tions '7†Anawer.--ptattt food elements are removed in crops which are harvested tron the soil both In the straw amt And In the (run. grain or need. They are tuso removed in the bodies ot live- stock vaunted upon the BOO, Ind nitro. gen especially is washed out of the soil through drainage water. Small calculus ot potash and phosphate in Answer-With oats at the present low prices it is dimcuit to make a trrofit from the addition ot fertilizers directly to this crop. From results ob. tained recently in our demonstration work, it would appear that eats can bentytit most trrotitablr from the re- eiduai eilect ot tertilizere applied to the crop preceding If, however, oats ere grown ea a cash crop. 200 lbs. of fertilizer to the Acre my be of advant- age. Whether or not it will pay will depend upon the type ot soil and state ot soil fertility. It min ha been taken from the Aeld frequently within the last few years without the return of much fertility, the "enable 'rotastt, ot the soil will undoubtedly be con-l eiderahly lowered. in which case a ter- tiliner ouch es 2-12-6 will pay well. 1 s. In how many ways are plant food clot-ont- taken from tho ttollt 4. How does 6% potash in the fertil. izer, say 2-12-6. applied at the rate ot 200 lbs. per acre, help the grain to pay extra cash in u spring crop. any oats? Amoree--wo know of no reason why fertilizers ot any kind should cause scab. Scab is a fungus disease which thrives in en alkaline soil. "i potato seed is not treated end is plant- ed in n treabinteeted soil that is Ilka-' line in reaction, there is every chanceI of e treatrtrr crop being harvested.| Many potato growers and that by turn. under a second crop ot clover in we: Paratton ot the potato need bed, the desirable small degree ot acidity in the' coil which produces clean potato stock results from the decay ot the organic: matter. . l h eaten Ontario in 1930. there war On increase ot 13.6 bushels. Ott the lame plot in 1931 without my lurther fertilizer there was " increase ot 4.320 lbs. ot clover hay (green weight) over tmtertiliaed land. in 1 test con- ducted hr the Department or Chemis- try, O.A.C.. where complete fertilizer. were applied to mangels and no tar. ther fertilizer applied for two years. there was a gain ot 4.t tons ot mangels the first Fear; 9.7 bushels barley the lee-9nd year, and 600 lbs hay the third year. chwnrily. airontiun U1itrt, lu- ohr.aittahle, it the sail proved in its productive c 3. Should a 4-8-10 fen scab on potatoes. used a! 800 lbs. per acre? Attswer.--tn experimental Work and leld demonstration tests considerable information is accumulating which points to a decided "utter" elect iron tortillzere. For instance, where ter. tiltrer was applied to alum in 1930 giving an increase ot 9,200 lbs. (green weight) per acre, the some Not in 1931 without iurther fertilizer gave an increoae ot 2,240 lbs. (green weight) over land which had been unfertilized. In another instance when fertilizer had been applied to barley on clay loll Ci _-._..... m... mun-zen used with man-l cola have been obtained where 2-12-6r lertililer was Applied at the rate ot 375 lbs. per me. Thu gave an “easel yield on loam soils ot " tons per acreI against " tons where no fertilizer was [ lead. On clay soil: it gave a yield of .3 tons per acre against " tons when. no fertilizer we: used. *le are very good yields on sugar beets but! was slightly surpassed try fertilizers e Ittle higher in potash. l 2. Will complete fertilizer build up, the soil for future crops or no they only good tor one crop? I Atttrmrr.-rts the iuatottatration tests conducted on 1 large number ot forms throughout tho province by the De. partment ot Chemistry, 0.A.C.. best returns from fertilizer: and with man. 1. wnu tannin: would you lune" lot mun? How much per acre, and would the nine fertilizer be used tor sugar beets? n MUTT AND JEFF--. Br BUD FISHER , NR» m woo , t M GONN$ HANG BANQUOV IN WT RAN. on me gen BUT |F You thL- ' 'tttta. coqu MS“ You» mum Me JC7u%iirikFrt A (cone OF sess- VA. . vnuun-nnIL£b all the w rerunzer muse used at the rate of pa n “HIS! ma be be at " m _ ll l Attorer.