304 ILLINOIS STATE DAIRYMEN'S ASSOCIATION 



containing the same or in which it is offered for sale; or any 

 person who sells, or offers for sale any meal, ground grain or 

 other feeding stuff which has been so adulterated unless the true 

 composition, mixture or adulteration is plainly marked or in- 

 dicated upon the package containing the same, or in which it is 

 offered for sale, shall be fined not less than twenty-five or more 

 than one hundred dollars for each offense. 



Section 8. Whenever the director aforesaid becomes cog- 

 nizant of the violations of any of the provisions of this act, he 

 shall report such violations to the dairy and food commissioner, 

 and said commissioner shall prosecute the party or parties thus 

 reported; but it shall be the duty of said commissioner upon 

 thus ascertaining any violation of sections two, three or four 

 of this act, to forthwith notify the manufacturer, importer or 

 dealer in writing and give him not less than thirty days there- 

 after in which to comply with the requirements of this act, but 

 there shall be no prosecution in relation to the quality of any 

 concentrated commercial feeding stuff if the same shall be found 

 substantially equivalent to the certified statement named in sec- 

 tion two of this act. 



THE RELATIVE VALUE OF SHELLED CORN AND CORN MEAL FOR 



FATTENING PIGS. 



Summary of Ten Years' Feeding Trial at the Wisconsin Erperiment 



Station. 



By W. A. Henry and D. H. Otis. 



For the past ten years this Station has been testing the com- 

 parative value of whole corn and corn meal for fattening pigs. 

 One or more tests have been made each year. With the excep- 

 tion of one year, the corn was supplemented with wheat mid- 

 dlings, and, in one instance, also with skim milk. Experience 

 teaches us that corn, either whole or ground, as an exclusive 



