagious, infectious, or communicable disease of animals from a foreign country into the United States or from one State or Territory of the United States or the District of Columbia to another, and to seize, quarantine, and dispose of any hay. straw, forage, or similar material, or any meats, hides, or other animal products coming from an infected foreign country to the United States, or from one State or Territory or the District of Columbia in transit to another State or Terri- tory or the District of Columbia whenever in his .judgment such action is advisable in order to guard against the intro- duction or spread of such contagion. Sec. 3. That any person, company, or corporation know- ingly violating the provisions of this act or the orders or regulations made in pursuance thereof shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction shall be punished by a fine of not less than one hundred dollars nor more than one thousand dollars, or by imprisonment not more than one year, or by both such fine and imprisonment. Approved, February 2, 1903. [Public — No. 229.] An Act To enable the Secretary of Agriculture to establish and maintain quarantine districts, to permit and regulate th^ movement of cattle and other live stock therefrom, and for other purposes. Be it enacted hy the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Cong)€Ss assemtled, That the Secretary of Agriculture is authorized and directed to quarantine any State or Territory or the District of Co- lumbia, or any portion of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, when he shall determine the fact that cattle or other live stock in such State or Territory or Dis- trict of Columbia are affected with any contagious, infec- tious, or communicable disease ; and the Secretary of Agri- culture is directed to give written or printed notice of the establishment of quarantine to the proper officers of rail- road, steamboat, or other transportation companies doing business in or through any quarantined State or Territory or the District of Columbia, and to publish in such newspa- pers in the quarantined State or Territory or the District of Columbia, as the Secretary of Agriculture may select, notice of the establishment of quarantine. Sec, 2, That no railroad company or the owners or mas- ters of any steam or sailing or other vessel or boat shall receive for transportation or transport from any quarantined State or Territory or the District of Columbia, or from the quarantined portion of any State or Territory or the Dis- trict of Columbia, into any other State or Territorv or the 54 District of Columbia, anj' cattle or other live stock, except as horoinafter provided ; nor shall any person, company, or corporation deliver for such transportation to any railroad company, or to the master or owner of any boat or vessel any cattle or other live stock, except as hereinafter pro- vided ; nor shall any person, company, or corporation drive on foot, or cause to be driven on foot, or transport in pri- vate conveyance or cause to be transported in private con- veyance, from a quarantined State or Territory or the District of Columbia, or from the quarantined portion of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, into any other State or Territory or the District of Columbia, any cattle or other live stock, except as hereinafter provided. Sec. 3. That it shall be the duty of the Secretary of Agri- culture, and he is hereby authorized and directed, when the public safety will permit, to make and promulgate rules and regulations which shall permit and govern the Inspection, disinfection, certification, treatment, handling, and method and manner of delivery and shipment of cattle or other live stock from a quarantined State or Territory or the District of Columbia, and from the quarantined portion of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, into any other State or Territory or the District of Columbia ; and the Secretary of Agriculture shall give notice of such rules and regulations in the manner provided in section two of this act for notice of establishment of quarantine. Sec. 4. That cattle or other live stock may be moved from a quarantined State or Territory or the District of Columbia, or from the quarantined portion