--ta the system ot taming ,commoniy pursued in Ontario, time should be applied once in tour or "tt [years on the average. in soils that are naturally short ot it. Crops are m. _ tated so " to introduce a legume crop once in tour or tire years. The second 'growth ot this crop is usually turned Ire, as green manure. It niso odds considerable nitrogen to the soil it legumes predominate in it. A fair amount ot livestock is usually kept and manure is'returned es generously; as possible. In addition to these pram tices. suitably balanced fertilizers MF plied to money crops or to crops of re- latively high value has been found to Iincrease yields at considerable proftt. or course, the degree ot Protit will de. pend among other things upon the quantity ot fertilizer employed. We mean that while three bags ot tertiV lizers per acre mar give s highly pront- able return on wheat or corn or sugar :beets. the addition ot eight bars to the were, which would entail a much greater cost, would in all probability iconsume the additional profit, The I‘Onturlo farmer has Co determine this point for himself, in View of the type of his ml, the crepplu: system which, l follows and the amount ot fertility} tut he is abie to return in barnyard ’munure and green nunures. _ i 7. What is the maximum phosphoric‘ ,m-iii that one can use in a potato ter' tilizert For the last two years ws) have used “2-6 for early potatoes and l Artswer.--Results in our detnoastray tion fertilizer teats throughout thel past three years point distinctly to the value ot 242-6 fertilizer " potatoes under general conditions. In our tests ot 1931 where 242-6 and 4-840 fertil- izers were compared, we found the latter Care a little higher yield out light soils and loamy soils, but the dit-) ference on loam soils hardly overy came the difference in cost ot fertil-l lzer. The reverse order was found to, prevail on clay soils. From the rather' extensive investigationai potato work} conducted by this station we are of the', opinion that as least 12% phosphorici acid can be used with good result: in fertilizers for early potatoes. it would appear that while your choice of fertil- izers tor the early potatoes, namely 4. 12-6. is quite " we would recommend. yet the results ot our tests indicate i that you could get slightly larger yields by substituting 4-8-10 for the] Into potatoes on the light soil. This will depend, of course, upon how] heavy a coat of manure you apply. In; the tests conducted to which we have referred, no manure was applied. in the event that you have a fair coating of manure to apply, 2-12-6 will the. you a better balance ot plantfood with manure than 4-3-10. l In the interior of the Republic of‘ Fa-rata-aa Panama one often sees valuable ttttb- Love In like a tree-re-ig ot hogany being uged as fuel in the W- melt athlng deep-roots tllrbugh tbil boneros, or charcoal burners, dong our (wing. and often oontlnuiug to the cooking for the .villaes and grow greenly over a heart in ruins. planters. Mahogany " cheap and And, inexplicable as it is, the blind- makes the best cureotu,.but.the Canal er is this passion the more_1t is Zone authorities are planning to ':ltiiaaoiir. It is never more £9me troduco other fuel 30 as to save mounted than when it is without . valuable timber. Shadow ot may,“ --Wetor Hugo. 2-12-63 for late. and the results have been very good. We have a sandy loam soil and usually put on a light coat ot manure. Would a proper application, utter liming, ot a well balanced fertilizer hr crease production to an economics! maximum? Attorer.-'rhe natural reaction of the removal ot “no and magnesium in to produce a condition where acid pro dominates. It so. does this actlo'n on}; an tnt- balanced troll condition in whlch the acid elements predominate? the bases in the soil occur constantly? Artswer.--certaia ot tho Duo: in the soil are removed by cropping and by drainage. For instance, lime In thus removed, and magnesium. the order named are also removed by this means. Mahogany Used " Fuel the gradual elimination ot t, in view ot the type Topping system which he amount ot fertility to return in barnyard Size 8 requires 1% yards 54-inch material and 95 yard 35-inch contrast- ing material. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plain- ly. giving number Ind size of such patterns " you want. Enclose 20e in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number. r't’i address your order to Wilson Pu l Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Tm ". . Spanish tile wool jersey with brown linen collar and brown suede belt is cunning. A dark green tweed-like' woolen with vivid yellow pique collar is In.- other scheme you'll like. Style No. 3465 is designed in sizes 6, 8. 10 and 12 years. The original dress med brown wool crepe. The collar was almond green wool crepe. The wide brown belt was shiny patent leather. Ytra can carry it out so charmingly in sheer woolen, now so modish. For the darling pleated collar, you could use pique, linen or self-fabric in a contrasting color. For little daughter of school age, why not this darling scat-like dress? Illustrated Dreamaking Lesson Fur. naked With Every Pattern BY ANNE BE LLE WORTHIN GTON A dororated skull unearthed by Protessor Alfonso Cuo leader ot expedition in MeEieo.F annual specimen is adorned with curved sea shells in the eye sockets, n piece ot flint in the nose culty end the whole tiala'aed " with turqupls. What New York Is Wearing Ancient Mexican Art I t pay in his next