imaSF 395 THE HOG SPECIAL REPORT OF THE INDIANA STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE. “mr me Soe CINteRE PORT OF THE Indiana State Board of Agriculture ON THE oleae PREPARED UNDER THE DIRECTION OF HON. W. W. STEVENS, MEMBER OF THE BOARD, AND CHARLES DOWNING, SECRETARY. INDIANA STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE, 1900, 1st District...... Joun C. HAInES................. bake, Spencer Co. Yada District®....... MESON Oe NEBDACKeacercccnis cess Vincennes, Knox Co. Sd eeDIStEleba.--)1- WW STEVENS sae ces asc enepersiers = Salem, Washington Co. 4th District. ..... HW eRAUC ROBISON? seisae testicles: Rocklane, Johnson Co. 5th District...... He Wisp NO WLAN ica cc corr Sos aes) at's veya, 406 pause oteos ste SEB aae saints sks 8.1 aL Dae araaspatteere acer nehens cote Boece arste's NW eer nevic cose costae drahage oS baeens 3 8.8 POO 24a ty ir. cee. tetatate Sistine oe ore aos Saris Sites ete Dae ee we 10. 1895-1897 ME Sa Ny (apata teh eva tees so seyantedis thee’ sareveysre Sepa Par cieher seks or chs satorei ens te ak DN aeel Mee eo arse aD nce ak. 2 kilts cnaberehe S earion sle.sdi'b, ee, dhetione feu aio. ¥ woke 'shety ie 9.1 ere (cia Mn vee Nae carne ate cacke Sears eee LS Res Bier atarere-a, anise aut-oaba bush eater 11.1 d= O) ae are ae eos fee aces hi ohtereyers Gy deta cds cna dteaton the Ss ane yen tose whete 17.9 ST OPUZA eels coh 2 act ae vee 2, bora aea ye aus lens a ihe, Sacsuce Moron oRtee es pcs gauss a tete 19.2 125-149 PLONE na eat alee Aysheiece ah eron © sustee 17.3 ED (LUCA aos tos cree tue Be lo an Uagaws or tices A cbeRa eye Dien s. arate 21.6 fap nen. vas thapals aeetaes, « Rieearit's o,0 ete LPR AC ARE he reek tee te IO OE 22.2 PAV z2 DA ge nrrshis cecloiers loholer staratete ese chs Sue 22.0: During a period of eight years there is comparatively little difference in the losses, but during the period of three years when the disease raged with unusual violence the percentage was much higher in the counties having a large number of hogs per square mile, 4—Swine. It is not possible to tell how much of this increase in loss is due to the greater number of hogs, as it so happens that the counties having a very large number of hogs per square mile and large percentage of loss also have one or more rivers passing through them. From a comparison of counties about equally situated but the number of hogs per square mile very different, I am of the opinion that the number raised is not a very important factor in deter- mining the per cent. of loss. The season of the year when cholera is most prevalent is always in the late summer and fall. It occurs at all times of the year, but like all the intestinal diseases, as dysentery, typhoid fever, ete., in people, the conditions are more favorable for germ development in the fall. The germs of the disease may be carried from one place to another by birds of carrion. It is a common experience with farmers that hogs can not be raised upon a farm where there is a buzzard roost. I have learned of isolated outbreaks of the disease occurring from buzzards alighting to eat the carcass of a colt or other animal and soon after the hogs gain access to the same place and contract the disease. Dogs prowling about at night carry pieces of dead animals for a mile or more, across pasture fields, feed lots, leaving pieces here and there to be devoured by some unfortunate animal. Men may carry the disease from place to place upon their boots, or particles of dirt remain upon the wagon wheel and when dry drop off in another lot. It should be a general rule never to allow agents for hog cholera cures to come near a pig lot where there are healthy hogs. They go about diseased hogs and do not use the precautions necessary to pre- vent the spread of infection. Under some circumstances I believe the wind may be the bearer of germs. If the germs be distributed along a public highway by the ren- dering wagon and become mixed with the dust it is possible and altogether probable that they may be blown on the pasture or on the feed lot and thus convey disease. I have seen a few outbreaks continue in one direc- tion for several days after a constant prevailing wind trom the southwest. The evidence in this case seemed to point to the wind as the distributing agent. In such cases the germs fall in the water or are taken in with the food. Hog cholera is often contracted as a result of buying hogs from stock- yards for feeding purposes. This is such a common experience that only the strong-headed or uninitiated will be likely to take the risk. The farge stockyards and the inajority of shipping cars are permanently in- fected with disease and no matter how healthy the hogs may have been when they started from home they come in contact with infection and should never be withdrawn from the yards for feeding purposes. We have recorded many outbreaks caused in this way. It has been claimed that the shipping of diseased hogs over the railroad may be the means of causing new outbreaks of disease. I made this a particular object of ; 51 research in 1895 and 1896, but in no case have I been able to find more cholera along railroad lines than at a distance of a mile or two upon either side. Under the present method of having the right of way fenced I feel certain that the infection from this source is over-rated. It would be useless to try to go into detail concerning all the methods by which the disease is distributed. Any means by which the germs are carried from one place to another can be considered an accessory cause. All of these means are not under our centrol but many are and we will succeed in prevention in the same measure as we eliminate them. SYMPTOMS. The diagnosis of the different swine diseases is attended with greater difficulties than the diagnosing of diseases in horses or cattle. Except upon very careful examination the general symptoms of swine diseases seem to be very much the same. Cholera assumes several different forms and therefore can not be recognized by any specific set of symptoms. The symptoms vary greatly with the virulence of the outbreak. It may be said to assume an acute form which may run a course in from a few hours to two or three days, a Subacute form which runs its course in from three days to a week, and a chronic form which may last from one week to more than a month. These are only relative terms and merely used for convenience in describing the disease. The symptoms as here described are for the more common cases that live for three to seven days. About the first symptom to be observed is a general droopy condi- tion, the eyes more or less closed and dimmed, the ears drop more than usual, that there is a certain amount of sluggishness and although the hog eats, it is not with that greediness that is customary. The appetite becomes depraved and he will eat the droppings from other hogs or chickens, eat clay and earthy substances. The hog lies about more than usual, hiding in fence corners, under Liter, and in out of the way places. If he should have access to a manure pile, that will be a favorite place. During the hottest days he will prefer to lie in the scorching sun rather than in the shade. At first he will respond to calling for feed but later he will not get up unless urged to do so. During the progress of the dis- ease and sometimes from the very beginning there will be pronounced rheumatic symptoms. The hog will be lame first in one leg and then in another. The back will be arched. Diarrhea usually makes its appearance with the onset and is almost always present at some time during the course. The discharges at first are thinner than normal, but they rapidly become tarry and have a characteristic offensive odor. Constipation may occur and is almost sure to do so in those animals that eat earth. In some of the animals the contents make casts that perfectly occlude the passage and when struck with a board give the sensation of baked clay. Vomit- ing is also present. There is rapid emaciation. The fever is high and the breathing rapid but not labored. 52 In the very acute cases the toxins cause such rapid poisoning of the system that death is so sudden that the symptoms may not be developed. A pig that will be eating at the trough at one hour may be dead the next. In the chronic type we are especially prone to have the swelling of the ears and cracking of the tail. Both may drop off. The eruption is more pronounced upon the skin. Ulcers may form from the size of a grain of wheat to the size of the hand. The hair is lost. There is fre- quently hemorrhage from the nose and sometimes sore mouth and feet. There is coughing as a result of lung involvement. In hog cholera the great fatality is among the pigs, the older hogs often making a recovery or not being attacked. In swine plague a cough is probably the first symptom observed. It is paroxysmal at first but is deep seated. This is more noticeable when the animal first gets up or after exercise. Later the cough is more persistent. The breathing is short and rapid with little movement to the ribs and a double hitch in the flanks, like a horse with heaves. The breathing becomes more labored, the throat swells and there is nose bleed. If the hands are pressed over the ribs there will be evidence of pain, often due to pleurisy. The animal will not move more than necessary, the appe- tite remains better than in cholera, there is much thirst and much less tendency to diarrhea. Constipation is more frequently present than in cholera. The eyes are more inflamed and watery and there is less ten- dency to skin eruption. Swine plague is particularly liable to attack and be fatal to old hogs. Both diseases may be present in the same herd and even in the same animal at one time, thus complicating the symptoms. In nearly all cases where there is doubt and a number of hogs are simi- larly affected in the same neighborhood it is safe to conclude that one or both of these diseases are present. We have no other wide-spread dis- eases of hogs causing such loss. Hog cholera is sometimes mistaken for other diseases, as worms, diarrhea, or scours, septicemia or blood poisoning, etc. Swine plague is frequently mistaken for pneumonia, pleurisy and bronchitis. In some places the intestinal worms become so numerous as to cause all the intestinal symptoms ascribed to cholera, vomiting, diarrhea, de- praved appetite and emaciation. The onset of the trouble is not so sud- den; there is not the same temperature, ustially no lameness, and no skin eruption. The worms causing the trouble may be the large intestinal worms, the size of a lead pencil or larger, or the small fellows from one- half to three inches in length. A post-mortem will show the presence of the parasites in great numbers and the intestines ‘will be more or less irritated. The presence of the parasites causes so much loss that some of the cholera cures are nothing but vermifuge powders. The lung worm may also produce symptoms that will be mistaken for swine plague. Diarrhea, or scours, may also be mistaken for Cholera as it is so often induced by a change of feed as turning upon new corn, feeding city slops 53 that contains soap and sour feed. The discharges are usually more fluid and of lighter color than in cholera. The diseases can not be dis- tinguished in the early stages, but a change to a limited dry diet will usually be all that is necessary to bring about the desired result in the diarrheal trouble. A form of septicemia, or blood poisoning, sometimes attacks a bunch of pigs and being contagious, spreads from one to another. The mouth, nose, lips, tongue, feet or other parts of the body become gangrenous. While the disease presents some of the symptoms of cholera, the localiza- tion of the trouble is sufficient to make a diagnosis. Hogs will pile up in bunches when not properly divided and protected during the cold weather, and as a result catch more or less severe colds, resulting in bronchitis, pneumonia and pleurisy, giving rise to symptoms like those of swine plague. The same troubles may also appear as a result of turning hogs upon a stubble or pasture field during very hot weather and then permitting them to have access to cold springs or brooks in which to wallow. These same troubles sometimes arise from the in- halation of dust. A study of the conditions will usually suffice to differ- entiate the troubles. NUMBER OF ANIMALS AFFECTED, AND IMMUNITY. When an outbreak of cholera occurs in a neighborhood we can not judge what per cent. of the hogs will be affected and die. Some out- breaks have a virulent type of the disease on the outset and gradually the virulence diminishes so that while from eighty to one hundred per cent. of the hogs affected at the outset may have died only ten per cent. may be affected and die out of herds attacked later. As a rule the disease is more virulent in type when it makes its first appearance. The reverse of this is true in some instances. Out of a large herd of mixed hogs it is always safe to predict that the younger ones will die and that from ten to thirty per cent. of the older ones will escape. Here is where hundreds of farmers are duped into believing that certain hog cholera cures accom- plished great good, as they lose the susceptible ones before a remedy is tried and then succeed in saving those that would have lived anyhow. One attack usually confers immunity against subsequent attacks, but there are exceptions. An animal then that passes through the disease becomes valuable as a breeder. Ofter sows loose the litter of pigs which they may be carrying at the time, but it has no influence upon subsequent litters. No immunity is conferred upon the offspring, as they are as sus- ceptible as any to the disease. TREATMENT. The treatment naturally divides itself into medicinal, hygienic and preventive. The medicinal is the least important as we have no spe- cific for the disease. Veterinarians who haye made a careful study of the action of drugs and of the character of the disease have tried every- thing that would seem to be a rational treatment, but have failed. Pathologists have recognized the apparently hopeless condition to be treated and have been unable to suggest a remedy. Experimenters have tried everything which science and empiricism has claimed would cure but they have found nothing which they could endorse. Notwithstanding all the futile efforts that have been made by careful and conscientious workers, backed by large sums of money and every facility for investiga- tion, we have more than one hundred sure-cure cholera remedies upon the market in this State. According to the manufacturer (and the claims are all alike), the prevention and cure of hog cholera is a very simple things and depends wholly upon whether the farmer is willing to buy a few packages of their remedy and use as directed. It is impossible to make a close estimate of the amount paid for such preparations, but it is safe to say that in this State it amounts to more than $100,000 annually. In 1897 and 1898 the writer devoted considerable time to the investiga- tion of the merits of the various preparations upon the market. Many of these preparations are the product of misguided men, wholly ignorant of the pathology of the disease and equally as ignorant of the action of the ingredients in their concoctions. From a very limited trial they had drawn conclusions and sincerely believed they had discovered a sure cure and were willing to part with it for a large compensation. A much larger number of the remedies are prepared by men and com- panies who know the value of a well-worded advertisement and who are in the business for revenue only. They take the government formula, alter it in some slight particulars, call it by another name and increase the price probably ten times. Another favorite scheme is to take the formulae of some of the patented preparations and sell the remedy under anew name, well knowing that if it failed under one name that it would act no better under a new. I was informed that Brown County clay sold for seventy cents per pound. A third class of remedies are prepared by men who make a study of the disease. They constitute a very small minority. There is no better evidence that we have no sure remedy than the fact that we have so many upon the market. In these experiments one hundred and fifty-six remedies were tried and nearly 4,200 pounds of drugs. All the formulae given in the patent office reports were filled. A large number of formulae were obtained from the owners and manu- facturers, a few by analysis and several hundred pounds of the proprie- tary remedies were used. f The plan was to test each remedy upon at least five herds in as many places and at different times during the season, in order to work over all the conditions. Without going into details, it may be said that none of them fulfilled their claims. Some were positively injurious. Many HD of them seemingly did good upon some herds and if a hurried conclusion had been reached it would have been favorable. This is an error too often made and no test can be considered satisfactory that is not used upon a large number of hogs in different herds, in different localities and at different times during the season. The good effects often reported are frequently due to the better care and better hygienic conditions in following the directions. Some manufacturers accompany their goods with carefully compiled directions upon care and management, and as they cost considerable it insures their being carried out. It must be confessed, however, that directions come high at fifty cents per pound. Very few remedies find a place upon the market for more than five years. The great majority of them run their course in two years, and the writer is cognizant of but three that have been sold for a period of more than ten years. This is the test of their efficiency. In every in- stance in which an attempt has been made to take infected hogs from the stockyards, treat them and fatten them for the market the result has been a failure. In 1897 Mr. John Cowie, of Iowa, tested a number of the more widely advertised remedies and the results were unfavorable. Dr. Reynolds, State Veterinarian for Minnesota, after examining the matter carefully, issued a circular advising the farmers not to purchase the remedies. In mild outbreaks and in very many cases much good can be accom- plished by such remedies as will keep the bowels clear and act as an alterative and tonic. For this purpose we have a prescription generally known as the government formula, and is as follows: Wood charcoal, 1 pound. Sulphur, 2 pounds. Sodium chloride (salt), 2 pounds. Sodium bicarbonate (baking soda), 2 pounds. Sodium hyposulphite, 2 pounds. Sodium sulphate (Glauber salts), 1 pound. Antimony sulphide, 1 pound. The dose is a tablespoonful for each 200 pounds once or twice a day. It is best given in slop. This costs about ten cents per pound and is the one so much imitated and sold under different names at from twenty to fifty cents per pound. Our best results in the treatment of mild cases were obtained by using the following: Chlorate of potash, 1 pound. Bicarbonate of soda, 1 pound. Nitrate of potash, 2 pounds. The dose is the same as in the former prescription. In the early stages and when constipation is present five grains of calomel are admin- 56 tered once a day to each 200 pounds of weight, or oil meal is added to the slop. Another treatment which found considerable favor was a tablespoon- ful of a saturated solution of chlorate of potash and a like quantity of tincture of muriate of iron once or twice a day for each 300 pounds. A half gallon of kerosene to a barrel of slop mixed thoroughly gave better results than three-fourths of the remedies tried. Quinine and salol were also of service. Carbolie acid and like preparations are disinfectants and not cures. The treatment of inoculating worn-out horses with cholera germs, killing the horse and feeding it to the hogs was not a success. The feed- ing of the carcasses of hogs that had died of the disease and been buried is to be condemned. The boiling of the carcasses of cholera hogs and feeding them has likewise disappointed those who have tried it. A final method of prying open the hog’s mouth and cutting off the papillae inside of the jaw only abstracts blood. PREVENTION BY VACCINATION. The attempt to prevent hog holera by vaccination is dependent upon the fact that one attack confers immunity against subsequent attacks. Vaccination has been used against smallpox in the human subject with the most marked success. In this case the pox germ is obtained from the cow and when vaccination takes place it induces a very mild disease. Vaccination is also used against anthrax in sheep and cattle. Here the disease germs have had their vitality reduced by artificial means and only a mild attack follows. The results are highly satisfactory and sheep and cattle are now raised where it was impossible to do so before. The attempts to vaccinate against cholera have not veen successful. In the first place, we know of no animal having a similar disease, the germs of which when inoculated into the hog will confer immunity, and no method of attenuating the germs so that they can be inoculated with safety has yet been discovered. Some years ago Billings and Detmers each thought they had discovered successful means of vaccination and the work was carried on on a large scale. The results were unsatis- factory and had to be given up, as it had the effect at times of starting the disease where it did not previously exist. The work is being revived at the Kansas Experiment Station and again being reported favorably. The matter needs to be more fully demonstrated before advising the stock- man to try it. THE ANTI-HOG CHOLERA SERUM. The serum treatment of hog cholera was probably first demonstrated by Dr. Peters in 1896, and the same work undertaken at almost the sume time by the Bureau of Animal Industry. The serum treatment is based upon the same principles as are involved in the anti-toxin for diphtheria. 57 It is a well established fact that in Some bacterial diseases a strong resistance to the growth of bacteria is developed by the formation in the blood of a substance known as anti-toxin. The germs form a toxin or poison and the body forms the anti-toxin to counteract the growth of the germs. If the formation of the anti-toxin is in excess the patient recovers, and it has been found that blood from such a patient can be drawn, the anti-toxin separated, and if added to the blood of a patient that is exposed or affected it will prevent the disease or bring about a recovery. In order to secure anti-toxin in medicinal quantities it is usual to inoculate animals that do not have the particular disease and produce a slight attack and after recovery reinoculate and repeat until the animal can stand an enormous quantity at one time. 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) ne i “ert at wT eee ee ee eee eee 4) ' Hach finely powdered and mixed. The dose is one teaspoonful in slop or water, thickened with bran. These powders will tone and stimulate all the functions, aid the recuperative powers of nature, purify the blood and increase the mammary supply. We have very little faith in any of the so-called hog cholera remedies, and have no suggestions to make along this line. I would say that success in hog raising and fattening does not depend solely on the judicious management of any one part of swine husbandry, but is due to foresight, proper care and judicious management of all parts. PREPARING HOGS FOR THE SHOW RING. BY I. N. BARKER, THORNTOWN, IND. The first requisite in preparing hogs for the show ring is to be sure we have the right kind of breeding stock. Then arrange to have the fall litters come as near the last days of September or first days of October as possible. And the spring litters last of. March or first ten days of April. By doing this we have the fall litters just the right age to select our show stuff for class “over six months and under one year,’ and the spring litters will be the right age to select show pigs for class ‘under six months.” While the dam that is carrying these litters before birth should not be fed highly on corn, as corn is too heating and has not sufficient bone and muscle elements in it to produce the strongest and best pigs, feed her on _ quite a variety of feed, such as mill feed made into a thick slop, together with a very moderate amount of corn, sugar beets, very early cut, sweet clover hay, ground oats, green rye, and also charcoal, ashes and salt once or twice per week. The above I consider the first preparation. But never neglecting to give the brood sows roomy lots, permitting plenty of exer- cise. Good comfortable houses for each sow separate from other hogs is a necessary preparation for farrowing; and when the little porkers put in an appearance extra care is necessary to save as near all the pigs as possible. Feed the sow very sparingly for several days before farrowing and also for the first ten days after farrowing, so as to keep down fever. When these precautions are taken, the pigs will seldom be troubled very severely with scours. By the time the pigs are three or four weeks old they should be eating quite freely in small pens near the dam, but so arranged that she can not rob them. If given such an opportunity they will learn to drink milk by 100 the time they are three weeks old, especially when it is placed in very shallow troughs. As they advance in age they should have all they will eat up clean and no more, and this should be given three times per day, and if in hot weather, they should always be fed in the shade, being careful that neither pigs nor dam are fed too much corn. Sweet skimmilk with wheat shorts and ground oats, with a small amount of corn meal together with about one handful of oil cake meal to two gallons of slop, fed as thick as it will cover, is our ideal feed in preparing pigs and hogs for the show ring. It is surprising how much charcoal, ashes and salt hogs will eat when they are being highly fed, and this should never be neglected; and a roomy, grassy lot for them is also a necessity, as well as plenty of pure water. But there are other things to look after in preparing hogs for the show ring besides what I have mentioned. Their sleeping places should be kept as clean as possible and disin- fected twice each week. Keep the stock free from lice by free applications of crude oil as often as necessary. Keep them tame and gentle by going amongst them and being very familiar with them, so they will not be nervous and wild when driven out into the show ring. When pigs have been bred right, and prepared as above recommended, they will grow to very large size and have plenty of style or finish. When you drive out in the show ring have them clean and in as attractive form as _ possible, and you are in good shape to win a liberal share of the prizes. SHAPING STOCK FOR THE SHOW RING. BY JOHN G GARTEN, BURNEY, IND. The most important point connected with success is in having and keeping a good breeding herd. You should select your breeding animals from stock that has as many noted ancestors as possible, as the best do not always produce show animals. Proper care of the sire and dam is laying the foundation of success with the pigs. The sire should not be run down. He should be fed liberally but not so that he will become sluggish. I find ground oats and shorts the best ration for a breeding boar, with a little corn and plenty of shade and water. To raise a show pig, the mother should be well matured, she should be fed so as to give plenty of milk at farrowing time; then she should be fed sparingly, gradually increasing her ration until she gets about what she will eat up clean. 101 The first month of a pig’s life I find to be the most critical. To prevent scour do not overfeed, and if you do not want to show bobtail pigs the bedding should be changed twice a week at least. AS soon as the pigs show signs of eating, a place should be fixed so that they can be fed to themselves. I feed ground oats and shipstuff and bran, as it pro- duces bone, which I think is most essential in starting a pig. Now comes the time that tries the most experienced breeder in selecting the pigs for the show ring. Every breeder has, or ought to have, a mental photo- graph of the perfect animal he is trying to produce—his ideal. We want a good bone structure; then you have something you can rely on to build upon. When the pigs are four to six weeks old, I think, is a good time to select them for the show ring. Once right, while they may grow away from it under the most careful management, they are always apt to return to their first form than to grow out of or cover up a faulty structure. Always demand a good head and ear, with good, strong pole, a short neck, a strong back well ribbed, with the best ham you can get, straight top and bottom lines, set on good legs and feet, with a full heart girth, well flanked. After the pigs have been selected they should be allowed to wean themselves and should have a grass lot to run in with plenty of shade. I often commence feeding stronger so as to make as much growth as possi- ble. When the pigs are six months old they should be fed more corn or something that will grow more fat. I usually feed when fitting ani- mals with age, white middlings or shorts and hominy meal equal parts and a pint of oil meal to two gallons of feed. Think this kind of feeding gives more bloom to the animal, and they will have a fine coat of hair. Aged sows should always be bred before being fitted so the young can suckle the fat off without detriment to the sow. Aged boars should not be fed too much corn as it is heating and injurious to the usefulness as a sire afterward. All hogs should be washed and cleaned up before crat- ing. Do not use too much straw in crating as it is heating. After you have arrived at the show ground and the pens are selected, see that they have been disinfected. Bed just heavy enough to keep dry, and when show day comes see that the hogs are clean and show dry. If they get too warm, use water with a solution of chloro-naphtholeum, as it gives a good gloss to the hair. If you are successful, you will know just how to act and what to say; but if some other fellow gets the ribbon you should then have courage of mind, treating the judge with respect, and be courteous to fellow breeders; and when you have arrived home go to work preparing for the show next year. Breeding hogs is not, as has been said, a lazy man’s business, but real hard, pleasant work if you love your business, and no man should com- mence shaping stock for the show ring without a genuine love for it. A taste for one’s business and an ambition to succeed in it, is indispensable, and a lack of such qualities is only failure. 