652 
СТЕ Bourton, Dorset, for their straw weaving 
of this description you cannot fail to p uate goo 
I have brought two or three specimens, an 
d | modation for his pigs, and had not been suffi ufficiently zac s 
in his Dy lently particular 
stock, Mr. H. aid he ke 
Marr! . ept 12 breedin 
матов, ў сора анне Бы а for their | Shall have gre reat e та Е уо euin t queo modation a p Stearn b i He pad n 
ire f id i whic d 
ire fencin о датат E | he lost from 30 to 40 pigsin а year by tha err 80 he beliered 
Nicholson, W. N., Trent Iron Works, Newark, for his Hay- | too yo ung, for it is ans of pre ing their growing «ба сакый Mot Es feeding bi e ^ hs lying upon tt 
making machine to the Qu size, or Сабар suficient strength. Ptn othar ирта Вова attening, however, like 
V ters, must come to "ii 
Page, E. & W., Victoria Iron Works, Bedford, for their ploughs zh жеш, o bred is from 10 5 eire ura r a question of 
and harrows proper time f e sow to begin ee T pounds, shillings, and pence; he sold 500 or 600 fat pigs 
Tiekeley, Sims, & Co., Leigh, near Manchester, for their reap- le 12 a ws di: the b oar being fon 8 to Ü month pb Дайна iei gs whether by еа plate 
machine and food preparing implem E e first. farrow of pigs are seldom wo Sith rearing, | the long, lean Dii; 5 bad Bd iei es „9544 not like 
; 
ANa ration Westbury, Wills, ford tor iqui mane. їп hé њу are generally ci апа puny, and Poe a-headby. He had, on the other hand, secured a mb 10s, 
кокк anbury and Lh ex , for his self-deliv a great deal of nursing to bring them to maturity. | pig, short of the chap and long of the side, and ho fd 
тей ie and Turnip eut E dun o NON d sized sows for breeding. so ОУ heri ар mu e чае E шу were well bred, 
eot, Ts 255 men Birost, du Е 5 Е | exhibited at Ipswich and at the Royal Agricultural | for 20s., and Mr. Stearn would want 5L. for bia" Ey 
Scott, Т., БУРАН. Co. Down, Ireland, for his apparatus f. eds last goes has brought up 76 pigs | were sufficiently well bred to pay him. Mr. Stearn model at 
seed separating жа req d in six farrows, without osing one. А hing of | а piggery would only accommodate three sows E litters, so 
Steevens, W., 6, Godolphin Road, Hammersmith, for his steam ti fpi must say he rege А want four such eee gs for his 12 sows, which 
P wou an enormous stoend Horo money and 
sU Pancras Tronwork Co., Old Sk Panora Road, for thelr Ода : have e ever &een one I consider fit to put a pig should at present be afraid to try to carry кее А.) Hen E 
rvatory and glass walls Some are badly nanaptin others are low and | of ране өшү farther Eu ©, building pe rhaps of one such 
Taylor, J. & Co., for their traction engine ds Чар ; ninetenths of them are too small, except for a | (© SUA TUI T E HA ite agreed ate Ye be glad 
rodean t rop Hus йай. КИ MAE КЫ garden | fat pig ; some аге too cold, and wi means Ф pi bred and ed the moro proftableit was. 
› , š 
bs емы and syring. 
'ood bourne, J., ” Park des on Works, Kingsley, near Alton, Hamp- 
shire, for his Hop poen Me e" 
Woods & Cocksedge, Stow: t, Suffolk, for their root pulpers 
ilis: Кы m run their portable steaming 
winter; an 
о, Eh 
o 
o 
E 
z 
Е 
A 
et 
© 
а pit. obs 
deep, " which, of course, nli е get" filled 
up 
unwholes ome rubbish. e general it there i one corner fed three it = day. 
an b 
n, Linslade Works, Leighton Buzzard, Beds., 
for their corn drills 
Humphries, E., Pershore, Worcestershire, for his е 
а: 
nu 
buildings for the 
pigs. It is not hs most expensive place tha: 
| best ; I consider js b operas otherwise. 
required is a simple, «шшс cal, well 
situated, and 
well planned pigger x I айа e k o 
expensive ps 
Essex, fe 
Lipscomb & Co, 233, Strand, for their improved founta jets 
Lovey, E., Peso. Perran Wharf, 
"Mapplebeck & Z Birmingham, for their drai: 
Messenger, T. G., Loughbo: ‚ for his 4 
their Clover 
Hunt, T. & R., Earls Colne, 
machine 
fortia 
for 
; Cornwall, e зане. br 
а 
& 
tis the| we 
tural boiler 
Ne & 
Wi 
Neighbour, a. & Son, 149, Regent Street, for their beehives 
Nixey, W. G., 12, Soho Square, for his m labels 
A: rsak Sri St. e, Jersey, for their combined paring 
Bons, Wheel Works, Thorverton, Devon, for carts 
slew M Ande for his field gates 
NET s mills and millstones 
eir, Per 15 High Holborn, X his drainage levels and churns 
Wilkinson & Wright, Bostoi incolnshire, for their stacking 
and stra w carrying Cw eg 
Willison, T R, Alloa, N.B., for his lift and force pumps 
„ MANAGEME NT ОР S 
Forme arge breeders and е ыы the 
pig beneath. eir Sene but I find this is chang- 
to be opened; 
they eat an 
and neither grow nor “fatter {ошаш 
farmers generally wonld pay proper attention to the | 
ing, r di 
he as 
venlo оре нА ena ps Mos Har 
the ДЫ, attended to and fresh littered, for 1 Para the 
cra md JM is kept the better the pigs thrive. 
