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About Polk County itemizer. (Dallas, Or.) 1879-1927 | View Entire Issue (April 30, 1914)
HOME AND FARM MAGAZINE SECTION 90 Per Cent of Deaths of Hogs From Cholera How to Raise Hogs in the Pacific Northwest 4 *4 *4 *4 -4 *4 *4 *4 "4 *4 *4 *4 *4 *4 *4 *4 - + 4* + TH E SW INEHERD. 4* 4* Keep the pigs warm. They 4- 4* will grow all winter if conditions 4* 4* are right. 4* 4* With bacon at 25 or 30 cents 4* 4- a pound, it pays to keep pigs 4* 4- and keep them right. 4* 4* I f the hogs are warm and 4* 4* comfortable it takes less food 4* 4* to keep them thrifty. 4* 4* The breeding sows should 4* 4* have a combination of foods and 4« 4- very little corn. 4* 4* They must have some sue- 4* 4* culent foods— roots, vegetables, 4- 4- ets., and clover hay. 4* 4* The brood sows must have 4* 4* exercise to be healthy. Bad 4* 4* luck with them can always be 4* 4* traced to ignorant or careless 4* 4* handling by the owner. 4* 4* Separate the breeding sows as 4* 4* they begin to grow heavy. 4* 4- A jam from a boss sow may 4* 4* cause the loss of the pigs and 4* 4* the sow too. 4* 4- •!* 4* 4* 'I* *1* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* 4* *1* 4* 4* 4* one-half to one-fourth digestible carbonhydrates per one hundred pounds live weight of the sow and lit ter. The same amount of nutrients is all right per 100 pounds live weight of the sow if she is fed separately from the pigs. But it may contain more coarse feed in the latter case. “ In terms of the feeds used on our farms the ration may be made up as follows: For a 250 pound sow with seven pigs weighing seven pounds each— 300 pound live weight in all— this ration requires six pounds mid dlings and three pounds skim milk; or six pounds barley and 8 pounds skim milk; or six pounds barley and four pounds tankage; or six pounds middlings and .15 pounds tankage.” Swine Buildings Are an Important Factor Don’t Break Yonr Neck P U M P IN G W A T E R B Y H A N D S A W IN G W O O D B Y H A N D L e t th e Novo Gasoline Engine do y o u r w ork . The most compact and simplest en gine made. No separate gasoline tank, no separate water tank, no piping, no careful adjustments. Absolutely guar anteed against damage by freezing. Made in all sizes from 1 h.p to 16 h.p., and furnished in combination with force pumps, centrifugal pumps, deep well pumps, wood saws, spraying out fits, etc. Lower prices than formerly. For full particulars address HE question of buildings for swine is a rather complicated and also a very important one. Almost every piggery that Is built possesses certain features peculiar to itself, rendered necessary by the cir Department C, cumstances it is intended to meet. 182-4-6 Morrison St. The most important features of a Portland, Oregon. piggery are dryness, ventilation, light, freedom from drafts, reasonable warmth and convenience. Good results cannot be secured in a damp pen, and dripping walls are a pretty sure indication of impending disaster. Stone and cement walls are very cold in winter and chill the air Men who are above the average. of the pen. A hollow cement wall is Salary $100 a month and up. Small much less objectionable than a solid effort on your part with our help, to one, but there is little dottbt that better yourself. Let us tell you how wooden walls constructed by setting others are doing it It will mean two by four scantlings on end and success to you. Get out of the rut and first boarding inside and out with write us today. Don’t delay. rough timber. This is then covered H. H. H ARRIS. up with matched lumber. I f it is International Correspondence School« thought desirable to have a loft over McKay Bldg., Portland, Ore. the pen the ceiling can be made of poles, placed a few inches apart, and well covered with straw. The floors and foundation may be constructed of cement concrete, and the foundation rise about two feet above the surface of the floor. Thorough ventilation is a great help in preserving dryness in the piggery, and it is an aid to ventilation to have a large air space, or, in other words, air can be provided for by construct ing shafts in the walls at intervals of 15 or 20 feet. These shafts should not be more than four or six inches in size, and should open outside near the ground and inside near the ceiling Provision must be made for closing A Pennsylvaina gun company Is us or partially closing these intakes. ing the waste pieces of black Circas-; Bight, especially sunlight, has wonderful influence in promoting sian walnut, left after veneer cutting health. So far as possible the win for gun stocks. dows should be on the South side of V- ' • - MMmdÜÑ the building, because the South side gets the most sun and is least ex posed to cold winds. While ventilation is necessary, drafts are extremely injurious, and their prevention should be kept in view when building the piggery. Warmth is a good thing, but it should not be secured at the expense of ventilation. A somewhat cold pen, well ventilated, but free from drafts, is preferable to a warm pen where the air is damp and foul, and the pigs will suffer less discomfort in the former. Very young pigs require warmer quarters than older ones, and when a sow farrows in winter special pains should be taken to secure warmth and freedom from drafts. T IGS begin to nibble at their mother’s feed when about four weeks old, and should then be fed all they will eat of feed that en courages growth and develops the digestive system without impairing di gestion. I f they are weaned when seven weeks old this allows but three weeks in which to accustom their nutritive organs to the change from natural to artificial nourishment. The principle involved in making this change of feed is explained by P ro fessor G. R. Samson, swine specialist of the Oregon Agricultural