“WEIGHT WATCHING CONTINUED FROM PAGE lAlextens'ions on the sides in 1957 i _ . ito make it 54 feet in width and m0" 13‘ I '9‘"t In the 518 I103 next year be extended the entire I bern- ‘ r to a length of 100 KINDNEBS HELPS fer . ‘ And kindness makes a differ-i The barn has a top capacity} once. even to pigs_ “1 never en- of 700 hogs and he can turn out I~ the barn. without speaking to a maximum of 2.000 each year. as l come through the though be normally runs about he told us. If. he didn't, 050 at a time and production to; IIlL'm d‘hr'l' M explrinad. the pigs would date has run 1,500 to scare and mill around in an ex- year, though that may be stepg cued manner. But they know:ped up, I gathered. in 1963. ‘ ‘his voice and behave in com- ~.pletely normal fashion. “AVE MORE ,VIGOR _ John who was with his dad Mr. FERSG!‘ likes the Land during our visit moved aimongjlfafi'e ' 10"k5hlre 9m“ 11°76‘5- me pigs and the hihe_year old‘ I'va have more vigor. better ibn- seemed just as much at gl‘fJWth and better health, be ‘hhme with them as his father. hsaid. Asked if the Landrace- 3H3 told us he likes the pigs. A;cross grades stood up he said {younger .0". Roy. who is eight I “there are more of those cross- 1was at the house during our vi~ hes. "1 “‘9 ham uilW- than “Y- fsh. ‘thing else. and the grades are holding up. Manure from the big hog. . H - . lnmdenially the 16.6 per cent lgsgrntOp dressesrlofl icarezdgg top grades he has achieved to ; phosphate fertilizer to balance ‘ “F”? comp“? twm‘ HfShtarply (I: I the plant food — after con' nIchng perm" age 0 0p gm ' tent sou testing __ and the 140 es in the provmce generally. .acreh of grain he grew hm! Nelson Ball. Canada depart- “ con vet “the Ther'e ment of agriculture livestock {:3 WO yof termini; andifieldman. reveals that grades the .fuel his big diesel tract orIfe“.Off shifgly I: t3” f‘ve‘mmu‘ burned cultivating the land. The : pen“! 9 ' er 0 “wary com'j return was an average w-bush-Ipargd Wm‘ the conespmdmg he! crop worth $5000 to m 000 period a year previously. thoughI enough to keep hh'; feed hohp‘en ihely came back fairly well in‘ ‘ 1 _; Ie ruary. tggiflwgédfide Sffifsfifir¥.ff“fiffl_g Here are the percentages of ; ruary. And there was still some If r A._f"cdal:]she s fig‘t’rtigl grain in a big second - floor feed . mm reg" ere I :5 thh‘the ' minim?“ we visited the “tab Ipercentages the previous ' . ‘ bracke 5: He grew a mixture or nats.Iyear I," . barley and wheat last year on' ocmber 19:22ssg'5g)‘_mbm' th' 1"! acres The other 16 acresiember1962 ‘ ' ecem er ' ' ‘49.!) (58): January 1963 49.9 “'9” 59w” t” Her“ bg‘rley‘ (581. In February of this year Iiivi’ncma‘géé'gheliifgyX’III 1*“? WWW WW?“ ‘° 554-5 six experimental plots by Caii- ‘ A s w ‘ch compares wmh 61' ' 1.700. ah = I i BIG FRASER BARN CAN HANDLE 700 11068 AT A TIME Jim Cudmore tells me that Mr. Fraser plays a valuable soil laboratory. ‘er. H. C. Hearts. and saw forl Mr. Fraser was first in area .myself just what is required.” to operate modern grain clean- Mr. Fraser explained. . . ing equipment which he does on Previously he shipped hogs at '3’”? 1" w°rthWhu° °°mmumty custom basis. 176 pounds liveweight because |lCthi¢Y- HE W3! 8 I0W1! 601m- Normally r e p a i r bills are I he believes that the greatest pro- 1 culor {or two terms_ among 0th. heavy but Charlie does all his fit is available from the hogs be- or things, and is one of the own normal repairs. fore they reach greater weights. Has a 1927 Model A Ford ; But. he changed to 190 pounds leading wmke" in “5 ChurCh‘ which garagemen told him ran 1 alive when new media! “"L’H- I “'5‘ to”- only about 2.000 miles which he ' Iations a few years ago made 1th ntends to restore this year. It easier to get A grades on car- Now Tgmvgs casses over 150 pounds. Hermitage. V rom 135 to 150 pounds. for: The American bison dropped All farmers should visit the example. only one and one - ‘Ifrom 503003001“ the early 19th Canada Packers plant to s ee, quarter inches of fat is allowed i cent", t l m 1h 1900 h t their hogs graded. said Mr. Fra- f on the loin. Over that amount,.