254 FEEDING AND MANAGEMENT 
a ration of 8 parts corn chops to 1 part cottonseed meal. (Fig. 
58.) 
When tankage was used in place of cottonseed meal, better 
results were obtained, but the ration was more expensive. 
A ration composed of equal parts corn chops and shorts is 
also commended. 
If one were disposed to criticize the recommendations made 
in the circular, it would be in connection with the amounts of 
meal recommended in the supplemental feeds on pasture. One 
be hte 2 ee a. 
Photograph from Dr, E. M. Ranck, Mississippi Agricultural College. 
Fie. 57.—A patch of field peas can be seen through the bars of the gate. One can get 
an idea of the amount of pasture by comparing the height of the peas with that of the mature 
sow shown in the foreground. The sow appears to be in ideal breeding condition. 
per cent of meal, that is to say one pound of meal for each 100 
pounds live weight of the hogs, looks like a rather light meal 
allowance for growing or fattening hogs. The reader is es- 
pecially referred to the discussion under “ Amount of Grain on 
Pasture ” in Chapter XXII. 
Results in Alabama.—Bulletin 143 of the Alabama Station 
gives results of three years’ experimental work with swine. The 
following points are taken from the summary of results. 
When corn was used alone as a ration for fattening hogs, 
