Abstract
SINCE the application of the “whisky” money to agricultural education in Great Britain a considerable amount of experimental work has been carried on by some of the more energetic of the county committees. A few of the experiments deal with animals but by far the greater number with crops, presumably because the expense is less; they serve a variety of useful purposes, arousing an interest in practical agriculture, showing the farmer (if, indeed, he needs showing) that artificial manures will give increases in crop, and, finally, they may furnish very useful material for the county agricultural lecturers.
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Some Recent Agricultural Field Trails 1 . Nature 83, 313–314 (1910). https://doi.org/10.1038/083313a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/083313a0