‘ y _° my ‘1 ser. "I used to fight over grad- though. one and one - half inch- "‘0‘" “WW3 0“ Fromm-ed Pas- es until I talked with the grad- es is allowed. ’tures. was owned by Janie A c o r n. ‘breeders in recent A 24-year old Nnrtzh Wiltshire; farmer. Cecil Godfrey. produces‘ approximately 600 pigs a year.’ with his 38 sow battery in the' modern bog barn he built a. year ago. . He started when he was 17 with a pure bred Yorkshire S’iw’ given to him by his uncle. Al-i mon Boswell, Dunstaffn'aizc. one‘ e most successful swine years. and} has developed from that small start. Cecil was looking after the. farm and stock when the Bos.I supplement the mother's milk, ‘ grain last year. He has The Guardian -'l'he Evening Patriot Page 11-1 North Wiltshire man starts early . now produces 600 hogs per year walls were away at the Royal, lamps. .arately in future Winter Fair and the young gilt‘ The North Wiltshire man sells 3 that is best, booms-Se was given in appilriation for his‘ most of his pigs as weanlings: mix the grain in work. at six to eight weeks of age I proportion. Wins Mn Godhrey uses a dozen pens when they run 30 to 35 pounds, I mixed pain, thee no and nhree gnawing crates to. though he keeps some of the} indication what the palpation handle the mothers when they ,‘ best gilts for breeding stock. and . is. he explains. a“. {En-Owing and naming their; usually sells eight to 10 boars He grew two acres of he!“ liners. He leaves the sow in the each year for breeding purposes. ; barley last year and expectant) farrowing crate for a week on Mr. Godfrey feeds his own fmw :bmlt 10 mes 0‘ W M- an average. though sometimes a ' ' - - ‘ Y9“ e “Odth bit longer. foi‘ahi: “th giain concentratrethttha‘ Canada Packm _ _ e sows for the most pa . mm The litters are creep fed to as he grew some 40 acres 9362’“ ' planned experiment in all I. be lit the “am is E i been growing mixed grain but intends . to grow oats and barley sep—‘ The sows run outside and the creeps are heated by ul-l CONTINUED ON PAGE 12 tra-vioiet and infra-red heat Supplying ada Packers. and produced just Iyear pr_e’]°u51y’ , under an average of 60 bushels ‘_ Resmcmd “399"” Is becom' per acre. Mr. Fraser hopes to Ting WWI“ “"th hogmen . how about 100 acres of the some areas and the usual thing Herta barley this year. he. said. :1? I“ “5? 3" expenswe amoma‘ He has 30 acres at homes md'tic feeding system .that only grows the rest on other farms. I supplies feed ‘1 “mlted 93” 9f pmdudlon of so much feed at h the time. Mr. Fraser gets simi- ‘home is a major factor in his . 13" results “’m‘ his limit“! |opprafinn‘ ‘ amount or hopper space on the “'5 amazing to see how much “10”” 0’ 93““ 99"- nianuai labor modern develop-I He has to watch carefully. iments have taken out of th e ._ of course. 7ii (use a smaller pig‘ -large operation. Mr. Fraser has ; is getting forced away from the one man working with him and lvbcpper too much. and he. moves 'it takes them less than t w o the animal or animals into a pen hours - they have done it inof smaller pigs \vliere tlicyi one — twice a week to fill the I can fight thetr food battles on large feed hoppers that distri—Ia more competitive basis. bute the mixture to the smallerE A pig that looks off color gets feed hoppers on the floor below. iimmediate attention. and a shot The pigs feed from automatic :of penicillin. for example. usual- water bowls. hly clears up the difficulty be- The feed is hoisted to the se- I fore it gets serious. . cond floor by an electrically-f A skilled mechanic. he says driven elevator and on." m a n .cvei‘y farmer should be able to dumps llie b"gs into the near- do his own minor machinery re- est feed hoppers as he receives ‘pairs. it. saves money and time the bags. The rest is stored for iwhich is also worth money. he; later feeding. There's no waste observes. The Montague ma n} motion in the Fraser hog barn. Edoes all his own electric weld-5 The hogs were given dry feed ing and. he observes. any far-i because of the labor it