102 Every swine breeder should have an ambition to be successful. It takes knowledge, persistence, patience and constant attention to prepare stock for the show ring; it requires work, and no hog breeder can expect to be successful without it. DO PUBLIC SALES BENEFIT THE BREEDER? BY JNO M. VANCE, SPRINGPORT, IND. As to whether public sales do benefit the breeder depends upon his surroundings. It is a well-known fact that all breeders do not succeed in the sale business. I have attended sales where the farmers of the neigh- borhood seemed to care but little for the stock they were offered. They either could not or would not distinguish between a good animal and a poor one. The idea of improving their stock seemed to never enter their heads, and the breeder would be forced to sell at a loss and eventually abandon the business. But I am glad to say all farmers are not inclined that way. The spirit of improvement has taken possession of some neigh- borhoods, and the farmers will attend the annual sales. All seem to strive to get the best hogs; a few dollars does not stand in the way when good ones are in the ring. They know the value of good hogs and they will have them. Where a breeder has such farmers for his patrons he can make the sale business a success. I have been selling at public sale for about ten years, and I am satisfied I can do better selling my stock at public sale than any other way. It is not the question as to how to dispose of any one crop of pigs, but how to dispose of them from year to year. Then we must manage to build up a trade that will last, and as the pork barrel is the destiny of the pig, the farmer that raises him is the principal one to look to for a market for him, and we can depend on him for that where they are a live, progressive class of farmers. It is a good plan to make a kind of a holiday of sale day. Warmers and breeders that are hear enough are glad to come and visit each other. We can not make the sale business a success without the support of the farmer and the breeder also. The man who goes into the public sale business should strive to raise better pigs every year. The spirit of friendly rivalry should be cultivated among all breeders. We like to hear our neighbors say, “I want to have the best bunch of pigs that is sold in our market this year,’ and when the breeder can hear these same men say, “I bought my breeding boar at your sale,’ then we can depend on these men for regular customers. I also think it is better for breeders and farmers to see the pigs they are buying, a thing they do more at sales than buying at private sale or on mail order, Another benefit in selling 105 at public sale, we often get persons to come to the sale who are not in the habit of buying fine stock, and when they get there they are apt to buy something that will do them good, and we have now a regular customer. And not only that man, but his friends, will want some next year. So this thing works like the leaven in bread, it keeps on until all will want something better than they had at home. I am not in favor of “boom prices” or shady or unfair methods being used by the breeder. It is not the best way. We should avoid all unfair methods in selling at public sale, as it is sure to bring trouble in the end. With fair and honest deal- ing between man and man, and ever striving to raise better pigs, I know of no better way to sell them than at public sale. WHAT BENEFITS ARE DERIVED FROM BREEDERS’ MEETINGS? BY LUCIEN ARBUCKLE, HOPE, IND, No argument is necessary to prove that breeders’ meetings benefit those interested in swine breeding. One of the main benefits gained at swine breeders’ meetings is the social advantage. There we meet breeders from all over the country, renew old acquaintances, make many new ones and in a friendly way re- view the business of the year. Another benefit is the experience given by men who have grown old in the business. Their advice, if followed by the young and inexperienced breeder, places him on the high road to success, and possibly some young breeder may tell something that the older breeder. had not yet learned. It is said, “There is nothing new under the sun;’ but we must remember we are never too old to learn. So the men who have been in the business almost a lifetime can be benefited by attending breeders’ meetings. Surely the young man just embarking in the business can not afford to miss a single meeting. There we learn from the care of the boar down to the sucking pig; the proper feed and care of the brood sow for months before being bred up to farrowing, and from then on to the time when she weans her litter and sends them forth to root hog or die. Then some other fellow reads a paper on handling of pigs from wean- ing time on, and we have a complete lesson on the breeding and caring for swine. Again, breeders’ meetings are often the means of selling stock, for we all like to tell the breeder just what we want and talk to him about what we are going to get. 104. We all make mistakes, and these we can have corrected when we come in contact with those who have solved the problems we are trying to learn. The breeders’ meetings do more than any other one thing to put the breeding of fine stock on a higher scale as the years go by, and make the business more profitable to all who are engaged in it. THE CARE OF PIGS. The well-known swine breeder, Mr. W. J. Malden, of England, gives some interesting suggestions on the care and medication of young pigs, in the Country Gentleman, which should prove interesting reading to American breeders. Little pigs can not stand against the disadvantages of a cold or wet bed. It is almost safe to state that no young pigs thrive if they are re- quired to exist in a sty which has a cold floor; and that if, in addition to this, the floor is allowed to become wet and foul, the last hope toward profitable management is lost. At the time of pigging a small bed is found necessary, because if a large quantity of litter is provided there is a risk of the little pigs being smothered, but the bed must be placed in a dry position, and where no moisture can drain. If there is a dry place in the sty the sow will make her nest on it, but if the floor is uneven no such opportunity is given her, and she is obliged to make as good shift as she can. For a few days after the pigs are born the litter should not be changed for fear of upsetting the sow, unless she is of a very placid disposition; but when it is safe to clean out the sty the operation should be carried out daily. Little pigs will not thrive if the straw becomes wet and foul. The first signs of ill-effect are noticeable in a husky cold which frequently develops into a fatal pulmonary attack. Pig keepers know how often they notice that the ‘lights’ are wrong when they cut open a little pig which has died somewhat suddenly. In almost all instances this is the result of being forced to lie on a damp bed; the less frequent cause is a chill brought about by the sty being draughty. Another result of a wet bed is rheumatism, a frequent malady among pigs; and no lover of animals can help feeling distress at the evident pain the little pigs suffer. They crouch about the sty and rapidly lose flesh, and if an effort is made to make them take exercise, they indicate the torture they ex- perience by shrill squeals and long-drawn grunts. A small proportion of the attacks of rheumatism, it is true, result from injudicious feeding, which causes acidity to develop in their system; but in the majority of instances it is through the unhealthy bedding they are forced to lie in. There is a disease among pigs which, to the casual observer, is very similar to rheumatism, but which to an experienced pig breeder presents different symptoms; and it is very necessary that the difference should be 105 understood, because the treatment of the two varies considerably. The disease to which I refer is a kind of paralysis which causes the animals to lose their powers of locomotion, and is commonly spoken of as “going off their feet.”’ This is due to errors in feeding, and can be distinguished from rheumatism because the pigs suffer no pain when touched, and therefore do not squeal when an attempt is made to make them move. They are usually in a listless and lethargic state, apparently caring little what is done to them, or what their surroundings are. The cause of this is that they are being fed upon food which contains a large proportion of nitrogen. When animals receive a too highly nitrogenous diet, the blood is surcharged with nitrogen, and presses so hard on the brain that ordinary symptoms of paralysis develop, showing themselves in the man- ner already described. The obvious method of relieving animals suffering in this way is to weaken the blood so that the pressure is lessened. There are various means of doing this, which may be followed according as the intensity of the malady shows itself. If the pigs are very bad, it is neces- sary to afford immediate relief by bleeding, when a rapid change gener- ally takes place. Should the attack not be so intense, a small quantity of epsom salts should be mixed in their food, and the more nitrogenous parts of it withheld. Thus, if the pigs are receiving skim milk in addi- tion to their mother’s milk the skim milk should not be given. If food, such as bran and peas, is being given, more starchy foods, such as maize or barley meal, should be substituted for a time. In all the minor diseases of pigs which affect the digestive organs, nothing seems to exercise more beneficial effect than the herb known as betony, or, in some localities, madder. The medicinal properties of betony have long been recognized, and for a lengthy period it was largely used in ordinary medicine. An old Spanish proverb, when translated, runs as follows: ‘Sell your coat and buy betony,’’ indicating in what esteem it was held before the days. when a more scientific pharmacy was established. It is wonderful, al- most magical, in its effect on pigs, for when they will not eat, a dose rapidly brings back and appetite, and if they are out of sorts the cause soon disappears. It may be given green or in a dried condition, and every pig keeper should grow a patch of it, so that an occasional dose of one or two tablespoonfuls may be given when required. The use of corn in the feeding of swine has been dropped out until at present this grain is fed very little except as a finish for pork. We need nothing better than roots, milk and mill feed, in the absence of pasture, for a sow during the period of gestation and until the pigs are six weeks old, except in the coldest weather, and even then comfortable quarters are preferable to too much concentrated food for producting heat. 106 WEHANING PIGS. {From American Swine Herd.} The time when pigs should be weaned, in a measure, depends upon their thrift, the season of the year, the accommodation and the feed you have for them. We do not consider it advisable to wean pigs before they are two months old—would prefer more to less age. Our early pigs we generally wean the first week in May, as we like to raise fall litters from a portion of the sows. Sows can ordinarily be bred within a week after the pigs are taken away. Sows that farrow in May and June will be too late to breed for fall farrow. It has been our custom to let these run with the sows until they wean themselves. We prefer to have our sows with litters in as small bunches as possi- ble; prefer a house and small yard with plenty of grass for each sow. If they are thus divided, and any of the pigs get out of order, you at once know what litter it is, and feed the sow accordingly. “Most of the ail- ments of pigs before weaning will have to be reached by feed through the dam. Watch your little pigs very closely. If they look thin and hungry see that their dam is better fed and swilled—always increasing ration slowly or you will invariably scour the little fellows. As it is next to impossible to raise a litter of pigs without some of them getting the scours, at one time or another, I will give you our treat- ment for their ailment. Watch the little pigs closely; if any of them are too loose, at the next feed dissolve a teaspoonful of copperas in a little warm water and feed it to the sow in her swill. For two years I have successfully checked every case, and only four times gave a second dose, which I always give on the following day if the first was not effective. Have also seen copperas tried on cases of from three to ten days in duration, where it was not effective; therefore re- member one stitch in time will save nine. When pigs get from two to four weeks old fence off a corner in the house or in the yard, where the old sow can not get in, and give the pigs all the shelled corn they will eat. As soon as they are accustomed to coming for the corn, begin by feeding a little fresh milk diluted one- half with warm water. One cupful will be enough to begin with; then increase quantity as they learn to drink. Be careful there is no milk left in the trough from the previous feed, as it tends to sour the trough and the new milk. If you are careless in this way you will do more harm than good. Re- member the stomach of a little pig is as sensitive and delicate as that of a child. After you have them eating and drinking, so they will come when you call, and their stomach thoroughly accustomed to the feed, they are ready to wean. 107 Do not overlook the fact that by removing the sow you remove the sweetest and cleanest portion of its feed. We want all the swill we feed to pigs under three months of age to be sweet, and then not too much of that; have at various times fed much soaked feed, but have discarded it entirely for dry shelled corn and dry oats fed in self feeders. We prefer dry feed for two reasons: First, in soaking corn, oats, ground or mill feed, it is next to impossible to keep the feed sweet in warm weather unless you have plenty of boiling water and rinse your barrels at each feed. Second, if feed is soaked, pigs will swallow whole or half kernels, without chewing the feed, thus being not properly mixed with saliva is hard to digest and may sour the stomach, while the dry grain is thoroughly chewed or ground. You can see this by the quantity of ground corn everywhere found where pigs have been fed dry corn. r WHOLE VS. GROUND FEED FOR HOGS. Carefully conducted experiments are always worth a great deal to pro- gressive breeders. The Wisconsin Experiment Station furnishes us with the results of an experiment made to determine the comparative value of whole corn and corn meal as a feed for growing pigs. The corn used was No. 2 Western Yellow Dent, of fine quality. The corn meal used was ground fine at the regular custom flouring mills. In the experiment eighteen pigs were used, divided into two even lots of nine each, the experiment continuing twelve weeks. Lot one was fed the ration of two-thirds shelled corn and one-third wheat and middlings by weight. Lot two was fed two-thirds corn meal and one-third middlings wet with water and fed immediately after mixing. Each lot was fed one week on this diet before the proper trial began. Each animal was weighed separately and an account kept of all feed being given by weeks. The amount of shelled corn fed to lot one was 3,284 pounds; of middlings, 1,624 pounds; weight at the beginning of the trial, 1,907 pounds, and the gain 984. Lot number two consumed 3,971 pounds of corn meal and 1,985 of middlings; weight at the beginning, 1886 pounds, and gain, 1,348. The experiment was repeated with two other lots of hogs finer in bone and less vigorous in constitution, and continued for nine weeks. Lot one consumed 1,107 pounds of shelled corn and the same amount of middlings; weighed at the beginning 1,281 pounds, and gained 522. Lot two con- sumed 1,888 pounds of corn meal and the same amount of middlings; at the beginning weighed 1,583 pounds and gained 576. Analyzing these experiments it will be seen that it required in the first trial 422 pounds of feed with corn meal to make 100 pounds of gain, and 501 pounds with whole corn to secure the same results. In the second trial it required 462 pounds with corn meal and 424 pounds with whole corn. 108 In the trial made in 1896, of which this is a duplication, it required 443 pounds with corn meal and 481 pounds with whole corn to produce 100 pounds of gain on the first trial and 487 pounds with corn meal, and 591 pounds with whole corn on the second trial of that year. To sum up the two seasons’ work, Professor Henry remarks that the pigs made a greater gain when fed corn meal than when fed whole corn. “Taking the average of the four trials we learn that to make 100 pounds of gain the pigs were fed 456 pounds of corn meal and middlings and 499 pounds of whole corn and middlings. There is a saving of 40 pounds of corn on 499 pounds, or eight per cent. saved by grinding. This saving will barely pay for the cost of grinding corn.” Under the conditions west of the Mississippi it would certainly not pay to grind the corn at eight per cent. of its cash value when it is worth less than twenty-five cents per bushel. When corn, however, reaches forty cents and the farmer has a mill at home (which he can not very well do without) the answer would have to be very different. The feed mill is a necessity on every well regulated farm for grinding corn, oats and inferior wheat for slop for pigs and calves, or preparing feed in short for any kind of stock requiring ground feed. It does not, however, pay, as will be seen above, to grind all grain for all purposes, and the object of this article is to point out the cases in which grinding will not pay when corn is cheap. THE HOG DOG. We don’t know that any of our Indiana breeders stand in need of the “hog dog,’ as he is still found in some parts of the South, but it is inter- esting to know how he is used in that part of the country, where we still find the “razorback” in all his purity. Henry Wallace was down south recently and accidentally ran across a “hog dog,’ and this is what he writes about it: ; “We called the other day at a lone house in the openings of a vast for- est along the bayous, and while waiting for the appearance of the man of the house, who had gone fishing and had to be found by a messenger on horseback, we saw a hound, and asked the mistress of the home what that dog was good for. ““That are a hog dog,’ was the reply. ‘That dog is worth fifty dollars. Hog dogs are scarce in these parts.’ “We ventured to inquire whether the dog would catch razorbacks, and she said: ‘Oh, no! Hog dogs don’t catch razorbacks; the razorbacks chase them.’ “On asking for further explanation, she went on to say that their hogs ran in the woods the year round without feed or care, and when it was necessary to find them they hunted for them the same as deer; that when 109 this particular dog was put on the trail of a hog he followed it up and located the herd by baying at them. The owner then indicated the direc- tion in which he wanted the herd driven, when the hog dog made an at- tack on the herd which they resisted in force, and the experienced H. D. aforesaid allowed them to chase him in the direction in which the owner wanted the hogs to go. If any of them seemed inclined to go in some other direction, he ran around and got the stragglers after him, and led in the home direction. If he got tired and turned out, he rested a bit and then made another attack, and no matter how tired the hogs were they would take after him, and he continued this masterly retreat until the hogs were brought home. “We were curious to know how the hogs were confined for slaughter- ing purposes after they arrived at home, and were told that the proper way was to build a log pen in the woods with an opening below large enough for both dog and hogs to enter and low enough for the dog to jump out and save his bacon, but so high that the hogs could not. The owner then was on hand and closed up the opening and had his winter meat ready for slaughter. We had heard stories of this kind before, but always supposed there was some joke about it, and it gave us a new sen- sation to hear this artless, simple-minded woman describing a scene that occurred every fall of the year when a hog harvest had to be gathered. “Through all the pine and oak forests of the South and over not a little of the prairie region where corn growing is not a pronounced success, the razorback flourishes and will flourish until conditions are changed. Say what you like about him, he is the hog for that locality. Attempts to grade him up without changing the environment are as futile as pour- ing water on a duck’s back or King Arthur’s attempt to sweep back the waves of the Atlantic with a broom. The little pigs, whether from the wild or graded up breeds, in the full flush of their mother’s milk, do not differ so widely as one would imagine from those of the improved types. When this milk begins to fail and the infantile razorback has to root for himself, he begins to take on the razorback form. It is the only form under which he could survive the conditions by which he is surrounded. Nature builds him that way because it is the only way in which he could make a living. From necessity he is an enterprising hog; intelligent, sus- picious, courageous, a born fighter, a good rustler,, shifty as a New Eng- land Yankee, and courageous as a confederate colonel. Nothing in the shape of food from the roots of grass and minnows in the fisherman’s bucket, to watermelons or dead fish, escape him. He is hungry from the first spoonful of his mother’s milk until the mast ripens in the fall; then his soul is satisfied. Whether it is the seeds of the pine cone, the acorn, or the pecan, it is all the same to the razorback. He has grown his frame under hard conditions and has developed a degree of industry, foresight, prudence, courage and energy, which, if used by his master in the prose- eution of his business, would make the South the abode of rich men, 110 and when the harvest of mast comes in the fall he revels in a luxury which would satisfy the soul of a millionaire, and puts the streak of fat between the streaks of leam that makes his flesh, when properly cured and smoked, a fit feast for the epicure. “Give the razorback his dues. He will hold the country until fenced pastures, tame grasses and cheap corn invade it, and then, and then only, is it worth while to grade him up.” MANAGEMENT AND FEEDING OF FALL PIGS. The question with some farmers is what to do with the fall pigs. It is easy enough to handle the spring litter, but the fall pigs have to pass through all kinds of bad weather, which is very unfavorable for their growth and fattening. The idea of this article is to show that the fall pig, with a little extra care and management, can be made to thrive and fatten in winter as well as in summer. Dollars do not grow on bushes, fall to the ground to be gathered into baskets by man, but by great labor we are able to gather a few. During the winter months the farmer is not pushed with work, therefore it is just the time for him to look after the pigs. I findeby my experience that the best time for sows to farrow for fall pigs is during the months of August and September. To have the pigs come then gives them the advantage of a little warm weather in which they can get a start before cold weather begins. The sow should be kept in good condition by the feeding of mill feed and a little corn and have the run of a clover field, so that the pigs will come strong and healthy, which is half the battle. From the time the pigs come until they are two weeks old the sows should be fed very sparingly on bran slop alone, after which increase it, gradually adding corn until you give them about all they eat. As soon as the pigs will eat they should have a run to themselves and be fed slop made by mixing mill feed with milk and kitchen slops. When they are six or eight weeks old the sows should be weaned from the pigs. Never pen the pigs. Let them have all the range possible. Feed them all the mill feed they will eat, but not much corn until they are three months old. If fed too freely on corn they will not grow fast. When cold weather comes the pigs should be well sheltered. Have them warm, dry sleeping quarters and also a dry feed place. It should be so arranged that they will not have to go through the cold from nest to feeding place. After they are three months old give them all the corn they will eat up clean twice a day and a liberal quantity of bran slop at noon, but not all they will eat. Have them squeal sufficiently at each feeding time to let you know they will relish their feed when you give it to them. Pigs managed and fed according to the above directions up Be should weigh at four months old at least one hundred pounds and not be fat but good stockers. But if the feeder desires to keep them they can be made to gain, by the same care and feeding, from one and one-half to two pounds per day during the remainder of the winter. I have done this myself and am doing it this winter with thirty head of good grade Poland-Chinas, which will weigh to-day at five months old 150 pounds. The main points to be looked after are good shelter, a warm, dry sleeping place kept free of lice by the use of coal oil, plenty of good drinking water, and feed at regular hours. FATTENING HOGS FOR MARKDNT. BY J. H. BONE, LAFAYETTE, IND. I take it for granted that all who read this article are trying to prepare their stock for market in the most economical way. With this in mind J shall try to point out the reasonable way of feeding. In so short a paper only general facts can be stated. It goes without saying that if we want to produce anything we must use the right material in the right way. There is no need of guessing about these materials when it comes to feeding farm animals, for we have abundant information on the subject. Let us first examine the composition of the animal’s body. Numerous investigations give approximately the following composition of the body of various farm animals: Bones, 9 per cent.; flesh and tendons, 40 per cent.; mechanically separable fat, 24 per cent.; blood, hide, entrails, etc., 27 per cent. To get at the problem more closely let us find out the composition of the body in terms that can be applied to foods. The pig’s body has the following composition: Contents of Stomaeh Mineral Nitrogenous in Moist Matter. Matter. Fat. Water. Condition. Store pig. . 2.67 13.7 23 3 55.1 5.22 Fat pig. pe 65 10.9 42.2 41.3 3.97 These percentages represent the body of the pig as it is when alive. The mineral matter mentioned in the table is composed largely of phos- phorie acid, potash, lime and magnesia. This mineral matter is mostly found in the bones and is produced while the pig is getting its growth. The nitrogenous substance is found in the muscles, tendons, ligaments, hide, hair, hoofs, blood, nerves and organic matter of the bones. In the pig there is less mineral matter than in any other of our farm animals. In its body when fat there is four times as much fat as lean meat. While the average amount of water in the body of farm animals is about 49 1195" per cent., the fat pig has but 41.3 per cent. and the store pig has 55.1 per cent. It will be noticed in a study of the table that there is a striking difference between the composition of the body of the store pig and the fat one. This difference is caused by fattening. In the fattening process the pig does little but lay on fat. There is an increase in the amount of dry matter in the body. Scarcely any mineral matter is added to the body and rarely more than 7.5 per cent. of nitrogenous substance, the fat forming about 70 per cent. of the increase. Of the gain in weight during the fattening process about 75 per cent. is dry matter and 25 per cent. is water. Keeping in mind what we have learned let us examine some of the materials used for the production of the body. All animals require a certain amount of food for maintenance. It is probably about right to say that two pounds of feed such as middlings or of their value will maintain 100 pounds of live weight. Until an animal receives more food than is required to keep up the heat of the body and supply the waste of the body, it can not gain in weight. It should be the object of every feeder to keep his stock gaining every day. All foods will not produce the same effect. Some are fat formers while others are flesh formers. While pigs are growing they should be supplied with food that will form flesh, or lean meat, and also furnish an abundant supply for the growth of bone. Unless the proper food is given, pigs will not thrive well, or they will become too fat and mature too early, after which we feed at a loss. Indian corn is a food that will form fat and contains a small amount of protein and mineral matter. As a food it is not the best for growing pigs or pregnant sows when fed exclusively. It is admirably adapted for fattening and we could wish for no better food for hogs after they have reached the proper age. Corn with good pasture will make pigs grow well. It is probable that more pigs are raised and fattened on corn and pasture than on all other foods combined. There is a part of the year in which we can not have pasture, and growing pigs should have mill feeds in addition to corn. Mill feeds furnish a high per cent. of flesh-forming materials and much mineral matter. They will also keep the pigs in a healthy condition. This paper is too short to make any adequate discussion of foods. I want only to emphasize the fact that we ought to use our judgment and knowledge even in feeding pigs. A WORD FOR THE HOG WALLOW. The wise breeder always consults the comfort of his stock in summer as well as in winter, if he expects to reap the best results for his labor. The hog wallow is not generally looked on with favor, but rather as a germ-producing and disease-breeding nuisance, altogether out of place on any well regulated farm. A correspondent in the Stockman and Far- mer, and a suecessful breeder as well, gives his experience with the wallow. 