Dwrssnn 2a, 1022.‘ "“ 1|‘ -. ,,, . d YDNEY BllSlC " SLllG i ViFortified woo Phosphoric Acid) Farmers who have used Sydney . 'c Slag know its virtues. An ap- t is made for a trial from those ‘t have not used it. ydney Basic Slag will be found ef- cious. on all crops where phos- » ates are wanted. 0N GRASS LANDS It encourages in a remarkable way the growth of clover.‘ _ It causes the grass to come away earlier in the Spring, and the better grasses to thrive. It sweeten the Herbage, l counteracts the aeiittyr of the soil, and ‘allows the bacteria which produces nitrogen to develop. ' ON HAY CROPS It adds greatly to the weight of yield per acre. It improves and sweetens the quality. 0N GRAIN CROPS It conduces to earlier ripening. It yields a straw of greater strength, and lessens the risk of the crop “lodg- ing.” It produces gnain of finer qual- ity. ON ROOT CROPS It prevents “finger and toe” in Tur- nips. It improves the keeping of the Roots. It raises the nutritutive value of the crop. It vastly increases the yield per acre. 0N ALL CROPS Its use means increased profits, and therefore EVERY FARMER SHOULD USE SYDNEY BASIC SLAG. i Place your order at once with your local agent or write to our General Sales-Agent for Nova Scotia. .45.. r ilalg)‘ s far-m that MR. R. A. BECKWITH, Hiantsport, N. s. who will give you any further infor- mation desired. Cross Fertilizers Ltd. ‘ SYDNEY, N. S. e Gave the Women the Vote and they unanimously elooted 0hr (hiet t represent them In the baking of the whitest and most wholesome rnsdt throughout F. E. island. The women and MoLeode rlouv mainstay of our country. .t1i-:00 * illlNti i MPANY unurono ‘ ‘U! your grooer for p It CHIEF" and Lion's snout." ‘Flam that letlety. NEW YORK FISH ADS WNSIONNIINTS BOIJOITED PROMPT RETURNS WI UPIOIALIZI IN SMELTS 11111 o-rnsia IIAIONABLE viiiuiimns or I'll-NH um norm! FISH?! p i N. S. GATES CO. NIW YORK. N-Y- .§- dll" l° B8)’ a good word ior p05- "11911- F01‘ years our asricultural elllerts have been advising farmers 110! lo put too much dependence on Pastures. tin his "Feeds and Feed- llll- Dr- Henry draws a picture o: “l” “Vefflle American farmer toil- “"~‘ l° 11111111108 crops to keep his starving in the midst oi ppm". In ilibct, ‘to listen to much oi the advice i. ven nowadays one would almost liihled to conclude that the model V1113" l8 he who has a small p“. ice-rill lils cows full rations in the stable the year mum; b70910 "my be conditions nndel w ich such farming is econgynjcaup llillfllabfi. but l believe that on tho Heal 1111110111)‘ of farms the mill and beet that is produced on grass l9 Illoftkllrofitable than ihatproduc- ed by stable feeding. This should be particularly true in the Maritime Provinces where l have been so- iournlng recently. These provinces down by the sea are blessed with an abundant rainfall. The present By] stair aspmshutivs 1t requires some tomerity nowa- 68 forithe entire season. and in FXJVYseKveIIIIod in winter. while ovgr] the growth of the pasture and it field m fifilirom the hay-field or 0011].! would have carried many nioro than a rlod pasture, his cows are litre as an exercising grgqnd and i went near it. the herbage was scant. run CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Piillilillill- Plfilllill l Nilll Siilllll 1913. 1111")’ mule and seven horse-a. I Two some 1180 this summer 1 first ‘visited the farm in company with .Prof. Trneman. In walking over the inward. it had that spring)’. velvety - feeling that one notices in strolling through English pastures. The cat- tle were making headway against the thirty-six head that were on it at the time of our visit. We stroll- ed across to a portion oi the pas- ture that had not been slaggod. It W13 growing up with inferior grass- es and. although the cattle never The cattle were all "mud-fat" and Prof. Trueman assured me that that Y“ ll"! Wily llwy always come in ll] the fail. l-la further told me that, allowing interest on the investment at 6 ‘per cent, making allowance for fencing and adding the cost of the slag. gains could be made on pas- ture at a cost of five cents a pound as compared with the cost oi stable gains of fifteen cents a pound wit pre-wnr expenses. - A remarkable fact about this pas- ture is that it has never been seed- ‘ in the full thinner than they went m, o; ‘he pasture bu; i0 the fact . l0 see what he could do , making it into a 500d 11611111191?