316 



A STUDY OF FARM Ais'IMALS 



namelj', availability and cost. The following recommended 

 rations arc by well-known American authorities on feeding 

 dairy cattle, and for that reason are here given. 



Prof. E. S. Savage of Cornell University writes.* "The 



Figure 136. — The result of feeding too much wheat bran and poor roughage. 

 This cow was fed a mixture of 6 parts wheat bran, 4 parts corn stover. 

 Millers' bran disease resulted the cow aborting six weeks before her time. 

 Reproduced from Bulletin 302, Wisconsin Experiment Station. 



mixture I am suggesting for dairy cows this summer is as 



follows : 



300 pounds wheat l)ran Cost $3.43 



330 " hominy " 4 52 



300 " gbiten feed " 5.17 



100 " oil meal " I.71 



1000 " will cost Cost 14.83 



100 " "_ " " 1.49 



The above is for cows on pasture." 



Prof. A. C. McCandlish, of the Iowa State College,recom- 

 mends the following concentrate rations in a pamphlet on 

 feeding dairy cattle, f it being assumed that corn silage 



*Holstein-Friesian World, July 9, 1921. 



fCircular No. 64, Iowa Exp. Station, March, 1920. 