113 “What do I think of the wallow? Well, you see I’ve got one, and can say that I have never lost a hog from disease, so in my case at least it has not proven such a death trap as some writers make it out to be. These writers generally have a ‘Doctor’ or ‘Professor’ to their names, and are able to bring such an array of facts and scientific reasoning to bear that one is forced to believe that he must banish the wallow or lose his entire herd of swine. “It is one of the rules of nature that nothing thrives out of its natural element. It is the nature of a hog to take to the mud just the same as the hippopotamus or alligator, and for the same reason. We read that there is no animal more cleanly than the hog, but that is all romance. I don’t say you can’t keep hogs dry and clean and healthy, but I never saw it successfully done yet. The value of my wallow during the heated part of the season can not be estimated. ‘There is little if any danger of loss from heat if the swine have a shady wallow to lie in during the hot part of the day. Without one there will be great loss of fat if not of animals. “As to disease germs, I do not see why the wallow is condemned so much on that score. If I understand the nature of these germs they must be planted by infected animals. In this way a wallow might be the means of transmitting the infection, but the drinking troughs and feeding grounds are more liable to become impregnated, and as it is admitted that the disease reaches the system through the stomach they are far more liable to transmit the disease and should accordingly be sources of more anxiety to the hog raiser. “The greatest danger in a wallow is that, through carelessness or indolence on the part of the feeder, the swine are forced to look to it for a supply of drinking water. No animal will thrive on impure drinking water, not even a hog. Nor will he drink it until forced to. It is my honest belief that for every case of cholera transmitted from a mud-hole you will find ninety-nine caused by impure drinking water or an exclusive corn diet. Give me the right sort of feed and pure water, and I’m willing to chance the wallow. To those about to try the dry pen and pasture, I would advise to think of the hot July and August days and use their own common sense rather than the advice of ‘educated’ but inexperienced individuals. I consider my wallow a necessity to successful swine rais- ing.” CROSSING BREEDS. It has been suggested by high authority that Tamworths be crossed upon our present popular breeds to give us a better bacon hog. Mr. W. M. Boomberger, in the Prairie Farmer, suggests that this kind of crossing is not improving, but destroying already well built foundations. Environ- ment and what is commonly known as line-breeding that does not go too 8—Swine. 114 near in-breeding is that which more nearly improves and develops healthy and vigorous organization. The Tamworth of Great Britain will, if kept a sufficient length of time under the conditions that have developed desirable types in other breeds in this country, give us what we want by selection, and the noses of that breed can be shortened. In the presence of our vast western corn cribs it is probable that bacon hogs can be developed out of the Tamworth without contaminating blood of other breeds and going into raising mongrels. There is nothing wrong at all in developing what is needed by the markets out of the breeds already so near perfection, be they Berkshire, Poland-China, or Chester White, by proper selection and feeding. If such’ is done, a more desirable type will at once be placed on the markets and the mixed mongrelism, that good farmers have been fighting and’trying to get off farms, will not be again at hand to flood the markets. There are types in the breeds that are rangy and do not take on fat so fast, and a little less high feeding and more reliance given to getting growth of hogs on large pastures, and giving them plenty of exercise, will produce the result. If we have been nearly half a century developing a breed, as we have the Poland-China, and it is found in a high-bred form and the breed widely used, and whether it be the Berkshire or Poland-China we would feel like protesting against this work being destroyed by widespread crossing. While we believe that packers know what they want, and the demand should be satisfied, we think that the talk of there being need of more bacon hogs is largely talk, for the very reason that no special prices are offered by the markets for that kind of hog. Let the markets make 50 cents to $1 per hundred weight more for bacon hogs and the farmers will soon produce them out of the present breeds without exploiting in the crossing business that would destroy the very foundations of the swine industry. It seems ex- ceedingly convenient for the markets to always demand just what can not be supplied, and make it a claim to bear the prices of what farmers have to sell. Breeding for breed improvement and breeding for market should be co-ordinate and we think it would not be necessary to destroy well- laid foundations to produce the bacon hog. SURE AND QUICK RETURNS. Every swine breeder in the country is in the business for the money there is in it, and the quicker the returns come in the larger the profits, as a rule. On this subject Mr. A. J. Lovejoy, of Illinois, suggests that the hog stands to-day, and always has, superior to any of our domestic ani- mals aS a money maker. It has been said that for big money breed horses, for sure money cattle, but for quick money hogs. Yet to-day we might combine all three sayings in the latter, as the breeding and feed- ing of Swine most assuredly pays the general farmer better, surer and ELS quicker than any of our domestic animals, not even barring the dairy cow. What can a farmer find for the small amount invested in ten good brood sows, safe in, farrow, of any of the improved brecds of to-day, that will bring pigs in the spring, that with proper care and liberal feed will during a twelvemonth return such a profit on the investinent 2s will these self- same ten brood sows and their produce? Good, well-bred pigs, farrowed in February or March, the earlier the better, by being properly cared for during the first three months while with their dams, until good grass comes, preferably the clovers, and then weaned and put on clover pasture with a good, dry place to sleep and in addition to the clover have all the shelled corn, soaked until softened, together with what wheat and middlings as a slop they will eat, can be made to weigh about one pound per day from birth, and by October 1, or any time before the large run of fall hogs are ready for market, bring ten to twelve dollars per head in the average market, and show a grand good profit for all feed consumed. The reason I speak of shelled corn soaked is that I consider it, when combined with clover pasture, a well balanced ration, and by soaking it the pigs will eat much more than they will from the ear. The liquid or water in which the corn is soaked should by all means be given to the pigs, either as a drink or mixed with good wheat middlings, for this corn juice to a hog is tike beer to a Dutchman, it helps to round him out. There is another profitable way. This is by raising late summer pigs, that may be weaned say by September, and then have the run of the pastures, though there may be but little grass at this time of the year, but what there is, together with a good feed twice daily of ground wheat, wheat middlings or ground rye, will push them along nicely. On many farms pumpkins are grown, which make a grand good fall feed for pigs or shoats, especially when a little green corn can be fed along with them. Shoats of this age with good dry shelter in which to sleep during the winter can be carried through at a small cost. If a field of fall rye sown very early, say in August or September, can be had for them, it will furnish green feed for the whole winter when not covered with snow, and this with a feed or two daily of grain will keep them growing and thriving at small expense, ready for early grass and heavy feeding to finish for a summer market, which by comparison will be found for a series of years to be the highest of the year. FEEDING SHOW PIGS. As one looks in upon the peus of fine pigs as they are shown at any of the leading fairs of our country, the wonder is, how have these animals been fed and cared for to bring them to such a high state of perfection. One of the most successful exhibitors in the whole country, Mr. Reuben Gentry, of Kentucky, gives his method of pig feeding as follows: 116 Granted that you have selected your litter from which you wish to take your show animals. You of course can not pick out any special individual at so tender an age. Hence must feed the whole litter, which at first can not be done except through the dam. After all danger of milk fever is past begin to feed her the following ration, gradually increas- ing to all she will clean up, avoiding an overfeed above everything else, for a setback at three weeks can not be overcome at three months. Shipstuff, bran, corn, ground oats, each one part by bulk cooked by steam, if possible. Feed to sow in slop made with greasy dish water and milk three times per day. As soon as pigs will eat (which will vary somewhat from three weeks to a month) place small trough in pen where sows can not get to it and feed in small quantities at first the same ration except leave off the ground oats, a pig’s stomach at that age not being able to _ properly digest the oats unless ground very fine and the hull sifted out. Watch bowels closely that you do not scour them. The plan of prevention being worth all the cures, put a small quantity of powdered charcoal in slop. Do not feed much at a time, but often, cleaning out all that may be left each time before putting in a fresh feed. As they get older, say six weeks, add the ground oats and increase feed in richness by adding common flour. Let run with dam until they begin to think more of you fnd your bucket of warm slop than they do of her. At four months pick out two or three of what in your estimation are the best ones, place in a lot with plenty of shade and pure water to drink; you can now add a small quantity of corn meal to the previous mixture and increase the flour. Three weeks prior to show feed four ounces of molasses to each hog, at first only once per day, gradually increasing to six ounces three times a day. Leave off corn if weather is hot and double the ration of flour and oats. I have not said anything about feeding milk, knowing that you all know that it is the first thing in importance in feeding for successful exhibition. Some one may say, Oh, the cost of all this. Well, if you are going to stop and count the cost never try to prepare for the show. You are working for a reputation and your profits must come out of your future sales. Feed in this way and my word for it when you go to show if you have the individual you will get your share of the coveted blue ribbon, and when the fair is over you will have a sow that will breed without any trouble, and a boar that is active and will sire you more and better pigs than one not so fat. Do not on your return quit feeding and let them shift for themselves, but gradually decrease feed. 117 DO PUBLIC SALES BENEFIT THE BREEDER? BY W. ARTHUR AYERS, OAKVILLE, KY. Let us first look at some of the advantages that accrue to the breeder from public sales. There is nothing that brings breeders together better than a public sale or good stuff, if it is well advertised. This is a great benefit to the breeder, from the fact that he has his stuff valued from other breeders’ standpoint; his mistakes in breeding are pointed out and made to show up in such a light that he will see them, no matter how narrow-minded he may be, and, if he is the man he should be, will profit thereby. Another very great advantage to be gained is, he keeps his stuff together, does his own developing until every one can see what they will make, thereby lessening his chances of putting out a pig that, when he comes to himself, would do his breeder an injustice and make him ashamed of having bred such a hog, to say nothing of the disappointment that comes to the buyer. To cite a case, a neighbor of mine bought a pig from one of our most prominent breeders—one noted for his honesty and fair dealing. This pig was bred in the “royal purple.” When he came the man thought he had a fortune. I saw him a few days afterward and he insisted on me coming down to see his great (?) pig. He was nice—there was no mistaking that—but by the time he was six months old, the neigh- bors said, he was only tolerable, and by the time he was one year old they all said, ‘Well, he ain’t no great shakes.” You all know how an old farmer can say that. and what a great deal it seems to express. I saw this hog when he was one year and eight months old, and I thought he was a disgrace to any fattening pen on earth. A man told me this pig never did show much wrong with him until after he was six months old. Now, what would this breeder say if he was to see this hog? Would you think he would want to say, ‘There is some of my breeding’? Verily no. Now if he had kept this pig for a public sale it would have been old enough to have shown these defects and have been sent where it belonged —to the fattening pen. This is only one of many such instances that have come under my observation, yet I do not know of one in which the breeder is to be blamed. In this case I know no one is to be blamed at all. Again, the men who buy at public sales are generally men that want a good hog because they need it, and will do their best to bring out every- thing good in their purchase, making it a lasting advertisement for the breeder; while, by selling privately, often we sell a pig to a man and he turns him out on the commons to “root, hog, or starve,’ and because he does not make a “stunner” he curses the breeder for it instead of his own triflingness. Our first investment in pure-bred swine was at a public sale, 118 and I have often thought it was our best for the money invested, although we have always gotten our money’s worth whenever we bought pure-bred swine privately. Another advantage to be gained is that the purchaser sees the stuff he is buying and can not blame any one but himself if he does not think he got what he should. And often when depending on selling our hogs through the advertising medium of our stock journals, people are afraid that this thing of pure-bred stock is to be classed with some of the fakes that are so well advertised. If you have an extra nice lot of stuff that breeders want, you have them together and where pur- chasers can see what they are buying: and rest assured, my friend, a swine breeder knows the plums as soon as he sees them, and, being able to sympathize with you, is willing to pay for what he needs. I think where conditions are favorable and the offering is what it should be, public sales will net a man more ready cash than private ones, and usually they are more satisfactory to the purchaser. Of course every advantage has its disadvantages, and public sales are no exception. Liv- ing, for that matter, has its drawbacks, yet how many of us are there but what want to live as long as we can? You run some risk in getting bad notes if you are not careful, and also know when to say no. You may not have a good day for your sale or your hogs may get Sick, or, nearly as bad, if not quite, is your hogs may be all right, but disease breaks out in the country about you, making every one afraid to come to your sale, to say nothing of being afraid to buy. You may not have a good day for your sale, any or all of these may and can happen, and you may not live to see your sale day, or, if you do, may die before your notes are due, for that matter, and then your sale would be a failure so far as you individually are concerned. But, brother, do not let too many little ifs, buts and ands discourage you, but if you have the stock and advertise well, besides doing all other things necessary, you stand a fighting chance, at least, of proving that public sales are a benefit to the breeder—one at least. WHAT IS THE SCORE CARD? Questions are frequently asked about the score ecard—what it is, how are the points divided, and the like. The score card is a numerical division of the hog from the standard of perfection, or 100 points, and is divided into twenty sections, a special value being placed on each division according to its importance to the general conformation of the hog, its constitutional ability and its com- mercial value. In addition to the detailed description, it describes a per- fect condition of each point, and the detailed description also describes objectionable conditions. The successful use of the score card is the ability to place a proper and correct valuation on each point. The score re a 119 ecard stands in the same relation to swine breeders as a questioner to a class of students. It is continually asking the question, Why? A hog is before you, and the card is placed in your hands. The card says the value of the head and face is four points out of a possible 100. Why will it not average that much? The detailed description tells you that the head and face and all other points must have a certain form as described to be perfect, and that such descriptions as appear under the objections, are to deduct from the general average of that head, and so it continues throughout every point. The following score card is uniform with the revised card adopted by the National Association of Expert Judges of Swine, June, 1896: Scale of Points. apes Points Off. ee HerOrandtacG: = te: 4. ao c0g sia eg whee & ae He VMereckiac or Tenree eg eiaes Gece eee EMM VOOR Pep iie share tet woe cts) Fen Bhi ol 8 “suthte, A Ze h-De tile pees Sera eae ERasteee foliar eM RU DTS hig lac ae Cees, ya see das) oi ck is hee Dosa else Bi) Ia. Sux Seaenemtanl es Moms sp ccikeaes aes ANE CKiger assis > Das S8Gh sw a alsa wee g are | Cerc eraere Fe ROL oe oer Ge cic Dear OWlecate certs, cm cr cerenciee ois Neriet fst ss sacec, Sees Dd lnicau say toaysre sy coh | Retmians otetee ys : GmeShoulderg russ 6)s 404 one see Gis" isan es “trot saab) seemteecauen eine igh CHOSURebiaseh act ake: sk eka hs Oe aR! ae tap 12 15 Was & ceeceek sell open ee $2 Back'and loinss-—-—= See ae ee sees V4" le as, sxet eee llleutinemeare OMOEA NG TINS. ates Sree y. dees js cei ie 10% Wily Seep Jape we sill | eereeactmo tires LO Belly,and flank ies aa lyases ee Gee as ee Lae) decease Ge Diy sc Mie AMsAnNdiGUIMp... so «2b eS Sw tw S 10” 9 ail loess: whee iL uae M2 eetian dulegSin, ocd he ce ais, s Mscleserea Aw 10 Herat Rear Mary anette A Sabet svatcn ete so tae Br Nei eerie a's Ve | sltcaseedy la).s Bsn elltntetersomaneie A COB tebe ay sesllortl Fake wick, vette Chis af ok Si-4 wl galley eagecstie mene eters Sem C OLOL mts soa -omt ss teeta, ese ous Sey li hemuey crue Sateen | need cota rong UGH SI Zegrh ass sitar eet ee cio Aeris} cies Beetle ar. ee Be me || sey acioruemanl ca eageraeets iemrActionmandistyle.es, 0) 2 5:04 wis aty.o tse of whe Sie (UN eben wecWyres|Ramepecy a, teehee ISSR CONGITIONG: saree cy ota el Ser ls Boe eS DIS 5 Mchaccks: ka seats tai Weesstea tedster LO PMPDDISDOSILLONG ty cas: |. 2, Gives aga ae we a Os VEE li cic a. oe roe oh aeoe auc Zeesyimmetrysof Points, & s.és suk hos a0 ca ee Deas el Ove. Keer : LAO CREAN. gee Lees aT eg tts eee Soe ROI MIE) SUE ke eke wee src Lota letters. Weck ae meg werk eee 100. Scores Animal). if 5. cose ee Ee eo cet 5S) os on leon ie¥ eS leal eats iie: sic. lelelsie, cose) 01.6 0)! e 120 As to the advantages of regular scoring schools, Mr. J. C. Bridges says: When we are busy looking after our little herds, admiring this one and that, and think we have something very fine, a neighbor comes on the scene and makes inquiry about your interests. You at once begin to describe this hog and that, and many others. Very natural he may take exceptions and say he don’t like some parts and we at once go into a dis- cussion over the subject. Here is where I understand are the advantages of a score school. May I ask a question? What is a score school? It should be where’ men of different breeds get together and unite on a maximum and minimum cut for the different imperfections. ; The question is being asked why should you mark thus so and so. At a scoring meeting you are provided with a card setting forth the hog in a numerical division for a standard of perfection of 100 points. The score card, being marked off, the different parts, according to their vital value, such as, for illustration, the head, marked five points for perfec- tion. You would mark it four or four and one-half points. Again the girth around heart, marked ten points, we will give it eight or eight and one-half, and when you have gone through all the different points and added up, your total may reach seventy or perhaps seventy-five. Some other has scored perhaps eighty, another seventy-eight, and so on through the list. As you are scoring, a committeeman is also going over the hog, as he thinks it should be. After all are through, the cards are given to the committee and the questions are discussed by the meeting. Why such and such points are marked short of perfection, which call for a continued discussion. After-you have scored on several breeds and wish to be identified as an expert, a committee of three takes your case under advise- ment and makes a report, sometimes to the dissatisfaction of the applicant. Now this is one very good feature in the advantages of a scoring school. It prepares a person to tell the reason why you make your decisions. I know of some good hog men who have raised hogs all their lives and have good ideas what a good hog is. But put them in a position as judge at some fair and ask them why this one took the premium over the other, it frequently bothers them to give an answer. We have good hog shows at our county fairs, and the fair managers want justice done in all de- partments. In having a school of this kind it helps the managers out by knowing who is competent to pass on rings. And again if a person is a good judge it helps them to select their stock to keep as foundations for herds. As a rule the best judges of good stock have the best to select from. 121 SOME POINTS IN SWINE BREEDING. BY JNO. M. JAMISON, CAPACITY OF THE BROOD SOW. One class of hog growers claims that a sow which only produces one litter of pigs a year gives a much fairer quality of pigs than if she pro- duces two. Yet the push of the times forces upon the breeder the practical belief that he can not afford to keep a sow a whole year for one litter of pigs. While one litter costs too much to start it, more than two are unprofitable, because they tax the sow beyond her limit of endurance. The only possible way to get more than two litters a year is to breed the sow while the pigs are sucking, either when they are three days old, or when five or six weeks old. To have a sow breed when the pigs are this latter age, she must be kept in high flesh. But few men in practice do this, because they do not believe a sow should be fat when she suckles her pigs, or because they have not the skill as feeders to keep her in this high condition. Because a sow comes in heat at this time, whether in moderate condition or fat, is no true indication that she should be bred. Breeders practice breeding to some extent at that time, but they recognize that there is a limit beyond which they can not pass without loss. The evidence bearing on this point is strong enough to establish a safe rule to follow. Sometimes we meet a farmer who thinks a sow can be profitably bred any time she comes in heat, and if bred at this time to a strong and vigorous male she will bring strong pigs. We have tried to get two litters a year by letting the pigs suck till ten weeks old, and breed the sow shortly before the pigs are weaned, or within a week after. The plan works very well for two or three times, but if continued farther we have failures. The number of pigs in a litter will be smaller and of poorer quality. Last spring we had two strong sows that did not save as many pigs as they should at farrowing time. On this account it was easy to keep them in high flesh while suckling the pigs. When the pigs were five or six weeks old the sows came in heat. If we waited till the pigs were weaned to breed them, the fall litters would be later than desirable. On this account we concluded to breed them as an experiment with the hope that it would bring profitable results. One sow brought six strong pigs that have done well. The other farrowed thirteen and saved ten. So far as we are able to judge, the pigs are as good and have done as well for us, as if the sows had not been bred till after the pigs were weaned. The 122 sow farrowing thirteen pigs was fed on pumpkins and corn, and had all the clover she could eat besides. The breeding boar had the run of the same field, and other sows were being bred, and to our surprise this sow came in heat when the pigs were five or six weeks old and was bred. We hardly expected that she would stand; however, in time she proved to be in farrow. Then we were in doubt as to results, as she was slow in de- veloping form, and slow in starting milk secretions. At farrowing time she brought eight pigs and saved seven. As we feared, the quality of the pigs was below the average. Three of them were runts and always will be; they are doing well, but will always keep about the proportionate dis- tance behind the others that they were when farrowed. These results from crowding the sow are in accord with previous experiences of our own, and of others who have given the matter close attention. When the present litter is weaned we will give the sow time to recuperate before breeding her again. All that will be necessary will be the length of time between the first and second time she comes in heat after farrowing, which is usually about three weeks. The first time she will be in heat, in three days after the pigs are taken away from her, she will be well fed from this time till the second time, when she will be bred. Being well fed, she will be gaining, and will doubtless do well next time she farrows. In our experience, this three weeks’ rest is very necessary to keep a sow up to her full working capacity. If not allowed she is soon worked beyond her powers of endurance, and no one suffers from the results more than the owner. The weakened vitality shows first in the offspring in de- creased numbers and quality. This overwork in the management of many farmers sends first-class brood sows to the fattening pen, condemned as worthless, when they should be just reaching their prime. And these farmers never take a thought, or reach a just conclusion as to why the sows failed. Animals in our care that should be profitable too often have to take the blame of failure, when we alone are the cause. BEDDING THE SOW. All pig growers have their preferences and prejudices in this matter. Some use forest leaves and prefer them to anything else, but to have these in supply requires that they be gathered and stored when they fall from the trees in the-early fall; otherwise, they’ are drifted, they get wet and are unfit to use. To store a large quantity requires more room than most farmers can spare for this purpose. With straw it is different, While it is best to have it under roof, still if it is well stacked dry straw can be had at any time to bed the brood sows. While we have used leaves, straw and fodder, and could have a liberal supply of leaves to store each fall, if we had storage room, and could make room if really necessary. we think straw, on account of its many 1238 good qualities for this purpose and the ease with which it may be kept is preferable to either leaves or fodder. In using straw we have found that oftentimes the bed need not be changed more than once a week. This is governed very much by the condition of the weather outside the house, if the sow has outdoor range. We make it a rule to change the bedding when we notice particles of straw, short pieces, stick- ing to the sow when she leaves the nest. When it is cut up this much it is getting fine enough to cause more or less dust. While in times past we have partly changed the bedding every day, we have concluded that it is too costly an effort toward cleanliness, and besides we do not regard this daily work as necessary. The breeder will take care not to bed the sow with new straw just before farrowing. To prevent being caught, he must know when the sow is due to farrow. She should have a good clean bed of straw two or three days before farrowing, and in sufficient quantity to meet needs at that time, and allow what becomes wet and soiled to be removed, and not require the bed to be replenished for two or three days. There is a question, and diversity of opinion, as to how much straw a sow should have for a bed at that time. A sow, when allowed her liberty in the woods, will gather for her nest as much as a wagon box full of leaves, sticks and whatever she can find conveniently, and out of this incongruous pile, after a few days, bring a strong, vigorous litter. But when brought to modern requirements in the use of shelter, and supplied bedding, maternal instinct seems to have lost its force to a considerable extent, and the owner must exercise a certain amount of judgment in her manage- ment if he would have her succeed well with her pigs. Since we have been growing pigs, this is the first year that we have not had, and could not get, good straw fo bed our sows. As we did not have room to store leaves in season, we have had to depend entirely on fodder. As this product is unusually abundant, we have been able to keep the sows that now (the middle of March) have pigs six weeks old, well and comfortably bedded. About a week before farrowing we put them in separate lots, and put two or three good-sized bundles of fodder in each house. Before farrowing time they had this fodder well broken and torn to pieces. A visiting farmer inquired how we got the fodder in such good shape fore the beds. At farrowing time we found it as desirable as straw; at any rate the results were as satisfactory as we could hope to have with the use of straw as bedding. A number of times, after farrowing, we did not use the whole stalk, but broke—or cut—the bundles in two about the middle, giving the sows the tops for their