The Lucknow Sentinel, 1932-09-01, Page 6•
tis.',O7' •
•„,
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. , . • •
• or
_3r 12,01, Dept. chemiptuu
„two ricuiturat c011ege GUelph
tion Bee Fall Wheat thIS Wenld be about 2,1 .oz. to 1 14„ea.
” • Itt he ar42' PrOlitable,After•er•:
feet •frote. tertiliZerS ou Wheat?,
' . Ans. •.,- ,tiaree years derneestratioa
experimental testi conducted 'over the
previncelia thDe:pertinent,
Chem-
istry, show, ati average'. in-
crenge o It.).•,hesirels pqr'acre le yield
from the use .ef fertilizers. is tlitite
common to fiad troth 2,00. to 31 lb% of
tertiliZe,re sed per aereOe wheat..It
• Is, aneStabliSlied fact that tite-gre,W,...
ing 'Crop talieS uoniy aboiii,!•60% of
-111e'lli06gdil'bvild*beltt-6-te•-1497o.Plies
Pherieucid applied•in'tertilizetia
, • !
therefore .aloyaren,t that_ much added
„ , ,, • • plant feed •thtist. remain In ther•seil tor
succeeding 'eropa.'•", Phosphoric acid
no used by the witeatlormaIarabineY additional, *.strtngth::: it, can more ,.....atta7-
tiona ' with • lieselin 7swgoet soils, • arid1 eessfu11r resiSt. bad ",:eandi-•
'per square yard, Which would notpro4
;Tide. enough fertilizer: neat the see'd
• injure It In any Way.. If .doebie
triple strength fertilizer, is used, bow.
ever, greater care mus. be taken la
the distribution, since, thie stronger
fertilizer falling near:the seed inay.
tend to draw the niollitate out of 'the;
.sed and thereby injure it" Of eeutse,
double strength fertilizer .is sown in
, , •
smaller amoants.
3. Willtertiliters "prevent wilder
UngL-
•AAdiofla1.
' • .*
Plant food either,
in manure or fertilizes gives added
strength to , any growing ',area: Ieas-,
nch as the fertilized oitep has thIs
'• With iron and .aleminuni Sear -sails.
• Potash 1Lk1se ferths:.,dembie•Ologg:
with the gen ` and s lest. la'only nun
Ute quantities from soils tO which it is
app1ied. "
Quotations 'from 'actual': growers 41-
hiatrate common experieece,
‘••• - "Where -the- phoSphate'.'And potash.
• Was „alied 1st year a' al:and of reek
clover and theotIlY (following Wit:eat)
is much heavieta Valuing:the Noone
field at 10 I Winild' rate the crops on'
the different fertilized elotg,at 13 and
14."--7rW.• C. . • •
"Theilethonetra,tiOn field was seed-
'AtoPs,; • • „ •••'„•.• •
:„.Witater kiI11p 18..iargek...thetretult' :
Oeat";ffeavitig ,ist, the • plaatii.ouf of'fhk
'grMind. „This is' due to freezing and
thawing. if the..:Whear field' is, pearly'
...drained.thefteethng of the waterwill.,
usetell-rheate the .what and clover
plants out •of -the 'al'aund, eituelak.coe-,
Siderable. Winter killing.. •NeeesSarilY.4
the addition of fertilizers will ..tot pre-
vent .auch, itetioa.„• Many, wheat grow-
ers have expiertsed their opinion Ott
the effect of „fe,rtiliars :in combating
winter killing throughout the past. tWo•
Years. Out ,of,73. inquiries sent
' • • 7. • ed•to cl-O-fee and tiuiothv It is-A-gotat -wheat,-erowers;' 48 -have reportedjhat--
stand. You. can plainly see where the the tertiliaecl wheat pante thr ugh bet-
fettiiiker was Sown.' (in 1031).„74. ter than the Unfertilized. The folloW-
deig.„ Woodstock lug are typical replies: ,
" "Fertilized pieta' of last year were !Would say that all plot?. wintery'
Seeded to red •ctoVer. There As a well The fertilized plots .phOW,
marked difference ,Where no feitiliZee' stronger growth."• -T. .M.cK., Pt. Rob -
'was 'rised;' net se thick end not ao Insets. '
•
'goo,. a towto."PA. E. r11biirs' The fertilized wheat ;wintered in
• • "larly this Pring the Pieta could :splendid' shape but „the ehite undettil-
ter I. .W., Lakefield:
"WhereI sowed tertilizerthe Wheat
did not kill itult. but' where there was
no fertilizer .yon can see, right to a
.row where it Whiter. killed." --CP: 13,
1s usually•stime'er",-thein graileg:Pt Hoe
' there." -E. 11., Milton. • , ,
Actual' -investigatiOne• bY thls de-.
