SEED STUFF LAWS AND ^ttD ADULTERANTS IO9 



Buckwheat shorts or middlings are that portion of the buck- 

 wheat grain immediately inside of the hull after separation from 

 the flour. 



Blood meal is finely ground dried blood. 



Meat meal is finely ground beef scraps. If it bears a name 

 descriptive of its kind, composition or origin, it must correspond 

 thereto. 



Cracklings are the residue after extracting the fats and oils 

 from the animal tissue. If it bears a name descriptive of its 

 kind, composition or origin, it must correspond thereto. 



Digester tankage is meat scraps from edible carcasses which 

 have been inspected and passed as satisfactory for human con- 

 sumption, especially prepared for feeding purposes through 

 tanking under live steam, drying under high heat and suitable 

 grinding. 



Distillers' dried grains are the dried residue from cereals ob- 

 tained in the manufacture of alcohol and distilled liquors. The 

 product shall bear a designation indicating the cereal predominat- 

 ing. 



Brewers' dried grains are the dried residue from cereals ob- 

 tained after "mashing and sparging" the malt. 



Malt sprouts are the sprouts of the barley grain. If the 

 sprouts are derived from any other malted cereal, the source must 

 be designated. 



Cotton-seed feed shall be a mixture of cotton-seed meal and 

 cotton-seed hulls containing less than 38.50 per cent, of crude 

 protein and shall be plainly marked "mixture of cotton-seed 

 meal and cotton-seed hulls." 



Alfalfa meal is the entire alfalfa hay ground and does not con- 

 tain an admixture of ground alfalfa straw or other foreign 

 materials. 



Chop is a ground or chop feed composed of one or more 

 different cereals or by-products thereof. 



Screenings are the smaller imperfect grains, weed seeds and 

 other foreign materials having feeding value, separated in clean- 



