Page 1 |
Previous | 1 of 8 | Next |
|
|
Loading content ...
<y Yol. IX. INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA, OCTOBER 24, 1874. No. 42. LiYG Stock* Hog Cholera Symptoms. 1. A hacking cough when they get out of their pens in the morning. 2. Tbe excrement pass in hard lumps. 3. The urine is scant and has a yellow or red color. As these symptoms advance, one or more' ofthe following appear; sick stomach, vomiting, diarrhoea, flux, extreme constipation, with high fever and great thirst, redness of the skin ifthehog is white (this cannot be so readily seen in colored nogs), rough hair, lameness, stiffness of the limbs, boils or abcesses, sometimes on the body, but most common the feet or legs, breathing short, and quick cough or wheezing, thumps, swelled ears, bleeding at the nose, sore eyes, get shy, stand with the nose to the ground, ears fallen back, hind feet drawn under, back curved up, weak staggering gait, frothing at the nose or mouth, refusal of food, indisposition to move. No one hog presents all of the above symptoms, but they are all common features in hogs having the cholera, and at times one hog presents several of them at the same time. Quality in Pork. We all know what a difference there is in pork. Breed has something to do in this matter, but not so much as many suppose. It is the kind of feed that makes kind in pork. Use milk or whey largely and your pork is sure to be soft, flabby and will fry away at least half. What is. left is not relishable. Hence our dairy pork is our poorest pork, varying according to the amount of grain that is fed. So still-fed pork is in bad repute. M,iscel- laneous feed makes ordinary pork, often quite ordinary. Slop will not do, there seems to be too much water.'"" '"'' The grains are what is wanted to make good, sweet pork—pork that is solid and will fry well. Rank pork is unendurable, and yet there is much of it, and some people like it, like the pork from large, strong hogs. A dirty, offensive sty is an element no doubt in producing strong and even ftetid pork. Have clean quarters, a clean animal, good ventilation and feed grain. For drink give cold, not in any way foul water. Corn for feed is the best, and old corn at that. Do not house too close, hor feed too sharp; look to the convenience of the hog; and fat him so that he is good condition, not over fat, with possible diseased parts about him in consequence, the pork being by it. Old corn submitted to heat will yield most pork.— Gountry Gentleman. 1 mt . . Care oi Sheep. "Flock Master," of Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, writes to the Germantown Telegraph as follows: I send you the following seasonable hints in regard to the care of sheep: ■ During the winter and early spring, sheep arp often affected with colds; these, if neglected, frequently become so deeply seated as to be incurable, and end in phthisic or consumption. The best remedy for a cold^is, first, place your sheep in a well ventilated, dry stable, comfortably littered; and second, give it any slightly purging medicine, with a moderate allowance ot hav, and a bran mash, one- fifth which should be oil-meal. Colds and catarrhs are not only epidemic, but endemic; be careful therefore, where you winter your sheep, that there be no predisposing cause in their locality; and when they are attacked, remove them instantly from the flock. By following these precautions, and keeping them well fed, sheltered, aired, watered, and salted, one may bid defiance to disease among his flock. « m • Tlie Iowa Cattle Disease. Farmers, Breed Heavier Horses— The Normans. There is no branch of stock breeding in the west so neglected by farmers as that of horses, while it should be the most profitable the most interesting and the most important to breed. The best class of these noble animals the masses of farmers pay no attention to how: they breed, only to the cheapest, and consequently to the poorest horses to be found. While none of these farmers would think of raising scrub hogs, because it won't pay. It is just so with horses. It does not pay to raise these small, scrub horses, either f>,r the farm or to sell, for the large horse is as easily raised and will do mueh more work in hauling heavier loads and ploughing deeper, and if you have a surplus horse to sell there is a good demand for it at a good price. Not so with small scrub horses; There is no demand for them at any price. Now, there must be improvements in breeding our horses as- in all our other farm stock by the use of pure blood. The introduction into the west of the Norman or the Percheron horses marks an era of prosperity and is an improvement in the right direction. These valuable horses crossed with our best native mares gives us fine heavy horses, valuable for the farm and in great demand for draft horses in the cities, always commanding a high price, such a price as pays well for raising them, while the great quantity of small horses on the market are forced off at prices that do not pay for raising them. Western farmers raise good horses or none at all.