“ lpounds of basic slat! Three years inter the ablllkglli“ i‘ was repeated and it is P1111111 ° mam pasture t lpoller a“ ‘he “rm Wm‘ slag ff°§yngzi~g of Canada. l consider this one three years at the rate of four 1m v two-year-old heifers. 81111 elgl“ M“ " This electric current can be made pearls: gleflflc Current from I-Oueh! Aching Joints, = Rub Rheumatic Pain . lernsl treatment. “NW”! l1" be" i119 dryest since ed with good pasture grasses. The 1904. but the drought has been mild pasture was slsgged and the p“. Oolllillirod with that in some other lure grasses came up of their own sections of the country. In this ab accord. Blue-grass and Dutch clover lindant rainfall we have the first were in abundance. Pflqulrement of good pasture. The When l came to the Maritime Pro upland soils are thin, however, and vlnces this season, l had Prof. True- usually deficient in fertility. if itlnian's permanent pasture specially were possible to increase the fer- in mind. As the season has been one tllity of those upland pastures, lib oi‘ the dryest on record, it afforded orally watered as they are. it would a crucial test oi" the slag pasture. nlonn much for Maritime ~ agricul-jProi‘. Trueman did not talk much "119- ‘about his pasture. lie asked me to '1 l1111| 11 chal- Wllh Pfvf- J- M- go and see it. As we drove over the Trlwlllflllv "l NW“ Swill! Agricul- couple oi miles between the col- turnl College on this point. For lege and the pasture iarm, the pas- souie years Prol. Trueman has been {ufes may we passed were dry and conductive 91111011111111"! with wm~ bare. The slag pasture did hot look niercial fertilizers on pasture landsfiapylhmg m“, n had two years be. 'l‘lie College Farm at Truro is smullq-Om’ p,“ there was nevertheless a in proportion to the number of good growth or grass and the cm. stock curried and each year the m, were yin-my and in 500d flash. $011118 11ml ‘l1?’ C01" hail 59°11 "l" There were not quite us many cattle out to pasture at a. rental oi $2 to pumping as on the previous visit, ‘$5 1191' "m? Usuall?’ l-lley Mme back but this was not due to the inabil- lllll l" sllrlllg- M“! lllls l0“ “m m that the College is hort of cattle at {lift Weekly taliserie l With today ends the last of the dreary days and weeks of anxiety and our nightly pilgrimage: along zhe brightly lighted avenues of stores with their dazzling array of ‘Christmas gifts, displayed with all almost uncanny cunning to catch tile wary eye of the impoverished shopper, have become a thing oi the past and will no more haunt ‘cur troubled dreiqns, at least not for another twelveintmth. Tomorrow is a day of rest, ‘for tunalely intervening between the strenuous preparatory days. and the final srrival and celefbration‘ of Christmas. Then the presents we have purchased and secreted in odd corners will be produced and hung upon the Christmas IP86‘. or furlivt-ly stuffed at miti- nlizht intn the gaping mouths oi elongated stockings. v Today ends the sail winter of our discontent. Our ihronrling over the gifts We must pitrchaso and be- stow upon our friends, is over. Tomorrow we may devote to the more plearlng contemplation of what our lrieutls shall bestow up- (ill i191. Tomorrow (or the next day) we may discover sadly that ih» friend upon whorl we have lavished a lriit lit for the gods. and which in CUT - lttdwhm all lmlbllila ,_.-_....-f—"~ - PAGE FIF-‘PEEN . mall PILOT l SMOKING“ its pron-urine 1m a sore and llieedina wound in our pocket book that only months of care- ful nursing will cure. has entire- ly foroctlr-n us. or has heizlled the Iillrfitifin of our intimate- reiallons i if a steer has quality to with tho sending of a paltry cart-withdiropsr handclinr; and feeding oi vcrsifled platitudes by way oflwill put mi the weigh‘. economically". cnnscitnce salve. Oli black ingrnti- The system oi tisiiig younger lull"? sattie for bccf involves the use of Tomnrronx- and this is Lhn bit- oi more harvested fcei! per 100 W188i rub oi aii.— We may disco- pounds of beef products than was ver that wn ourselves have left the cause whcn slot-r..