beds. Now, we use the fodder whole, pushing the bundles into the houses at the small doorways. The houses are six feet square, and it requires some mashing or breaking of the tops, as they are pushed in, top first, to get the long bundles into the houses. Three bundles, with the ties cut, cover the floor of a house very completely, and putting them in tops first places the finer parts of the fodder where the pigs and their dams find it most comfortable to nest. 124 From what we know of shredded fodder, we are led to believe that it is superior to straw for beds for sows and other swine stock of the farm, that is, taking the whole season through. We have a rail pen covered with fodder adjoining our feed lot at the barn, in which our brood sows are sheltered. They keep the nest comfortable and clean, with the corn- stalks they carry in from the feed lot. Usually we have a straw stack in the feed lot that the sows bed and shelter about, but we find the cheap temporary shelter, bedded with cornstalks, more to our notion than the protection they get about the straw stack. Here they keep dry, and their bed does not get dusty—two points that are hard to secure about a straw stack. In cleaning out the soiled bedding made from fodder, from the small houses, we do not find it more unpleasant or difficult than it is to clean out the soiled straw. When we do this work, we use a hoe, working from the outside. SINGLE HOUSE SYSTEM. No animal on the farm can be sheltered more cheaply and satisfac- torily at the time of parturition than the brood sow. This statement will cover a greater part of the large swine producing area of the United States. Two important features only are to be considered as absolutely necessary—warmth and dryness. These can be had by the use of different materials, cheap or expensive, as suits the fancy and pocketbook of the builder. A single shelter or house for each sow we think much preferable to the structure that will hold several animals. It is advisable for a herd of brood sows to farrow as near the same time as possible. When this is accomplished the houses can be put two or three rods apart, and will answer the purpose as well as if a greater distance, provided there are dividing fences between them. It is hard to get a lot of sows separated so far apart but that they will hear the herdsman when he commences to feed, and all be on the alert. This expectation for a share of the feed is against the large house that will accommodate a number of sows, as the sow will often leave the nest at farrowing time to go to the feed trough, usually to the detriment of her litter. if separated from her companions far enough for them to be fed without disturbing her it is much better. Again, if separated in this way, it is much easier to keep litters from mixing until such a time as there is no danger of the strong pigs stealing from the weak. In a herd of sows there is often one that is not as good a milker as the others. In a case of this kind nature does not limit the number of pigs to suit the supply of milk. She is as apt to produce a numerous litter as the best milker in the herd. The result is that these little fellows are always hungry, and spend much of the time pulling at their mother. If the sow is in a house with several others with litters, these hungry, restless fellows will cause much unrest with the others. We have often — Ps 125 noticed that when one litter of pigs begins to trail after their dam for their feed the litters of the herd are almost sure to take up the ery, and in a short time all the sows are down and the pigs sucking. When the sows and their litters are separated until the pigs are at least one month old it is much easier to feed each sow properly and get the pigs to eating. And, more than this, it is conducive to better thrift and health. For single houses to be used in this way we would want them portable, or of material that could be torn to pieces and removed when not in use. The latter is the least expensive, and within the reach of every farmer able to own two or more brood sows. PIGS ON GRASS. There is an impression with many that the pig should run on grass without grain, that he will gain all the faster when he comes to the grain ration. Jareful experiments made to show the value of grass without and with grain show that there is little gain from grass alone. Farmers must get away from the idea that there is profit in the long run from keeping pigs for a time on pasture without grain. If you want the most out of a pig he must pay for his feed all the time and a little besides. We have never seen the grass so fine but the pig would take a little grain with it, and vice versa. If the water and feeding grounds are some distance apart and good pasture intervenes the pig will hardly eat so much grain but that he will graze as he goes back and forth between the grain feed and water. When grain is fed while they are on pasture but little of it is lost to supply the wastes of the animal system or to offset the absorbing waste of cold. And then how much pleasanter to feed on grass than on frost and snow. In feeding corn to pigs that have the run of good pasture we have no arbitrary rule as to how much they shall be fed, but are governed solely by their appetites.. When they come with a rush for the feed then we feed liberally, but if they are slow to come to the feeding ground we cast out the corn with a sparing hand. If we go to the feeding place and see corn left from the time of feeding before we feel that we have blundered and overfed. If pastures are parched and scant we regard it as absolutely necéssary that the pigs have a grain product that will come nearest giving them the grass properties, such as bran and middlings dampened. When new grain is to be fed there is no better plan than to give it with grass, and in limited quantities till the pig is accustomed to his feed. The aim should be to keep the pig comfortably full but not wholly on corn, other grain or grass, but a combination. Then the growth and gain will be more even and rapid, and at a less cost. The rule should be when grass is plenty to feed what grain the pig will come to each time with a relish. 126 CLOVER HAY FOR SWINE. All successful swine growers readily concede the advantages in grow- ing clover in connection with other crops grown for their hogs. It is re- garded as the best crop to grow preceding a corn crop. Pigs grown with the aid of clover pasture if properly handled always yield a good profit on the care and feed invested in them. The plea against pigs grown in winter is the lack of growth secured. Without the muscular and bone development they cost too much. The main reason for the excessive cost is that the ration they get is improp- erly balanced. Usually young hogs carried over winter get a sufficient quantity of feed, but it is not the right kind. It is generally recognized that bran and middlings fed as slop will correet the error in the ration of corn, but too many farmers are slow to purchase these products; they feel that they cost too much, and as they are usually fed there is much truth in this claim. If pig growers can be brought to believe that clover is as necessary for swine in winter as in Summer they will consider the possibility of carrying the summer conditions into winter as much as possible. We can not have the green, succulent growth of summer during the winter, but we can have the cured—or dry—product of the plant. Many farmers think they can not make clover hay and that it is poor feed. Such men, if they are hog growers, must learn to make good clover hay, then they will soon know its value. Not only for the horse, cow and sheep, but also for the pig. The stumbling block in its use for the pig is how to feed it. While all know that the pig revels in green clover, eating right and left as he wades through the strong, rich growth, they are slow to believe that hay will be eaten as readily. Cut up your clover hay and make a chop feed, mixing in bran and shorts just as you would do for your horse or cow, and you will find that it is relished by the pig and that he will thrive on it just as well as other stock. FEEDING WHEAT. Wheat is an excellent feed for swine, if ground and mixed with other and lighter feed, the mass being made into slop. Have had no very satisfactory results from feeding whole wheat, especially when fed dry. By soaking, whole wheat can be fed to considerable extent without loss. For young pigs, where growth is the essential point, sloppy feed is superior to dry feed of any kind. For growing pigs never use pure ground wheat. Oats, or heavy bran, or both, should be added. Some succulent, or bulky, food should always be given with this concentrated food, thus aiding digestion and sustaining the appetite. MATURE BREEDING ANIMALS. BY THEO. LOUIS, DUNN COUNTY, WIS. Experience leads me to say it is to the advantage of neighborhoods or districts to adopt the same breed of hogs for the reason that boars can be retained to a greater age and maturity, provided a strict record of their line of breeding is observed, in order to avoid injudicious inbreed- ing. There is an ever growing tendency to breed from young, immature stock, the breeders being roused by the demand of the markets for light- weights of tender age. We should bear well in mind that while the art of breeding has developed hogs of all leading strains which at the early age of from eight to ten months fill this requirement, this early matur- ing falls far short as to maturity for breeding. In no line of live stock is this law of maturity for breeding so much disregarded as in the breeding of swine. The frequent complaint that this or the other kind of breed does not respond properly to feed in the line of growth, and seems to be subject to difficulty in gestation, deficiency in number of pigs to the litter—these and many other complaints are seldom charged to where they properly belong, viz., to immature breeding, injudicious selec- . tion, and the indifference in the selection of food to develop them. If more mature sires and dams were retained, those that have proven them- selves capable of reproduction and improvement, as to uniformity, pro- lificacy, good mothers and milkers, that have been perfected and devel- oped to full size and vigor by age—only by the use of these can we expect to retain the improvements handed down to us by master breeders. When indifference is replaced by proper selection and retention of the best, improvement is the sure result. Is it not the duty of the farmer and feeder to acquaint himself with the laws of breeding which tend toward steady improvement? The above recommendation in regard to the retention of sires is most necessary to success and improvement, and carries most weight without further comment. A BAD PRACTICE, Another practice that has a tendency to depreciate the standard of excellence is to allow hogs liberty to serve sows ad libitum, and to be turned out with the herd or confined with a number of sows in a yard. Is excessive service less harmful to future offspring of swine than of other live stock? One service as a rule will give satisfactory results as to the number of vigorous pigs, while when the other system is followed small litters, dead pigs, deformed pigs are the result, but in swine breed- ing this is ascribed to bad luck, while the horse breeder would cnarge 128 it to excessive use of the sire. Build a paddock or yard four or five rods square, with a shanty-like house seven by eight feet, seven feet high in front, five feet to rear, with a door two and one-half by four feet high to permit of entrance when cleaning it, a half drop or swing door on hinges, attached to the upper part to keep out beating storms and cold, and a tight board fence, high and strong, which will prevent teasing the sows, and will also prevent fretting and irritating the boar. This often has disastrous results, the boar becoming impotent by self-abuse, especially in the case of young sires. There should also be a feeding floor in one corner of the yard, eight by eight or ten feet, so that a large boar can stand in front of the trough—a V-shaped trough of three feet in length, securely fastened to floor and wall. A plank should be securely fastened edgeways with spikes to end slippers, and stakes firmly driven home to guard against his natural propensity of root hog. At the corner a slide gate two and one-half by three feet should be placed, to permit the entrance of sows. At the further end of the floor build the pen. This may seem like extravagance, but when we take into consideration that a yard of this kind will last from fifteen to twenty years by simply reposting it, this will lose its force, and furthermore to have a boar under control and use him at will is worth a great deal. If the yard can be situated so as to give natural drainage it is an advantage, but it is essential that a hand rake, shovel and fork should frequently be used to prevent contamination. But while secure and under control, the boar should never suffer for a food ration calculated in its nature to develop him; he should not suffer for the want of green food and succulent food when the season permits, and in fall and winter squash, pumpkins and roots should not be wanting. Nor should he be deprived of charcoal, ashes and salt—in fact, no hog should. KEEP THE GOOD BREEDERS If it is of importance to retain the boar to a greater age and until further development, it is of equal importance in the case of the sow. Too many do not deem it essential that they should have a system of breeding; if not, why not? Why can we not have a note book, a list and a record of the sows that have proven themselves superior in all ‘respects? Why not retain her as long as she proves satisfactory, instead of using a young, untried one that has not been selected with regard to heredity and the virtues of a mother, a breeder, and her milking qualities, but because she is pretty and she is a sow? If sows are selected yearly to replace those weeded out—those that have proved unsatisfactory—they should be selected from only the best and most profitable mothers, so that improvement will keep pace with reproduction. This selection should be deferred until the pigs are from three to four months of age, as we can then better judge their development and disposition, and they ¢ 129 should be fed on the very best growing and developing food available. We have found it a good practice not to breed the sow for a second litter the first season, but to give her a chance to recover from the strain so as to fully develop in size and vigor. Thereafter we breed her twice a year. We have an inflexible rule that no young sow is bred before she is” eight months of age. It will also be found of practical advantage when having a list of sows in a note book either with name, mark or number; or for convenience put a ring in the right or left ear, the upper or under side, to note the time they come in heat, say in October; any farmer knows that this will occur each three weeks. In this way he will not waste time in watching when to breed the sows or be disappointed in missing her, but one who never practiced it will find to his astonishment that he is becoming master of the situation. UNIFORM HERDS. \ With the boar in the enclosure, able to regulate the service, and knowing.that the gestation period takes place within 110 to 112 days, he will know that by Mareh or April 1, as the case may be, he must be ready to accommodate ten or twelve sows with breeding pens and play midwife day and night. As a compensation for labor and system he has a lot of pigs of nearly the same age and size to feed and care for, a uniform lot to put upon the market, not to mention the advantage of being weaned at one and the same time. This is not a fine-spun theory, but has been the practice of the writer for a long series of years. The sows can then be turned out to pasture and receive a liberal allowance of feed once or twice a day. at stated time, according to their condition, in order to have them fully recover from the strain of nursing and breed- ing. All that have proved deficient are weeded out for fattening, and young sows are put in their place as heretofore stated. But sows having their first litter should not be condemned for having a litter of but five pigs if they are otherwise satisfactory and are uniform breeders. A twelve or fourteen teated sow, of roomy build, generally responds with sufficient numbers at her second litter, unless heredity on her dam’s _side is wanting in this quality. But should there be small and uneven litters with the larger number of sows the sire may be at fault. : FEEDING THE BROOD SOW. [From the Prairie Farmer ] Did any of our readers ever investigate the growth of a litter of pigs and learn by experience what an organized appetite the little- fellows are? A Wisconsin experiment, made some years ago. showed that a litter of seven pigs. weighing eighteen pounds when farrowed. had, at S—Swine. 130 the end of the third week, increased to ninety-eight pounds, or about five and a half times. To make such an increase the pigs must have con- sumed a good deal of food, and it all came in the form of milk from the dam. The fact is stated to convey an idea of the importance of feeding the brood sow liberally during the nursing period, for she must not only sustain herself but must provide for this rapid growth of the young. The liberal feeding, however, should be judiciously planned with a view to other conditions of the problem. Having tapered the feed down until it is quite light as farrowing time is reached, the sow needs nothing but cool, though not chilly cold water for the first twenty-four hours. Then the feeding should begin light, and full feed should be gradually reached only at the end of about ten days. An observance of this plan is neces- sary to prevent those digestive disturbances in both dam and litter which earry off so many young pigs, making them wonder, if they can be supposed to wonder, If so soon I am done for, What in the world was I begun for? The large losses that occur in litters on the average, especially among very young pigs, are in a great measure due to injudicious feeding either in quantity or kind, and it is generally overfeeding that does the mischief. The kind of food given, too, is important. The sow has to make an abun- dance of wholesome milk of a quality that will produce gains of the kind indicated, and these gains are growth rather than fat. The feed given to the dam must, therefore, be growth making food. This means that it should consist of bran, shorts, oat meal and feed stuffs of that class rather than of the heat and fat making kind, like corn. There is, it is generally admitted, too much corn fed to hogs in the corn belt at best, but there is no period at which the feeding of it is a greater mistake than during the suckling period. After the sow has lain quiet and undis- turbed for twenty-four hours a thin bran slop should be given, and this may be gradually thickened, at first with bran, and later with bran and shorts, until after ten days good, liberal feeding is reached, consisting chiefly of the more nitrogenous kind. If methods of which what has ~° been said is only an outline are adoptéd, and if, in addition, care is taken | to guard the pigs against exposure and overlying, there will be a good deal larger percentage of pigs raised than is usually the case. The ques- tion of exposure is an important one, especially with litters that come during the changeable weather of early spring, and unless the swine grower is prepared to give adequate protection, it will be well not to breed for early litters at all. 131 HOG CHOLERA CURES. So many “infallible” hog cholera cures have been put upon the market the past decade that swine breeders have very little faith in any new remedy that is suggested. Dr. C. IT). Smead makes some very timely sug- gestions on this-subject, and is of the opinion that the disinfecting of the pens or premises, the separating of the diseased from the healthy, and the practicing of better sanitation have done more toward effecting a cure than the remedies used. He says: In fact I do not believe that swine plague (hog cholera) can be eradicated from any herd, without a change in sanitary conditions in most places where it appears, the practicing of a vigorous quarantine and the free use of germ-destroying elements in the form of disinfectants. I also believe that it may be possible for healthy swine to be so medicated that they can be for a time kept with ailing swine and not contract the disease, and yet the medicine that was used would not be able to cure a hog that had the disease. I am glad that some discoveries have been made on the line of treating the disease, and not altogether by scientific research, but by men who are not professional scientists. Men of common sense haye done and are doing as much toward finding a cure as the college professor, and while I do not think that a ‘sure pop” each and every time cure has as yet been discovered by any one I do think that the fellow who is on the farm among the swine, and has been practicing common sense as regards sanitary condi- tions and the use of such drugs as his judgment dictates him to use, is in advance of the fellow who is searching for bacteria through a microscope, and cultivating serums that he hopes will be able to render well animals immune from the disease if hypodermically injected into the system. While thousands of dollars have been expended by commissions and by experiment stations in striving to find a cure, the result has thus far been in one sense a failure, and in another sense a success. Scientific re- search has found the cause to be a bacterial germ having its origin in filth, and has also found that the disease can be and has been carried from farm to farm upon the boots and clothing of people who thought- lessly visit sick herds of swine, and then visit their own or some other fellow’s herd. The lesson therefore taught is to clean up all filth and make and keep the sanitary conditions right and the food wholesome, and then keep away from diseased animals, and keep diseased animals away from healthy ones; or, if compelled to care for sick ones or help a neighbor to do so, change your boots and outer clothing before attending to other swine. It has also been discovered by scientific research that there are many germicides and disinfectants that can be safely used, viz., carbolie acid solutions, solutions of sulphate of copper. and the sulphate of iron, also slaked lime. It has also been learned that several drugs can be safely given internally to all swine when the disease is prevalent that will to some extent prevent their contracting the disease, provided ordinary sanitary conditions are present. One of the simplest and safest that can be used by farmers is the hyposulphite of soda (so often recom- mended in these columns). This has long been known to have the power of destroying ferments in the blood of either man or beast, and as far as my experience goes will do as much toward rendering a pig immune from the disease as any known compound. As to the advertised specifics that are being put upon the market as sure cures they may, be good. Many of them undoubtedly are, but don’t invest too heavy or place too much faith in them until you are sure. But remember all the time that filthy conditions must be eradicated and good sanitation provided, or my word for it the sure cure won’t cure. Farmers as a rule place too much confidence in specifics or cures for ailments of their animals, and take no heed concerning the food, water and sanitary condition of their stables and feed lots. There is work on this line for the farmer himself that no professional man or specific drugs can ever do. Especially is this the case with epidemic or infectious disease. Any building that can not be made clean and kept clean is not fit to keep a well animal in, much less a sick one. And any feed lot that can not be kept free from filth should be changed to another one. Any well, spring or stream that does not furnish water fit for man to drink should be condemned as a watering place tor animals (especially milch cows). When farmers learn these things and put them in practice, then and not till then will hog cholera and many other diseases be stamped out. In saying what I do about water I do not wish to be understood as saying that the water that man relishes the best is the ideal water for the beast. Mankind as a rule like water at a temperature of about fifty degrees, while most animals like it from ten to twenty degrees warmer. But I have reference to its purity. The old well that gets the soakage from the manure pile, or the stream that collects filth, or the spring that gets to be but a cesspool from the droppings of animals who go there to drink, these are the places that need looking after and the conditions made right. In most cases the well can be made right with but little expense by cleaning or even digging a new one. Fence off the stream or spring so as to prevent the bad conditions. You can do very much for yourselves along the line of preventing disease on your farms of all your animals, if you only will. In fact, far more than professional men with drugs ever can do for you; and while you are about it don’t forget that the house well needs cleaning occasionally, and the cleaning of the privy vault and opening up the sewer drains and the free use of carbolic acid in water solution. Sulphate of iron and lime applied to the place where slops are emptied about the house, not forgetting the sink, may save you many a case of typhoid fever and diphtheria in the family. All along the line, either in the dwelling or about the barns and stables, disease germs in the filth that is allowed to accumulate, and you suffer in consequence, while we doctors and patent medicine venders are reaping a harvest. =~ —’ 4 133 HOW TO CARE FOR BROOD SOWS. BY D J GREEN, NOBLE COUNTY, OHIO The care ot the brood sow has a great deal to do with the success that we may expect to have with the coming litter. In the first place I should want good sows to care for. I have no time or feed to waste on such sows as I see on many farms. If there are any in your herd that after a fair trial have not given satisfaction as breeders dispose of, them, and if your business demands that others be added be very careful in their selection. But I think it is a common mistake with many of us that we try to keep too many sows, and do not give them the care that we could give to a less number, con- sequently do not raise as many nor as good pigs as we might from a less number. ‘In selecting young sows I should want to know something about their ancestors, at least as far back as their grandams and sires, for in hogs there is as much difference in different family strains as in any other kind of animals. I have noticed that young sows partake largely of the characteristics of their dams, especially in regard to disposition and pro- lificacy. So I should select those that were out of sows of good form, good disposition and prolific breeders. PROLIFIC SOWS. By prolific breeders I would not restrict them to those that produced twelve to eighteen pigs at a litter. A sow that produces eight to ten good, strong, even pigs is prolific enough for me. Those that have so many seldom raise more than half of them, and it stands to reason that a sow that has a reasonable number will have larger and stronger pigs, and such are more likely to survive. I think that the sow and not the sire is responsible for the number in litters. I think that the condition of the sow at the time she is bred has much to do with the number of pigs conceived. She should not be too fat nor too lean, but she should be in a plump, healthy condition, if you would expect her to do her best and maintain the reputation of her particular family strain. To produce this condition she should have plenty of ‘exercise and good, nourishing feed, of which grass or other green feed should form a considerable part. Now we have our sows selected and ready for breeding. The next thing is, To what kind of a boar shall we breed them? After selecting sows of the breed and type typical of our ideal hog, I should select a boar as near like them as possible, but not near akin. I think that sows bred 154 , to boars of their own type will produce pigs of more uniformity, which will add much to the attractiveness as well as profit of the herd. After sows are bred they should be separated from other hogs, and I should prefer not more than two or three together, and they should be agreeably mated. Don’t put a young, timid sow with an old, cross one if you expect good results, but put the old ones by themselves and the young ones together. Then you may at least hope for peace and harmony. THE SOWS’ QUARTERS. The brood sows should have good, comfortable quarters. Their sleep- ing room should be tight and dry, and well protected from draughts. If the door is to be left open there should be a wind-break. This can be made by driving stakes in the ground and nailing boards on them, making a passage way to the door. The bedding should be watched closely. The straw or other material used for bedding should be strictly dry, and as soon as it becomes mussed and shows signs of being damp it should all be removed and good, fresh bedding supplied. Bedding will require more attention in muddy weather than when the ground is frozen or dry. I lay a good deal of stress on bedding in the winter. I have seen so many hogs with patchy coats in the spring, large portions of the body almost destitute of hair. I never have had such when I was careful about the bedding, and I am inclined to think that damp, filthy bedding causes it. PLENTY OF EXERCISE. Brood sows should have plenty of exercise. They never do so well with me when confined in a small lot. I would prefer that they have the range of a large pasture field at least during fair days. They are fond of the grass and will take lots of exercise to get it, and both are good for them. I frequently let a number of them run together on a pasture after the cattle or on rye pasture, and give them separate quarters at night. They soon learn their places and will be on hands at night, and by letting the bosses in first we have but little trouble in separating them. , Brood sows should be fed a considerable variety of feed. I always feed some corn to all my hogs. I believe