saves. mer can learn to weld with a Mr. Fraser said he believes wet ‘minimum of instruction. feed may bring them along fcs- ‘ I ‘ er. i but "it would take a tie 5T0? CONDITION; ‘ mendous amount of labor to: He bought m 1938 a m ' foo" {slop 650 hogs" —- that's the num- ‘ 5°” '. propeu‘id combine .3 n d I ,ber in the barn now — and that the Mg .maChme “um We a ‘ ‘would add greatly to expenses happy k'tten‘ because .31" which have to be watched close- . waist? e e I” it in top runmng I ly in an n oration of this kind. 5C0" ‘mn' . " , Mr. Finger buys weanling Mr. Fraser bought a Jeep in: ‘1956. put an 85 gallon asst». I I. "‘ . “Eh; fieggunfi. IE]: plane tank on the back of it and ‘; 'mately four and one-half mon- "IggEd It 0.1” as a grain Spray" tbs. When he started back er- TW‘" “‘5 “WW “‘9 Spray 1952 he could ‘ over a 50 - foot width —— there around 1951 or I . . clear $14 on a hog. The week 3 13 "0 boom "' and It has the ad' .bqt’ore i visited him he barely "image 0‘ Speedy “WWW”- bmhe even abut next wfck'n “You. can head for a brook at hairexplained‘ ..hhihgs mhv he 30 miles per hour. for example. much better" “(1 I added mhsh when the spray. runs out. in- ye‘ Iwas one of my best years... §stead of lumbering along at 10 Y «gs reached a top price of tMRI-l. on a tractor. he said. .340 per 100 pounds in t'Ic earlyl He had been "SIM! the jeep ¢_ but that was bet-0m the 4 several years for his own grain Fraser hog development started ‘ and cpsmm spraylng When he read in a national farm maga- In Inked “How did you get Tine about a retired armv officer n ~t ' ‘ ?" - ' ” ‘0‘ e "0g busmess the re "who had thought up the new pig‘siyas straightforward and in- i idea of using a Jeep for Spray e in : I. ,, .' ' .3 was in the feed husimss:ing whichtglavehthe Montague from 1952 to '54 and was trying I ma" a qu‘e “3 - The Jeep also pulls a manure Ispreadsr which spreads the ma- nure from the big hog barn. All land used is soil tested —- he has Names of his own and grows the rest on other farms -— applies the manure and fertiliz- toh'e‘talk farmers into feeding bogs. Why not build a small hog barn and feed 101 to 1 ‘.lnstesd of five or six. 11 em. One farmer told= MH‘d lose my shirt.‘ Finally I in and and went into it my- * { er mixture recommended by title M0708 REWINDING & REPAIRS Advisers naconns Mr. Fraser knew exactly “at the feed was costing the “Risers who were his custom- e L" for he has always kept ac- iorey Elector to: i: ’u g the answer to just about t ‘ ‘ DIAL 4-7341 for 24-HOUR SERVICE onta ue man started modestly in 1954 with a building feet by 30. He built shed-roof You can’t beat these rugged work clothes for long wear and value! 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In COVERAGE Pays for Injdrles that require out of pocket expenses over $10.00 up to $500.00 for doctor, nurses and ambulance. If hospitalized for three days the patient will be paid $5.00 a day for lost time upto 21 days Land commencing on day after accident, Pays for Accidental Death $1,000.00. DISMEMBERMENTS BENEFITS: 1. For loss of both hands 2. For loss of the entire or both feet .. . . $1.000.00 sight of both eyes . . . . . 1,000.00 4. For loss of the entire _ 3. For kiss of one hand and sight of one eye a“d one one foot '000‘00 handoronefoot...... 1.00000 5. For loss of one hand or 6. For loss of the entire onoloo .. 500.00 sightofonoeye...... 500.00 The Federation needs your support . . . join today, only $5.00 yearly member- ship entitles you to purchase accident insurance for only $6.00 per year. Prince Edward Island ...FOR PHONE TODAY FOR AN GUARANTEED WATER sue LY YOUR LIVESTOCK ...FOR YOUR HOME! For a very low cost you can have a guaranteed water supp- ly for your house or herd . . . . use as much as you wish, because there will always be lots there! Now is the time to make your up- pointment with us for this spring or summer - so you can have your well drilled when you want it. 0 OUGLAS BROS 89 QNES INC 35555“ FEDERATION oi AGRICULTURE ‘ APPOINTMENT “.54 ..v .. V: . u-‘p'J. WMWW-Oa‘t-i - -