New Yorx AGRICULTURAL ExprerRIMENT STATION. 69 . 
of protein it would be necessary to add large quantities of goods 
like linseed meal rich in protein. As seen from the analyses 
Blatchford’s calf meal has a feeding value somewhat inferior to 
old process linseed meal. Whatever it may cost to manufacture, 
no man who has sufficient intelligence to mix feeds can afford to 
buy it at anything like the price asked.” 
In the light of this information the farmers of New York must 
decide whether they can afford to pay at the rate of $100 per ton 
for materials no more valuable than those which are generally 
offered in our markets at ordinary prices. Special mention is made 
of this feed because it is sold for distinctively food purposes and 
because, prices considered, it perhaps does the farmer’s pocket- 
book as little harm as any other food mentioned in the above 
list, and less than all excepting No. 462. At the same time it 
typifies all those efforts here discussed of mixing common ma- 
terials and selling them under extraordinary names at extraordinary 
prices. 
CONCENTRATED FEEDING STUFFS LAW. 
Laws or New York, Cuap. 510. 
AN ACT to amend the agricultural law, regulating the sale and 
analysis of concentrated feeding stuffs. 
Became a law May 38, 1899, with the approval of the Governor. 
Passed, three-fifths being present. 
The People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and 
Assembly, do enact as follows: 
Section 1. Chapter three hundred and thirty-eight of the laws 
of eighteen hundred and ninety-three, entitled, “* An act in rela- 
tion to agriculture, constituting articles one, two, three, four and 
five of chapter thirty-three of the general laws,” is hereby amended 
by adding at the end thereof a new article to be known as article 
nine, and to read as follows: 
