274 INDIAN CORN. 



have the effect of increasing the profit on butter, by 

 enabling the farmer, after the cream is taken from the 

 milk, to turn the latter to a more lucrative account 

 than formerly. 



Yet these circumstances can have no material 

 effect upon the principle on which the above esti- 

 mates are based. "Whatever changes may be made 

 either now or hereafter in the plan of making butter 

 and cheese, yet the modes of feeding, the varieties of 

 food, and the proportions of them, remain the same. 

 The principles of feeding that we have endeavored to 

 illustrate, as well as the relative value of corn, and 

 the advantage of using it in due proportion, if found 

 correct in one case, will prove equally so in the 

 other. 