-rairtmeet slioiv the' effects . of .fertilizer
Ariereitinue for at least three.yearei •
• 2. is there danger of "bitirting 'wheat
• • ' when fertilizer is used?
• ' Anit.-;Whena fertilizer is
•t1iroegh,,tlieLgas_nr.Arili-atta&to„.0.41..4.
is -spattered through the all at ..at -
,which., the, 1 -,wheat seed is.
' ..The_ordinary -ferti,iiiersasownItivogriol-thefertilizeri.',-- As -you -gross
: . • : At prevailingrates of 200. to 'The: the rows you Can gee' at once when
• ••• , per:;,acre'-"E-; ettainiy-, canntitinjute--: the- car-ure-Ton-the fertilized -gra-in-mid
spipatfili-gtein. 'At the rateaqtaited" "Wileff: not '-W E 131, Peterlitire. '• •
I he Picked Out Of the field:: •The •grass. „ized. are•bi poor shape and badly win-
• started to grow at least a week sooner
• than the rest of the field -and had a
much darker colour. • Since the ,cattle
were: turned out they seem to prefer
' • °
'the plote that we're fertilized, Per there
"The unfertilized, wheat is vety•thia.
and short atnal haat). bad 'colour. .These
cold; dry winds seem to do more dam,
age to the unfertilized' wheat."-7T.,L.,
Zurich. ,
"The sections a fertilized grain are
growing , as; are the, tiefertilized, but
Lthe_ettenatbaand__-thialtneas.....ef,„atand,
and the-degtee-of healthy green colo
of• the: .grgii.is very' pronounced in
, . •
11
• ••Open: Season. For Partridge •
• • In Ontario iaPromiSed
,
Fortl•Willlatn:--:-An open 'season for
- partridge in Ontario this Fail waapro-
rnised by, Hon. George H. ChaUies,
Provincial„Secrethry _and. Jillitister.of,
Game and Fisheries, at a meeting: Of
7 • the Thunder Bey'Fish and Game Pio-
- . tectire Association here. Mr. Challies
said the dates and length of the sea -
sets tor Shooting•the birds, which have
been under a protective act for some
ifeasonad yet to be decided.. •
• Theo7 minister ,made Another an-
• nouncethent of importance to the
• NOrth When he stated he would recom•
mend to the Cabinet Council the
abOli-
tion .of restrictions on fishing in the
Nipigon River as ap1Ied to residents
the same as other streams. Ai.Present
a -010 license' fee is charged for two
weeks' privitegeit for aliens and $6: for
'residenta.
•Mr. Challies said that with the dori•
on rearing wards in operation it would
he no longer necessary to restrict the
fishing in the Nipigon, which was the
principal reason for the fee. He fur-.
ther stated that the. GOVernment•
would supplement work 'otthe fish and
game association in placing Hunger!,
• attlittitridge tal the Wild tail& of• the
. district. A number Parent' birds
were pieced laSt• Fall and excellent
' hatches are reported.. •• :
Swam of Frogs Gives.
Illusion Road is Moving
Vancouver, Wash. -- Hundreds of
• thoesands of tiey frogs invaded Van-
couver recetttlY. Motorists on the
• Evergreen Highway said the frogs
• - were so thick over some sections as to
give the illusion that the2.yad was in
motion.
When the invasion began thousands
• ''of frogs 'left the river and headed for
Vancouver Barracks, *here they coved
ered lawns, sidewalksmid . roads.
Some of the streets in the downtown
section were reached and the tnigra
• tion extended two- miles east. The
• frogs travel in waves or "herds."
The only explanation advanced is
• that river and water conditions this
season are exceptionably:favorable for
spawning.
163 Centenarians • -
Found in Dominion
Ottawa, -There are 163 centenarians
ItiCallads.00f- whom 89 are Wothen and
74 men, according to census figures
issued recently. Fifty live In Ontario,
26 in Diov-ie Scotia, 22 in Quebec, 15 in
Manitoba, 15 Iii British Columbia, 1.2
• In Saskatchewan, 10 in Alberta, 7 it
• Prince Edward Islatd, 7 in New 13ines-
Vick and aerie in. the Yukon or the
• Northwest Territories,
•
' .
