1895.] 



PUBLIC DOCUMENT — No. 33. 



453 



D. Analyses of Siigar-producinfj Phmls — Continued. 

 [Effect of different modes of cultivation on Electoral sugar beets.] 



* From beets weighing from I'i to 2 pounds, f From beets weighing from 10 to 14 pounds. 



1. Soil, loam resting on clayish hard-pan, had been for several years 

 in grass. Tomatoes had been the preceding crop. Five hundred 

 pounds of a phosjihatic blood guano were ajjplied before planting. 



2. Soil, a clayish loam, had been ploughed seven inches deep. A 

 libei'al amount of rotten sheei^-manure was placed in trenches and 

 covered by running two furrows together, thus forming a ridge on 

 which the seed were jjlanted. 



3. Soil, a gravelly loam, which had been richly manured with stable 

 compost and twice ploughed before 2>hmting. 



4. Soil, a sandy loam, underlaid by fine sand. The seed were jjlanted 

 on rido;es, which covei^ed ti'enches containino: a little rotten stable- 

 manure. 



5. No details of modes of cultivation received. 



6. Soil, a dark, reddish-brown, rich, deep, sandy loam. Clover had 

 been raised for two years previous to a crop of carrots, which preceded 

 the sugar beets. The beets were the second crop after the aj^ijlication 

 of twenty loads of stable-manure per acre. 



Composition of Canada-grown Sugar Beets. 

 [1872 and 1873.] 