of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, into any other State or Territory or the District of Columbia, under and in compliance with the rules and regulations of the Secretary of Agriculture, made and promulgated In pursuance of the provisions of sec- tion three of this act; but It shall be unlawful to move, or to allow to be moved, any cattle or other live stock from any (luarantlned State or Territory or the District of Columbia, or from the quarantined portion of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, Into any other State or Territory or the District of Columbia, In manner or method or under conditions other than those prescribed by the Secretary of Agriculture. Sec. o. That every person who forcibly assaults, resists, opposes, prevents. Impedes, or Interferes with any officer or employee of the Bureau of Animal Industry of the United States Department of Agriculture in the execution of his duties, or on account of the execution of his duties, shall be fined not less than one hundred dollars nor more than one thousand dollars, or be Imprisoned not less than one month nor more than one year, or by both such fine and imprison- ment ; and every person who discharges any deadly weapon at any officer or employee of the Bureau of Animal In- dustry of the T'nited States Department of Agriculture, or uses any dangerous or deadly weapon in resisting him in the execution of his duties, with intent to commit a bodily Injury upon him or to deter or prevent him from discharging bis duties, or on account of the performance of his duties, 55 shall, upon conviction, be imprisoned at hard labor for a terra not more than five years or fined not to exceed one thousand dollars. Sec. 6. That any person, company, or corporation vio- lating the provisions of sections two or four of this act shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and on conviction shall be pun- ished by a fine of not less than one hundred dollars nor more than one thousand dollars, or by imprisonment not more than one year, or by both such fine and imprisonment. Approved, March 3, lOO.j. [Public— Xo. 340.] An Act To prevent cruelty to animals while in transit by railroad or other means of transi)ortation from one State or Territory or the District of Columbia into or through another State or Territory or the District of Columbia, and repealing sections forty-three hundred and eighty-sis, forty-three hundred and eighty-seven, forty-three hundred and eighty-eight, forty-three hundred and eighty-nine, and forty-three hundred and ninety of the United States Re- vised Statutes. Be it enacted hy the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled. That no railroad, express company, car company, common carrier other than by water, or the receiver, trustee, or lessee of any of them, whose road forms any part of a line of road over which cattle, sheep, swine, or other animals shall be conveyed from one State or Territory or the District of Columbia into or through another State or Territory or the District of Columbia, or the owners or masters of steam, sailing, or other vessels carrying or transporting cattle, sheep, swine, or other animals from one State or Territory or the District of Columbia into or through another State or Territory or the District of Columbia, shall confine the same in cars, boats, or vessels of any description for a period longer than twenty-eight consecutive hours vrithout unload- ing the same in a humane manner, into properly equipped pens for rest, water, and feeding, for a period of at least five consecutive hours, unless prevented by storm or by other accidental or unavoidable causes which can not be antici- pated or avoided by the exercise of due diligence and fore- sight : Provided, That upon the written request of the owner or person in custody of that particular shipment, which written request shall be separate and apart from any printed bill of lading, or other railroad form, the time of confinement may be extended to thirty-six hours. In estimating such confinement, the time consumed in loading and unloading shall not be considered, but the time during which the animals have been confined without such rest or food or water on connecting roads shall be included, it being the intent of this act to prohibit their continuous confinement beyond