Experiment Station Work, XXIX

By Allerton Seward Cushman, C. F. Langworthy, Charles Pinckney Hartley, David Ernest Lantz, Edwin Harrison Webster, George Lemon Clothier, Karl Frederic Kellerman, Merton Benway Waite, Peter Henry Rolfs, Philip Lightfoot Wormeley, Richard H. Wood, Theodore Sherman Palmer, Thomas Shaw, William Allen Orton, William Jasper Spillman, William Renwick Beattie, Henry Oldys, T. Ralph Robinson, Robert White Williams

Experiment Station Work, XXIX
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To build up and maintain fertility in the soil, feed a large part of the crops and return the manure to the land. If manure is not available, plow under crops grown for the purpose. Plow deep (but do not subsoil). Grow leguminous crops for the nitrogen they add to the soil. Commercial fertilizers and lime may be important means of improving the soil, but the fertilizer requirements of different soils and different crops in different seasons are so little understood that we are not yet in a position to make positive recommendations that are of a general application.