352 



Feed^ and Feeding, 



process oil meal was figured at $26 per ton, and gluten meal at 

 $18 per ton, the current market prices. 



Feeding oil meal and gluten meal — Ohio Station. 



It is seen that gluten meal was a cheaper feed than oil meal at 

 the prices stated. Where gluten meal was fed with other grains, 

 it always cheapened the cost of production. These experimenters 

 conclude: The results warrant the stat-ement that '* for fattening 

 cattle these feeding stuffs (gluten meal and oil meal) are approxi- 

 mately of equal value, pound for pound, and that the one which 

 can be bought for the least money is the one to use." As yet 

 the feeding value of this class of corn by-products has been passed 

 unnoticed by those who fatten cattle; if experience shall confirm 

 their worth as substitutes for oil meal in the feed lot they will 

 acquire a new interest with many. (161-164) 



547. Kaffir corn.— At the Kansas Station, ^ GeOrgeson divided 

 a bunch of twelve grade Short-horn and three grade Hereford 

 three-year-old steers into three lota of five each. For concentrates 

 the first lot was fed corn meal, the second red Kaffir-corn meal, 

 and the third white Kaffir-corn meal. In each case the grain was 

 ground so fine that about three-fourths of the meal passed through 

 a sieve having a one-twentieth inch mesh. The roughage during 

 the first part of the trial consisted of Kaffir-corn stover; later corn 

 stover and alfalfa hay were fed. One hundred pounds of the 

 stover were fed daily to each lot of steers, and the rejected por- 

 tion weighed and deducted from the total, so that the weights 

 in the table are the amounts of forage actually consumed. The 



' BuL 67, 