— Western Agriculturist. "Cross Jersey Bulls.' For the Indiana Farmer. Preparations for Winter. BY MR?. WARREN. One feels in thejmoodfor self-gratula- tion when everything is at last prepared for cold weather, Vegetables, plants, etc., all in snug winter quarters—at least I do. We have an excellent cellar, dry, light and perfectly frost-Woof, and this fall in my zeal to save all I was just taking article, when pater my favorites, possible, down the fifty-ninth familias mildly inti mated that I had at propriated at least the lion's share ofthe cellar room. I looked around, and could but admit that it was even so. But what can be done? Nothing this year), of course, and the only remedy for andther seems to be, a pit. Several of my acquaintances have them and I think they (are admirable for all plants that are not exceedingly tender, but as usually made there is this objection, if there comesj several weeks in succession of extremely cold weather, as in the winter of '72 a,nd '73, one cannot go into it without endingering the contents. I have been thinking I would like one on tho south side lof the house, making the cellar wall the north side of the pit, and then have an entrance from the cellar, and then it could be attended to, at any time. Have any readers of the Farmer ever tried this plan? If so, will they not tell us of its disadvantages, if it has any? The Farming That Pays. upon The Wheat Crop. A writer in the Dutchess Farme the above topic, remarks: The profit in agriculture, like the profit in other business, depends on what they call in Wall street a "margin," and a very small one it 13 in farming, as in all safe and well-established industries. When we sold wool to the Bunnels. many years ago, one of the firm told us that they had been making cloth without profit, and when they found a waste of about a cent pound on their wool, and managed toavoid that waste, their business again became successful. A quarter of one per cent, received by a broker, in a large financial transaction, has made him a large fortune. And though in the limited transactions, of the manufacturer and farmer, so small a per centage would not avail much, it is certain that the fortune of the farmer, no less than of the merchant and manufacturer, is made'up of the small net profits of his business, accumulated by many years of labor and carefulness. This net profit is so small that it is liable to be impaired by any trifling error in management, or lack of force. Any serious defect in management, or any great degree of slackness will spoil the profit altogether. There are so many things to be well done in order to succeed, that it is not strange that so many fail. When every part of farming is well done, there is no mistake about the profit. A New Binding; Reaper. SCHOOL STATISTICS. Partial Abstract of the Report of the Superintendent of Public Instruction for 1873-4. From the advance sheets of the biennial report of the Superintendent of Public Instruction we take the following historical items, showing the progress and prosperity of free schools in this State are taken. _ The school fund has become very much simplified within the past fevf years, and may be classed under two heads : First—The Township school fund Sti,.113,447 57 Second—The Congressional Township ps-*»<- Fund 2,398 072 03 Total school fund -. 88,711,519 CO The fund at the beginning of the year, together with the increase during the past year, ls concisely exhibited In the following statement: COMMON SCHOOL FUND, 1874. Non-negotiable bonds £3,001,78.1 21 Common school fund June, 1873 2 Ml 2(i7 12 Fines of Clerks of the courts ' '3.1,2 n 82 Flnesof Justices of the Peace 28,843 Kit Fines from other sources 3'luo 53 Total common school fund ?6,313,4t7 57 CONGRESSIONAL SCHOOL FUND. Amount June, 1873 $2,289,183 7(i Amount received from sale of lands... 0,091 87 Add 13,153 acres unsold land worth 102,293 41) Total 52,398 072 03 ADDITIONS TO THE Kl'SU, 1S73. To the common school fund : Sinking Fund distributed S50,140 09 Fines by Clerks of courts 23,083 16 Fines by Justices of the Peace 19,188 15 From other sources 2 153 20 Tptal increase in Common School Fund in 1873 H01.764 90 To the Congressional Fund : From the sale of lands 19,316 15 Total increase , Deduct .Sinking fund distribution.. Si 21,080 a5 5f>',li0 09 ;,F.rank.Morris,.of.the.PraeiicaZ Farmer, says: "While the Alderney or Jersey calf, heifer, or grown-up cow is proverbially the quietest, most docile and gentle of all the cow tribe, there are very many cases where the Jersey bulls are exactly the reverse. Can this be explained? It may almost be said cross Jersey bulls are the rule, and quiet ones the exception.