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Show ooil Conserving Practices . Named By Agriculturalist mire normally produced In one year by any of the following: two head of eat lie lof more than one year of iiiitM, two horses, two mules, four calves, four colts, ten sheep, or ten iionts. 5. Applying In 193!! to land on which sugar beets are planted for harvest in 1938 an amount of commercial com-mercial chemical fertilising materials mater-ials (.including inorganic chemical substances used as fertilizers), the principal constituents of value of which are any form or combination of nitrogen, phosporle acid, or potash, pot-ash, and which contain 75 pounds (.or 50 pounds in the case of peat or muck land determined ns such by the State Agricultural Conservation Cimmittee of the state in which the land Is located) of such constituents in the form of net available plant food. o Farming practice requirements for e Sugar act payments were unnmced here this week, follow -- g release by Henry A. Wallace, v"civtary of agriculture. According to the conservation Vdes, each of the following will be aisidered to be one acre of soil nserving practices, Secretary "allace announced: 1. Maintaining until after July 1, ""vSS, one acre of a protective coving cov-ing of adapted perennial or blen-, blen-, ;sxl legumes, adapted perennial nsses. or mixtures of such legumes d grasses. tV-- Seeding In 1938 one acre of id to these legumes or grasses, or u xtures of them. ). Seeding and maintaining until :er December 31. 193S, one acre of adapted green manure crop, or nving under in 1933 one acre of a ' xi stand and a good growth of '' 1 adapted green manure crop. ,:- 1. Applying in 193S to land on the -m adapted to the production of P,rtr beets eight short tons of nni-Q nni-Q l.l manure or the amount of inn- |