16 BULLETIN 1101, U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. 
The average costs of producing milk were $3.36 and $3.70 per 100 
pounds for the two winters, respectively. The costs for the two 
respective summers were $2.40 and $2.19 per 100 pounds. (See 
Table 10.) During the first winter it took 69.2 per cent of the gross 
yearly feed, pasture, and bedding cost to produce 52.9 per cent of the 
yearly volume of milk, which brought in 53.5 per cent of the yearly 
income received from it. (See Table 11.) These figures and those 
obtained for the second year show that the income and volume of 
milk sold followed each other closely, but that the income and gross 
feed cost required to produce milk varied considerably. 
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