Mail ...to be Delivered •
By Air Ao Far North
•
"• Edmonton; Alta. -What is believed
to be the first step tower, the estab-
lishment of permanent post tothees In
the .North.west Territories Is indicated
in the last issue of the Post Office
Bulletin, which announces the, estab-
lishment of a mail service to the far
north, including points an Great Bear
Lake. At present the aviators plying
between MeMuuTay at the end of the
railway and the non -post office. pointa:
in the far north have been acting as'
.thall carriers.
• Under the new arrangetnent the nine
different settlements on Great Bear
Lake where the prospectors are now
staking claims and mining radium
itehblenilk_WAILreceive melt.reailar•_.
ly via the air ioute, as planes are oper-
ating almost daily to thin point.
Non -Transparent Dress
Is Edict for Teachers
,Beauce. Junction, Quebec - School
teachers here must wear modest cos-
tumes of non -transparent material,
buttoned to the neck with sleeves to
the wrist and the, skirt not higher th-an
eight inchesfrom -the ground, decrees
a resolution passed by Beauce Junction
School CO lesion. The commission
voted to ct
rate for fe
per annum.
tinuethe present salary
le school teachers of aa26
. .
World Conference May Be
. Held Early January
Ottawa. - The Imperial Economic
Conference an sassured success, eyes
of British. economic experts gathered
here are already turning to the World
Econonlic• Conference in London.
While no date is set it is expected
that this will be converted as soon af-
ter the United States presidentialselea.
tion as Is practical, late Novemher- at
the earliest, but more likely immedi-
ately after the New Year. It is con-
sidered •that what has been aetole-
plishedin Ottawa gives a distinct and
timely .1eAd to world eermornie
operation. • ,
•
Grass Strips to Check Fires
,•••
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REAbY FOR *I'‘`E NORLirs 9,11AMPIONSH4P SWIMMING MARATHON AT THE CANADIAN NATIONAL EXHIBITION AbG..31st
• • The seven men ' shown above ahould', all ' finish . within the 'money : • No:' 1' is IS4ore" Spondor, nOW. Of :Toronto, but ;formerly of 144,
Colborne, Who' has been a colorful figurelnprevious. years :' No. 2. -George Totem, Toronto, Winner last . year. and.. also Wlener.,:Athe
..•
famous Catalina' Island Swim : ' which he Was. the, WAY:Contestant . to, iinialt; No 3 -Warren Atidersoe, a powerful fellow from „Sydney.
;N.B.; No 4,Glanaa Gambl holder ef mi, Italian records and winner of :the lotnile Men's Invitation' pWho Iast yeitr;:: No. 5 -George
••
Blagden Memphis, Tenn, who has'. roade agood showing in termer years ; , No. ,6 -Milton: Potts of London, Ont.; who ie regarded as fa • ,
strong .deritendet; No. 7 -Marvin Nelson of Fort Dodge, Iowa, winner In 193, and holder IA the :record for I4 1 - 'course:
• ' • ,
show one..alternative: It's. "K, as in
Kitliina."--The Christian Science •:,
German Notes
Because little Willie let the porridge
boil over 5,000. years ago, Prof, joa
la:mines Gruess is now able to deter-
mine what boy andhis parents
had for breaVfast in the Stone Age.
For on some pottery dating from that
time, and found at Herkheim near
• Noerdlingen, traces iof a certain' kittd
of grain were discovered together
with spl'nters of charcoal. .Froin this
has been deduced that the Stone, Age
'Peonlogranfft-_-t_lie-coter7whieh-theY-
teem to have brought with them freni
Asia, and made porritge of -it whieh-
•Was hone -a -Tit pota it-eliarcoat
fire. Srnall causes' ofttimes have great
effects; the bermens say. EMUillie
cettitinIrneyer-dreamed that -the -por-
ridge •he let burn, and for which he
•no doubt received a spanking,' wtould.
occupy bearded professors in the age
of airplanes and television.