he p^ washed down k, 
wn generally once a week, 
теуш ng. Tuns off, and the | asphalte ^ soon dries. ня 
from the раш. , Rd «ршен Should be troughed pA 
bra off the ent the manure being 
ust 
eat), and a a little whole Maize out of troughs like on 
For 
could be doable "e wc raised a ttle e than the | 
y by bur pope: p ү and 
api luv studied t 
"A 
eI 
y the first ны: жү sta 
bs weaned ery о 
ей 
Оа 0 а тшу! little food at a tim m 
ughs h 
I give them 
a Aip variety of meal, such as Wheat, Maize, Barley, 
a- nother, that is wbere the He had a sow at the БОШО Um of the long теу А and ed 
pig stye i is "ar and people almost require pe ое NE x LR owns and иы ton ha de one lik 
AE 
О ad been 
d, but from what Si had seen, and from 
ed from Mr. Stearn’s men, that was by no 
e found the 
siam 
said, i in answer to a question, that hi 
th 
or | Mr. STE. 
black то ow it (€ bobo one-third oio food than 
white ones. Mr. Wells’ remark, that he should 
Ny for a short nag and a he т һе rn two 
brace of partridge: 
those] 
hat pig w: 
eig flapped into two DA bb In his opinion it was best to 
Ment the middle course—between the long and the short pigs. 
QUALITY OF HAY, 
THREE emer relative to Grass and hay should 
m m SA y^ т, by the Lugo of ho 
ative value of green or dried Grass 
ini С  provender. tho difference in à vili between 
green and - ied food, and the advantages ч 
ача ntages gain using this € 0 
provender at diferent periods of its growt 
t | the of m Е it when formed i 
flesh-forming. principle m 
ry much dear y ew pr 
for feeding purposes, more than trebly so 1 
i Horses, when peres 
р 
847, it was thought. that eu "ul 
the quality of the pigs I sho wed then, "but I have 
at the present time better. than hao T ezhibitad Ыт 
а breeding I cross as far distant as possi 
onally, t to strengthen Td constitution, I find it not 
| with " boit ng "ans and s it with 
I have some | i 
th 
, occa- | Pi 
a greal 
wish for by proper selection. There is а marvellous | and f. 
differen: ence | in the breed of the pigs termed the White 
as can be, and 
as good г Rod аз can be. I have eae tested. them 
I jus it with cold water, and then scald it 
эзы meals I beris hole Maize and Mangel 
Sw 
і E f th 
е 
consumption of muscle than 0! 
other Structures of the body, it is cheaper to - оге 
small; and а little c oal c occa 
d than t 
e fed two or dote times 
Me 
gra шр to ^. 
ense dies for that is wherethe proi is E and the 
tt 
th Soa the less food is 
m Ут опе 
пне refuse anything | а 
offered. thém, not 
sivi 
will refuse, I have never kno 
= hg ^c o of pig fe yet that ч was 
e priz 
ee but 
iis 
will clea lar) aka i me. | all ci 
a day. the 
2 | brda and well fed store pigs will always consume the 
the farm and dai a bad bred 
кет bulk of ‘provender i in de] hors 
es for the танар 
wil 
e or far v к 
fa йр: the weather. 
rial, 
diat edm 
tand for 
after being fit for the БУШ wai 
This — сун ers eee of ш һау, у ав 
and from the p 
ende 
t, long body, the thigh 
o the iod, shoulders and hams 
the neck rising well behind the 
QM D E ri 
and boar Жон 
been tested Ae i 
Ransomes and Sume, of quf They h 
nspected «did several sd Seid most eom- 
peten and pronounced 
Lunes ie det - the front, 80a ы 
chaps can feed out of them with the ее ease ап 
, 88 wii those animals tha 
pu 
e report in the Ipswich Adv 
This ertiser 
ecture delivered ed some time ago by Mr. Stearn. The 
it ues ing discussion ensued :— 
broad in the and straig 
with the tail small and curled and 
fine, 
hair thin, long, and silky, igh, and the 
By procuring animals | t 
- pé TE deca n Кэз me been of those MM 
men who made a fortune оен he p nd Мамыш pigs. 
L^ ee not been particularly profitable to him. ee — se 
e reasons were that he had not provided pro 
t can eat out of a 
of a|? 
distinct eases of b wind nonths 
under my own observation from feeding for two оош 
оп badly ies n hay, t cdd er the three being 50 гз 
to be incurable. 
inferior hay, е 
: the 
what is commonly ed “а sweat,” die d 
nose, and thus improve it тау atas; iyi "x 
selves they have got ent provender, gimp because 