it is a natural feed for the hog, but brood sows should have in connection with it bran slop, roots and other green feed such as rye and grass as I have mentioned, and in long- continued, severe winter weather, when they can not get the grass they relish, early cut clover hay, I think, is of great benefit to them. They should be fed liberally, but not sufficient to produce too much flesh, and just here I would emphasize the importance of exercise. I believe that every pregnant animal is benefited by a reasonable amount of exercise. I know a man who keeps his mares in fine condition and in the winter | —: he keeps them confined in the stable, and in bad weatuer carries their water to them. The result is that he has lost more colts at foaling time than any man I know, and I believe it is from the lack of exercise. FARROWING TIME. This period should be looked forward to with consideration. After we have labored to have the sow produce a good, strong litter of pigs we should see that it is not our fault that she does not save all of them. Sev- eral days before farrowing time she should have separate sleeping quarters from all other hogs, and this should be the place that you expect her to occupy at farrowing time, and everything should be in readiness. The nest should be tight so that the pigs can not crawl out and away from the sow and perish, as they will frequently do if an opportunity is afforded them. It is a good plan to place a fender around the nest to prevent the sow from catching the pigs between her and the wall. I find that smooth, round poles are about the best material for this purpose. Place them about ten inches from both floor and wall, and be sure to fasten them securely or the sow will be very likely to tear them loose. She should be furnished a good supply of bedding, and for this purpose I know of nothing better than dry forest leaves. All this, as we have said, should be done several days before the sow is due to farrow. so that she will be accustomed to her quarters, and will not fret to get out at the time that she should be quiet. She should be handled and made familiar with your presence, so that it will not disturb -her for you to enter her quarters if need be at the time of farrowing. She should be entirely rid of lice before farrowing, for it is easier to clean one animal than eight or ten, and little pigs will do no good with lice on them. Carbolic acid in grease and lamp oil is the best thing I have found to destroy hog lice. After farrowing the sow should be fed lightly for several days, a little bran slop with plenty of drink at first, gradually increasing her rations until she is on full feed. Some may say that all of this care is too much trouble, but I have found that good management is more to be depended on for success than good luck. VALUE OF SUCCULENT FOOD FOR SWINE. BY C. S. PLUMB, PURDUE UNIVERSITY. In the consideration of this subject it is desired to draw attention to the different succulent foods available for feeding swine and to note their several influences on animal growth. The writer will not only give the results of his own experiments in feeding succulent foods to swine, 136 but will quote freely from the published statements of others, trusting that there may be information in the facts presented which will be of service to our feeders and breeders. Succulent foods for swine may perhaps be placed In three distinct groups, as based on the character of the plants supplying the same: (1) Grasses, cereals and clovers. (2) Fleshy or thick-leaved plants. (8) Roots and vegetable fruits. Blue grass is the commonest pasture grass in those States most given to swine raising and so perhaps first merits attention. During 1888, ’89 and °90, Professor Morrow at the Illinois Station studied the feeding value of blue grass for pigs. (“Bulletin 16,” Illinois Experiment Station, May, 1891.) Four trials were made. One lot was fed corn only, one a full feed of corn and grass and the third a part feed of corn and grass. The pigs receiving a half-feed of corn and pasture during the first period of eight weeks (which was then followed with four weeks of full corn feed with pigs still in pasture) gave the best results. Thus 441 pounds of corn produced 100 pounds of gain. When pigs were fed full grain on pasture it required 507 pounds of corn to make 100 pounds of gain in weight of pig. The pigs confined in yards free of vegetation required 629 pounds of corn for 100 pounds of gain. Professor Morrow reports that he did- not succeed in getting pigs to make fair gains on pasture alone, and Henry states (“Feeds and Feeding,’ 1898, page 579) that his experience coincides with Morrow’s in this respect. Writers on the summer feeding of swine usually commend blue grass for pasture, but it is not so highly regarded for swine as some other succulent foods. When at the Utah Station Sanborn experimented with four lots, of three pigs each, from May 25 to October 14. (‘Bulletin 22,” Utah Experi- ment Station, May, 1893.) Lot 1 had pasturage; Lot 2 was confined to a yard 6x8 rods, in which the pigs were fed cut grass, while Lots 8 and 4 were confined in pens 8x16-feet, one lot receiving grass and the other not. The four lots had all the grain they would eat, a mixture of ground wheat, ground barley and bran. The grass was a mixture of eight varieties, of which alfalfa was the principal one. The results of this experiment were such as to cause Sanborn to write: “The figures show no pronounced advantage in favor of grass feeding to pigs * * * To make grazing successful it will have to occur with a limited amount of grain.” Later Mills carried on similar trials at the Utah Station (‘Bulletin 40,’ Decem- ber, 1895), in which like results were secured.. In experiments where pigs were fed grass only and no grain they lost in weight during the trial. At the Ontario Agricultural College Professor Shaw conducted an experiment (“Bulletin 59,” Ontario Agricultural College) on nine pigs, divided into three lots of three each. They were fed from June 7 to October 8, 1890, as follows: Lot 1, all they would eat of a grain mixture of two parts by weight of ground peas and one part each of ground =e; Lowe barley, ground oats and wheat middlings. Lot 2 was fed three-fourths as much grain as Lot 1 and a quantity of cut green fodder, “consisting of clover, oats and vetch, corn and millet, as these came in season.” Lot 38 had one-third as much grain as Lot 1 and twice as much green food as Lot 2. At the close of the experiment Lot 1 was fat, Lot 2 was prime and Lot 3 was not improved in condition. Shaw concludes that a grain ration is best in every way. Rye is generally recommended for late fall or early spring pasturage for pigs, and the writer has used it for this purpose when no other suitable green food was available. There is no specific data, however, that I know of which shows the feeding value of green rye for pigs. It may be fed to advantage before the stalks appear and later when the head is in the milk or dough, though brood sows in pig should not be permitted on such pasturage, owing to the danger of abortion being caused by ergot in the rye. Common red clover is the most generally-used pasturage for swine by western farmers, and other green crops are used in a small way compared with this. Notwithstanding this fact, we have almost no figures available showing the value of this pasture. In his work on ‘Feeds and Feeding” Henry gives only an example of using clover hay with meal as food for pigs. Stewart, in his work on ‘Feeding Animals,” reports on an experi- ment in which green clover was cut and weighed out to pigs. A litter of six pigs was weaned at five weeks old and divided into two lots of three each and of equal weight. Each lot was placed in a separate pen on June 1 Lot 1 was fed corn meal soaked twelve hours in cold water as much as the pigs would eat, while Lot 2 had a small portion of chopped green clover mixed with the corn meal. Stewart notes that the pigs fed clover and meal were always lively and always ready for their feed, while Lot 1, with meal alone, ate greedily for a time, then became mincing and dainty for a few days, indicating a feverish condition of the stomach. By fast- ing they appeared to recover appetite and go on eating vigorously again. Fhis was repeated many times during the five months the experiment continued. Each lot consumed the same amount of meal At the end of this time, the one fed on meal alone averaged 150 pounds each; those fed clover and meal 210 pounds each, or 40 per cent. more for being treated according to their nature as grass-eating animals. Stewart recommends the soiling process with pigs (‘Feeding Animals,” 1886, page 469) and claims that an acre of good clover will soil four times as many pigs as it will pasture, giving them a full ration of grass, with this great advantage over pasture—that you may mingle the grain ration with it so as to produce the most rapid growth with perfect health. At the New York State Station six Chester White pigs were divided into two lots of three each, and one fed oat and pea forage and one fresh second-crop red clover. This trial, however, covered but three weeks, in which time the oat and pea lot gained the most, consuming 7.37 pounds 138 dry matter for a pound of gain, while the clover lot ate 31.89 pounds per pound of gain. An interesting comparison of the feeding value of green clover is given by Coburn. (“Swine Husbandry,” 1877, page 111.) This is shown best in the following table : Gross Product Will Produce | At Four Cents per Acre, | im Bore |p pepegund Wihedtvrt.W-ccee meses Pein eee 900 Ibs. (15 bu.) 225 Ibs. $9 00 Barley ssc costars cast ete hons 1,680 Ibs. (35 bu.) 420 lbs. 16 80 OAS canta Deena met ted. co ole 1,320 lbs, (40 bu.) 320 Ibs. 12 20 Corn eee ee ee oe cae At 2,240 lbs. (40 bu.) 560 lbs. 22 40 Pease) res | ho cae eee 1,500 lbs. (25 bu.) 375 lbs. 15 00 (neeniclOvierienen vis) ane eee 12,000 Ibs. (6 tons) 800 Ibs. 32 00 This table is on the basis that four pounds of the raw material will make one pound of pork, except that of clover, for which fifteen pounds. is allowed for a pound of pork. As relates to corn and wheat, in my ex- perience, these figures are perfectly reasonable. The claims for clover, however, are, I think, somewhat excessive. Coburn says: “Tf this is true in practice it is evident that an acre of clover is worth for pork making as much as three and one-half acres of average wheat, almost as much as one and one-half acres of good corn, and nearly as much as two and one-half acres of good oats.” Sullivant, in the Ohio Agricultural Report, figured that an acre of tim- othy and clover, green, weighed 12,000 pounds, that 745 pounds of grass and clover will be consumed daily by one pig from May to October, or during 153 days, which is equivalent to 1,146% pounds for one pig, which indicates that the acre of ground will support ten pigs, and that 382% pounds of pork can be made from the acre of timothy and clover. Alfalfa is probably one of the best green pasture crops for pigs, and in experiments at Utah, where this plant formed about one-half the basis of the green grass, pigs did very well when fed grain in addition to the pasture. Alfalfa, however, will not grow satisfactorily in the Hast as a rule, and consequently red clover in the Central West must be re- garded as its superior under ordinary conditions. Rape at the present time is the most favorably known of the fleshy- leaved plants for swine pasture, and while but a comparatively small number of trials have been reported showing the value of rape for this purpose, these have attracted sufficient attention to justify further trial. At the Indiana Station for three weeks, during the summer of 1898, ee we fed rape to pigs. Eighteen Chester White pigs were selected, weighing from 60 to 120 pounds, on July 5. These were divided into two lots of nine each, five sows and four barrows being in each group. Each lot was kept confined in a small lot free of vegetation. Lot 1 was fed such fresh cut rape as it would eat, in addition to a mixture of half corn meal and half shorts, with some skim milk to drink daily. Lot 2 received the same kind of feed, less the rape. During the three weeks Lot 1 gained 164% pounds in weight, or an average of .§6 pounds per day per pig, while Lot 2, which received no rape, gained 223.5 pounds in 21 days, or an ayver- age of 1.18 pounds per day per pig. During this trial Lot 1 ate 274% pounds of corn meal, 27444 pounds of shorts, 28034 pounds of skim milk and 395 pounds of rape, while Lot 2 ate 366% pounds each of corn meal and shorts and 276 pounds of skim milk. If now we figure the corn meal at 80 cents per 100, shorts at 60 cents, skim milk at 15 cents and rape at 5 cents per 100 pounds each, we find that each pound of flesh in Lot 1 cost 2.65 cents and in Lot 2 2.47 cents. While these figures show that the cost of production in each case was an economical one, the balance is in favor of the pigs that received no rape. At the Wisconsin Station two trials of feeding rape to swine have been reported, (“Bulletin 58,” Wisconsin Experiment Station, April, 1897), including in all fifty-eight hogs. In both these experiments one lot of pigs was penned and fed soaked corn and also shorts in a slop, consisting of two parts corn and one part shorts by weight. The other lot had the same grain feed with a limited amount of rape in addition. In the first trial the ten hogs on rape ate, in seventy-six days, 1,386 pounds of corn, 690 pounds of shorts and .32 acre of rape, and gained 853 pounds. The other lot, penned, ate 2,096 pounds of corn, 1,042 pounds of shorts and gained 857 pounds. As the gain is essentially the same in each lot, the third of an acre of rape saved 1,062 pounds of grain, or an acre of rape would be worth 3,318 pounds of grain. In another trial of two lots of nineteen each, conducted in the same manner and fed the same rations for forty-nine days, the rape lot ate 2,220.83 pounds of corn, 1,109 pounds of shorts, .6 acre rape and gained 1,066 pounds. The penned lot ate 3,106.5 pounds of corn, 1,558 pounds of shorts and gained 1,076 pounds. The gain is practically the same in this instance also, so that it may be said that the .6 acre of rape saved 886.2 pounds of corn and 444 pounds of shorts, or that one acre of rape is worth 2.217 pounds of grain. The average of the two trials indicates that an acre of rape is worth 2,767 pounds of such ‘grain for fattening hogs. Prickly comfrey, another plant with rather large, succulent leaves, has been experimented with some as a green food for swine, but not with suc- -cess. At the New York State Experiment Station two lots of swine were fed (“Bulletin 28,” N. S. New York State Experiment Station, 1891), there being three pigs in each lot. The pigs of both lots were fed ‘all the ‘prickly comfrey they would eat, and a little corn meal. The comfrey ST 140 formed over 90 per cent. of the total food consumed in both pens.” ‘There was a steady loss in weight while comfrey was fed. Sanders Spencer, the noted English swine authority, says (Pigs: Breeds and Management,” 1897, page 66): : “Gur own experience and that of many other pig keepers is not in favor of the use of prickly comfrey. The pigs are not particularly fond of it. and unless a considerable addition of good food is made they will grow big in the belly and narrow on the back, losing all muscle.” Purslane or pusley, a very succulent common weed, has not been gen- erally used for feed, but it possesses some merits. In 1898, at the Indiana Station, for twenty-one days, purslane was fed two Chester White sows. The pigs were of about the same size and age and the purslane was well developed when fed. From September 21 to Oetober 11 the sows were confined in a small yard or pen. They were fed a mixture of half shorts and half hominy meal, twice a day as a slop, and all the purslane they would eat. During this time the pigs consumed 611% pounds each of hominy feed and shorts and 390 pounds of purslane. One pig weighed 162 pounds on September 20 and 18244 pounds on October 11, a gain of 2014 pounds, and the other weighed 157 pounds on September 20, and 174 pounds on October 11, a gain of 17 pounds. Rating hominy feed at 65 cents per one hundredweight and shorts at 70 cents per one hundred- weight, this gain in weight would cost 2.2 cents per pound. The pigs consumed about 1814 pounds of purslane per day between them. It was not eaten with the relish that was to be expected, yet the pigs did very well while receiving it, making fair daily gains. ‘ Roots and vegetable fruits furnish a class of succulent foods for swine that may be regarded as a most desirable sort for winter feeding when pasture is not available. Some of these may be grown at compara- tively small expense. ; Artichokes for many years have been known as suitable for pigs, and the live stock and agricultural press have published much relative to the value of this plant for swine. The writer's experience with artichokes has not been so encouraging as reported by others, but perhaps this is due to a somewhat limited experience. Four sows placed in a small field of artichokes that had not been disturbed made a total gain in weight be- tween October 25 and November 8 of twenty-seven pounds. They rooted out the artichokes and were fed in addition fifty-seven and one-half pounds each of corn meal and shorts. Each pig gained much the same in weight. These pigs no doubt would have done better had there been a larger area of artichokes to feed on, so that the experiment might have been longer continued. As it was they practically cleaned the lot of all tubers. Some very flattering reports have been made on artichokes. Coburn quotes A. C. Williams (“Swine Husbandry.” 1877, page 112), a prominent 141 and successful Poland-China breeder in Iowa of years ago on a large scale, as writing: “The keep of my hogs in warm weather is blue grass, clover and Brazilian artichokes. Forty head of hogs and their pigs may be kept without other food on an acre of artichokes, from the time frost is out of the ground until the first of June, and from September or October until the ground is again frozen.” At the Oregon Experiment Station six Berkshire pigs weighing from 118 to 215 pounds each were fed artichokes and grain from October 22 to December 11. They gained 244 pounds in weight, or an average daily ‘gain of 0.81 pounds. The pigs ate 756 pounds of grain during this period, which is 3.1 pounds of grain for each pound of gain in live weight. In other experiments it was found that it required five pounds of mixed grain to produce a pound of gain, hence on this basis the artichokes con- sumed would represent two pounds of grain in producing each pound of gain in live weight. The pigs consumed the artichokes on one-eighth of an acre, rooting them all out. (‘Bulletin 54,’ Oregon Experiment Station, . 1898.) ; Sweitzer, of the Missouri Station, reports a trial by Porter in which artichokes and wheat meal were fed pigs. It required 3525 pounds of wheat meal and 820 pounds of artichokes to produce 100 pounds of increase. (“Bulletin 29,” Missouri Experiment Station.) In none of the reports on feeding artichokes are results secured in gain of live weight that have not repeatedly been attained by feeding no larger amount of grain than is indicated in these trials where no artichokes were used. Potatoes, as has already been stated, have long been used as food for pigs and usually in the boiled form. Pigs will eat raw potatoes, but not with the relish that they will boiled ones. Henry reports (“Feeds and Feeding,” 1898, page 595) three experiments in which a comparative test is made of cooked potatoes and grain when both were fed in connection with skim milk or whey. Four pounds of potatoes fed against one pound of grain gave practically the same gain in live weight. The quality of the pork from the potato feeding was good. At the Oregon Station ten pigs were divided into two lots. Lot 1 was fed one part shorts and two parts chopped oats, while Lot 2 was fed a mixture of shorts and cooked potatoes. The pigs in Lot 1 consumed 6.8 pounds each per day, and made a daily gain of 1.8 pounds, or one pound of gain to 38.8 pounds of food. The cost of producing 100 pounds of live weight in this lot was $2.18. The pigs in Lot 2 consumed 12.4 pounds of potatoes, and 2.8 pounds of shorts each per day, and gained 1.3 pounds per day. The cost of 100 pounds of gain with Lot 2 was $2.86. From this experiment, when the potatoes were reckoned at ten cents per bushel, there was no profit in feeding them. An effort was made to increase the amount of potatoes consumed, but the pigs would not eat the greater quantity. 142 Sugar beets, through the recent great increase in their cultivation for sugar production, are attracting attention as a food for swine. Last year at the annual meeting of the Illinois Stock Breeders’ Association strong testimony was given by practical feeders in favor of feeding them to pigs. The testimony seemed to be that the pigs relished them and improved while receiving them in their rations. In experiments at the New York State Station (“Report for 1892,” page 283), in which sugar beets were compared with sorghum as food for swine, about 514% pounds of beets and 614% pounds of sorghum per head were fed daily as a full ration with skim milk and linseed meal, with the result that “all the rations gave profitable results.” This trial covered sixteen weeks. At the Canadian experimental farm at Ottawa, two lots of eight pigs, averaging about 60 pounds in weight per pig, were fed from December 29 to May 18 a mixture of ground peas, barley and rye, with sugar beets and silage respectively. (“Report of the Central Experimental Farm, 1891,” pages 83 to 87.) To half of each lot grain was fed steamed; to half, raw. The pea silage was made from peaS harvested when the pods were full, . but the peas soft and the vines green and succulent. The silage kept well but the pigs refused to eat much of it. The results show no striking differences between gains on pea silage and on sugar beet rations. Mangel wurzels furnish the farmer with a large amount of succulent winter food in the form of roots. These may be produced very cheaply. In 1898 at the Indiana Station we grew as high as 2514 tons of mangels per acre at a total cost of only eighty-five cents per ton harvested. No other succulent winter food for swine can be produced so cheaply; conse- quently, if they can be profitably fed the growing of mangels should be encouraged. Beginning on February 1, 1899, a feeding experiment on pigs fed mangels was begun at the Indiana Station. Twelve Chester White pigs were selected, which were about three months old, at the beginning of the experiment. The pigs were divided into two lots of six each. Each lot was confined in a pen about 15x30 feet, with a comfortable shelter house in one end. Each lot was fed a grain mixture of one part corn meal and two parts shorts, and Lot 1 was fed cut mangels and Lot 2 was not. Lot 1 ate, up to April 19, 44284 pounds of corn meal, while Lot 2 ate 55134 pounds, or 109 pounds more than Lot 1. Lot 1 ate 877% pounds of shorts, while Lot 2 ate 1,091 pounds, or 213144 pounds more. Lot 1 also ate 514 pounds of mangels, which was about as much as they could be induced to consume. 4 The following table shows the more important facts relative to this experiment, which is a comparison of the cost of food to cost of grain: Lot 1. Lot 2. ROCA MOOUNMAS FAM MAGE: . Geiss wc)s asso oa bes ceeds ems eee OOOO 442.5 Average daily gain made in pounds...................05- 4.6 oh Pounds of meal and shorts to make pound gain........... 3.71 Sok OSUMO MOO TO aye side susie pide ereritacs:o(eudve otu.ces lem .s.avebe se @ glare $10 19 $12 05 Cost of food for each pound of gain................... 028 027 Cost of food for each 100 pounds of gain............... -2 80 2 70 The interesting facts are brought out by these figures that it required exactly the same amount of corn meal and shorts to make a pound of gain with each lot, and the total cost of food for each pound of gain for Lot 1 was slightly in excess of the cost for Lot 2, the roots making this extra expense, which amounted to ten cents for each 100 pounds of gain live weight. A study of the amount of digestible food consumed by these pigs shows that Lot 1 was fed 3.36 pounds dry matter for each pound of gain, and Lot 2 was fed 8.23 pounds of dry matter for each pound of gain. In his work on “‘Feeds and Feeding” Henry quotes at considerable length certain Danish feeding experiments on pigs. In reference to the use of roots I wish to quote from some of the statements made. In com- paring mangels and grain, all the lots received skim milk or whey in addi- tion to grain and roots, excepting Lots E and F, to which an equivalent of additional roots was given. It is here shown that ten pounds of mangels more than equal, and eight pounds about equal, one pound of grain in trials. The quality of the pork produced by the different lots was very satisfactory. Even where one-fourth the daily feed was given in the form of mangels no ill effect was noted. In 1890 a preliminary feeding experiment was made, using beets with different sugar contents, to ascertain their comparative feeding values. Mangels containing 12.71 per cent. dry matter and 8.93 per cent. sugar were fed against fodder beets containing 19.86 per cent. of dry matter and 13.8 per cent. of sugar, or against barley. The experiment included twenty-five pigs, averaging 79 pounds each and lasted seventy days. The indications were for pigs one pound of barley had a feeding value equal to 6 to 8 pounds of mangels or 4 to 8 pounds of fodder beets. In 1891-92 204 pigs were fed four kinds of roots, in addition to daily refuse and grain. There were fed— Dry matter. _ Sugar. (1) Eckendorf mangels containing..........°11.0 per cent. 6.0 per cent. (2) Elvetham mangels containing........... 13.0 per cent. 8.9 per cent. (8) Fodder sugar beets containing........... 16.5 percent. 10.9 per cent. (Sugar beets containing: .2...0..0....5.55 21.2 percent. 14.0 per cent. Lots fed barley only made the largest gain, closely followed by those half of the grain of which was replaced by roots in the following ration: 144 mvs For one pound barley substituted 7.5 pounds Eckendorf mangeis, 6.5 pounds Elvetham mangels, 5 pounds fodder beets and 4 pounds sugar beets. These quantities of different kinds of roots proved nearly equiva- lent in feeding value. The conclusion was arrived at that about 40 per cent. of the daily ration of the pig may be advantageously made up of roots. Slaughter showed pork from pigs fed roots fully equal to those fed grain only. . Long states (“Book of the Pig,’ 1886, page 254) that he remembers one case where a large quantity of mangels returned $6.24 a ton when fed to pigs. At the New York State Station they made a return of $3 per ton. (“Bulletin 28,” New York State Station.) Carrots are not a profitable crop to grow for feeding live stock, owing to the expenses of cultivating and harvesting. Long states that they have long been used for pigs, although they are too rich for feeding animals. (“Book of the Pig,’”’ 1886, page 254.) Numerous experiments, according to this author, have been made in feeding them, and it has been shown in some instances that they have returned as much as $7.20 a ton by being converted into pork. In the Danish feeding experiments above referred to in 1892-94, on nine different estates, 893 pigs were divided into 175 lots. In comparative trials carrots and mangels containing equal quantities of dry matter had similar value in pig feeding. It was shown that the amount of dry matter in roots is of importance, rather than the total weight or quantity of sugar contained. Later nine experiments with 277 animals in 54 lots were conducted for the study of relative values of barley, mangels and carrots. Two kinds of mangels and four kinds of carrots were used. Dairy refuse was fed all the lots. Roots were fed in such quantities that 0.84 pounds of dry matter in roots corresponded to one pound of grain. The experiments lasted SO to 130 days, the average being 102 days. The pigs averaged 66 pounds at the beginning of the experiment and 169.6 at the end. The average daily gain made by the lots on different rations was as follows: IBA TICY, taraatente Oe oth ere Renee vee he De COR ORs 0.986 Ib. Mekendort manecell@wirzelsi- «tee teem eee eee 0.828 lb. Elvetham mangel WULZEIS co tiation: Case oe Re eee 0.833 Ib. Vogeser and Champion carrotss. ee ees ee eae 0.875 Ib. James and Giant) .:... sce neces ce eee ee eee eet 0.900 Ib. The gains made on roots in these experiments are not up to the pre- vious ones. Carrots are shown to be of similar feeding value for pigs as mangels when equal amounts of dry matter are fed. Kohl rabi is practically unknown as a pig food in America, I believe, but in Hngland Sanders Spencer uses it to a considerable extent. The following quotation is of more than common interest, not only in relation to the food used, but method of handling the pigs. (““Pigs: Breeds and Management,” 1897, page 64): 145 “It is scarcely necessary to remind our readers that a somewhat differ- ent system of feeding the sows is advisable in the winter to that which is suitable in the summer, when there is plenty of grass. * * * At the time of writing (December) we have some sixty aged sows, the majority of whfch are carrying their pigs. * These are being kept in three lots, cne of which comprises thirty-six of the strongest and most lusty of the sows; these have the run of some fifteen acres of grass, and besides what they can find on the grass field they have nothing but kohl rabi and an occasional feed of small or diseased potatoes. As those of the sows which are forward in pig require more nutritious food they will be drafted out and supplied with it. Another lot of nine sows, which have each reared one good, large litter of pigs and are again forward in pig, have the run of a grass field of some five acres in extent, in which is an open shed which is used by the sows for shelter. Their food consists of kohl rabi and some mixed meal, of barley, wheat, maize and peas, fed to them as slop, night and morning. Other sows that are older are fed kohl rabi run through a root cutter. “This system of feeding sows will continue until about March, when the rabi will have lost much of their goodness and the supply of them will be exhausted. Mangels will gradually take the place of the rabi, but in smaller quantities.” * * * “We grow but very few swedes or white turnips, or these would take the place of kohl rabi. At one time we grew a considerable quantity of cabbages for the pigs, but we found that these caused constipation and were not at all suited for the little pigs or for young boars which were kept confined in sties. Even kohl rabi require to be sparingly used for the younger pigs or they will some- times cause constipation.” Turnips are only fed in a small way in America, and then, I believe, usually boiled. Long states (‘Book of the Pig,’ 1886, page 254) that they furnish an admirable diet when judiciously given. and that he has known many thoroughly practical feeders to use them largely in the winter with good effect. At the same time he says that numerous instances could be quoted in which they have caused disease, weak litters and even abortion. Like all roots, he says turnips should be cut up as small as possible for pig feeding and mixed with the meal at least twenty-four hours before being fed. In Danish feeding experiments, when feeding barley and whey to pigs, turnips were substituted in part fbr whey. In two experiments with thirty animals barley and whey gave an increase of 1.08 pounds per head daily, while turnips gave 0.96 pound. The experiment lasted 1380 and 110 days each. (“Experiment Station Record,’ Vol. VII, 1895-96, page 243.) Pumpkins have for years been fed by our farmers to some extent to pigs. and while they have as a rule met with favor we know little of their feeding value on the basis of reports. The Oregon Station fed pumpkins to six Berkshire pigs, which were about eight months old when 10—Swine. 