incarnation. "Who sinned, thin man, or his parents, that he was born blind? v. 2. So strong were the old legalistic tendencies of Ithe disciples, that the sight of suffer- ine aroused, not che impulse to help, but the desire to discuss. Jesus' answer (v. 3) did not mean that sin does not bring sufGring-- for it does. He did mean, however, to diseouratte the tendeney--stilt am- ong us-to think uncharitahly of 'cut. fering as punishment. Let a non- churchgoer. say, be killed in u motor accident on a Sunday and some one will be sure to say, "God's judgment!" We are not in a position to My. Our duty in such a. situation is made clear by Jesus' repiy to his speculating Ietip1ey v. 3._ We ure_to ask,_ttoy--, The elaborate process of wetting the clay-sealing the man's eyes, sending him to the Pool of o'lcam, is symbol- ism. The clay symbolizes the act of creation, Gen. 2: 7. The Christian, the man whose eyes Christ has opened, is a new creation. Sealing the eyes means that our spiritual blindness meat be brought home to us. Siloam mans "sent." "John saw in the name a reference to Jesus Christ, "sent" by God. The command to "wash" is part "mfr do such things happen?" but "What can I do to help?" So will the works of God be made manifest. Tty Greek view “as that in some previous state of existence a pan did something wrong for which he " made The queation which they are made to ask in the story Indicates the Lwn main views which th: people of John's time in Ephesus held regarding trouble. The Jewish view-as old as Job's comforters-wa, that trouble is the punishment or the sin a man com- tttits-.?' the sin which his parents comma. ilind" is a type of the Jews who re- ceived Jesus. The Pharisees in the story represent the prejudiced stub- bornness of those whose hearts were hardened by Jesus' life and teaching. L THE BLIND MAN CURED, John 9: 1-7. It is probable that the blind man was at the entrance to the Temple. 0n the Sabbath, however, he would neither be begging nor receiving aims. The rapidity with which the news of his cure spread suggests some reli- gious festival-perhaps the Feast of Dedication, 10: 22. The "disciples" (9:2) may have been the Judean gran), and not the Galilean. Would tishcrnrw. he intervs:ed in the theo- ltitalquertion'.' _ _ " Itmtoovcrros-Chapters 7 and 8 show the gradual hardening of the Jewish hearts against Jesus. Many of his own disciples no longer walked with him. The shadow of the ap- proachi.rg origin; W".S already darken- ing hi, way. He knew that the end on“ not be far off. The "man born ANALYSIS. I. THE BLIND MAN cums, John 9: M. II. “I WON'T BELIEVE, John 9: 3-34. m. mm mum. on AGAINST am, John 9: 35-41. ’WmnOO-O- February " Lassen BH-Jesus and the Man Born Btind-gohn it. 1-11; 30.88. Golden Tettt--t am the Ilght ot the world: he that followeth ms shall not walk in the darkness, but shall have the light of life.-- Jolm 8: 12. "No new age over sum; from scrum. Each en makes its parti. culu‘ contribution to the future."-- Raymoud B, Fosdlck. Jesus, summing up the meanimt of the "sign," declares that his coming: into the world is like u judgment. It brings out the characters of mem V. 39. No one ever comes in contact with him without being compelled to sije with him or against him. The choice he makes determines his destiny. Failing in their purpose. the Jews' degenerated into abuse, v. 34. They hated Jesus. Therefore they would neither see nor admit any good in him. What about our attitude toward iii; deeds of people whom we dislike? III. WITH CHRIST. on AGAINST Hue, John 9: 35-41. Resourceful and bold as this man proved to be, he could not but haw} telt keenly his excommunication. His hope of employment would now he Cone. He would be shunned as the outcast he was. One could imagine him moodily wishing that he had been left as he was. where he could at least have had society provide him his liv- ing. But, meeting Jesus, who, hear. ing of his punishment was probably looking for him, he found a friendship which more than compensated foranyi loss which his loyalty may have caused 1 him. To him as to many another, be: set by life's misfortunes, Christ be-' came "ali and in all." i At last the silence was broken, and like the t1rst breath ot the trade-wind which clouds the Mazaruni surface. the mirror ot silence was never quite clean again - or so it seemed. Mr Northern mind, stored with sounds ot memory, never instinctively accepted a new voice ot the jungle tor what it was. Each had to so through a re- ference clearing house ot sorts. Any strange wait or scream 'striking sud- The story begins with the healing of physical blindness, but it soon shifts to the Jews who, in spite of the con- clusive evidence, remain stubbornly unbelieving. They fastened upon the work involved in wetting the clay on the Sabbath, and mule it