- were carried forgotten some one-time dear fflluld whose generous gift will ar- rive only to’ overwhelm us with ’ remorse. ' Thert- are mam‘ stories about the Elvin: of Christmas presents, but lcw more popular with they 3090141111! Ansel than the story by! O. ilcnrwaholit n silly young cnll- lllt‘. llcwly married and not rich in the tvnrltfs goods. who pur- chased for ouch other the zift each most ardentiy desired. The huslinnti sold his gold watch. fl family heirloom. to buy her a LIVE STOCK NOTES. be replaced with high priced winter me Dream“ “ma 1t was decidedly feeds. Several years ago, therefore, the be“ pasture that 1 have scan llla Clllleg“ lmllwrllles purchased in this visit to the Marltlmcs. I llily acres a. couple of mile nway——| prop Trueman-s work with slag] a run-down pasture inrni. with thtrpamures may mean much id Adar]- chnrncterlstic light u-pland soil. The “me Agriculture if p; 18550113 are condition oi the farm is indicated applied. There is much chm‘, p“. by the fact that even the Govern- mm ‘and m both Nova 3mm; and merit was able to purchase it for New Brunswrck’ similar to that $1.500. Professor Truemun decided whlch has been regenerated with towards basic slag by wProf. Trueman. These: _ ‘pastures are Yleldlnt! llllle a‘ lllw; ,pa.sture. - pfggefll time. Applications of B115 l The first season a Dart of the at ‘hreeqea, mtepvpis would enublol liarni was treated wlth four hundred ‘ Mr Owners to capwnuze the “hep! to the acre. a‘ ramp,“ it is possible too that} b piled with profit toi 5mg mun‘ e up lands in other i. , i the most 111190115111 as“ ‘.1 lred pounds to the acre, Three yearspgvork in connecmm Wm, ‘he NQ\i\l had been Dractic- Agflwirurai Collelze.——l-‘am-l all?’ uon-prodlwil" Wslflledwgfgé weekly 5111- Aug-f 11'1"" “m” "wslly d" °° 21. 1921. l cooled cylindrical anode 30 incllesl 1 inches in diameter; DEVELOPMENTS IN aging m2 llollghglilaiisfit me anode ,5 a ma.‘ DU . a,“ filament 0.4 in. in diamctorl s d 22 in lons- This “lame” “l Zliicilnd by olmfl" °l L800 “mpitm a. actuated 10,000 cycrlglé 2:11) uftllggiekfli-v‘ “fr he déid produced bl‘! 121$. urrent i5 5115mm‘ ° ‘he; Continued from Page 13 ___ ______._.._ thelelcclric current is _ i‘ Wlllcll wrreslwnlls Mm grtilmwaavce ulirnxleelllc‘: curacy to the original soun - m E m aclume a telephone loud Bpealler on htd to the anode during n 1101-1 or to operate radio broadcast n; cat o e h ha“ cyde or me cum apparatus directly». u ‘ions of t-leola ignifigg ‘hrough the athndc. Many ‘nlerewng app cad been this action taking 111° Place °l me this new device have airea Y -d made and a icw possibilities can gri firm“ ha izmefly sqilblunflfe “tlallililltwniotitrlil flll?l(:r(l,lll‘lGl'fllDled 20.000 ‘timespeppfi! ma, e5 p08 8 » 0 pf0 . lllclure‘ for o“ “mm of me normal feggiidkirooil: ti‘; LIZ: be used for width. both sound and action can‘ a . rodumon o! Mgh treqmmcy he recorded simultaneously hand t e l) he‘. pur. projected with absolute sync rou- ism. it is practically unlimited as tovthe length of record it can make and reproduce and is. 11161010"!- suitable for recording speeches. d0- powcr for radio or any 0! p038. ,h Thlg particular tYPe "l lullarlglip is called the Masnelrml- ‘w we‘, ply 1.000 kw of 20.000 eve o r0 g 70 per cent. 0i)" bank cimceild‘ progrlillnllgr illfly gilaltiiilgemvgiltialllcinoanode voltase oi taking o ev ence an ' d‘ p curl-pp; Pose where a lengthy record of 20.000 volts rec sound is required. it can be dupli- cated and used as a fllm D5010‘ sfgph and applied in radio tele- grigphy in producing wireless sili- nals and for audio nmbllflcil-lllll- ll- img already been successfully a?‘ plied in radio broadcasting. The Magnetron. The largest vacuum tube over made consists essentially oi s water Etiquette ertsin rules which There are c was we mdivhmal: hold so<><1 1“ l" , t which 1111"“ “Way” - , that ho observed. ‘liheso decree _ plate and silver aro set 011° half inch . m“ w me “gm (:1 o etlle left. that forks are lal II ed Flat silver is always 8111118 in the order in which it is to b9 used. the spoopd or gap‘; "t; first to be us. ‘m M m? from the‘ platpiieAf-gg-QSQNPS" n‘ waw‘ Stop di-usslusi zgtllmatlff: pom; of the fork the Rub soothing, penetrating St. Jag bread and butter plate. The butter obs Oil r1811! ""3 71'1"! sow mid knife is placed either on the drismi aching loints. an 1'9 9 “m” i the plate or on the brea n stanlly. St. Jacobs Oil it: s 1121;"; gun" pinto, The narpkin, neatly less rheumatism llninien . wbuc mum‘ Wm‘ m hemmed edge “p. never disappoints. 