?24 Bulletin 132. 



SI. One row Goldeu Self-Blanching, set June 20. No fertilizer. 

 Crop almost worthless. Figs. 62, 63. 

 Six plants, 2 lbs., 9 ozs. 

 K.I. Three rows Golden Self-Blanching, set June 20. Received 

 200 lbs. wood ashes July 17. (The ashes analyzed 6.32 per 

 cent potash, and 1.87 per cent phosphoric acid.) 

 Crop the best in the entire plantation, the stalks being numer- 

 ous and very stocky and solid. Figs. 62 and 63. 



Six plants, 7 lbs., 7 ozs. 

 XII. Five rows Kalamazoo Broad-Ribbed, set June 24. 

 Received July 18, 100 lbs. dissolved South Carolina rock. 

 Crop medium to poor, the stalks being too slender. Fig. 64. 

 Six plants, 5 lbs. 2 ozs. 

 ^111. One row Kalamazoo Broad-Ribbed, set June 24. No 

 fertilizer. 

 Crop unusually good for a check, being nearly equal to XII., 

 yftut the row stood near a dead furrow and no doubt received some 

 benefit from deeper plowing at that point. 



XIV. Five rows Kalamazoo Broad-Ribbed, set June 24. 

 Received July 18, 100 lbs. bone black. 



Crop much better than XII., the plants being much thicker and 



heavier. Fig. 64. 

 Six plants, 6 lbs. 



XV. Six rows "White Plume, set June 25. Received July 18, 

 100 lbs. sulfate of potash. 



Crop fair. Fig. 65. 



Six plants, 5 lbs., 12 ozs. 



One row in this plot (shown in Fig. 66) was almost ruined by 

 being burned by the sulfate, the material having been scattered 

 directly upon the row and much of it striking the plants. 



XVI. One row White Plume, set June 25. No fertilizer. 

 Crop poor, stalks many but small. Fig. 65. 



Six plants, 5 lbs. 15 ozs. 



XVII. Six rows White Plume, set June 25. Received July 18, 

 200 lbs. sulfate of potash. 



Crop heavy, with much broader and heavier plants than in XV. 



XVIII. One row Golden Self-Blanching, set July 8. Received 

 July 28, 10 lbs. nitrate of soda. 