— We have known, ourselves, many cases of this kind, and have been asked the reason "why Jersey bulls are generally more unruly than bulls of other breeds?" Then he quotes the English Agricaltural Gazette, in reference to this matter, as follows: "It is strange so many of the Jersey bulls should be such ungovernable and downright dangerous brutes, and therefore, in spite of other merits, we protest against prizes going to animals which are blindfolded and require tbe precaution of two attendants." On the foregoing a correspondent of the New York Sun ventures the following comment: "Now, we own the Jerseys_ have a bad name, but we honestly think it is more in talk than reality. The writer has handled a goodly number of Jersey bulls and others too. Ayrshires are just as likely to be vicious, perhaps more so, and so are Devons if indiscreetly handled. In fact, it is indiscreet handling that spoils the temper of bulls, as of almost all other animals. If every man who keeps an Alderney bull would break him to the yoke or to harness at eighteen months old, he would have a good-tempered, serviceable beast, worth more for every purpose, and capable of earning his board by effective labor before the horse cart or stone boat or snow plow every day in the year." The Wilton, Iowa, Exponent has the following information regarding the new cattle plague, which has proved so fatal to stock in the neighborhood of that place: "The disease is as curious in its workings as it is fatal in its result. The first indication of an attack is a violent twitching of the under jaw; then a frothing at the mouth, from which saliva flows freely; the eyes become watery, and the animal seems to suffer the most intense pain, which increases from the moment it is attacked until death ensues, which in no case is longer than twenty-four hours. They commence rubbing the head, mostly on the left side, and continue the skin, and sometimes one of the ears, is rubbed off; the head swells up so as to close the eyes in many cases. The animals stand erect, and, straining every muscle to the utmost extension, giving evidence of a powerful , internal convulsion, they utter the most I pitiful cry—you can hardly call it anything else—and, throwing the head from side to 'side, fall over dead. Keep the Hogs out ofthe Water. A correspondent of the Colonial Farmer, whom the editor declares to be a practical breeder, writes that to handle hogs to the best advantage, a pasture is needed of green grass—clover, blue-grass and timothy—and it is best if there is no running water or stock ponds in the lot. Hogs do better where there are no branches or stock ponds to wallow in. In place thereof, have well water pumped for them.— Have troughs made, and nail strips across, eight inches apart, to keep the hogs from lying down in the water, and let these troughs be placed on floors, to keep them from digging up wallowing holes. If feed be given, it should be soaked in swill barrels for twelve hours before feeding—no longer—and fed to them as drink. Tan-Bark for Stables. Leached tan-bark makes a very clean and cool bedding for horses, but it should be dried before it is used. If used while wet it ferments and heats, and will cause the hair to fall from animals that are bedded with it. /it least such has been our experience with it. Sawdust is the cleanest bedding for horses that we known of. The October returns ofthe Department of Agriculture show that the wheat c is equal to or greater than last year in all ofthe States except Maryland, Virginia, Texas, Kentucky, Wisconsin, Minnesota', Iowa and Kansas. _»Tn Connecticut, Delaware, South Carolina and Illinois it is about equal to last year's crop. Other States have increased their yield. The New England States almost reached the splendid crop ofthe census year, approximating to 1,000.000 bushels. Maine has increased her yield thirty-three per cent. The quality of the crops in these States is considerably improved. The Middle States have considerably enlarged and improved their yield, New York reportingan increase of sixteen per cent. Of the South Atlantic States, Maryland falls one per cent, and Virginia six per cent, below last year, but their deficiency is more than made up by the other States, Georgia showing an increase of twenty-one per cent. The quality is also improved. Of the Gulf States, Alabama reports an increase of twenty-three, and Mississippi two per cent. Texas a decrease of seven per cent.in quality, Alabama improves twenty-nine per cent, and Mississippi declines nine per cent, and Texas six per cent. All the four Southern inland States show an improvement in the quality from one per cent, in Arkansas to 17 per cent, in Tennessee. In quantity Arkans presents an increase of 1 percent; Tennessee, 20 per cent.; West Virginia, 23 per cent.; Kentucky declines 5 per cent. The crops of these States are a third greater than that of the census year. North of Ohio and Illinois equals that of last year's crop, while Wisconsin, on account of the grasshoppers, falls 35 per cent, short, which reduces the aggregate yield of this section below last year. Ohio increases her yield to 16 per