Deterioration Sugar Beets Due to Nitrates 
1 7 
Plot 
Fertilizer Applied 
Tons 
Percent Sugar 
Apparent 
Sugar 
No. 
per Acre 
per A. 
in Beets 
Purity 
per A. 
12. 
20 tons mamire . 
10.3 
14.27 
81.4 
2,939 
18. 
20 tons manure . 
12.8 
14.62 
82.8 
3,742 
31. 
20 tons manure . 
11.3 
13.30 
79.5 
3,005 
13. 
P. 110 and manure; K. 130, N. 
200 . 
12.8 
13.92 
82.2 
3,558 
30. 
P. 110 and manure; K. 130, N. 
200 . 
11.6 
14.46 
82.6 
3,325 
14. 
P. 110 and manure; K. 130. 
14.2 
14.27 
82.3 
4,223 
29. 
P. 110 and manure; K. 130. 
10.6 
14.53 
83.4 
3,074 
15. 
K. 130, N. 200. 
15.2 
12.95 
79.0 
3,921 
27. 
K. 130, N. 200 and manure. 
8.9 
14.20 
82.9 
2,527 
16. 
P, 110, N. 200 and manure. 
16.6 
13.94 
81.7 
4,628 
26. 
P. 110, N. 200. 
9.7 
14.56 
81.4 
2,824 
17. 
P. 110, K. 170, N. 200, Ca 4 tons 
and manure. 
21.9 
13.33 
80.9 
5,825 
28. 
P. 110, K. 130, N. 200, Ca 4 tons. 
9.3 
14.50 
82.1 
2,697 
19. 
Nothing - added . 
10.1 
13.66 
81.5 
2,747 
38. 
Nothing added . 
7.2 
15.10 
81.7 
2,174 
20. 
P. 250, K. 170, N. 200. 
11.6 
13.94 
82.1 
3,234 
37. 
P. 250, K. 170, N. 200 . 
6.5 
16.30 
84.8 
2,119 
21. 
P. 250, K. 170. 
14.6 
13.75 
82.3 
4,015 
36. 
P. 250, IC. 170. 
8.6 
15.13 
83.7 
2,602 
22. 
K. 170, N. 200. 
13.2 
14.22 
82.7 
3,754 
34. 
K. 170, N. 200. 
9.9 
14.46 
83.1 
2,863 
23. 
P. 250, N. 200. 
9.4 
14.76 
84.3 
2,774 
O O 
OOi 
P. 250, N. 200. 
7.4 
12.75 
* 79.5 
1,887 
24. 
P. 250, K. 170, N. 200, Ca. 4 tons 
13.1 
14.37 
83.0 
3,746 
35. 
P. 250, K. 170, N. 200, Ca. 4 tons 
8.9 
14.40 
82.3 
2,563 
25. 
Ca. 10 tons, waste. 
10.4 
14.20 
81.0 
2,953 
39. 
Ca. 20 tons, waste. 
6.4 
14.30 
82.2 
1,830 
32. 
Ca. 20 tons, factory lime from 
settling pond . 
10.4 
15.03 
82.9 
3,126 
If we consider the east half by itself we have still more perplex¬ 
ing results; we have one plot without any fertilizer which yielded 
7.2 tons per acre, one plot with stockyard manure, 20 tons to the 
acre, with a yield of 11.3 tons, two that receive phosphoric acid, 
potash and nitrogen with yields of 11.6 and 6.5 tons, two that re¬ 
ceived phosphoric acid and nitrogen with yields of 9.7 and 7.4 tons, 
two that received phosphoric acid and potash with yields of 10.6 and 
8.6 tons, two that had received phosphoric acid, potash, nitrogen 
and lime with yields of 9.3 and 8.9 tons, two that had received waste 
lime in different amounts with yields of 10.4 and 6.4 tons. In one- 
half of the cases the minerals were applied in conjunction with and 
in the other half without stockyard manure. In regard to the effect 
of any or all of the combinations of the fertilizers used upon the 
tonnage no one, I think, would be willing to say more than this, that 
taking the east and west halves separately the plot that received the 
addition of nothing made the smallest return except in one case in 
each half, but the aggregate result in regard to tonnage shows an 
advantage accruing from the application of fertilizers, but this is 
neither large enough nor uniform enough to satisfy any one, besides, 
