. Elementary agriculture. Agriculture. Fig. 27. A Cheshire pig. farmer keeps a few hogs in small pens or yards and feeds them the waste from the kitchen and farm. Such hogs are usually kept for home use. The Western Hog Farm. In the Corn Belt of the Central West there are great hog farms. Hogs are often raised on farms where cattle are fattened for the market. Here both hogs and cattle are fed on corn. The hogs run with the cattle and grow fat on the corn which the cattle waste. Where hogs are put on pasture they grow rapidly on clover, alfalfa, or rape pasture. (Fig. 29.). Fig. 28. Good f<


. Elementary agriculture. Agriculture. Fig. 27. A Cheshire pig. farmer keeps a few hogs in small pens or yards and feeds them the waste from the kitchen and farm. Such hogs are usually kept for home use. The Western Hog Farm. In the Corn Belt of the Central West there are great hog farms. Hogs are often raised on farms where cattle are fattened for the market. Here both hogs and cattle are fed on corn. The hogs run with the cattle and grow fat on the corn which the cattle waste. Where hogs are put on pasture they grow rapidly on clover, alfalfa, or rape pasture. (Fig. 29.). Fig. 28. Good f< < Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Nida, William Lewis. Chicago, A. Flanagan Company


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectagriculture, bookyear