cent.; Michigan, 23 per cent.; Indiana, 9 per cent. All show an improved quality except Wisconsin, which declines 23 per cent. The aggregate yield ofthe States west ofthe Mississippi is also short of last year's. Missouri increases 29 per cent, and Nebraska 1 per cent., but Minnesota declines 16 per cent.; Iowa, 2 percent, and Kansas 5 per cent. The grasshoppers have been destructive to the spring wheat in theseStates. Thequality is below last year in all except Minnesota, which improves 27 percent. On the Pacific coast the crop is greatly increased, and is fully 50 per cent, above the census year. California increased her yield 10 per cent, and Oregon 12 per cent. Oregon equals the quality of. last year's crop. California improves hers by 3 per cent. The total yield will nearly, if not quite, equal the census year. ■ » » The Demand for Barley.—While this is the great grain-producing country ofthe world, the bulk of the barley which, is used here is imported from other countries, and the demand grows with every year. From Canada alone during the past four years we have drawn a yearly average of nearly 4,500,000 bushels, while, owing to a short crop there last year, large imports were made from Europe. The New York Bulletin gives figures to prove that the cultivation of this cereal is much more profitable than wheat-raising, and thinks that the matter should commend itself to the attention of farmers. The market is enlarging yearly, the prospect being that England alone will have an annually increasing demand. The "Harvest Queen" is the name given to a self-binding reaping machine invented by C. Chapman, which has attract- croP ed considerable attention in OlmsteadCo., Minn., where the trial machine had cut 160 acres of grain this harvest, up to the latest report. There are some peculiarities in the machine, especially the reel, I Total increase in Common Fund but the principal point of interest is the I T°talincrease in Congressional Fund binding attachment, which is thus de-! Total increase S73792 11 Increase from regular sources StM.939 9fi ADDITIONS TO TUB FUNDS, 1S7I. To the common School Fund: Fines by Clerks of courts ?35 247 82 Fines by Justices of the Peace 28813 89 From other sources 3105 53 $07,197 21 6,599 87 "ThTgrain is slid by the rake from the | Jl'TfllZt t'hV'sS? TjVoZlTcl T^jtZ1! ^^*. ■Ji!&„,»^ i »8K-_6 more in 1874 ZJ^im™"* ±ne following statement gives the a- rear,and, as soon as it has reached this, the rake lifts away from it, and a dividing board raises and separates it from that which continues to fall on. the apron, thus preventing tangling, and the formation of "slobbering,, bundles. As the sliding board raises, a buncher traverses the platform, driving the grain before it, and against the wire band at the opposite end, where are also a couple of steel prongs against which the grain is pressed. A compressor now comes down upon the bunch of grain, which is thus held tightly until the wire band is drawn close about it, twisted and_ cut off. The buncher then retreats to its former position on the fftr end ofthe platform, the compressor raises up out of the way, and the steel prongs turn a somersault, dropping the bundle, and resuming a position of readiness for the next. The Rochester Record and Union says the machinery is easily understood and managed, and no more liable to get out of order or break than that of any other reaper. Three horses are used. It is expected to have a large number of the machines on the market for next year. . ♦ « Machine Wanted.—A correspondent of the N. Y. lribunc says: Farmers generally require a machine, I think, such as I have never seen or heard of, but of which I have especially felt the need, as it will save labor and utilize forage. It is this : Say a machine that will pulverize, or crush, or grind, with once handling, our corn crop ; that will reduce the entire growth, cob, shuck and stalk, as fine as ordiuary meal. After the corn is cut and put in stooks (twelve hills square is the habit generally prevailing in the west,) then as soon as the stooks are dry enough, feed them entire into the machine, which might be similar to a grain thresher, and propelled by steam or horse power. My object is to place the corn-stalks as well as the corn in condition for the cattle to properly masticate, digest and assimilate. ■ m> ■ We read, says the New York Tribune, of one Ohio farm whieh several years since was wet, unproductive,_ and agueish. Twenty bushels of inferior corn to the acre, and from five to ten bushels of wheat, was all that could be raised. Sheep would die about as fast as they could be produced. Now it is underdrained with five miles of tie and yields eighty bushels of good, sound corn, and from twenty to forty bushels of superior wheat. On grass lands the difference in quantity is not great, but the quality has been vastly improved. Chills and_fever have disappeared, and sheep raising is profitable. So satisfactory have been the results of tile draining on this estate that the owners intend to bury at least ten miles more of "crockery." Father-Yarnall, who is seventy years old, hauled to Brookston and unloaded 100 bushels of oats on Friday last. __-_—. mounts of the fines and ferfeitures for each of the past seven vears. For 1868, $32,904.59; 1869, $35,755 57; 1870, 834,103.10; 1871. $28,99G.49; 1872, $39,306.51; 1873, $43,171.61; 1874 $64,- 091.71. In seven years these funds have increased 100 per cent., and 50 per cent, of that increase was during the year ending June 1.1874. This clearly proves that the fines of clerks of the Circuit Courts and the justices ofthe peace have increased much more this year than last, there being a difference of $20,920.10.