Corn, Soy-Bean Pasture, Tankage and 

 Cotton-Seed Meal 



The Alabama Station in Bulletin No. 154 gives some very interest- 

 ing results from the above mentioned feeds. For comparison the 

 following prices are used. 



Corn, per bushel $ .70 



Tankage, per ton 40.00 



Cotton-seed Meal, per ton 30.00 



Soy-Bean Pasture, per acre 8.00 



The summary of the results are as follows: 



Prices realized from each bushel of corn when fed in connection 

 with soy-bean pasture, with tankage, with cotton-seed meal, and when 

 fed alone. 



AVERAGE OF THREE YEARS 



No. 

 Lot 



Ration 



Selling Price of Corn when Hogs Sell at: 

 5 Cents I 6 Cents | 7 Cents I 8 Cents 



1 Corn, \ ration, soy-bean pasture ^ 



2 Corn, ^ration, soy-bean pasture. 



3 Corn, f ration, soy-bean pasture. 



4 Corn alone 



5 I Corn, 9-10 tankage, 1-10 



6 Corn,9-10; cotton-seed meal, 1-10 



$3.55 



1.77 



1.61 



.55 



.96 



.82 



$4.33 

 2.18 

 1.93 



.64 

 1.15 



.97 



$5.15 

 2.58 

 2.25 

 .74 

 1.34 

 1.12 



The following table from the same bulletin is also very interesting. 



SOY BEAN PASTURES VS. CORN ALONE AND THE MOST PROFITABLE AMOUNT OF 

 CORN TO USE WITH THE PASTURE 



Following taken from Henry: 



"Field Feeding Com. Gaumnit7,, Wilson, and Bassett of the 

 Minnesota Station turned one lot of pigs into ripe standing corn and 

 fed another lot ear corn in a yard, with the results shown in the follow- 

 ing table. Rape sown broadcast in the corn field before the last culti- 

 vation furnished succulent feed to the foraging lot, and both lots 



