Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1961)
STRESS Moving calves to feedlot puts them under stress that rails for Tbrramycin.* The stress comes in many ways: The move itself, the new rations, the new surroundings. It weakens calves and cattle and makes them more vulnerable to disease. Such conditions can range from low-level infections whose symptoms you can’t readily see ... to attacks of major diseases such as shipping fever. That’s where Tbrramycin comes in. Use Tbrramycin Animal Formula Soluble Powder or Tferramycin Liquid Concentrate in the drinking water. Use it before ... during . .. and after stress occurs. You’ll help prevent stress-triggered disease**... and help your animals get on full feed at heavier weights. There’s a package size for your operation .. . including 1-lb. and 5-lb. sizes of Tferramycin Animal Formula Soluble Powder and 1 gallon of Tlerramycin Liquid Concentrate. * Brand ol oxytetracycline HCI—Reg U. S. Pat. Off. **due to Termmycm-sueceptible organism* Terramycin Liquid Concentrate “I’m always satisfied most with a Brand that's made a Name for itself!" IMHO NAMES FOUNDATION, tec. 4-17 Fifth Avenue. New York IS. N. Y. Terramycin Animal Formula Soluble Powder Chas. Pfizer & Co., Inc. New York 17, N. Y. Science for the world’s well-being• T-7 CONFIDENCE BRAND NAMES I V SATISFACTION 1 A pork factory is an apt description of the P. L. Greiner farm. Ami the manner in which hogs are turned out is as effi cient as an assembly line in a manufac turing plant. Tlx* heart of the operation is a 28 by 106-foot farrowing house set slightly a (tart from tlx* oilier buildings on Grein er’s 600-aiTe farm in Cedar (anility, Iowa. Twenty sows farrow lx*re every month under tlx* supervision of his son, Peter, and son-in-law, Haymond Wendler, who operate the farm and livestock enter prises in partnership with the elder Grein er. The unit lias been in operation less than a year. However, it is evjdent that their goal of 1,500 hogs marketed [>er year will lx* met. ’To get the job done efficiently ami with the least lalxir, we had to have this type building,” the elder Greiner ex plained. “Even when the house is filled to capacity one man can do the cleaning and other chores in an hour.” Actually there are two units in the building. In the front section 10 far rowing stalls line each wall. They are separated by a 10-foot service alley and a 22-inch space lx*fwcen the front of tin stalls and the walls provides ample work ing space in this area. Ten weaning i "j| occupy the rear half of the structure. *■—> The amount of planning that went into the building is evident when you step through the d<x>r. Each stall is equipped with an auto matic waterer and feeder for the sow and there is a smaller feeder for the pigs in the creep area. However, the Greiners and Wendler say that the pigs eat only a small amount of feed because their sows produce a heavy milk flow. In the winter months the comfort of the babv pigs is assured by a hot water radiant heat system set in the floor. Tlx* main lines that circle the service alley are 15f inches and the copper connecting lines to the creep areas are three-quarters of an inch. There are 20 farrowing stalls in the front half of the building, 10 on a side. The rear section of the building is occupied by 10 weaning stalls. A radiant heating system in the floor insures that the pigs are comfortable on the coldest days. Swine production headquarters on the P. L. Greiner farm at Lisbon, Cedar County, Iowa, is this 28 by 106-foot building that doubles as a farrowing house and weaning unit. The frame building is lined inside with corrugated steel and the walls and ceiling are insulated with fiberglass. A 28 by 192-foot finishing house will be built soon to accommodate the 1,500 hogs raised each year.