college, animal husbandry department, as fo l lows: “ The proportion of water in the little pig’s body is greatest at birth. This water is gradually replaced by dry matter as the pig grows older and any undue hastening of the trans posing process interferes with the pig's entire organism. “ The rate of substituting dry mfct- ter for water may be retarded by di luting the solid part of the feed with water which is incorporated into the pis: Possible to Overfeed. “ The digestive tract of the small pig is larger in proportion to his body than that of the older pig. While the more common mistake is under feeding at this time, it is also pos sible to overfeed. At this time the pig may eat and digest more food than he can take care of in his body and in such cases much of the value of the feed is wasted. Another ill which may result from overfeeding is the impairment of digestion ef ficiency so that the gains in later life are secured at greater cost than would otherwise be necessary. “ When the little pigs begin tp nib ble at the feed they should be provid ed with a trough Inside a creep, where they may have feed especially suited to them. To start with there is nothing better than skim milk Into which about one-tenth by weight of middlings or oatmeal is stirred. If oats are used the coarser hulls should be sifted out The proportion of the middlings or ground oats may be in creased until at weaning time the pigs are getting about one part of solid feed to two parts o f skim milk. Leave No Food in Trough. “ When the little pigs are first be ing started on artificial feed, care must be taken that no feed be left in their trough to become sour, for scours almost surely will result if 4-4*4- + + + + + + 4- + + 4- + + they eat this left-over feed. Therefore give them but little and remove what E T E G R A F T IN G s m 'K K D S . is left and give It to their dam». Then thoroughly clean their trough and if The sucres« of the operatlbn possible scald it and set It up to dry. performed several weeks ago at At any rate make sure the trough is the Baltimore Eye, Ear and left clean and is clean when feed is Throat Hospital, in which the put into It again. A good start makes cornea of a pig's eye was grafted success possible; a bad one makes success very uncertain. The advant 4• onto the blind eye of David Kane ages of the creep are that cleanli •¥ a six months old Infant, is now ness is more easily secured and a 4* practically assured. It is learned smaller amount of higher priced feed 4* that the eye on which the pig's is necessary as the sow does not re 4^ cornea was grafted is still clear. -5» There is reason to believe that it quire such expensive feed. “ If it is considered too much + will remain clear for the few trouble to provide a creep for the lit 4« days left of the time allotted for tle onea they may he allowed to con 4* the test by the surgeon. I f the eye has not d en ied . tinue eating with their dam. and her 4* ration may be made suitable to the 4* the mother of the tnfaqt prob- pigs. Milk production is stimulated 4* ably will be able to take him from by sloppy feed and the sow requires 4* the hospital virtually cured of concentrated feed which is eaaily di 4 * the blindness in which he was gestible. For this method of feeding 4* born, and seeing through a pig's I>ietrich suggests one-fourth to one 4» eye. fifth pound digestible protein and 4* ♦ ♦ ♦ + + + + ,H , 4, + + + + P T is estimated at least 90 per cent of all deaths of hogs from disease in the United States are caused by hog cholera, says the department of agriculture at Washington. There fore, in the case of any fatal out break, the chances are about nine to one the cause is hog cholera. It is true other infections may and do fre quently complicate outbreaks of hog cholera, but in such cases the germ of hog cholera is primary cause of the disease. The symptoms exhibited by hogs sick or hog cholera are not really dis tinct from those produced by other maladies. From a practical stand point the important thing is to recog nize hog cholera as soon as possible after Its appearance in a herd in order that anti-hog cholera serum may be applied before the disease progresses too far. Good serum may be depend ed upon to protect well hogs, and even to cure a large percentage of those in the earliest stages of the disease, but it will not avail much when used upon hogs already visibly sick. Watch Your Neighbor's Hogs. Keep posted concerning the con dition and health of hogs on other farms in your neighborhood. Sick hogs on a neighboring farm are a pos itive menace, for the germs of hog cholera are easily carried on the feet of men or animals. Look over your herd regularly that any sick hogs may be promptly dis covered. I f any hogs in the herd are found to be “ o ff feed” or appear in anywise sick, separate tjiem immediately from the remainder of the herd, and keep them and the main herd under close observation daily. I f there is a tend ency for the disease to spread in the herd the trouble is probably hog cholera. Fancy Names for Fake Diseases. When the first symptoms of sick ness are observed an immediate change of feed sometimes corrects the trouble. This is particularly true of swill fed hogs. I f there is a tendency for the disease to spread in the herd, do not tempo rize, but immediately treat the herd with serum from the state college or state livestock sanitary board. Prompt administration of the serum is essen tial to ’success. Remember that hog cholera kills millions of hogs where other diseases kill thousands. Dismiss from your mind all thought of such diseases as “ lung typhoid,” et<5., for these are gen erally merely fanciful designations given to hog cholera by uninformed men. S + 4- 4- 4- 4* 4• 4* 4* 4* 4* 4- 4* 4* 4 4- 4■ + + 4* 4- 4- 4» + ♦ + The Beebe Company