the period of twenty-eight hours, except upon the 56 contin.neucles horoinltefore stated : Provided, That it shall not he required that sheep he unloaded in the ni.q,httime, hut where the time expires in the nighttime in case of sheep the same maj' continue in transit to a suitahle place for unload- ing, suhject to the aforesaid limitation of thirty-six hours. Sec. 2. That animals so unloaded shall he properly fed and watered during such rest either hy the owner or person having the custody thereof, or in case of his default in so doing, then hy the railroad, express company, car company, common carrier other than by water, or the receiver, trustee, or lessee of any of them, or hy the owners or masters of boats or vessels transporting the same, at the reasonable expense of the ov.ner or person in custody thereof, and such railroad, express company, car company, common carrier other than by water, receiver, trustee, or lessee of any of them, owners or masters, shall in such case have a lien upon such animals for food, care, and custody furnished, collecti- ble at their destination in the same manner as the transpor- tation charges are collected, and shall not be liable for any detention of sucli animals, when such detention is of reason- able duration, to enalile compliance with section one of tliis act : but nothing in this section shall be construed to pre- vent the owner or shipper of animals from furnishing food therefor if be so desires. Sec. 3. That any railroad, express company, car company, common carrier other than by water, or the receiver, trustee, or lessee of any of tliem, or the master or owner of any steam, sailing, or other vessel who knowingly and willfully fails to comply with the provisions of the two preceding sections shall for every such failure be liable for and for- feit and pay a penalty of not less than one hundred nor more than five hundred dollars : Provided, That when ani- mals are carried in cars. l)oats. or other vessels in which they can and do have proper food, water, space, and oppor- tunity to rest the provisions in regard to their being unloaded shall not apply. Sec. 4. That the penalty created by the preceding section shall be recovered by civil action in the name of the United States in the circuit or district court holden within the district where the violation may have been committed or the person or corporation resides or carries on business ; and it shall be the duty of United States attorneys to prose- cute all violations of this act reported by the Secretary of Agriculture, or which come to their notice or knowledge by other means. Sec. 5. That sections forty-three hundred and eighty-six, forty-three hundred and eighty-seven, forty-three hundred and eighty-eight, forty-three hundred and eighty-nine, and forty -three hundred and ninety of the Revised Statutes of the United States be. and the same are hereby, repealed. Approved, June 29, 1906. INDEX. okdp:h u.'.. GE^"ERAL REGULATIO>-S : Page. appraisement and slaiijU'hter of diseased live stock. how made (Reg. 8)— 7 certiflcatiou and inspection, meaning (Keg. 0)__ 7 contagious diseases, notice of. and quarantine for (Keg. 2) — 6 definition of term " interstate "__( Keg. 1)-- 5 diseased live stock must not be placed in interstate trade (Reg. 3) 6 disinfection of diseased prem- ises, cars, boats, etc (Regs. 4. 5)__ 6 indemnity for diseased live stock killed (Reg. 8)__ 7 inspection and certification, meaning (Reg. 9) — 7 inspections of live stock may be made while in transit (Reg. 7) 7 interstate, meaning of term (Reg. 1 »__ 5 live stock, diseased, movement from quarantined area for- bidden (Reg. 2»__ 6 live stock en route can not be di- verted without inspection (Reg. lo» 7 live stock may l»e inspected while in transit (Reg. 7»_- 7 movement of diseased live stock forbidden (Reg. 2)__ premises, cars, boats, etc.. dis- ease must be disinfected (Reg. 4) — 6 quarantine to be established upon outbreak of contagious disease (Reg. 2)__ fi (57) 58 General regulations — Continued. Page, sliippers ninst see live stock is free from disease (Reg. 3)__ slaughter and appraisement of diseased live stock, how made_(Reg. 8)— 7 stock yards, etc., not disinfected after disease, to be dipped and certified cattle may be shipped any time (Reg. 1T)__ 1- dipping of tick-infested cattle__(Reg. 17)— 12 disinfection of cars and boats_ (Reg. 14?