difference m thrift and un ity of the stock** 



For a while, an application foi p movement 



oi ,oil seemed < uite solved, but this ^pli- 



bions have . 11 s? ;oun bees wwi given 



of t vino a dry blood end one pound bone 



aeal, to forty-eight itjfty* ieet. Beds were left to 

 oheok the results. In general, the fertilised stc 

 has a rich, dark oolor, >noro thrifty than 



the yellow-greei ly, non-fertilised stock. On 



close examination, tbe crown is found to be larger in 

 the tret-.te J. Of the 107 befcB sowed for yelldf 



pine traneple-nt stoc v , ' o foui > beds ht-.ve t: 



thickest stand. 3?his, however, may have no bearing; 

 on the fertiliser. 



This summer, the white pine beds were infected 

 v/it isease t<. WiSBple : -ting 



ost Pathologist of this ' istrjct. j 11 of this area, 

 excepting one row of experimental lying adjacent, 



had been dr with blood &nd bone nea.1 when cowed. 



ae far as we havo been r.ble to ascertc?:.n, the fertiliser 

 in the i block of otock, and not in the exoerimentti 

 a the only difference in the Cc re aoaA treetoent 

 between the two. Yet, while the expgisfeMKtoX row had 

 only one dead tree at the root per forty-eight square 

 feet, due to t>;< .-pie ii ^aae, the "beds adjacent 



were literally brown with deac seedlings, Ihis fact, and 



-1. 