146 the experiment began. The pumpkins were cooked in a vat and mixed with shorts. They were fed from October 30 to December 25. Reckon- ing pumpkins at $2.50 per ton and shorts at $12, the amount of the former fed was worth $9.40 and the latter $5.54, a total of $14.94. The total gain in live weight was 499 pounds, making the cost of the food for 100 pounds of gain in live weight $2. The pigs consumed large amounts of pumpkins, averaging for the two last feeding periods 26 pounds each per day. At first only small amounts of shorts were necessary, but later this amount had to be increased. The average daily gain for the entire period was one and one-half pounds per pig. The quality of the meat was very fine. (“Bulletin 54,” Oregon Experiment Station, 1898.) The real value of succulent food for swine can not be measured by simple gains in weight of pigs given such food. Undoubtedly where animals are confined to a pure grain diet the digestive tract is more torpid and sickness is more likely to occur than when succulent food is given. Then the digestive organs are more active and natural in movement and the body is better prepared to resist disease than when pure grain food is fed. The influence of this succulent food on sows in pig or sucking pigs can not be measured by the scales, but the general testimony of practical feeders of experience is that such diet promotes easy parturition, a generous milk flow and vigorous offspring. Pigs that are to be fattened in a short period of feeding do not perhaps need roots in their diet, though I believe it would be to their advantage, but breeding stock, both male and female, and suckling sows will certainly be materially benefited by summer pasturage and roots in winter. Swine should always be fed with discretion the first few days of turning on pasture to prevent bloat, but where roots are fed no special danger is likely to occur. Of the summer pasture plants red clover and rape are undoubtedly the most desirable, while the sugar beet and mangel wurzel, all things con- sidered, offer the cheapest food in the form of roots. Possibly swedes or kohl rabi are equally desirable, though they are probably more of an unknown quality with American feeders than the other two. Those roots with the greatest amount of sugar in them, however, will be eaten with more relish, and probably give the best returns, as is shown in the Danish experiments where the sugar contents of beets is reported on. POOR STOCK. No other branch of farming has been so remunerative for a few years past as the production of pork. This has been a stimulus to the farmer for adopting a better class of swine, as well as better methods of manage- ment and development. Still too many farmers are simply wasting time and feed on grades of swine that do not betoken for them the first speck of pride or ambition for keeping pace with the advancement of the times. 7. 147 BEST SUMMER PASTURE FOR HOGS. BY H. Z. CHURCHILL, ELIZABETHTOWN, KY. To ascertain and discuss the best summer pasture for hogs is a subject upon which very few persons in any locality agree; and in writing anything about this subject one must take up and discuss it entirely from his own point of view and experience. Of course, different conditions and localities make different results. What might be the “very thing” here in Kentucky might not be at all advisable or practicable for Indiana, Illinois, or the trans-Mississippi States, as much depends upon latitude, climate and the adaptability of the soil that one may be so fortunate to own or cultivate for a summer pasture. By the meaning of the summer pasture, I certainly would not confine it just to the three summer months June, July and August, but would add part of the spring and fall months, thereby covering a period so as to include the time of farrowing in the spring until the time the hog is old enough to be placed in the fattening ‘pen in the fall to be prepared for the market, making our pastures not only for the fine pedigreed and show hogs, which are only sold for breeding purposes, but for the hog that is raised by every successful farmer for the market. The first thing to be considered in the arrangement of a good pasture is the water supply, for without good and wholesome water no pasture or feeding of any kind will be a success; no animal of any kind, however plentiful and good its feed may be, will thrive without water; it may be and is true that grasses contain a larger quantity of water than any other kind of feed, yet it does not take the place of water, nor should the raiser of hogs allow himself to think it does. To start your hogs off in a thriving condition in the spring, when it is possible so to do, arrange a small lot and sow it in rye. Then by the last of March or the first of April, on all pleasant days, turn your hogs into the lot of green rye. The way both young and old relish it is wonderful indeed; nothing puts their system in so good a condition to stand the long summer months as this rye. Myself and partner were so fortunate this spring and part of the winter months to have the wheat so high that it was an advantage to both wheat and hogs to be turned on a fifty-acre field. To come right to the beginning of the summer pasture, nothing in my experience can compare to the clover field. It is certainly the “king of all pastures,’ and without it we would certainly be in a dilemma as to what to do and where to go at that season of the year for a substitute. Clover stands higher in analysis than almost any other grass for pasturage; besides it is very useful for the farmer, more so than 148 most crops. as a fertilizer, for nothing enriches the land more than this self-same clover when plowed under in the fall, after having been pastured all of the summer season to the fullest extent. If any hog raiser has never tried the virtues of a good clover pasture in summer, let him hasten to do so at once. Towards the last of the summer months all clover fields become somewhat rank and dry; from then on they are not ample for the thorough maintenance and growth of hogs. So other kinds of pasture should be provided. Look around and search your books on feeding and see if you can find anything that compares with cow peas; a patch of them would be the very thing required to finish out your summer pasture. The peas themselves stand ninth, and the hay twelfth in feeding value of all mill products, grain, green fodder and hay. which is very high, considering fifty American feeding materials are treated. Hogs love this pasture, and with the eating of the peas and the green pea vines they come to the fall months sleek and almost fat enough for the market. In making a pasture of cow peas do not try and get all of one kind or variety. Get for the first a variety that will make a large quantity of vines and follow up with the variety that produces a great quantity of peas, so when cold weather comes the hogs will be prepared to take readily to grain that will:then be given them. The cow pea, like clover, improves the land instead of taking from it; in other words, it both fattens the hogs and fattens the land. So it follows. in summing up, that in the judgment of the writer, for the best results to the hog and the constant improvement of the land, the best summer pasture for hogs would be to start them off early on a rye or wheat field; as soon as Glover is well enough advanced turn the hogs on and keep them there until the latter part of the summer, and then finish them for the summer on a good pasture of cow peas. By this method you will find yourself with a herd of fat, healthy porkers, and. raised at a small expense. Not losing sight of the water supply, which should be plentiful and healthy, always remember that pastures for your pigs should contain grasses that are tender and juicy, if you wish them to thrive. Pigs do not have all of their temporary set of teeth until they are three months old, and, of course, can not vite or masticate anything old or tough; and when they do cut their temporary set they only contain about one-half as many teeth as they have when they have a full per- manent set. One of the greatest causes of the death of so many pigs is because they are placed on food they can not masticate, and thereby die of many disorders. In discussing the subject of pastures, I have lost sight of such pastures as rape, alfalfa and blue grass, for the simple reason that the writer knows nothing of the first two, as they are not grown in his section, and the latter grows on land that is too expensive in this State to allow hogs to run on, and probably root up, so as to destroy these beautiful pastures —— 149 that are the mainstay for the fine horses and cattle. However, when it is possible, the blue grass pasture is one of the very best to go side and side with the clover and the two mixed help wonderfully to make the ideal sumimer pasture. It is sometimes, and I may say generally, that the pasturing of hogs is supplemented with feeding of grain. In fact, it makes a quick growth and fattening for the market and is commonly carried on by most feeders who ship young and quickly fattened stock. But I must urge that it is best not to make the feeding of any kind of animal too expensive, espe- cially the hog. While we can buy a great variety of mill feeds that are very fattening, the question is, does it pay to buy these to put on this additional weight? I should think not; better not to feed at all than to make it cost more than can be realized. Just feed what you raise on your farm, which consists of corn and oats principally, and if you have any overabundance of either you might sell some of it and invest that money in shipstuff or shorts. I have found for a summer feed, with pasture, that a small feed twice a day consisting of two parts ground corn, one part shorts and one part ground oats makes an ideal hog food. This mixed with water the consistency of a thick slop and given about six quarts twice a day to each grown hog, with about half the quantity to shoats, is all they require in summer while running on pasture. PASTURING PIGS ON STUBBLE. No matter how carefully grain is harvested, some always escapes the reaper, and unless stock is turned on the stubble it is lost. While the amount may hardly be sufficient to make it profitable to follow the machine with a rake, the scattered grain may be profitably utilized by turning pigs or other stock into the fields, and as a matter of fact, the custom of pasturing hogs on such fields is quite common. Some recent experiments along this line are reported by a Farmers’ Bulletin, Agricul- tural Department, to show the value of-this kind of feeding with other methods. Forty-one pigs from six to nine months old were'‘allowed the run of barley, wheat, and pea stubble fields of 18, 10.44, and 10.73 acres, respec- tively. For some time before the test they had been pastured on alfalfa and fed one pound of cracked barley per head daily. For ten weeks im- mediately preceding the test, they made a daily average gain of .42 pound per head. While pastured on the stubble fields they were given no grain in addition to what they could find except on stormy days. The grain *nus fed amounted to 24.1 pounds in the five weeks of the test. During this time the pigs made a gain of 22.8 pounds per head, or 17.5 pounds, deducting the amount which it was calculated they gained from the grain fed during stormy weather. On the supposition that 4.5 pounds of grain 150 are required to produce a pound of pork, the forty-one pigs gathered 3,228.75 pounds of grain, which otherwise would haye been lost. The harvesting had been done in the usual manner, and, in the investigator’s opinion, the amount of peas and grain remaining in the field did not exceed that left in the stubble fields on the average farm. The scattered grain could not have been saved in any other way, and represents a clear profit. The grain saved from the stubble fields by these pigs was not all that could have been gathered if they had remained in the fields a longer time. Seven brood sows were afterward pastured during the winter on the Station stubble fields, which included a twenty-four-acre oat field in addition to those mentioned above. They were given no food in addition to what they could gather, except kitchen slops and a small grain ration on stormy days. The sows frequently rooted down through six inches of snow and found sufficient grain to keep them in good condi- tion throughout the entire winter. It is stated in a recent communication from the Montana Station that several brood sows have been pastured during the past season on stubble fields without receiving any grain in addition, and that they are in fair condition. They had, in addition to the grain stubble fields, the range of clover, alfalfa, and timothy meadows, and the gleanings of fields where root crops had been raised. The manure from grain-fed stock, which was spread upon the fields, also furnished some gain. CLOVER FOR HOGS. To produce the cheapest as well as the best pork, clover must be the mainstay of the swine breeder. How to get the most out of the clover crop is a question good farmers are somewhat divided in opinion upon. Some advocate that hogs should not be turned on clover until it begins to bloom. Mr. S. Farill, of Wisconsin, and a very successful breeder, says: Instead of waiting until it begins to bloom I should let them in as soon as the clover is fairly started—say from four to six inches high—and I would put in hogs enough so that they would keep it down so that but little, if any, of it would get up enough to bloom. And then if we have fairly seasonable showers we shall have a fresh pasture nearly all sum- mer. But if they are not turned in until the clover begins to bloom it will be nearly full-grown and the hogs will only eat the top off, and the whole field will soon become old and woody and they will eat but little of it. It is true it will, to some extent, spring up fresh, but only in a small way compared with what it will if it is kept cropped off so that it does not head out. A little thought will discover the reason for this. The whole effort of the plant is for reproduction, and as that is done through the seed the plant will continue its effort to make seed until the strength of the root is exhausted, so that reason and experience teach that the usefulness of the clover plant for summer pasture can be greatly = alae —_ 151 prolonged by keeping it from heading and blossoming. This is equally true whether hogs or neat stock are to be pastured on it. There is no “question about the economy of growing hogs on clover pasture, provided one has the right kind of hogs. But just here comes the trouble. Hogs to do the best on clover pasture must be at least five or six months old, and if we would have them on hand for the early spring clover it means wintering them, and that I have of late years entirely abandoned—only wintering my breeding stock. I breed two litters a year and see to it that the pigs from start to finish have the best of care and feed till they go into the market at from six to eight months old. It is the statement of Mr. A. J. Lovejoy that 400 pounds of growth can be made from an acre of clover. I accept his statement, and will go him 200 pounds better. I have made 600 pounds’ growth from an acre, by actual weight, not guess-work. This was the way of it: I have all my life been a hog raiser, and always tried to have a pasture for them in the summer, in connection with their other feed, and I always considered the pasture a valuable adjunct in successful hog raising, but I never was so situated but once that I could tell, without too much trouble, how much of the profit should be credited to the pasture. A few years since I found myself with an eight- acre field of clover that had come through the winter very nicely, and I decided to see how much pork I could make from that field of clover. I bought fifty shoats that were from six to eight months old. They had been fairly well wintered, but were not fat; their average weight was 100 pounds. They were put into the clover fields when the clover had gotten about four inches high, and were kept in that field until the 15th of September, when they were sold, and their average weight was 225 pounds. But that is not the whole story. These hogs were fed, in addition to the clover pasture, one pound (by weight, not guess) of shelled corn for each hog per day. That was all the feed they had. They had free access to good, clean water. Their drinking trough was kept full by an auto- matic arrangement connected with the water tank. It was covered so they could not get into it to foul it. They had free access to salt and wood ashes mixed in about equal parts, kept under the shed so as not to be wasted by the rain, and I was surprised at the quantity they ate of it. The corn was fed regularly once a day, at a little before sunset. The first month the corn was soaked in water twelve hours; after that it was fed dry, another small item of importance. The corn was not fed in troughs or even in piles, but was scattered broadcast so they were obliged to eat it slowly. This may seem like a trifle, but success or failure is often determined by these little things. It was so with the regular feeding of corn; hogs (like the rest of us) are creatures of habit, and they soon did not look for any feed, except in the pasture, only at evening. This is not quite all about that clover field. In the early part of June I found that the hogs were not keeping all of the field cropped down, but were leaving bunches that were commencing to blossom. I turned eight 152 head of cattle and two colts into the field and kept them there four days. After that the hogs kept it down. In the final summing up of this matter I gave the clover credit for 600 pounds of the gain to the acre, and-charged the balance of the gain, 1,450 pounds, to the corn. That would fully pay for all the corn they ate at 50 cents per bushel. Whether this division of the gain is a fair one others can judge as well as I. One thing is certain, the result of the experiment was quite satisfactory. But the conditions were all favorable. The hogs were about the right age and condition, and we had rain often enough to keep the clover growing. These favor- able conditions can not always be secured (the mechanical part can), ‘so one can not always be sure of such satisfactory results. But it will always be found profitable to have clover for growing hogs. It is cheaper feed than corn. STREAKS OF LEAN. BY I. N. COWDRY, GRATIOT COUNTY, MICH. There is too much fat pork used in the family. Good pork is healthy, and makes the best of meat, but it is usually too fat. Now, there is a way to fatten for lean pork, as well as for fat pork. I remember years ago we thought that a hog should be made so fat that it couldn’t get up. This was invariably the rule we went by if we had corn enough to put them in that condition. The hogs were put in a pen, with a floor, early in the fall, and fed corn and water until after Christmas, when they usually contained enough “blubber’ to satisfy. Then butchering day came, and sometimes as many as seven large hogs were killed and packed down for the year’s use. Then this ended the work of butchering for another twelve months. Of course, headcheese and liverwurst had to be made, which has become a lost art with us now, except the sausage part of it. Practically, nearly everything about the hog was used up then, where much now goes to waste. I remember that my part at butchering time was the tail. It was cut off and given to me. I would slice it around with a butcherknife, put salt and pepper on and roast it on the live coals. This I thought the most dainty part of the hog. Perhaps because it was not so fat as the rest. The country was new in those days, and a great deal of hard work had to be done clearing up the farms; and I can well remember how hungry I would get before noon and long for the big chunk of fat meat with beans or cabbage that we were almost sure to get for dinner. In those days in the cold winter time, when we did the chopping, the fat meat was most welcome. ——Te : 155 But those days of hard winter work are done with most farmers in the United States, and it naturally calls for a different kind of meat. More lean is desired. Smaller hogs are in demand. Instead of the hog weighing 500, a 100 or a 200 pig is asked for, and instead of having one butchering day in the year three or four such days are now required to satisfy the changed conditions. Now, how shall we do to get this streak of lean and streak of fat pig pork—the sweetest and best of all meats? Why, feed for it, of course. Commence as soon as your pigs are farrowed. Feed bran and middlings to the mother to develop bone and muscle. Make long, rangy pigs of them instead of chuffy ones. Be sure to have plenty of good pasture for them all summer if you have to sow it for them. Rye, oats, clover and rape make good pasture for them. When the pigs are three months old they can have considerable corn if they have plenty of pasture. If the corn is hard it is best to soak it about a day before feeding. Now, if you want some choice meat for your own use, select out as many as you want and feed them separately from those that you intend for market. Select long, rangy fellows, with big bone and deep up and down, and narrow on the back. This is the bacon type and makes the best meat. Don’t select a blocky or chuffy one, for there will be too much fat. Let the most of their feed be pasture, milk, bran, and other cheap slops, with a little corn, not much. Increase on the corn as the pigs grow, and the last six weeks before killing they should have all the corn they can eat up clean two or three times a day. Don’t shut them up on a floor, but let them have the run of a good pasture lot until ready to kill. For the best of pork the pig should be a rustler, wide awake and not lazy, always active and a good runner. This is the kind of pig that will sandwich a streak of lean through the fat, and smells good while cooking and tastes good for dinner. This is some trouble, but the best things always make some trouble to get them. CONVENIENCES FOR HANDLING HOGS. BY W. A. HART, PORTLAND, IND. A visit among those engaged in caring for hogs will convince any person that the same thought and talent have never been expended upon devising means for the convenient care of hogs that have been expended in almost any other line of farm work. The most of us seem to imagine when we start with our pail of slop that it is necessary to the comfort of the hog that we permit ourselves to be run over and trampled down just as the feeders did ages ago. This article is prompted by reason of the old-time careless, inconvenient method being generally in vogue. First among the necessities for conveniently and successfully han- dling hogs is a convenient feeding house. Much improvement may be made in this respect. Many haye expended hundreds and even thousands of dollars for feeding houses and yet find them so cumbersome and inconvenient that they seldom, if ever, use them for the purpose for which they were built. A feeding house that does not lessen the work of feeding, that does not give better return for the feed used, and that can sau Hh Se <5 Fig. 1. Frrpinc Houser. not be built with but trifling expense, can never come into general use among farmers. An effort will be made in this article, aided by the accompanying illustrations, to describe a feeding house that accomplishes these results, so that any carpenter or intelligent farmer can build such a house. As an illustration, I will use a feeding house fourteen feet square and eleven feet high to the eaves, with ordinary comb roof of the desired pitch. Such a house is shown in Fig. 1. It may be a surprise to the reader to learn that such a house will furnish crib-room overhead for 450 bushels of corn, bin-room on the ground floor for nearly two tons of ground feed, convenient troughs and feeding rooms for more than fifty hogs, three good stock fountains to furnish pure water to three different lots, and all at a cost of less than $100. The hogs do not go inside of the building at all, but eat slop from a V-shaped trough, the outer edge of which comes out even with the outer edge of the building. This trough arrangement extends around three sides of the building, giving a length of about forty feet of trough. Outside of the building at each side at which there is a trough, and fitting up against the building, is a tight plank floor, eight feet wide and extending the full length of the trough. This platform is enclosed with an ordinary board fence, with the bottom plank of the fence resting down tight upon the floor, to prevent the hogs from rooting ear corn off the platform. A small gate or door is made in pai 155 this fence that the hogs may be shut in or out of this pen. The house on the three sides:at which the troughs are placed is weatherboarded up and down, but the siding only extends down eight feet from the eaves, thus leaving a space of three feet between the bottom end of the siding and the ground, through which the hogs eat out of the trough. The trough shown in Fig. 2 is the old-fashioned V-shaped trough made of two solid oak planks, each one and a half inches thick, the one eight and the other ten inches wide. Pieces of plank are nailed on the end of the trough in the old-fashioned way, but are cut exactly as long as the trough is wide at the top. Two pieces of inch plank eleven and a half inches wide must then be cut long enough so that when the lower end is made fast to the end of the trough the upper end extends an inch or so above the lower end of the siding of the building to which it fastens. This trough is then partitioned off into spaces of from eight to fourteen inches, to suit the size of the hogs to be fed. This partitioning is done with inch plank eleven and a half inches wide, standing with the lower end fitting down into the trough and cut long enough so that the upper — ends extend up to within about two inches of the lower end of the weatherboarding. These partition boards must lack about four inches of being cut to a point at the lower end, leaving space at the bottom of the trough for slop to run from one end of trough to the other. Use plank tongued and grooved the length of the trough for back wall. Let the first plank so used fit down tightly on the inner edge of the trough. Board up to about four inches above the upper end of the partition board of the trough. Cut a board nearly a foot wide just the length between the two boards standing upright that are nailed to the ends of the trough. Fasten one edge of this board to the inside of the weatherboarding above the trough so that the other edge will rest on the upper ends of the parti- tion boards set in trough. This board and back wall nailed fast to the partition through the trough into the lower ends of the partition boards serves to hold them in place, and the back wall and this board form a hopper into which to pour the slop. This board throws the slop back against the back wall as it descends to the trough and prevents the slop from falling on the heads of the hogs. It is for this reason that the back wall must be watertight. 156 Fig 3 shows the inside arrangement on the ground floor. The three troughs will be noticed in place around the three sides. The bin for ground feed is seven feet square and built in the center, and extends from the ground floor to the floor overhead, and is built very strong to help support the floor overhead. This leaves a space three and one-half feet wide in the front end of the building and two and one-half feet wide next to the troughs, to pass around and pour in slop.