Bulletin, Volumes 124-147South Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station., 1906 - Agriculture |
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Page 4
... soil usually gave , and was perceptibly better than that secured from similar soils of adjacent fields where the ordinary methods were practiced . The 1906 rainfall was excessive and it is the belief of some that an abundance of ...
... soil usually gave , and was perceptibly better than that secured from similar soils of adjacent fields where the ordinary methods were practiced . The 1906 rainfall was excessive and it is the belief of some that an abundance of ...
Page 7
... soil . Cotton requires a more compact soil than corn , and while a deep soil is essential to its best development , it will not produce as well on loose open land , while corn does best on land thoroughly broken . A deep soil will not ...
... soil . Cotton requires a more compact soil than corn , and while a deep soil is essential to its best development , it will not produce as well on loose open land , while corn does best on land thoroughly broken . A deep soil will not ...
Page 11
... soil the resultant vegetable matter rich in humus and expensive nitrogen . The needs of our soil are such that the South can never reap the full measure of prosperity that should be hers until this is done . " " I give this method as a ...
... soil the resultant vegetable matter rich in humus and expensive nitrogen . The needs of our soil are such that the South can never reap the full measure of prosperity that should be hers until this is done . " " I give this method as a ...
Page 12
... soil . " The character of plowing done in the South is notoriously poor and the lack of systems of rotation is proverbial . 4. " A deep soil will not only produce more heavily than a shallow soil with good season , but it will stand ...
... soil . " The character of plowing done in the South is notoriously poor and the lack of systems of rotation is proverbial . 4. " A deep soil will not only produce more heavily than a shallow soil with good season , but it will stand ...
Page 13
... soil surface to the effect of evapora- tion would probably have a detrimental effect in dry seasons . Planting four inches deep in many soils in the upper part of the State is not advisable on account of the nature THE " WILLIAMSON PLAN ...
... soil surface to the effect of evapora- tion would probably have a detrimental effect in dry seasons . Planting four inches deep in many soils in the upper part of the State is not advisable on account of the nature THE " WILLIAMSON PLAN ...
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acid phosphate acre Agriculture ALAN JOHNSTONE alfalfa Ammonia Ammonia Potash Solu analyses Anderson animals Armour Fert Atlanta Augusta ble in Water bolls Brand of Fertilizer Bulletin bushels cattle cent Chem Chemical Clemson College Coe-Mortimer Columbia Combahee Fert commercial fertilizers Cotton Oil Cotton Seed Meal cowpeas cows crop Darlington disease eggs Etiwan Fert Experiment Station Farm Farmers feeding Found Phosphoric Acid fungus German Kainit Guano inches infested inoculated insects J. E. WANNAMAKER J. N. Harper lime Macmurphy manure Muriate Navassa nitrate of soda nitrogen Norfolk Oil Mill Paris Green Peruvian Phos Phosphate Phosphoric Acid Planters F plants plots plow pounds S. C. Ashepoo Fert S. C. Charleston S. C. Planters Sampled at Manufacturer Savannah season Seedling silage soil Soluble Reverted Available South Carolina Spartanburg spray stalks starch stomach worms sweet potatoes ticks trees Value pr varieties vines W. D. EVANS W'ks Williamson Plan yield