111d cmnol’ m pgrmost. shoulil be Plfletl "l ‘he the skin. ye" or the plate. Salt. and P901191‘ Llmbel‘ up! Q11" °°1111'l‘l"l“‘l "my be supplied iridividuail)‘ bl" est St. Jae _ [gfwgqn each two covo u. 111d l" m“ ‘ "mum" you“ be "B: llrsakfast the finger bowl is lilac- irom Plmllllmlc wln',s°ral:fil';tn_ Q1] above the plats or slightly to lplilgnfiiiii‘. flascwiirbll is lust as thahraisqilést "ma"; occupies the mod yo; gpigtlca, neuralgia, lnm- Se“ n mo end o‘ n“, “Me hr. ‘iago. backache, spflllll thgg-Q from the drawing nwm- B F1,“ mitt. L’:‘°i.'..:i"... ilSibll l8 ~ A. HALEY st. Jacobs oil stop! any 0e11- hnd rheumatism is pain only. Not one case m nrt-v requires 111- i ' ntry. Above the co- ll‘; “fiat: ‘:10! of the tabla the ‘oi-rm. pups and saucers are Ill‘- rpqgod, together with the cream pitcher and m!" l>°"l- "ll "l" OOIIIIIIIII tantalum flanqftlll which the coffee w!" Q ‘m. Two mlnntos before break- FRQh III‘ t ‘It n i'a"s]t’dis'e"ahiio:::: the glasses are mlmrfiammltm The hostess lo always served , |,|)I0‘A ""1"" um. as the first oer-on my“ 1 eonornn "a". m. “u”, ‘M OOIIIGI lace and long circular lines to the he meal be brcBlPi ' the edSe 0f thcl 151111"! jewel atuddwli comb for her beautiful hair. The wife. to buy u dainty fob for his preclmig wMch. had her Ibeautifui hali- cut off and sold. if we are lucky enough tn have our irlr-nds arimnrl us and within hail. lei us hasten to count them "D- and make sure we ahve not forgotten one or two or them before it is too late. Fr “ofwhat should n man be prmiri ii he i5 11°! Droud of his friends?" Quid Nurlc. Embossed sliver cloth formed nl debut costume made with fitlcti basque. bertba oi’ delicate sliver sit t. r__ ‘. miles to minutes. more vitally—news l of the Read the advertisements. publicity. start lpruspociilt- live slut-k ]\!"..1lll(‘ll()ll, Miles and Minutes -- HE Atlantic cable is approximately 3500 miles long. TYet, to the newspapers, London is only a few minu- tes from New York. Your paper tclls you about happen- ings in the Old World within a few hours of their occur- rence. For newspaper enterprise has reduced those How far back we would go without newspapers! would remain in ignorance, not only of events at home and abroad-but also of much that concerns us even our personal, every-day lives. Every day new things appear-new products that save time, labor and money are introduced-new comforts, new conyeniences and new ideas are continually being worked out and offered for your beefit. The advertisements bring you news of all this prog- ress. They tell you all about these things, where to gefi them, how to get them and how much to pay for them. The advertisements are daily directories to wise buying. buying, by getting the products which have porved their worth by making good under the spotlight of consistent iii Read the advertisements and buy advertised products. Q. . _~ {weight on the same quantity ‘of oii iced than pigs from a scrub boar. - -.\'nr:li (‘arollna Agricultural llllli iiiiiiriiizitioii Oi (‘llrfrlll inzli-ltc! Extension Service. foul‘ or five seasons m1 grass. The riibiisliiiii; til still itiis IIIUYOlllPIlIS. tjllfllll-"S ])i'i)illl(‘Qi'r4 holler ll‘ \()i‘l‘l‘litli' siippij: v-"itli- the (lflilltlllti, thereby presenting, Ermine is present everywhere in gllits or slicillzigcs. ‘the debutante wardrobe. from Pigs iriiiii il piii'u~1i1'->i! ll-lill‘ \\'lll>\\'l‘il[tS m many dross trimmings, ev- nvcrago 25 per cont lllufv iniillirc oii to slipper ornaments. '\,htI Contented Cooks use Regal Flour because it returns them the greatest degree of satisfaction. We things that have to do with iisalr- - Protect yourself in your _ ,. . .. - . -a...-i_. .-»n:$‘:§.u‘-“‘ "._'~'.‘$Z;F"" ..~'-’~1;-<§%':sh iwwhnihrega-qssncipenei-‘sav..i .- ' ' . . ‘ _ -' ‘ , u a v p‘. vQPVQQPFQI-fi: IWSA$III|IflF ‘l! unfit BI’.4_snnF V I! ibfaaflfi“