20 BULLETIN 1069, U. S. DEPAETMEXT OF AGBICTJKTXRE. 
duction. Through the weighing and testing of the milk it lets the 
farmer know which are the high testers and persistent milkers. The 
careful weighing and testing of the milk has caused many an intelli- 
gent dairyman to say : " The cow I thought was the poorest turned 
out to be one of the best in the herd." 
The cow-testing association can accomplish much, but there are a 
few things it can not do. It can not compel a dairyman to dispose 
of his poor, cows if he is determined to keep them. It can not make 
him feed according to production nor practice economy in the man- 
agement of his dairy herd. It can not require him to dispose of his 
scrub bull and biry a better one. It has never yet demanded the 
planting of legumes and the building of silos. It can never compel, 
but it will always encourage and point the way to economical im- 
provement of the herd, of the farm, and of the dairy business. 
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS. 
1. A tabulation of 18,014 yearly individual cow records showed 
that as butter fat production increased from 100 to 400 pounds there 
was a regular increase of about $16 in income over cost of feed per 
cow for every 50 pounds of increase in average production of butter- 
fat, 
2. As production of butterfat increased from 109 to 396 pounds,, 
the returns above the dollar expended for feed increased from 35 
cents to $1.52. 
3. Tabulations of the records by herds gave results similar to the 
tabulations of individual cow records. 
4. The records show that cow-testing-association cows are seldom 
fed beyond the point of economical production. 
5. The average milk production of 21,234 cow-testing-association 
cows, each on test 12 months, was 6.0TT pounds, and the average but- 
terfat production was 248 pounds. These figures are about 50 per 
cent above the estimated averages of all the dairy cows in the United 
States. 
6. Cows having high average production of milk and butterfat 
averaged high in income above feed cost regardless of breed, age, 
weight, date of freshening, and geographical location. 
7. The cows having an average milk production of 3,250 pounds 
had an average income of $32.25 over cost of feed, while the cows 
having an average milk production of 13,250 pounds had an average 
income of $218.19 over cost of feed. The average production per cow 
in the latter group was about 4 times as great and the average income 
over cost of feed was nearly 7 times as great as in the other group. 
8. This bulletin is based on the tabulation of the figures in 120 sets 
of records from 96 cow-testing associations. 
o 
