6 
BULLETIN 75. 
worth 15 percent more than corn, but under other con¬ 
ditions and for the entire trials then made, the wheat and 
corn were almost exactly equal to each other. The results 
with corn in our more recent trials show that the high 
prices paid by our farmers for corn during the past year 
were more than it was actually worth when compared with 
our home grown grains at their prevailing market prices. 
The high prices received for fattened lambs made the feed¬ 
ing of corn at $1.30 per hundred pounds profitable, but the 
man who properly fed wheat and barley at one cent per 
pound would have an appreciably larger balance on the 
right side of his ledger. It is the province of the Experi¬ 
ment Station to investigate these subjects and furnish the 
information to all who desire it. In addition to Bulletin 
No. 32 on sheep feeding, the Station has published Bulletin 
No. 52 on “Pasturing Sheep on Alfalfa and Raising Early 
Lambs.” 