>) __ 10 disinfection of cars, boats, chutes. pens, etc (Reg. 14 f, r/)— H fencing of southern and other cattle in transit (Reg. 14c)__ 10 horses and mules infested with fever ticks, movement (Reg. 17)— 12 interstate movement of cattle for immediate slaughter, rules — (Reg. 14)— litter and manure of southern cattle in transit, disinfec- tion (Keg. 14f)— n modified quarantined areas, how made (Regs. 11. 12)- 8 nmles and horses infested with fever ticks, movement (Reg. 17)__ 12 pens and yards for cattle from quarantined area, manage- ment (Reg. 14(/)— 59 Splenetic fever— Continued. Page. IDlaoards on cars containing cat- tle from quarantined area_-(Reg. 14d)__ 10 quarantined area, periods ^Yllen open and closed (Reg. 13)__ 9 quarantined areas, modified, pro- c Scabies in cattle : Beaumont crude petroleum dip, method (Reg. 25)— 18 cars containing dii)ped scabby cattle and exposed cattle, pla- cards for (Reg. 24)— IT cars, yards, pens, etc., method of disinfection (Reg. 28)— 19 cattle becoming diseased or ex- posed en route, procedure (Reg. 26)-_ 18 cattle can not be moved from quarantined area unless certi- fied .-(Reg. 19)_- 13 cattle, healthy, placed in iiifer- tious premises, treatment (Reg. 23) — 17 60 Scabies IlV cattle — Continiiod. Page. cattle ill public stock yards, re- strictions re»;ardiiig iiiove- meut (Rojr. 27)__ 1I> cattle may be moved from (luar- antiiicd areas after dii)i)iiii;__(lie^'. L*<))__ 14 cattle not diseased maybe moved from (luarantined area with permit (Keg. 21)__ 14 cattle, scabl)y, dipping for imme- diate slaughter (Reg. 22)__ 16 cattle, scabby, dipping for stock- ers or feeders (Keg. 22) 16 dipping of scabby cattle for im- mediate slaughter (Reg. 22)__ 16 dipping of scabby cattle for stock- ers or feeders (Keg. 22) 16 dips approved by Department, formulas of (Reg. 25) IS dips, proprietary, conditions nec- essary for approval of Depart- ment (Reg. 25)__ 18 ■disinfection of cars, yards, pens. chutes, etc.. method (Reg. 28)__ 19 healthy cattle placed in infec- tious premises, treatment (Reg. 23) IT lime-and-suli»hur dip. fornuila for (Reg. 25)__ 18 movement of cattle from (luar- antined areas allowed after dipping (Reg. 20)__ 14 movement of cattle from quar- antined areas, certificate nec- essary (Reg. 19) 13 movement of cattle from quar- antined areas, placards (Reg. 21) 14 movement of cattle to and from public stock yards (Reg. 27) 19 movement of dipped scabby cat- tle and exposed cattle, pla- cards for cars (Reg. 24)__ 17 movement of scabby cattle for immediate slaughter after dip- ping (Reg. 22)_- 16 61 Scabies in cattle— Continued. Page- permit required for moving clean cattle from quarantined area_(Reg. 21) __ 14 placards for dipped scabby cat- tle and exposed cattle (Reg. 24)__ IT placards on cars from quaran- tined area (Reg. 21)__ 14 proprietary dips, conditions nec- essary for approval of Depart- ment (Reg. 25)__ 18 tobacco-and-sulphur dip, formula for (Reg. 25)__ IS Scabies in sheep : cars containing " dipped scabby " or " exposed *" sheep, placards for (Reg.32)__ 21 cars, yards, pens, etc., method of disinfection (Reg. 37) __ 24 coal-tar creosote dip. formula for (Reg.33f)__ cresol dip, formula for (Reg. 33c)-- dipping. careful handling requi- site (Reg. 34) - 24 dipping of scabby sheep for im- mediate slaughter (Reg. 31)_- 20 dipping of scabby sheep for stockers or feeders (Reg. 31)— 20 dips approved by Department, formulas and directions (Reg. 33)__ 22 dips, proprietary, conditions nec- essary for approval of Depart- ment"^ (Reg.33)__ 23 disinfection of cars, yards, pens, chutes, etc., method (Reg. 37)-- 24 lime-and-sulphur dip, formula for (Reg. 33rt)__ 22 movement of " dipped scabby " or " exposed " sheep, placards for cars (Reg. 32)__ 21 movement of healthy sheep after exposure to disease (Reg. 31)__ 20 movement of sheep " picked " from scabby tiock prohibited- (Reg. 29 )__ 19 62 Scabies in sheep — ('ontinued. Page. movement of sheei) to and fioni piiblie stock yards (Reg. 3(j)_- 24 " picking " sheep for sliipment from scabby flock prohibited- (Keg. 29) 20 phicards for cars containing *' dipped scabby " or " ex- posed " sheep (Reg. 32)__ 21 proprietary dips, conditions nec- essary for approval of l)(^part- ment (Reg. 33)__ 