the basis of the charge against Jesus, v. 16. "A good man would not break the Sub- bath," said some. "A bad man could not work a miracie." retorted another. So _thteontroversy went on. It wss euly spring in the tropics. dolly not my our intently crumb! All! Him nemlndodoiplpemdlddlehuisedso-emionoitheputâ€"eo-ede __ 's1ttret-tredootuttt-aano otetantt.oradraattaeq We with John Gibson Loch-rt to “Lite ad hut in. the underworld. The low similar sound. Then. appreciably on n " Welter Scott" gives us on into» at up and the spreed ot poms were second thought. “the keen ooueon- "tine new or the methods employed no less silent then-the myriad crew tntion of - oeuoe to identity this by Scott in treating his children In Lures which. I knew, numbered or new sound, to hour it onto. to In it in their early days: hunted on every side. " who u it [mind with its chmcter end mooning. He nod now two boys end two had slipped heck' one dimension in Per-hops " some distont place and giri-attd he never had more. He spece snd,wnlked in s shadow world. time. in utterly incongruous surrouhd- wu not one ot those who take more But these shadows were not ell color-"lugs. it my in turn "att into con< delight in a mere infant; but no less. Although the light was strainedfsclousness - . metnorHitrtite stimu- father ever devoted more time and utmost barren by the moon mountains, l lated by some sound of the future. lender care to his othortrtg than he yet the glow from the distention endl I stood in s pstch ot moonlight " did to each ot his, as they succes- craters still kept something ot coiorr,'tettttte to the baring ot n hound. or so' trivets reached the age when they and the green ot the leaves, greet snd,l thought; that musical ululntion'couid mum to him, and undelulail‘ smell, showed as n rich dark olive. Thetwhlch links man‘s compsnion wolf-hi. talk. Like their mute playmates, utternoon's rain had left each one wards. I turned to the Indinn at my'cmmp and the greyhounds, they Ii“ tttttted with clear water, and this elbow, full of hopeful LiLiitGi.lit' all times free access to his study; struck back the light " polished nil-:With his quiet smile he whrstrered,i,he never considered their tattle as any ver. There wss no tempered 11.1."ei.ytiy's11tyyyy'; and I knew that i lied disturbance; they went and came a tlon. The troll ahead was either black: frog ot size and voice well in Ptuer pleased their fanrr, he Was tl. or a solid sheet oil ight. Here and heard the giant tree frog ot Gu'utna-- ways ready to answer their quesMonn therein the jungle on each side. where ' ing with these mighty jungles. I could l, “a when they, unconscious how he a tree had (alien. or a due ot cleariimgine the great goggle-eyed fellow was engaged, entreaied him to lay space led moonwards, the effect was otyorawled high near the root ot the'down his pen and tell them a story. cold electric. light seen through treesltiuurle, clutching the leaves with its.“ would take them on his knee. re- in city parks. When such s t'"t.ti'ttetyteurrped toes. The moonlight peat ' ballad or a legend, kiss them struck down upon us it surpassed would make him ghostly-a hostel and .19; them down again to their simile. I have seen old paintings in'trog: but in the day he haunted splssh- marbles or nineplux. and resume in. Belgian cathedrals ot celestial light'es ot azure and green on his scarlet lobar a. If refreshed by the linen-up which now seem less imaginary. Ibody. tion, of the sacramental tendency of this Gospel. Only after the rite of hep. tiam does the believer enter fully into the new life. IL "I WON'T BELIEVE, John 9: 8.34. “Where did you tlm1 your won- dertul follow-up system? " would get money out at anybody." “I simply complléd mid adapted the letters my son sent me from college." Sounds of Night in the Jungle was a Dark and Stormy Nirht---t At a turn in the trail we squatted and waited for what the Jungle might send ot sight or sound. And in whil- pers Nupee told me ot the big frog kunnma 1:19,â€.- wnyl. " never came to the ground, or even descended part way down the treel; and by some un- known method of distillation it nude little pools of ity own in deep hollow- and there 1ired.--Williarat Beebe. in “Jungle Peace." ELOQUENCE OF WORD. Br words we hue it in our Power to nuke such cotnlrittatiot" u we Cqattot possibly do omen-wile; by this power at combing we are dale, by the “Milan ot well-chosen ctr. cumstances, to give I new lite and force to the simple object; in point- lug we may represent any the "ure we please; but we can never give it those enlivening touches which it may receive from words. To repre- sent an align". in a picture, you can only draw a benuzliul young man winged: but what ilfilliilfig on fur. nlwli anythin: an grand :14 th. addy r.uu of one nova, "Tim 4113'. of me Lord , Southampton Boating dock, under- going I [homugh grooming in nonunion fair her next busy â€non. The ttropetters each weigh 15 tons. Giff/ERIC) Joie-pi-ist-Ei, TORONTO Kind Kind Love That For Grow Kind Kind GROWING IN Imam are gardens, _ thoughts are roots. _ words are blossomu, deeds are Imus; _ is the sunshine warms into lite, only in darknes- hatred and strife. Getting Ready DARKNESS ' One of the ttrotrterna of mm. 1 no is to “all bad dam-b“ do“. i to oneself. beau" " {a In old as. that tho debt.