- A three-quarter inch pipe running into the house from a small tank outside and following around and fastened to the back wall of the trough, furnishes the water to automatic stock fountains, one placed in one of the end spaces in each of the troughs. The partition at the space in which stock fountain is Fig. 3. Insipe ARRANGEMENT OF FEEDING Howse. placed must extend to the bottom of the trough to prevent slop from running into this space under the fountain. The steps from the ground fioor above slant toward the center of the building, so that the landing is near the comb of the roof. Board up around the landing, about three feet high, to prevent corn from falling down stairs. You will notice from cut No. 1 a small door immediately over the trough from which to throw ear corn on to the platform. If shelled corn is fed it can best be fed in the trough. With this arrangement the feeding can all be done from the inside of the house, and it is impossible for the hogs to dirty or waste the feed. Besides, the partitions in the troughs prevent the hogs from fighting and pushing one another. It is much less work to clean out the feeding pans when they are outside than when they are inside of the building. A separate lot is used for the hogs at each side of the building, at which a trough is placed. These lots are made about twenty-five rods long and each contains about one and one-fourth acres. A sleeping house, which is described below, is placed in each of these lots at a point about twenty-five rods from the feeding house, so that the hogs may be compelled in bad weather to take exercise of going to and from feed. laa Another convenience that is indispensable for handling hogs with profit is a good sleeping house. The sleeping house as illustrated by cut No. 4 pos- sesses many advantages over almost any other plan used. The side walls should be made about eighteen inches high, and the roof, a comb roof, at half pitch. A small door, to be kept closed except one may need to open it to aid sow at farrowing, should be made in back end, and an opening in the front end only large enough for the hog to go in and out. No door is required in the front end, which should face to the south. The strip of timber across at the bottom of this opening should be two inches thick and six inches wide. Sufficient dirt should be thrown inside of the house that water will not run into it, and a plank floor laid flat on the ground to prevent draft from beneath floor. A small box should be securely fas- tened in one of the corners at the front end of this house in which to place salt, lime, ashes. ete., for the hogs. The bed at farrowing time Fig. 4. A Very Satisvacrory, INEXPENSIVE SLEFPING House. should be of some material that will not bunch badly and will keep the pigs as dry and warm as possible. For bedding older pigs or hogs a bed of dry cobs from the corn-sheller filled in five or six inches deep all over the bettom of the house will be found much more satisfactory than any- thing now in general use. Slaked lime should be scattered plentifully through the bed. Such a bed is always dry, free from dust, and the hogs can not cover up in it and get too warm. Besides, even in bad weather, it seldom needs to be changed. The low side walls and low roof prevent the sow from lying too close to the side wall and crushing her pigs. The single opening prevents draft, and the weather has to be ex- cessively cold when the heat from the body of the sow does not keep the house warm and comfortable. The house should be no larger than neces- sary to accommodate the hogs sleeping in it. Unless the sow is very large. five feet wide and six feet long will be a very good size for the house for sow and pigs. and where twelve to fifteen hogs sleep together, 3 158 unless they are very large, a house eight feet wide and ten feet long will be found large enough. In changing bedding upend the house, burn the bed on the space occupied by floor of house, and replace the house on space burned over, and re-bed as before. The smaller-sized house may be built at a cash expense of not to exceed $2. A trial of such a house so arranged will convince any farmer that a hog can be made to gain a pound a day with the feed on which the same hog with poor shelter and a wet bed will make no growth. Fig. 5. A HomemMave BREEDING Box. Another convenience that is indispensable, if a properly developed, mature boar is used, is a properly constructed breeding box. Such a ‘box is shown by cut No. 5. By the use of a breeding box it matters not how small the sow, she may be bred to any sized boar, and always receive a good service. Any boar gets better litters of pigs and has much less trouble about getting sows in pig where the box is used. In order to accommodate ali sized sows, the floor of this box is made thirty-two inches wide and five feet four inches long, and is nailec to three cross pieces two by three inches, placed an equal distance apart underneath the floor. The upright pieces are two by three inches and the two longer ones on each side are thirty inches long and the shorter one 159 on each side is same size and fourteen inches long. The cut shows straps of iron on each side of these upright pieces and extending down through the floor so that the ends of the straps of iron fit in each side of the cross piece underneath the floor. A bolt extends through the lower ends of these straps of iron and through the cross piece underneath the floor to hold the side of the box in place. In from the row of mortises in the right side of the floor five inches and ten inches a second and third row of mortises are made, that this side of the box when the sows to be bred are smaller may be moved in and thus make the box narrower to suit the size of the smaller sow. The body of the sow should fill the space between the two sides of the box. The board lengthwise in the center of the breeding box is five inches wide with the two upper edges rounded off. This board is bolted at one end to a cross piece about ten inches above the floor. This cross piece also has holes bored in end to suit the different widths at which box is used. The high open end of the breeding box should be placed against a fence or side of a building when used. The cut shows the box ready to receive the sow. As soon as the sow goes into the box astride the board the end of the board now resting on the floor is raised up between her hind legs and the notched bar shown in the eut is slipped through the end of the box under the end of the board and behind the hind legs of the sow. This prevents her from backing out of the box. The notches in this bar fit over the edges of the side pieces of the box and prevent it from spreading. A row of auger holes is bored in one of the strips on each side of the box through which a piece of half-inch gas pipe is run at proper place to prevent the sow from running too far forward in the box. A plank platform two feet wide and three feet long should be placed at the lower end of the breeding box immediately behind the sow. This plat- form may be propped up higher or lower to suit the boar to the height of the sow. The timber, iron, bolts, ete., for such a box will cost about $1.25. SNARE AND HURDLES. Two other conveniences that are inexpensive and yet indespensable in handling hogs are a snare and a hurdle. The snare is made of a piece of small, stout rope, about six feet long, with a slip-nose in one end to slip over the upper jaw of the hog, and a short stick tied to the other end to take hold of. A hog becomes perfectly manageable when the snare is put on him. Hurdles are made of parts like small gates about vihirty-two inches high and four feet long. The most common form of hurdle is made of two of these parts connected in the center by a pair of strap hinges. A man at each end of the hurdle can corner and catch almost any hog, and by the use of the snare and hurdle hogs soon become as manageable as any other kind of stock. 160 WHAT THE HOG HAS DONE FOR THE FARMER. BY THEO. LOUIS, DUNN COUNTY, WIS. It is a difficult matter to do justice to this subject. From the days of our Pilgrim Fathers he was the companion and supporter of the pioneer on his journey westward, until his abode is in every State and Territory of the Union from the Atlantic to the Pacific. On the plains and in the Rockies (the home of the buffalo, the antelope and the grizzly) he reigns supreme, at home in every clime, the ever true abiding friend of the pio- neer. It would give volumes of interesting reading if farmers had left behind stories of his individual benefit, ever dividing the hardships, with a contented grunt for the smallest favors. It would be the story of mil- lions that the hog laid the foundation of their happy, free and independ- ent homes—if we were not so forgetful and did not ascribe success to our own individual efforts, forgetting that in the mighty struggle he divided the hardships of poor shelter, storms and starvation. It was he that fur- nished the main stable of wholesome nutritious meat and the necessaries of life; he paid for shoes and winter garments; it was he that paid for the first cow. he that paid for the first plow; it was he that furnished the money for taxes, however small they were, but they were cash. When other products had to be sold for half cash and half trade he demanded cash and it was ever forthcoming. He walked to his burial and future home and liquidated the note on the team; he bought the school books; it was he that paid for the material for stable, for horses and cow; while he without a discontented grunt took his abode in a straw pile, and his mate brought forth lusty litters, any one of which would excel the three- year-old steer in value in ten months. It was he that paid the doctor bill, he that lighted up the first Christmas tree and furnished the toys for the kids, the first merino dress, calico and trimmings, and caused the smiles and tears of joy. It was he that replaced the log hut, the sod house, the shanty, with comfortable and often stately homes. He paid for the edu- cation at city schools, and the professional boy forgets that his superior education is somewhat due to the American hog. The wheat farmer of the West, that trusted his all in wheat until it went below the cost of production, found in him his savior—he paid his way. ten pounds per bushel, live weight. His presence changed agricul- ture on the plains;.he ate alfalfa, clover and bluegrass. Corn was no longer a drug on the market, but a remunerative freight product for rail- road. It was no longer fuel—he replaced it with coal and gasoline. He brought about mixed husbandry. Go where you will, if you find him in- 161 telligently cared for with a liberal hand, the farmer’s reward is sure to come. In 1898 he found his way to distant shores in— Mv w HO P'S ercpete atin ches. cidls ohare. isles We Gale sss Bian oeee 6 $110,487 FUG OMe Rees vest oe stoke S's, okra iderararanel annie nataiale nas 46,380,918 EV ATI SWerwesr derek: cule ota e ae leet Os. Mace na Seewecws LO I8RS2 YEXOTE SS ey Re ee 815,075 NZ Op Ya eee aPC IAC ORs sear cs che a, Gd 5.50 ox’e..5. Fy wobeise'e¥) wile tas oer gies AieMercviota diane 4,906,961 Neate Cee sere ie Ana Sane SaaS sewlis Snel ve re ah ay. OE iter wr vob anid 39,710,672 LINO Gaal mentee rat Paes ee caer ayia ever ke Sacre ac ee ueestees ene $110,811,638 American farmer, read, think, stick with intelligence to the American hog, better his condition, stick to him as he sticks to you, brother-like. They tell you that he is not what he should be, they show you figures of sales and exports, but all sink into insignificance in comparison with the American hog. TREATING THUMPS IN PIGS. BY W S. HALEY, WILSON COUNTY, TENN. Thumps is one of the most disastrous diseases among hogs. In fact, I believe it keeps more pigs from reaching the smoke-house than all other diseases combined. Its ravages, however, are almost entirely confined to shoats or pigs, so we do not feel the loss from them as badly as when cholera takes off the same number of large hogs, yet where real cholera kills one hog, thumps take off pigs by the score. Then how to prevent thumps and how to cure them are subjects of vital importance to every hog-raiser. For thumps, as for all other diseases, preventives are better than cures, still, after all known precautions have been followed, we will have a few cases of thumps. then we have a need for a remedy. The most frequent causes which haye come under my observation, I believe, are ex- posure to bad weather, sleeping in dust, a want of a properly balanced ration, and a lack of proper exercise. The last mentioned cause of thumps is often really the effect of one or all of the preceding, yet it is sometimes due to pure laziness in the pig and that laziness the result of the way the pigs are fed. The sleeping quarters may be warm, dry, and free from dust; the pigs may have access to them at all times as they certainly should have; and the food may be of exactly the right nature as far as we can de- termine and plentiful at that; if it is always fed to them from the trough 11—Swine. 162 the pigs will become lazy and inactive, and their health will be endan- gered. I have actually seen pigs that had been fed that way starve to death before they would get out and get something to eat when good suc- culent food was plentiful at the cost of just a little exercise. That seems strange, but it is true nevertheless. In a bunch of forty I bought one spring there were ten pigs that had been fed on slops and scraps in that way. They were the prettiest pigs in the lot. I turned them into a plenty of green rye and artichokes, but neither of those ten would work for a living. I fed them for awhile and tried to reduce their feed gradu- ally, but they would not get out of their lazy wallows. I would toll them out into the field every day, but they would go right back to their wallows. They would eat the roots greedily if fed to them, but they would not root nor graze. Right there in one month five of those pigs starved to death, and it was only by the greatest patience that I ever induced the other five to quit their lazy habits, while the rest of the shoats did well. So my ad- vice is to have plenty of good food, but let the pigs gather for themselves as much as possible in good weather. Teach them to be industrious, be careful to provide good sleeping places, keep them free from lice, and you will reduce thumps close to a minimum. As I said before, after all possi- ble caution we are likely to have an occasional case of thumps. Then we need a remedy. I know of none that is infallible, but I have had real good success with a very simple treatment. I have never seen a case of thumps in a pig without there being some constipation, and often the bowels are terribly hard. I remove this evil by injecting some warm, greasy suds by means of a syringe, about once a day until the bowels are regulated, or give castor oil for the same purpose, but I prefer the former method as the relief is immediate and the stomach unmolested. Then with either treatment give regular feed.of good slops, scraps of meat, potatoes, ete. Induce them to eat but do not overfeed. HOW LONG TO FEED HOGS. It is often a question as to how long a pig should be fed before it should be marketed, or rather at what weight it is best to sell in order to realize the best profit. There is one fact pretty well settled, and that is, the greater the weight of the animal being fed the greater the cost per pound for the gain secured. But no set rules can be given, as conditions must always be considered in determining which is best. Sometimes it will be better to feed longer and for a heavier weight than at others. There are two kinds of days that are unfavorable seasons for feeding. These are extremely cold days of winter and extremely hot days in sum- mer. Of course on the farm and especially when it is an item to feed 168 out the greater portion of the products grown upon the farm to stock on the farm, some stock must be fed during these seasons, but as far as possible these shouid be either young growing stock or breeding animals. This is especially the case with hogs. In fact, in many cases it will be better to sell a little lighter weight than to feed through the summer. In fact, generally light weight hogs, averaging 150 to 175 pounds, will bring better prices per pound than those of heavier weight, and when, in addi- tion, the unfavorable conditions of growth with the risk of loss, are taken into consideration it will be better to sell in June rather than to feed longer. It is always advisable so far as possible to have hogs sent to market in a good condition, and it will pay to commence in good season in order to secure this. But it is rarely advisable at this time to feed for heavy weight when this would compel feeding through July and August before marketing. It will be a good plan to look after the pigs and push the growth of all that can be put in a good marketable condition by July, and all these should be sold, feeding only young, growing pigs and what breeding hogs it is considered best to keep. BREEDING AND FHEDING HOGS. BY P.-W. PETERSON, VERMILLION, S D. Hog-raising is a financial issue; the problem now before us is what kind of hog shall we breed, and what shall we feed to produce the most dollars and cents in the least time and with the least feed. On this point there is a diversity of opinion between farmers, breeders and professors of agricultural colleges, but not so much on the feed as on the breed. We all have some idea as to what we want in the shape of a hog, some preferring one kind and others something different, and with some color makes considerable difference, and they will sacrifice some quality to ob- tain the desired color, while knowing that the market price makes no difference as long as the hog carries the required quality and finish. The selection of the sow is the first and most important matter for the breeder to consider. Some people are satisfied when they have a sow that will raise a large litter of pigs, but do not stop to consider either the feeding qualities or early maturity, nor symmetry in form, which is so very es- sential in the foundation of a herd. I have noted some farms where there have been all colors and all shapes of swine, and these have been used as brood sows, and in nine cases out of ten these sows have all been mated 164 with the same male. Such breeding is simply ridiculous, and shows the inability of the breeder to understand his business. It is this kind of breeding that degenerates size, quality and would in two or three crosses bring the hogs back to where they were twenty or thirty years ago, and we would still be annoyed by razor backs and rail splitters the same as our southern neighbors are this very day, where the hogs are all let run at large and breed at nature’s will. By comparing the up-to-date bred hog with the wild razor back of the South, is it any wonder that the breeder of improved hogs feels proud of his success? ‘These men, the im- provers of hogs, have been very careful in the selection of their breeding stock and have not selected anything for breeding purposes which has not shown up the necessary qualifications to help to promote an ideal hog. In selecting their brood sows they have picked those that had the qualifi- cations for thriftiness, short wide nose, which denotes strength, wide be- tween the eyes and ears, which denotes intelligence, wide between the forearms, a full neck, a well tilled heart girth, and a well-sprung rib, which denotes good lung power, an active heart, and a robust constitution. Then comes the straight, wide, slightly arched back and shoulders and hams to compare, all put upon four straight, stout legs well set out on the corners. After they have chosen their brood sows as near to these qualifi- cations as their circumstances would permit they have then to set about getting a herd header which, upon past experience would induce them to believe, would produce good results by mating, and helping to improve the most deficient point in their herd. Now then we have arrived at one of the most critical points of the hog business, which is the time of breeding. It is as important to have your hogs in the right condition at this period of time as it is to have a steam engine in condition before you fire up. If you do not something will go wrong during the event and the manager of the engine or the herd of hogs will have to suffer the consequences of his neglect. In order to acquire the best results from your breeding. it is necessary that your hogs should not be too fat, rather a little thin and on the upward turn, on moderate feed as under those circumstances your sows and male both are more apt to be healthy, strong and vigorous, which is very necessary in order to produce a large, healthy. strong litter of pigs. After breeding it is also necessary that your sows should be dieted in order to obtain good results at farrowing. By dieting, I mean that the sows should be fed diversified feed which has a tendency to pro- duce more bone and muscles than fat. It is to the detriment of both the mother and the young to feed a full corn diet at this time. I have had very good luck with my brood sows by feeding them one-third oats, one- third barley, and one-third corn chopped and soaked twelve hours before feeding, but I allow them to take plenty of exercise at this period of time, and as a tonie I feed them beets, mangelwurzels or potatoes, whichever I happen to have. Hither of these are first-class substitutes for green pasture in summer. I also intend to feed enough of the above rations 165 from breeding to farrowing to keep the sows on a steady gain. I prefer a sow in pretty good flesh at farrowing time, which enables her to with- stand the pressure for a long time caused by the sucking pigs. At and after farrowing we must be very careful as to what and how much we feed the sow, as on the first few days’ feeding depends altogether the wel- fare of our young litter of pigs. It is also necessary in cold or chilly weather, that the youngsters should be watched and cared for so they do not chill right after birth. I keep a stove in my farrowing house, and as soon as a pig is born he is carried to the stove, wiped and dried by the fire. I then leave him by the stove to exercise and wait for the next pig which goes through the same performance. After the labors are all over, and I have a whole box of nice, lively pigs, I take them to the mother, and give them their first meal, and see to it that they all get something to eat. I then put them in the box again and place it by the stove where the little beauties will lie down to sleep, quiver and sneeze to show how they appreciate the warmth of the fire in the new world. They are kept in this box for one or two days, according to the weather and the disposition of the mother, but are taken to their mother once every three hours to be fed. After the pigs are a couple of days old they commence to feel very inde- pendent, can stand considerable cold, and can keep out of the way of their mother’s feet. As I said before, the feeding of the mother plays a very important part at and after farrowing time. I shall tell you my experi- ence, and how I feed at this time. Twenty-four hours after farrowing I feed the sow her first meal, which consists of some light food made into a swill and about one ounce of Glauber salts mixed with it, and of this mixture I only feed about one-half regular feed for three or four days. After that I commence to increase the feed very slowly minus the salts until I have her on full feed in about ten days, but I never feed more than what she is willing to clean up well before she leaves the trough. By giving a sow a little too much feed after farrowing, especially heavy food, it will create a fever which will terminate in milk fever, which is very fatal to her young and dangerous to herself. Too rapid an increase in the mother’s feed will increase the flow of her milk in excess to the de- mand of her young, and as they will only nurse what they need the rest is left in the udder, where it will become stale and unpalatable to the youngsters. The next time they nurse, they will nurse less, leaving a larger surplus of milk in the udder which will at once commence to clot, and we then have what we call a clotted udder, which also brings on a fever, and if the pigs will nurse at all, you are sure to lose a part, if not all of them, from the effects of the feverish milk, and in nine cases out of ten your sow will go dry, and if any pigs remain after nursing the feverish milk, they starve to death. In most cases of this kind, the experienced man will lay the fault to the sow saying she is no milker at all; she is just starving her pigs to death; while the fact remains that he is to blame, and no one else. By judicious feeding we can avoid all this trouble, and 166 then have a slick, growthy, looking litter of pigs, and there is nothing better looking on the farm among the domestic animals than a nice even litter of pigs. When pigs are about five weeks old they should be taught to eat by themselves, separate from their mother, in a place made for that purpose where they can eat without being disturbed. As they proceed to learn to eat, the mother’s feed should be decreased, and prepare her to wean her pigs with as small a flow of milk as possible. After weaning, these pigs should be kept on full feed and fed three times a day of milk and shorts, ground barley or oats with one-half corn meal which should be made into a slop and let soak from one meal to another, but care must be taken to see that this swill is always kept sweet, as acid from sour swill will ruin the digestive organs of young pigs, which will leave the system susceptible to any disease within reach, and then your hog business will be unprofitable. After a pig is past five months of age his digestive organs are stronger and can digest more heavy food, stand more abuse and still thrive. At six to seven months of age those that are in- tended for the market should be separated from those intended for breed- ing purposes and should gradually be put on full feed and pushed to a finish as soon as possible. In order to finish a hog he should be on a full feed of corn, but after you have got him as fat as he can be without. de- tracting from his comfort put him on the market at once for he is very unsafe to keep because a hog fatted on a corn diet is very tender and cannot stand any abuse or disease. These hogs kept for breeding purposes should never be put on a corn diet but should be fed feed that has more bone and muscle producing qualities. VALUE OF PURE-BRED HOGS FOR THE MARKET. BY J. 0. HIBBS, VINE GROVE, KY. The value of thoroughbred swine on the market is of a twofold na- ture. To the producer it means a lessening of both time and food, two valuable adjuncts for the farmer to combine. Formerly with the ridge- rooters it took from 18 to 24 months to get a pig ready for the market. Now, with increased knowledge and consequently thoroughbred hogs, the pig is ready for the market in from six to eight months, a saving of from 12 to 16 months’ time, attention and food. This is of equally as much interest to the consumer as to the grower; they get younger, purer, sweeter meat. It Has been said “the demand creates the supply.” In regard to pork and bacon I beg to reverse the axiom and say that pork and bacon will 167 create the demand. By this I mean the kind, the quality of pork and bacon will increase or decrease the demand. Let a butcher serve his patrons with strong, coarse meats and his customers will soon lose all appetite for such. Let him put young, fresh, sweet, juicy pork on the market and the patrons will buy more and buy oftener. One lamentable fact stands out more prominently than all others, that is, some farmers (with emphasis on some and a soft accent on farmers) send hogs to the market that should not even go to the soap factory for fear that after the addition of lye and a continued boiling some of the disease germs might linger. I doubt, indeed, if they are fit for anything other than a bullet followed by a lime pit. There are farmers who are more anxious for financial gain than personal honor, knowing such hogs cannot pass the inspector, cure these diseased animals as country bacon, thus doing irreparable harm to the honest farmer, to say nothing of the harm done the community. The twentieth century farmer should breed nothing but the best, feed nothing but the best in order to get the best results. Bear in mind we cannot plug off time, neither can we rest on our oars without drifting down stream. ‘Time and the tide wait for no man.’ If we hope to deal ereditably with the hog, we must take Father Time by the forelock and with a retrospection of the past and a hope for the future be up and doing in the present. A question might be raised, should all farmers (both little and big) breed thoroughbreds? I claim they should. The little farmer is apt to say, “I raise so few hogs it would not pay me to carry thoroughbreds,” to which there can be but one answer, “It does pay.” Is there not a sense of satisfaction in looking at even a few good hogs? In addition to this, they feed better, sell better, and a farmer naturally takes better care of thoroughbreds than scrubs. He would not forget to give them salt and hardwood ashes every ten days; he would keep a sharp lookout for vermin, would watch for coughs and feed charred corn to lessen the chance for swine plague. The farmer in the present and future must needs to cultivate both. brain and muscle if he hopes to reach the front rank. He should pro- vide himself with from five to six good agricultural papers, and in the experience of others reap profits unto himself, and thus become a walking encyclopedia of knowledge—a blessing to his own household and a ready help to his neighbors. He should be able to go on an old abandoned farm and with rye, clover and peas, with a little corn with which to finish, with good thoroughbreds and be able to rear hogs by the dozen where originally hogs would not grow at all. A farmer who carries thoroughbreds soon becomes a noted figure in the community and instead of his having to seek a buyer the buyer seeks him, knowing full well such hogs are always in demand and will top the market. 