QUAINTNESS INNAMES. •
'...interpretation the, Literarische
Welt, a litetarriveeklyinvited-some
et, • Genitally's.' greate writers to con-
• :tette.' It-atyled. comeilation of
essays •."a lessen in,.aeeing•.deeper and
better with the. poet's Aid." .,1fhomaS
Mann, one of . the world's .- best .known
writersatells Of a spot northeast of
Munich where he spencla'mtich of , his
.time. "It is not:a __est, tied:not a,
park, it in ,11-faity garden,",he Writes;
• "The Wilderness ' .is •penetrated • by,
criascriza ..paths. lust, strips Of 11E4-
teried pass or 'gravel ruts, • obviously
And. Pasture Cattle
• Tairahass6e,, Carpet vase is
the newest weapon to be etnalOYed by
the Florida Forest Seritice In fotest-
fire fighting. • Plowed 'fife breaks,
forty feet wide and Mut to six miles
• lortg, will be planted to carpet grass,
•which will be used, aa graiing for cat-
tle and protection'. against •the spread
of fires. ' ••„.•
Theae carpet grass' strips aiso
bound and quartera section ,of land.
•
• •
4.
Curious names surround Berlin.
There is a forest called' "Heaven" anci
• Monastery christened "Pariv
ilise,"- a hamlet "Loolaitrouna" and a
itrge"Since=where"-A-forest."Dance-
hall" and a hamlet "Prettychimney."
Sonte'of, the littl-s hills must have been"
christened by a chef de cuisine. There
'Are the "Bread Baking Oven Hills,"
• the- "Butter Hills" -and the 'Sauer-
kraut Hills.".lbirrying people trav-
eling by car �r train will probably
never find them, but the•patient,hiker
discovers triany such quaint places
with surprise an,d amusement.
GUIDEBOOKS GO. LITERARY:
""Whal-Wett-e-r guidebook con
written than.',a description of the
country by its, best authors? Convinc-
ed that there is no happier method
-t-artific-ially-made -hat....crente_
walking on them, without one's know-
ing who dieit-.-That-Bauselise-(his-
dog) and 1 should meet a man :on
ttem is a lbewildering exception and
my comWeir-hdlte- fan dr Etna -xi -AL-
-mut -um 'thicir'etcasions- •-an-d -niereI3r
lets out one deep 'whoa' which comes
pretty close to expressing tny own
feelings toward such • an incident".
Ricarda Hitch, one of Germany's
• prominent women writers, depicts one
-of those sturdy medieval • German
4.
cities. "Of all fowl.. in Wesphalia,
:Muenster. is the .noblest, indeed, m.,alt
of Germany pone equals it .in this
respect!!_'„Theurmor walls -and- tux
: -
rets it has east off. But the 'home
gown' the town now wears still shows
resemblance to an armor; its cut is
severe : and its jewels do not force
themselves on the visitor." •
FAEEIRIDES TO MARKET.
By motorcar to' market may be a
Icommon thing in !notarized countries
such as the United States, but it •was
a luxury. in Germany until recently.
And it might have remained , so for
'tante leng Imre a no an -en r-
,priaing market hall management
evolved an ingenious idea: It sent
out little letters to the housewives. in
the neighborhood inforiningthem' that
-rtivote-eais-would7be-
disposal to take then, to the market.
`Mid now every mottling happy house-
wives ire titling in luxurious limoa
eines to buy apples and pears'. All ef
audden, the diatance to market has
become much too short. But the eager-
ness to buy 'has doubtless ratIltiplied.
And the kind and leVer thought as
well as the money invested in: gaso-
line appears to 'be 'bearing, rich fruit
es sales of fruit and sausage incteage.
TELEPHONE 0 Miles'Ichig."
TECHNIQUE
of "RantiPpe
Zacharitta" issues frem: a
-telephorre-hootin Betlini-alsitora-aread
not be alarmed.. For it will be neither
a college nor_un„ election.',eatelocj
phrase. ItLattli_be merelaLa-humble.
telephone User following the printed'
instructions which tell him how -fa -get
his number -,--Under difficulties. The
use of 'tkey yards" for letters which
are not readily Understood over the
telephone is7u practice which endures
in most countries. , But the thought-
ful which controls the tele-
phone stem in Germany', :Pro:raid&
,two sets. ar one desires to peakato
Mae -C. Smith in a nearby city arid
the operator does no understand -the
name, one explain "C as in Caesar,
S-amuel, M-arie, I -da, • T-heodor,
H-einrich." But if Miss Smith hap-
pens to live in another country so that
Wrong distance call is required, a dif-
ferent series 'of key Words is provided.
