Soil culture and modern farm methods . nniilimillllllllllllliniUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllMIIII SOIL CULTURE r^ /- S OIL is the source of all wealth. From thesoil directly or indirectly human beings. and all animate creatures obtain the Creator planned this universe,He apparently provided every element neces-sary to sustain life and ordained that m theevolution of life and death there should be nodestruction of elements. Complex com-pounds are formed by the union of thesevarious elements, and they perform theirfunction in accordance with fixed laws, andfinally turn back in the f


Soil culture and modern farm methods . nniilimillllllllllllliniUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIilllllllMIIII SOIL CULTURE r^ /- S OIL is the source of all wealth. From thesoil directly or indirectly human beings. and all animate creatures obtain the Creator planned this universe,He apparently provided every element neces-sary to sustain life and ordained that m theevolution of life and death there should be nodestruction of elements. Complex com-pounds are formed by the union of thesevarious elements, and they perform theirfunction in accordance with fixed laws, andfinally turn back in the form of gases, vaporsand mineral salts to start anew their endlesswork of production. While elements may be indestructible,they sometimes stray, some become lostand often many are misused. Were it notfor such losses, natures store of plant food _. would not be diminished. It devolves upon man therefore, to co-operate with nature in order, first, to secure fromre so 1 the ful benefit of its fertility, and, second, to P-vent deplet omMo t virgin soils contain a goodly amount of the essentia inorgan^elem nts?and in water and air we find the four ^^f^^^^^^^^^^^^abundance, namely, nitrogen, oxygen, hydr


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidso, booksubjectagriculture