FEED AND MANAGEMENT. 57 



the Wisconsin bulletin. The numbers in this 

 table correspond to the numbers in connection 

 with the owners' names and name of breed, 

 and the table is quite interesting to a person 

 that wishes to study the feeding question. 



Dehorning. I have deliberated considerably 

 about the question of dehorning. It has been 

 so much discussed in the agricultural and dairy 

 papers that it seems almost an old story, but I 

 have decided to give a little of my experience. 

 I waited and read and watched for several 

 years, dehorning only the ugly cows, before I 

 'became thoroughly convinced that it was best 

 to dehorn my whole herd. I now have no cat- 

 tle with horns except my registered Jerseys. 

 One reason that I leave their horns is to avoid 

 any possibility of getting them mixed with my 

 grades. I employed a man to dehorn my cows 

 that had dehorned over five thousand head, and 

 he did a good job for me. It would require an 

 expert to detect that they ever had horns. He 

 did the work with a saw and cut a little below 

 the skin, setting the saw to cut a little circular 

 in direction. Cutting below the skin caused 

 some bleeding, but he pulled out the little blood 

 vessels with a pair of small* forceps, which 

 made the bleeding cease. I think the fright 

 caused by making the cows fast for the opera- 

 tion gave them more suffering than the act of 

 removing the horns. As fast as dehorned they 



