. Farmer and stockbreeder . e pur centof fish meal, the last, to be gradually increasedsi. th i • in i t-> i rf <u «er DUijiiiselves when theyreach the age of eight weeks. It is ax] disable attimes to allow them to remain on the sew some-what longer in the winter than in the Food similar to that fed to the sow would do wellfor the pigs when weaned, save that the proportionof fish meal might be reduced to five per pigs should be fed four times per day. 5, 6, 7and 8. Similar feeding until the pigs are six months?ii i ix» (rr»au<dh increased to 10 per cent, and coc


. Farmer and stockbreeder . e pur centof fish meal, the last, to be gradually increasedsi. th i • in i t-> i rf <u «er DUijiiiselves when theyreach the age of eight weeks. It is ax] disable attimes to allow them to remain on the sew some-what longer in the winter than in the Food similar to that fed to the sow would do wellfor the pigs when weaned, save that the proportionof fish meal might be reduced to five per pigs should be fed four times per day. 5, 6, 7and 8. Similar feeding until the pigs are six months?ii i ix» (rr»au<dh increased to 10 per cent, and cocoa nut meal partially rake theplace of the palm nut meal. 9. The only pig foodswinch pay tor cooicmg are house waste and potatoes;. Photos bp] [Parsons. Group of Shorthorns, Property of Mrs. FJTZHUGH, PLAS POWER, WREXHAM. Puddington Red Rudolph.—€., October, 1915; s., Oxford Record. Plas Power Butterfly.—C, May, 1913; s., Furbelow Prince. Plas Power Butterfly Zrd.—C, September, 1916; s., Yeldersley Thomby Iron Duke.—C, May, 1917; s., Drusus.—Bred in the Plas Barrington Prince. Power Herd. The experimenters, therefore, make cultureswith which they try to infect rats and birds. Ifthey succeed they then produce a vaccine or aeeruni with which they can inoculate healthyyoung pigs, just as we inoculate healthy youngbabies with the mild vaccine we call cow-pox in-stead of the dreadful malady of small pox whichformerly disfigured every third or fourth personin these islands. So far the foregoing experi-ments have not succeeded, but this is only aetimulus to further effort, and the men who workon such subjects are building for all timo andmay not see the fruits of their travail. Thetrouble of our period is the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookpublisherlondon, bookyear188