168 RESULTS OF EXPERIMENTS IN SWINE FEEDING 
It is unsafe to make comparisons of the different rations, 
but the table fails to show any advantage of the No. 1 frozen 
wheat over the No. 2. 
The most remarkable feature of the experiment is the 
uniformly good results obtained with all the groups, indicating 
frozen wheat tv be a valuable feed for swinc. 
The same would probably le found of wheat slightly 
affected with ‘smut disease, and of otherwise shrunken wheat. 
(Fig. 42.) 
Frozen Wheat vs. Barley.—.At the Outario Agricultural 
College, the writer fed three lots of pigs to compare frozen 
Fic. 42.—Good plump wheat at the left; a poor type at the right, with narrow shriveled 
kernels, suitable for hog feed. 
wheat with barlev. The frozen wheat tested only 431.4 pounds 
per bushel. 
Lot 1 contained 18 pigs and was fed ground barley and 
wheat middlings. 
Lot 2 contained 20 pigs and was fed ground frozen wheat 
and wheat middlings. 
Lot 3 contained 18 pigs and was fed ground barley and 
frozen wheat, equal parts, with middlings. 
The proportion of middlings varied, being reduced as the 
experiment progressed, but was the same for all lots, 
The pigs in lot 1 averaged 41 pounds in weight at the 
start, lot 2, 37.7 pounds, and lot 3, 54.5 pounds. : 
Lot 1 made an average daily gain per pig of 1.08 pounds, 
lot 2, 1.1 pounds, and lot 3, 1.18 pounds. 