168 DEVELOPING BREEDING STOCK. BY CALDWELL NORTON, LOUISVILLE, KY. The future usefulness of any young breeding animal depends in a great measure upon its development. To illustrate: I will take a farmer and a breeder living on adjoining farms. Both are corresponding with a breeder of another State in regard to pigs three months old. Price and description satisfactory. Pigs arrived and were up to expectations in every way, and both buyers well pleased. The breeder takes his pig home and, as he is only three months old, puts him in a lot of one acre with six other boar pigs of the same size, with good grass and comfortable house for protection from the weather. This pig is fed on a rich slop made of shipstuff and water, and is given just what he will clean up three times a day, with enough corn and oats to keep in good flesh and at the same time it makes a balanced ration. This pig is kept this way until October 1st, when he is put in a lot to himself and pushed a little faster, as he will have to do service the following months on about five sows, and is fed more so he will not go down hill at a time he should be growing out of pighood into hoghood. When there is a sow to be bred she is brought to his lot, or put in breeding box just outside, and he is taught how to serve either in or out of box. We find the breeder’s pig at eight months old in good fix, weighing about 800 pounds, not over-fat, and growing right along. We find him in the same lot next March at one year old, weigh- ing 400 pounds, having had plenty to eat and dry, clean place to sleep all winter. We find him the next March, at two years old, in the same lot in breeding fix, weighing between 600 and 650 pounds, and the sire of 200 stout, healthy pigs. The breeder’s pig is just sold for $150 and is well worth the money because he has proved to be a good sire. The farmer’s pig is taken home and turned in an orchard with a few calves. He is fed more corn than he can eat for about a month, and is also treated to the dish water from the house, but is beginning to show that he misses the good, rich slop that is the only thing that will grow a pig right. By the first of July the pig is forgotten, as the farmer is so busy laying corn by and getting ready to start in his hay. Although the pig is seen on Sundays and the farmer thinks he is not doing well at all, and wonders what is the matter. By the middle of August the apples begin to fall and the pig gets more than he should haye, and in another month he looks like he would soon farrow, but there is very little fat on his bones. He, next month, is expected to do service, and is turned in with six old sows and about six gilts and makes a record for himself that would do him credit if he had been three years old, and at this time in 169 his life is when he is overworked and his usefulness is marred forever. We find him all winter sleeping around a straw stack and being fed his corn in the mud that is about six inches deep. This pig has forgotten a long time ago what slop tastes like, as he has never seen any since he left the home where he was farrowed. We now find the farmer’s pig, at one year old, in very thin order, after having only about half he wanted to eat all winter, weighing about 175 pounds, and the farmer is disgusted with him, but should be with himself, as this pig could not grow on only feed enough to keep up animal heat, but the farmer could not see that he had neglected him. Farmer’s pig is put in the fattening pen, and the last we see of him he is en route for the stock yard weighing something less than 300 pounds at eighteen months old, and the farmer is fully convinced that it’s good money thrown away to invest the same in pedigreed stock. AMERICAN SWINE. BY J. R. DODGE, WASHINGTON, D. C. This country surpasses all others in swine, as in corn, tobacco and eotton. The numbers reported in packing operations are by no means all, though best known and easiest counted. Mr. C. B. Murray keeps a very complete record of these packing operations, and supplies current data relative to hogs killed, meats cut and cured and lard rendered. The United States Treasury takes note of exports of meats from the packers and live hogs from shipping ports. Usually between one-fourth and one-fifth of the total product of the United States is exported, say 22 per cent., and of late about 28 per cent. of the product of packing establishments. Last year’s packing included 22,201,000 hogs in the west, a decrease of 1,450,000 from the previous year, the largest packing record ever made. The total east and west was 28,172,000, against 29,793,000 the previous year. To this should be added, for farm and town slaughtering in the South, and on farms and in villages from the Atlantic coast to the Pacific, prob- ably 12,000,000 more of various weights, but the larger portion small, and averaging about two-thirds as much as the recorded packing, and making fully 20,000,000 hogs slaughtered the past year in the United States. The record for last year (to March 1, 1900), east and west, is, for green meats made, 3,498,000,000 pounds; lard, 944,000,000; together, 4,442.000,000. To this add 1,200,000,000 for the farm and other killing outside of organ- ized packing, or 5,642,000,000 pounds of product made in the United States. The value of hogs slaughtered represents a heavy item in farm pro- duction. Last year the regular packers paid $267,858,000 for their hogs. 170 The farm and other hogs, at an average of $6.50, would add $78,000,000, and make an aggregate value of $345,858,000. Ten years ago the packing record was only $181,169,000, and though the number of hogs was greater in 1898-99, the aggregate cost of last year’s supply was greater than in any previous year. * There is a considerable variation in the cost of hogs, depending on the supply. Last year the cost may be considered nearly an average of $4.11 per 100 pounds live weight as paid by western packers. In the last decade the average of four years was greater, up to $5.87 in 1893-94, and former years less, down to $3.30 in 1896-97. 'The cost averaged a little higher in the previous decade, ranging in the several years from $6.65 in 1882-83 down to $3.75 in 1884-85, lower than $4 only two years, while in the past ten years the average was below that tigure four years. The fol- lowing is a statement of average cost: Seasons. Summer. Winter. Year. SOO Ole caus sar cise Mee Riese tae iat $3 91 $3 54 $3 74 SOIAOD Fee ete oe ee eee ee 33 Oil 4 16 1892-93 2a csemiee Gee oe ene ce ieee Oe 6 54 5 60 SO 3-94 yao. eis RN lore tenet eae ee oot 5 26 5 87 day? fs SS Fs De cae cer ctcots en te eee ciaiG 0 4 98 4 28 4 67 TS95-OG Hee tinea: Sse cree ec heyhae aes ees 4 41 3 68 4 O07 S96 sO T a ce ee ee ice ee eee ee 3 30 3 30 3 30 SOFAS eco. ae te eee Ae LIE ca ae ee ay 1) 3.00 3 63 WSOS-99 4 ears ce cake eae eee ae oO 3 52 3 TL USSO200 0. nS mctesecas AS CR ee cae ee OD 4 29 411 The weight of hogs slaughtered averaged less than in earlier seasons of pork packing. From 1873 to 1890, inclusive, the average weight was less than 250, only in 1888, ranging from 290.53, in 1873 to 251.31 in 1887. Since the highest average was 278.20, in 1894, and the lowest 232.65 in 1899. Hogs are killed at an earlier age than formerly. Fewer are kept over winter and the tendency is to better care and feeding, more continuous and early fattening, in accordance with the ruling economics of meat mak- ing in all lines. EXERCISE. It is important that the pigs have a clean, dry bed and plenty of exer- cise. Whenever the weather permits they should be induced to stir out. Failure to take exercise is the one great hindrance to success in raising pigs in very cold weather. They burrow in their nests and remain inactive until thumps destroy them. jo ~T i YOUNG OR OLD SOWS FOR BREEDERS. BY SAM CLARK. Much has been said and written about the comparative merits of young and old sows for breeding purposes. I tried to breed up my herd in this manner: If I had forty brood sows and desired to retain the same number for the next year’s breeding I would carefully watch each sow with her litter as a mother, nurse and suckler, and just before the pigs were weaned I would discard the twenty sows which had raised me the twenty poorest litters. No matter how fine a show animal a sow might be, if she raised a poor litter she had to go, unless I specially desired her for the show ring, and then she is pretty sure to get me into trouble, as I must explain why her pigs are not with her, or, if on exhibition, why they are no better. As a matter of policy, as well as finance, it were better to dispose of her, paying no attention to age. The sow that raises the best litter of pigs, I retain, no matter if she is five or ten years old; so long as she raises my best litter of pigs she is my best brood sow and I will not discard her for a green, untried one. Now to replace the twenty sows I have discarded and turned into pork, I would take twenty sow pigs from the best sow, being careful to select them from litters of six to ten and all of the pigs in the litter good ones. If a sow had eight or ten pigs and only one or two of the litter good, I would not select breeders trom such a litter, although that one or two might be among the very best specimens in the whole herd. RAPE FOR SWINE FEEDING. Rape is fast coming to the front as a profitable crop to grow for swine pasture. Every farmer should know how to grow this crop, and give it a trial. Rape may be sown any time from early spring until the first of August, and is ready for use from eight to ten weeks after the seed is sown. The seed may be sown with oats or barley, or it may be sown by itself. If with the former, let the oats appear above ground, and then sow on two or three pounds of rape seed and cover lightly with a harrow. The dragging will not kill the oats, and will cover the rape seed. The rape starting after the oats will grow spindling because shaded. If sown at the same time the rape grows as fast as the oats and makes trouble in harvesting. When the oats are cut the rape will spring forward and fur- nish feed. Another way is to sow the rape seed by itself broadcast on 172 well prepared ground. A third way is to drill in the seed the same as rutabaga turnips, having the rows thirty inches apart and cultivating with a one-horse cultivator. Rape so seeded need not be thinned. By sow- ing early, rape will be ready for pigs by the middle of June, while the latest sowing will furnish feed from the first of October until the ground is frozen solid. It should be remembered that the rape plant stores its nourishment in the leaves which resemble the leaves of the rutabaga tur- nip, only they are larger, more numerous and more nutritious. Rape cannot be used for making hay, silage or for any such purpose—it should be fed off on the ground by stock or cut and carried to them. While rape is primarily a sheep feed, it serves about equally well for pigs. Every farmer should have a rape patch, if only half an acre in area, for his pigs. Provide an acre of rape for each 2,500 pounds of growing pigs, to be fed upon that crop. As soon as the rape plants are a foot high, turn in the pigs to feed upon them. They will greedily eat the leaves and gain about enough nourishment therefrom to support their bodies. This true, all of the extra feed will go for gain. Corn, middlings, etc., should be fed with the rape. A great advantage of rape feeding is that it keeps the digestive tract expanded and in healthful condition. Pigs fed rape fatten quickly and yery cheaply. Farmers should take extra precautions to sow none but the Dwarf Essex rape seed, which costs not over 10 cents per pound if ordered in quantity. In many cases farmers have bought oil rape seed or bird seed rape, and the crop proved a failure. Be sure to order Dwarf Essex rape seed. Sow two to three pounds per acre when drilled, and four or five pounds when broadcasted. Every pig-raiser who has not yet tried rape is urged to do so the present season. Our experiment stations were the main source of introducing rape into this country, and they have paid for themselves in what they have done in helping our farmers to this one crop. ; SLEEPING QUARTERS FOR SWINE. It is better for the hogs for them to’ sleep in the fence corners or in the beds of leaves and brush on the south side of a big log in the woods than breathe dust and trash under the corn crib, where, if permitted, they invariably seek sleeping quarters. Whether the cholera germ is in- vigorated or given better opportunity for its development by its victims sleeping in a place where fine dust and trash are several inches deep may be doubted by some, but we have it from an old swine breeder, who says fine dust in the sleeping quarters of hogs aids the germ considerably in getting a grip on the animals. While the hog is an unclean brute and seems to delight in wallowing in mud and eating offensive stuff, we be- 173 lieve this proclivity has been bred into him by stockmen, who, thinking, him naturally filthy, permit, if not compel, their hogs to occupy any little pen or bare pasture or lot, excusing the case by saying, “any place is good enough for a hog.” By the same process that has made the hog such an unclean brute we believe he can be improved in his regard for self-cleanliness and decency, though we do not expect him ever to become so fastidious as a pug dog. But by keeping the hogs in grassy pastures, providing thickly bedded sleeping quarters for them, giving feed in clean troughs, access to plenty of clean, fresh water and using the best boars, a very perceptible refor- mation will result. The health and vigor, however, of the herd will de- pend to a very large extent upon the sanitation of their sleeping quarters, where much of their time is spent. Where foul odors abound and the wind keeps the air laden with fine dust, each hog breathing the breath of another, there is likely to arise disease of some kind—and too frequently it happens to be cholera. WHAT BECOMES OF THE HOG WHEN IT REACHES THE PACKING-HOUSHE. There is probably no industry which better illustrates the economy of thorough organization, both in the saving of labor and in utilizing the whole product than that of packing. The difference between the method of slaughtering from five to seven hogs on the farm, where it requires the whole of one day and the labor of three or four people to get it into the desired form, and the method used in handling as many thousand per day in one of the large packing houses is so great that it can scarcely be comprehended by the ordinary person. There is probably no large business in which every detail is better mastered so that the following of the pig from the closing of the gate through all the stages of the making of a food product to the plac- ing of the shipping tag is interesting and profitable. The pig enters the slaughter house near the top and is received with about forty or fifty companions in a small pen. On the side of the pen is a large wheel from the rim of which is attached several chains with hooks. The pig-catcher seizes the pig by a hind leg and places a special chain above the hough and hitches it in one of the chains on the wheel. The wheel is in constant motion and as it turns lifts the hog high in the air and easily places the pig on an inclined rail and sends him on his way to the sticker. Thus one after another they follow in quick succes- sion. As the pigs pass the sticker they are killed by a single thrust of the knife and from this moment nothing is lost. Even the squeal has “NI OGXOF ‘auaASsuug MOT “SANDO 000'ZE ‘THT AY ATT “NI QEXZZ ‘HYASSAAg HOTTY *SUMGNITAY WVELY “NI ggxe7z ‘suaaxriag “INV'Id ONILVUGSINATY S.NVONIM “HdX], YOSSAUANOD ‘ANIHOVIL MOT NOT-002 (174) 175 been caught on the phonograph and turned into commercial use. Some stickers are so dextrous that no squeal ever occurs after they once seize them. The rate of the movement is checked sligitly in order to save all the blood and to give them time to die before reaching the scalding vat. The pig is dropped easily into the sealding vat and again seized by an endless chain bearing heavy prongs and turned over and dragged to the opposite end. The vat is about twenty feet long, and upon reaching the end he is lifted out by a large cradle. Men watch the course to see that the water remains at the proper temperature and to tell when the scalding is done. Upon being lifted out he is again attached to an endless chain that drags him through the scraping machine. The scraper is built like a barrel and has a large number of scrapers mounted on springs pro- jecting from the inside. These scrapers can accommodate themselves to any sized hog or any irregularity of the body so that the hog is almost clean when he reaches the opposite end. A little hair may be left upon the face, ears and feet to be removed by hand. The scraping machine may be horizontal or upright, but in either position the hog receives a copious volume of water to wash away the hair. The hog comes from the scraping machine upon the scraping table where a few men complete the work as nearly as possible while the gambrel is being put in position. The hog once more starts on a journey and the first place he meets a bath of soda water and a man with a stiff brush to clean any dark-colored patches so as to make the whole carcass look uniform. During this time he is seized and the head half severed from the body. A few feet farther along he meets the gutter, who with one stroke of the knife splits open the hog along the entire length of the body. With two or three more thrusts he releases the intestines to the diaphragm. The next man is known as the snatcher and he seizes the intestines and with one or two movements completely separates the diaphragm and then completes his job by loosen- ing the heart and lungs. How speedily this work is accomplished can only be realized when it is known that three men will handle from five to six thousand hogs in a day. They are about the best paid men in the plant. During the removal of all organs the whole operation is under the eye of a United States inspector who stands behind and above them. The hog passes on to the next man who turns on a stream of water and sluices out the body. If any remnant of a piece of trachea should remain he removes it. Two or three scrapers are then ready to receive it and shave off any hairs that may have escaped up to this time, and the last man cuts off the teats from sows and the carcass is ready for a bath. The hog moves on and is weighed, and here is the first stop that he takes on his course to the cooling room. The head is then removed and the next gentleman awaiting his arrival is known as the ham facer. He is an expert and decides what kind of ham he is best adapted to make. The weight and size of the hog are large determining factors whether the ham will be faced or not. The next man is the leaf puller and he “SNOL ae HOV ‘SHOOY OMT—ONINVIL HOT “INV Id ONILVYROIYAAY S.NVONIM (176 ) LOE removes the clear fat or leaf lard. At the same time the kidneys are taken out. One or two experts are now waiting to determine how the Garecass shall be divided—whether the back bone shall be split or shall be removed. It they decide that the back bone shall be split the hog goes on directly to the splitter, but if it is to be removed they make a cut from tail to neck on each side of the middle line of the back and the hog goes on to the splitter. The splitters must be able to do their work with great pre- cision, and some are able with only a few blows to exactly divide the spinal marrow throughout its entire length. The last man to be en- countered on the way to the cooling room is a scraper, and it is his busi- ness to remove all tags and pieces of fat and save the same for lard. One of the objects is to make the carcass appear well. The hogs intended for microscopic examination are not entirely split; the head may or anay not be removed and the leaf lard is left in position. Hogs that are condemned never have the backs removed but are thrown out entire. On leaving the killing floor for the cooling room the gambrel (which is complicated) drops and leaves each half on a separate track. The time occupied for all this from the penning to the cooling room is about ten minutes. The hanging room has the same temperature as the outside air, and the hogs remain there only such time as the weather will permit, but the object is to get rid of the animal heat. The pig is moved on to the chilling room and here he remains from twenty-four to forty-eight hours. The temperature is held at from thirty-six degrees to forty-four degrees Fahrenheit. ‘he next place he reaches is the cutting room and here he is disposed of with the same speed as has moved up to this point. The ribs are removed with huge curved draw knife; bones are either cut off with one stroke of a cleaver or sawed off on a band saw. The different packers have different names for the same cut, but they are in general, regular hams, long-cut hams, regular shoulders, the boneless ham, which is a shoulder with the bones removed, the picnics or California hams, which arc shoulders cut like hams; boneless plates, salt butts, or butt cuts, which come from the neck; fat backs, the fat from the back with the loin removed; long clear middles, short clear middles, Stafford middles, or middles with the ribs left in; clear belly or bacon, loins and tenderloins, and Cumberland cut, or a half hog with the ham, shoulder blade and humerus removed and feet cut off. The backs make the joints, the tail and the last few joints go into the lard; the feet go for pickle, for pigs feet jelly, and into glue; the knuckles go to the canning factory; the trimmings go into lard and sausage; the cut stuffs go to the cellar as dry salt or sweet pickle. Each packer has his own formula for preserving and these are kept secret. 12—Swine. W HO LISNVU], GAVG WAASNT OL SUVO YOLVAADINAMY NI XOT ONIGVOT “INVITd DONILVYUROIYHEU S.NVONIM eben Sis ist an at OB (178) 179 Most of the stuff must remain in the cellar from sixty to ninety days, depending upon the season. During the winter the meats may be shipped much greener than in summer. These meats must be moved very often and the changing of the acres of meat in order that it shall cure properly is one of the very large labor problems about the place. Some of the hams, shoulders and bacon are smoked, and this requires an immense ainount of work. All meat before being packed for shipment is tested by an expert who forces a sharp-pointed instrument into the center of the piece and then smells of it. To return again to the part of the pig left along the way. The blood is all saved and from it are made albumen now largely used by bakeries, buttons, and fertilizer. It is one of the principal sources of nitrogen for the commercial fertilizers. The hairs are saved, the bristles saved for brushes and the other hair broken and split for mortar. The intestines, with the Hver, heart and lungs, have found their way to the table; the liver, heart and lungs are separated; the intestines are “run,” separating all the fat; the stomach is saved for large sausages and the small intestines cleaned for small or link sausages. The large intes- tines are split open and the contents cleaned and thrown in the rendering tank. From the stomach rennet is obtained and pepsin made. The pan- creas furnishes the sweetbreads and pancreatin. The suprarenal capsules furnish suprarenal extract. The bladders are saved for putty. The spleen goes into fertilizer. The livers are only saved in part for shipment, some are used in puddings and the balance go for fertilizer. The fat about the heart and lungs is stripped; the heart is made into sausage and the remainder goes into the rendering tank. The head is not a very valuable part; the jowl is opened and the lean removed to make sausage; the tongues go to the canner, some are pickled and some into sausage. The balance of the head goes to the lard tank. Lard is designated in the market as prime clear, pure leaf, open kettle, rendered, etc. The rendering tanks also yield white grease and black grease and from this machine oils, soap grease, etec., is derived. The crack- lings from the lard press are ground up and make meat meal for dogs and stock. The other cracklings, bones, etc., go into fertilizer. Very little pork goes into sausage. The main part of the meat used in sausage is beef with only sufficient pork to give flavor. A considerable amount of fat is also used in the butterine with the beef fat. fe Ne) free KINGAN’S KILLING DEPARTMENT. Hog-Haneing Room For 3,000 Hogs. "HOV SANNOd 000°L ALI “iL sp eee og hi . se OVdVQ HOVUBAY ‘SUNV], XIQ-ALUIHY, N aw WLUVdAd GUVT S.NVONIN oe “ ae Magheees, ee “SUNY, r3) NIVRONGY (181) “Sada, GUY] ONITII NOWLUVdEHd CUVT S.NVONIM (182) ‘Sussayg MQ auvyT INAWLUVdEd GUVT S.NVONIW fe ee ee SONNE re cienes (183 ) “LYAW, ONILIVS INGWLYUVdad ONIYNO S.NVONIM (184) KINGAN’S BEEF DEPARTMENT. Beer Cootinc Room—CaPacity, 1,000 Heap. ( 185 ) “SHOONOT, ONIYVdHA dg “LNOWLYVdad DNINNVO S.NVONIM “SNYQ ONIYVIL ‘LNAWLUVdad DSNINNVO S.NVONIW *KOOY ONITIAV'T “INUWLYUVdad ONINNVO S.NVONTH (188 ) . IN ‘g41000 ENINALLAG "STIOY ONINOVG NIM AWLUVdAd ANIYALLAG S.NVO ne ie * sig 9 ) (18! LN “SULLAQ LVS aovsavg HWLUVdad AYVYSNVS S.NVONIM Seema etme ) (190 INAWLYUVdad ONINVATO DNISVO S.NVONIM (191) “dUVA HSNOH-ONIAGOL S.NVONIM cadena were te Sao R map ae Fpesnenyen a i Page. TNTOUY Ee» chy ae ce ea Soke “aly telllesee we louae eos 39 Breeding Animals— Where and how toselectt.........2..-. is acon a 77 Someomts In SWING arn) any 4. ale Ee Vallone gets SNe Ne 121 Breeders— Moppublic:sales:benefit: the-;¢ «34 bs. Se eA Wee Be ae LOD Breeders’ Meetings— Wihtat benefits to be derived from... << «ss 4 2 «4 e465 - 103 The care of pigs. . .. - ee ee aE ere eee Pens 104 Breeding Animals, mature . . 127 A bad practice. . . ye ae Rec Mehi 127 Keep the good. . . ST ee ae ce nee cam eT 2S Ded comis 128 Uniform herds ..... Pith fests als ky 160, Geen eRe neti ake 129 Heading. <5. 6 EE te LI aries ie OO peat a ts RE Sa i 163 Stdckadeveloping’ <5 6 ss stelee « ie Evoke eeu ee 168 Breeds of Swine— Rolands@hinag score } 6). * sys ict 3 IBCUKSHITCS PEs Moves en ete et a oad Sei ee 4 Chester Whites 5 AVAICLOTEAR RR ai ca Ba y Ske etascnhos Soynl ohukc ont) ep ee con tte ia 6 Suftolksie., 1c curccsaes = 6 TERS yes ci TES eA sn a a ee eg 6 Thin Rinds 7 Duroc-Jerseys . . 7 113 Crossing Breeds . . . . 13—Swine. Diseases of the Nervous System— Paralysis 4. ston, 'sies ge Geers Chorea Sun or heart stroke. . ...... 6” .0/> 0 he: pe) Lien pete Fe, ie), te em © Apoplexy )... <)- Diseases, Other— Effects of meat brine. . .-.-.. Effects of washing powders . . . . Effect of cotton seed . . Wheat and barley beard . Effects of cockle burrs ciate ye: “te « 6.” © Diseases of the Reproductive System— Abortion Barrenness © és @) (Je fier ie 66) 6 ew Oe Inversion of the uterus or vagina . Mammuitis (garget). . . . Diseases Respiratory— Catarrh . Sore throat .. . Bronchitisn) ee ie ene vi) ey" Heyman, « eo) te— se eear Telco! wee "0 cleo p cole foe o%e, fe. .<) b@iatec elise!” ye) “6 Ve ese te ee. tet oy) le eM) sie! 0) ‘elas slo) sin le. = ki 2) site: \) ee een (ale te Leys ole /8! ia, cons earen oe 6 wee, Nome e98) .@) 8) e) oD erae ate) ta") 16, [60 /e epee Ke, se) 1s) leg, ene oi) 6) fe ce: 0] ‘es Te vey Kageer (0) sieume © ce, (ssh o er kei iio, @ le (he le), oie, ve Chee Dee CCM Oa An ir es hema ey | 195 Diseases Respiratory— Continued. Page. Bneumonianeiye bs us is Ge es wl a es we Gt ay en DODO Oe 24 IPIGUIIBYioe a st! sow) Gey wa BRE Red bis eathe 24 Woumtieeele a 42 x bee ee Bhienta 3 “ch Bord .e10, 49 om 24 MR WORIAS? aha Bear eis a. cee eS desk. ‘go wees, wa eee ee ee 25 Suifiesmsnuiies, bullnose ta). @. 9. . sd a ue oye eee ee 26 Diseases of the Skin— li. ofa) ee tas, san oP ka eo: a ee eee Se 28 Mampevre « cas: — at As eRe Speers Pee 29 Wnticartasnettle-rash, surielt s?. 9s 2.4. 43". sof eee, oe ee 29 IG ZeMameremee chases a sk ke eh wes ih Ase ae alae aoe 30 OEPURLH EIS RAE ae a cor bce sm a Ge etn bh ae ene) OU ae 30 Feeding— Generale principles: observed) in... s+. 6, & a) eats A ok ee 82 How to produce most from feed consumed... . . . 2... ee. 83 Sueculentawinterdeed)... . - «a6 os 6s eas eae pe 85 Tankage—a substitute for milk... . ...... Ae ae 86 Oldimethodscontrasted .- . ss sw we ee mw eae 87 wartltesex rape as-a forage Crop’ <2 4 «i's als jaca spe eens 87 Fall pigs, feeding and management of... .... . onthe: 110 Wiheatmerei tk ee NG Fa Ns, a is ee ee eee a 126 MIRERDTOOURSOW. gates, ah: otc ‘ow /ials ey co tos oo tal ws a a ae ane oe eer 129 Hogs, manufacturing... .-.-.--+:- 10 Ske oe ae 89 Wikvdo they @eteick... 6 6). jn 2 8 e8 oo eae ins ee 91 Nrdmitsmmanagvement . oS 4 1S ea TO eee: cece en eee 97 Preparing for the show ring... ---.- - + + +e ee eee 99 Whole vs. ground feed for... .-..- - Ch, ie ea 107 Digi: (Oe aa eee a mem Ail ete oe Cra ST ed eee 108 Fattening for the market. - ---+-+-+-+-++- bows ciek pole 111 Wallow,a word forthe. ..-.-.-. - Scie fea ee 112 Crossing breeds . b La et ON VERE Ia Sa! Rn eas ae eae 113 Sure and quick returns. - ~~. +--+ + ee st tere “4114 Best summer pasture for... - +--+ +--+: See ee 147 (Ton Ge ee a PIO ee re ha STR, Go ca 150 Convenience for handling .~ . Pee ene eee Ch Sab Ane 153 Spaeaen chitel Jiiboes lt peecees cee Oren oo ceuren) rio | SC Sras ie boeak st 159 What he has done for the farmer ..-...--:+.- a et eae 160 196 — manufacturing— Continued. Page. How ‘long toideed! i 226 iirc, conte eee x ae cna eee oe 162 Breeding and feeding’ sn, or omit en a erates tees eer 163 Value of pure bred for market... .......-. Sees ce 166 Hydrophobiaie cae een eee Spee ee lee Hane ete” Ralcdece iy, santa 39 Hog Cholera and Swine Plague. ...-.. 2) fits ot PSkaemie: os peta: if 40 TsOS8eB eas Cec 5 As tea hn bah aia ego atte eet es ee oe ia te 40 Pwoddiseases . .cdifovss fe eplen neINe eo See el ee kee ele eons 4] Effectiof germs on body -.-f7-82 0. ae “aes sew eas Pe 42 Iixfevof germs onioutside of body =.= -s2ee 2s ce 4) 4 ee 44 Ways by which germsenter the body .......... «ets 45 Accessory causes ...-.... - SRR OREM) anager es eee 46 Symptoms Sav ntele hat ama ayy Ge aa asec Sun as eR RD 51 Animals afttected and immunity. . io ot. eee ee 53 (Rreatment; lames eee by x oe Neg Rha Ste URES i a outa ei leet 53 Recipes: Wess uae ce eden bo" ot au lng, sorieete ane tctme Bye eclnncees 55 Prevention by vaccination) | «2 2) ne a ee ee 56 Anti-hog cholera serum <<. . .- > 2.s) wm: <> As ape Lee oe 56 immunization anyuterois = e-seen een ene inte = Ue aig 57 Preventionvls 045-28 ece eee = yo. weaken tok ae Se 57 Stateieontrol! a2 3. 4 yeros™cucen- (-) chts cece. eee ae eer 59 GUTOSi Ee ahi tia code aerate RRC me a Rm Te HET iON ec 131 Illustrations— Needing houses seco eet, oat eee ee 154 Convenient trough. . <2 5. =: pac eae Meee 5, fe saahigs 155 Inside feeding house).¥ is), ais, <. am) cree: .s' 47 2.2) B.'s ee Be ee 94 Pointsan breeding’. ee. oy.5. “v0 ge eee coon ae 121 Beddimp the sow... 1-06 Sn: )s\s eget oe ao bee eee 122 Single house system Ee ye ee (Oren 124 Pigs on grass .... - OMe Per ery) ey ye Ste teats 125 Cloveriiayiorie --a- een eS ura at Oh: oto Beery S 126 Value.of sneculent foodvfor. 45-0 = ~'2) < twee ee eee wie 135 Amernicant-) =) 0-5 are Meer One C, Cae R eb iets 169 > Rape: forfeedinig <<< ...06 604-2 gas le eee ec 171 Swine Business—Is It Liable to be Overdone? .....-.- - aes 81 Thoroughbred Swine—Starting a Herd --...--.-+-+.+.-.-. 79 Weaning Pigs: =. .*< 2 a8 Stor og Pig te Tend: | ss tes oa ee meee oe 106 Whole vs. Ground Feed for*Elogs;. - ...-. 2-3) 25. = 2 Se 107