For the benefit of the operator it is
now spelled: "C in Casablanca,
S-antiago, M-adagascar,
H-avana," But even then
oneravaty-nor get life Yi-ght
-not if the young lady's name hap-
pens to he Catherine. For the "rules
of speech" in the telephone book only
•
300 -Mile Sand Hilb;
• Found. inoCrwAputhsatdroal.biay-...
Adelaide, S. 'Aits.-Sand hills like
ferrows,eaell
Were Aineeg theilisci
:
Dt.:Coecil T. Madtggnin Central Aus- •
tralia, according to' records recently
Presented' . to • the South Australia
brand' 'Of the Royal Geographical •
, .
lieeigotaa-M•a-Madigan,,in,the.„0'
his expeditions bas. added . ,20,000
-square p.iles.-to4he2maPiof
1 these reeOidiihOW:..• • •• '
The most notable of Mr. aladtgates'
-ereeditiona•••Twasteat-aniciertaleen., in-
-1-e29'when-heettat1orect-the-great-desa--
er in' the heart*ni the continent by • .
airplane. The actual area'ef•the dee- '
ett Is About 28,000 sqUatei•milestHhig-:!,-.
ger than. Tasmania�r Ceylon -but •: •
nearly -A quarter .of• it had been rifiex:1••• .
Plered before Mr. Madigan's memor-
able flight, which was the most exten-
sive yet. Made !nth& world outside the • .
Poiar regions. •
' This -area has_ho:ey named.thesiinp.
son Desert inrecoenition of the great •
financial assistance given by' the then
president of the .Royal- Geoeraphidat
Society of Australia;Mr. Alan A. Simi. -
son. Up till now the expedition to
• Central Australia has not resulted la
the 4iscovery, cof anything of economic
value, , but: interesting scientific finds
,have been, made. On the ,return .Jour-
ney Mr. Madigan proved. that "Lake"
Eyre is mostly solid itind; with ,a slight
peattegAtialltjustead of a tak.syto,mp.._
as more cautious observers had imag- •
ined for more than milt a'tentury.
• THE FAMILY ALBUM ---THE MORNING PAPER _
6/11YAS
•
ton.UA
60E5 To POOR ToBRIN6
IN MoRNIN6 PAPER
•
.stfois wick Mt .!
Hoyst MOVERINCI HE
Wi614ES Ticif ti WOULD •
'BRING THE PAPER ON
TiME
By GLUYAS WILLIAMS
MILDRED 'CALLS tPri UP-
STAIRS 15 HE LOoRittOgOR
THE PAPER, BECAUSE SHE
BROU6HT ITN A MU
10.441.E Aka -
•
Glider Lands Itself •• •
• As The •Pilot. Jumps
• Wiesbaden. -Herr Piss% •a pilot. of
'the flying. school in:Aachn, may' be-
crime the firet member of, the Cater-
pillar .Club tohave Made an escape
from a glider plane. On a repent
flight in his 'glider Cthruilus he was
seized by •arr curfiYff. And
driven rapidly to an altitude of 6,000
feet, Where the plane capsized: He
felt ourof the pilt'a seat, but made
a sate leading' with a parachute.
Muth to the amazement ..of the
crowd watching the' accident, the
plane tame circling Own and made a
perfect lending without anybody at
the controls.
141.015 UP5TA1R5 TO 6E1
miLDRED REpk1i6
MoTi4ER HAS ir 1401(ING
UP SUS6E51ON6 VOR
DINNER TO-1416HT
•
•
Spanish Women Pay Allmon)
Madrid. -One of the, most amuring
aspects of the new Spanish divorce •
law is that women mud payllintony
to their ea -husbands if the latter ob
tain the dliorce. This presumes an •
4ity7 of slues ihinhtheWT�
gime desires to attain but which cer-
tainiy does net exist at present.
DASHES WINN TO Nircii-
EN, WHERE Win
SAYS WORED HAS IT..
tfOtV
5140015 TO WILFRED Ma
15 BRu5HIN6 HIS TEETH
AND WHo ANSWERS RATH-
UNIKELLIGBLY 111,5
1141•4E IJ/N6 ROOM
GRAS PAPER tRoM
100 OF PIANO, AND 3CANS
NEADLINM WHLt S1Y116
WO Po MO COAT
vlios it was YWEP'
DAY'S PAPER HE 601r
HOLD OF AND LEAVES
IN DIS61)5r FOR Ora
• s,
tSts. . 'AV
-Ls
°
' •
• He-” here. did you learn to
diver•
, .
She -min divers places.'
;7,7.J.I'a...'•;444.4.: •