- become payable, and In is not plan-at. Stlu, there In [campus-non- tor again. They in, {mm by litth the right bu "my; PM]. " little att longing coul- Imlo u an to than out mu. by Hula the world no" no man; the butle- of rigtst Little " mu. the wrong gives an The (Liam, who know more about wisdom than my other nee, design“ 1") who by I conbinoiion ot in. ideo- mplu tor wind out 1mm... Wing with then. is not tho - old no. bereft ot Bil " illusion. bat he who. like the wind, rushes headlong and ir- resistibly on in way. and cannot to “and not laid hold ot in my man ot " ettNttr---wtMt write: the Mr h tho manor of lightning on out. whom†there is "ed.-Htrar"'tn Kunming. that 3 mu " a old " in anal-lea. but It is truer to my that he I. a. old at his spirit. but Mn get mm interest um some Moo ot naval. ture, Ind toi. the society ot the old And the bold. There in than the pop- slbillty ot lncreanlng your charm: of being younger - day. minnow two be" ad two 31de he never had more. K. m not one ot than who take not. delight in a more Infant; but to tether ever devoted more time all [tender cu. to " otttrtthttg than he Al I biologist let me remind m that there " no "ttttity in the “1- mal kingdom outside dotnertiC ul- mlll. Ben""- In the prerogative of mankind. cm. on ot the pmblem- o! ttte It the and I: to submit to all no tulle avoiding oentiltr.--Sir I. Arthur Thom-on. tins, being unable even to so into s but Ion. without serious distress. 0-0 at these susceptible girl. is the twin ot a bor who has not yet displayed the detect; the twin not being. how- ever, ot the wallet! identical type whoa. hereditary ooaatitutioa in he iieved to be exactly the lame. A Pennsylvania tumor who got dizzy whenever he looked down Iron a height. and who trunmitmd um Immunity to no lea than 17 ot his children. gramtehiidrets and great- qrattdehildrms, in reported by Mine Mary Lou Heaton, or the University of Wyoming. to the Eugenics Research' Association. as I part ot that unocc- ation'a collection ot human pedigree: interesting tor etudiee of hOMlty end eugenics. All Ieven children ot the or iginai outlet-er experienced this dim feeling, Mile Heston reporte. one It nun no severely that she could net even ride in n high cerriue became it made her diny to look down two or three feet to the ground. Five ot the seven children untried and tour of these ndded to the bully n total of " grtutdehildrett, eight ot whom sut- iered from the same kind ot dilution as their grandlnther. One boy of thin generatzon is no susceptible that he cannot watch mother person walk-u; near the edge ot any high pint-o. Att. other boy so fer conquered " defect that he became an nvintor during the war, but continue] dizzinese fotcod hlll out ot thin learn] on soon as the wet III over. One girl ot this gen- eration men-led end he added four grxsatarandchildren to the funny. 'i‘we of these, both girls, ere dizzinesu VIO- Prom I very early use he nude thorn dine " lnhle. end "to sit I. to "111.6!†wee the great new." when they ha been “very cool hull-u.†In short. he considered it u the highest duty, u well n the sweetest plenum ot 3 went to he the communion ot his children: he outlook ell their little you ud nor- rows, and nude " hint tutor-In! instruction to blend no easily end phyluilr with the current ot their on saying: end doittel that no fer from rent-din; hi. with nny dim tent ewe, It we: never thought lhnt any sport or diversion could so on in the right Why. unleu nepn wove ot the may, or that the ninlent day could be dull, " he were et itottte.-JMttt Gibson Lorkharz. in "Lite ot Sir Walter Scott." did to ouch ot his, as they succee- - “who! the age when they could listen to his. and undersued hie talk. Like their lute playmtee. Che-p end the greyhounds, they had at " time- tree eccen to big and]; he never considered their tune es my disturbance; they went and cene " they pleased their fancy; he was M. waye reedy to answer their question. and when they. unconscious how he was eunged. enireeted him to In down his pen and tell them a Morn he would take them on his knee. ro. peet I hell“ or a legend. kin the. end set then down again to their marbles or niuepina. end resume his labor u it mtreahed by (he interrup- “on. Sir Walter Scott And His Children Little " UN. Dizzy Descent MIDDLE AGE Wisdom O