23 scabby sheep for innnediate shiughter, dipping (Reg. 31) 20 scabby sheep intended for stock- ers or feeders, dipping (Reg. 31)__ 20 scabby sheep must be dipped lie- fore movement (Reg. 20) 19 sheep becoming diseased or ex- posed en route, procedure (Reg. 35) 24 sheep in public stock yards, re- strictions regarding m o v e - ment (Reg. 36)__ 24 sheep placed in infectious prem- ises en route, treatment (Reg. 30) 20 tobacco-and-sulphur dip, formula for (Reg. 33a)__ 22 treatment of healthy sheep be- coming diseased or exposed en route (Reg. 30)__ 20 Maladie du coiT : (Asses regarded as horses.) board of appraisers for condemn- ing animals, how constituted- (Reg. 40) 25 breeding prohibited in diseased or exposed herds (Reg. 39) 25 condemned horses to be pur- chased by G o V e r n m e n t , method (Reg. 40)__ 25 diseased animals, Government reward for information ( Reg. 41 ) 26 diseased horses can not be moved from quarantined area. (Reg. 38) 25 healthy horses in quarantined area, movement (Reg. 38) — 25 25 27 63 Maladie du coit — Continued. Page. indemnity for liorses condemned, method of determining (Reg. 40)__ 25 movement of bealtliy horses from quarantined area (Keg. o8)__ 25 owners of condennied horses to be indemnified, method (Reg. 40)__ 2'j owners of horses under inspec- tion required to assist (Reg. :i8)_- 25 reward for information locating diseased animals (Reg. -41)__ 26 stallions running at large in quarantined area, penalty — (Reg. ;>1J)__ IIOG CHOLERA AND SWINE PLAGUE: cars remain in yards until after inspection of swine (Reg. 45)_- cars, yards, pens. etc.. method of disinfection (Reg. 45)_- 27 diseased or exposed swine not allowed in interstate com- merce (Reg.42)__ 26 diseased swine in stock yards. disposition (Reg. 44)__ 27 disinfection of cars, yards, etc., method (Reg. 45)__ 27 exposed swine in stock yards may be shipped for immediate slaughter only (Reg. 44)__ 27 feeders or stockers, conditions of movement from stock yards (Reg. 44) — 27 healthy swine may be moved without restriction except at destination (Reg. 43)__ 26 interstate shipments of diseased swine not allowed (Reg. 42)__ 26 movement of healthy swine not restricted except at destina- tion (Reg. 43)__ 26 movement of swine from public stock yards, restrictions (Reg. 44) 27 shippers of swine to ascertain they are not diseased (Reg. 42) 26 Page. 64 OliDKIi 144. Splenetic fever : California ; island of Santa Rosa not in modified area (Exc. 2) 35 feeders or stockers from modi tied area, pens for (Exc. 11)__ 43 feeding stations 43 Indian Territory, movement of fattle from other States (Exc. 10)__ 41 modified quarantine lines (Exc. 1) 29 California 29 Georgia i 34 North Carolina 34 Oklahoma 31 Tennessee 32 Texas 2!) Virginia 3.'> movement of cattle into States during open season (Exc. 11)__ 42 Arizona 42 California 42 Georgia 42 Kansas 42 Missouri 42 New Mexico 42 North Carolina 42 Tennessee 42 Texas 42 Virginia 42 movement of cattle to and from certain counties in — Arkansas (Exc. 9)_- 4ti California (Exc. 2)__ 3." Georgia (Exc. 6)__ 38 North Carolina (Exc. 7)__ 39 Oklahoma 1 (Exc. 4)__ 37 Tennessee (Exc. 5)__ 38 Texas (Exc. 3)__ 36 Virginia (Exc. 8)__ 40 open season, interstate movement of cattle during (Exc. 11) 42 pens for feeders or stor-kers from modified area (Exc. n)__ 42 rule 1, revision 1, superseded 43 stockers or feeders from modified area, pens for i (Exc. 11)— 43 ei5 ORDER 145. Scabies in cattle : Page, areas quarantined in — Colorado 40 Kansas ^o Montana 45 Nebraska 45 New Mexico 40 North Dakota 45 Oklahoma 40 South Dakota 45 Texas 40 Wyoming 40 ORDER 140. Scabies in sheep : States and Territories quarantined — Arizona 47 California 47 Colorado 47 Idaho 47 Kansas 47 Montana 47 Nebraska 47 Nevada 47 New Mexico 47 North Dakota 47 Oregon 47 South Dakota 47 Texas 47 Utah 47 Washington 47 Wyoming 47 o 29990—07 5 THIS BOOK IS DUE ON THE LAST DATE STAMPED BELOW AN INITIAL FINE OF 25 CENTS WILL BE ASSESSED FOR FAILURE TO RETURN THIS BOOK ON THE DATE DUE. THE PENALTY \Afii I iKiz-DCAcxEr TO «?o rTKivG r\hj Twp- cniiPTi-i ^ \ \ ■0 m o m O > O O CO X) O > m > m a CO Lr, O > z m TO o ;5^ ro I K) CO < CO O O 70 z o O — ' CO m o m 9P TO > CO to OD O o o m to O r^ ■(^ CD en JO CO -< LD 21-95m-7,'37 U C BERKELEY LIBRARIES CD5ED5t.7MT G U60 UNIVERSITY OF CAUFORNIA UBRARY