—Journal. ' ■ • m> m Watch the Market. If you, in your judgment, based upon what appears to you to be safe authority, think wheat or any other class of grain will rule higher within a month than now, no matter if every man in your neighborhood sells, hold on and get the highest figures. On the other hand don't be obstinate and hold on when everything shows you should sell. It is plainly a matter of judgment backed by intelligence and experience. The same thing is applicable in the selling of hogs and fat cattle. We have seen the market barren of stock, the demand urgent, and prices high. All at once the movement set in; the market was flooded, prices fell off, and the seller lost as a matter of course. Quick sales and the highest prices are made on a light market supply and good demand. The substance ofthe whole matter is then, keep posted and keep your eyes open. It is the duty of every farmer to get the very best price he can for everything he soils, and sell everything he cannot use to advantage on the farm. Sell everything that would be wasted at home, for every dollar thus made is truly a dollar savsd. Nothing is too small or of too little value to market which will bring money.—Rural American. — » ♦. • Thos. Meehan, who is good authority on the subject of botany, says that farmers' sons, who are now receiving their education and whose future is to be employed in the noblest of all occupations— the tilling of the soil—should be pretty thoroughly educated in botany. It is not only one of the most pleasing and instructive of all the branches of education, but it is one of the most useful, particularly toa farmer, who will find daily and almost hourly need of it. He is constantly facing its representatives in some form, to understand which is-frequently of the utmost importance. Not a plant, especially a weed, can be grown or obtrude itself upon his premises but what will be, familiar to him, as much so as the plants\ composing the leading cultivated crops.^5.;-^ He is thus brought face to face with wcli-'-^ knownacquaintances.be they friends or^**- othcrwise, and will give them such a re- 1 ception as they may respectively deserve. -£3 '^mm
Object Description
Title | Indiana farmer, 1874, v. 09, no. 42 (Oct. 24) |
Purdue Identification Number | INFA0942 |
Date of Original | 1874 |
Subjects (LCSH) |
Agriculture Farm management Horticulture Agricultural machinery |
Subjects (NALT) |
agriculture farm management horticulture agricultural machinery and equipment |
Genre | Periodical |
Call Number of Original | 630.5 In2 |
Location of Original | Hicks Repository |
Coverage | United States - Indiana |
Type | text |
Format | JP2 |
Language | eng |
Collection Title | Indiana Farmer |
Rights Statement | Content in the Indiana Farmer Collection is in the public domain (published before 1923) or lacks a known copyright holder. Digital images in the collection may be used for educational, non-commercial, or not-for-profit purposes. |
Repository | Purdue University Libraries |
Date Digitized | 2010-10-01 |
Digitization Information | Original scanned at 300 ppi on a Bookeye 3 scanner using internal software. Display images generated in CONTENTdm as JP2000s; file format for archival copy is uncompressed TIF format. |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Subjects (LCSH) |
Agriculture Farm management Horticulture Agricultural machinery |
Subjects (NALT) |
agriculture farm management horticulture agricultural machinery and equipment |
Genre | Periodical |
Call Number of Original | 630.5 In2 |
Location of Original | Hicks Repository |
Coverage | Indiana |
Type | text |
Format | JP2 |
Language | eng |
Collection Title | Indiana Farmer |
Rights Statement | Content in the Indiana Farmer Collection is in the public domain (published before 1923) or lacks a known copyright holder. Digital images in the collection may be used for educational, non-commercial, or non-for-profit purposes. |
Repository | Purdue University Libraries |
Digitization Information | Orignal scanned at 300 ppi on a Bookeye 3 scanner using internal software. Display images generated in CONTENTdm as JP2000s; file format for archival copy is uncompressed TIF format. |
Transcript |
|
Tags
Comments
Post a Comment for Page 1