411 Ninth Annual Retort of the 



Section 123. License fee. 



124. Analysis to be made by director of experiment station; 



samples to be taken for analysis. 



125. Penalty for violation of article. 



126. Sale of adulterated meal or ground grains; penalty. 



127. Violation to be reported to the commissioner of agriculture. 



§ 120. Term " concentrated commercial feeding stuffs " denned. — 

 The term "concentrated commercial feeding stuff " as used in 

 this article, shall include linseed meals, cottonseed meals pea- 

 meals, cocoanut meals, gluten meals, gluten feeds, maize feeds, 

 starch feeds, sugar feeds, dried brewer's grains, malt sprouts, 

 hominy feeds, cerealine feeds, rice meals, oat feeds, corn and oat 

 chops, ground beef or fish scraps, mixed feeds, and all other 

 materials of similar nature; but shall not include hays and 

 straw, the whole seeds nor the unmixed meals made directly 

 from the entire grains of wheat, rye, barley, oats, Indian corn, 

 buckwheat, and broom corn. Neither shall it include wheat, 

 rye and buckwheat brans or middlings, not mixed with other 

 substances, but sold separately, as distinct articles of commerce, 

 nor pure grains ground together. 



§ 121. Statements to be attached to packages; contents; analysis. — 

 Every manufacturer, company or person who shall sell, offer or 

 expose for sale or for distribution in this state any concentrated 

 commercial feeding stuff, used for feeding farm live stock, shall 

 furnish with each car or other amount shipped in bulk and shall 

 affix to every package of such feeding stuff in a conspicuous place 

 on the outside thereof, a plainly printed statement clearly and 

 truly certifying the number of net pounds in the package sold or 

 offered for sale, the name or trade mark under which the article 

 is sold, the name of the manufacturer or shipper, the place of 

 manufacture, the place of business and a chemical analysis 

 stating the percentages it contains of crude protein, allowing one 

 per centum of nitrogen to equal six and one-fourth per centum 

 of protein, and of crude fat, both constituents to be determined 

 by the methods prescribed by the director of the New York 

 Agricultural Experiment Station. Whenever any feeding stuff 



