10. Lambs fed shelled corn and alfalfa hay were valued at 

 $14.00 per cwt. and returned a profit of $3.22 per head; those fed 

 shelled corn, alfalfa hay and corn silage were valued at $14.10 per 

 hundred pounds and returned a profit of $2.99 per head. 



PART IV 



11. Lambs fed ground soybeans as supplement to shelled 

 corn, clover hay and corn silage, maintained eager appetites but 

 failed to consume as large quantities of feed as those fed cottonseed 

 meal as supplement to the ration. 



12. Lambs fed ground soybeans gained 35.1 pounds per head 

 as compared to 36.5 pounds per head by those fed cottonseed meal 

 as supplement. 



13. Lambs fed ground soybeans as supplement made gains at 

 a cost of $9.76 per hundred pounds as compared to a cost of $9.92 

 per hundred pounds by those fed cottonseed meal as supplement. 



14. Lambs fed ground soybeans as supplement were valued at 

 $14.15 per cwt. and returned a profit of $3.09 per head; those fed 

 cottonseed meal as supplement were valued at $14.25 per cwt. and 

 returned a profit of $3.18 per head. 



PARTY 



15. Shorn lambs consumed slightly larger quantities of feed 

 than wooled lambs. 



16. Shorn lambs gained 33.8 pounds per head as compared to 

 36.5 pounds per head by wooled lambs. 



17. Shorn lambs made less economical gains than wooled 

 lambs, the cost per hundred pounds being $10.72 and $9.92 re- 

 spectively. 



18. Twenty-five lambs sheared 57 pounds of wool. 



19. Shorn lambs were valued at $11.75 P er cwt - an d returned 

 a profit of 96 cents per head ; wooled lambs were valued at $14.25 

 per cwt. and returned a profit of $3.18 per head. 



PART VI 



20. Lambs fed in a well ventilated barn ate the same quantity 

 of grain and silage, but slightly less hay than those fed in an open 

 shed. 



21. The gain per lamb was 33.1 pounds when the lambs were 

 fed in a barn as compared to 33.8 pounds with lambs fed in an open 

 shed. 



22. Lambs fed in a barn gained 100 pounds at a cost 

 of $10.68; those fed in an open shed gained 100 pounds at a cost 

 of $10.72. 



23. Lambs fed in a barn were valued at $11.25 per cwt. and 

 returned a profit of 51 cents per head; those fed in an open shed 

 were valued at $11.75 P er cwt. and returned a profit of 96 cents 

 per head. 



