Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 2, 1921, Page 10

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NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY, DECEMB ER 2, 1921 Something In GOOD FURNITURE MAKES A PARTICULARLY ACCEPTABLE GIFT. NEW CHAIRS TEA WAGONS LAMPS CEDAR CHESTS NEW TABLES LADIES’ DESKS TELEPHONE STANDS DAVENPORTS VISIT OUR STORE N. 5. GILBERT & SONS Shetucket Strect Opposite Laurel Hill Bridge ltooa potash { existi out of the ng aready in the them fc = nlowing them becan ing about ther knows what they also what he ecan got the = 1 application? How. E who has no capital would like to see for hi SUGGESTED PLAN FOR SELLING THE BACTERIA { TO WORK FOR US Assuming that it is worn-out - fleld which restore to product either farm manure tilizer in adequate s how should vou ro t bacterfa do it for | zestea plan in mi (Written Spectally For The Bulletin.) “In the third place, they manufacture the potash from the rock minera's. “In the fourth place, they furnish the materfal to build up. organic matie; “Their fifth function to convert residues into plant food: Last week we -talked about:the- eco- nomic impossibility of renewing the ni- trates of the sofl either by .importing Chilean nitrate of soda or by electrical ly decomposing the air to get them. We came to the conclusion. that the only Sofl Dbacteria were doing all the ivestock £a] adequate, permancnt and economical | things long before man appeared on thy Bprs-ai e source of nitrate supply Was in the way |Scene, Why not speed up their activ- rst Year: Ge v seed, vreferably Medium ity for the benefit of humanity?” . required amount nature has pointed out—the way, nature has been producing it for untold thous- were before us. new Declaration of Agricultural Inde- show nodulea pendence. They also manufacture plant- successful. In fall, w Today, let's conSider potash and phos- phorus, two fertilizer elements of com- of the raw acid phosphate cost, what the whole thing amounts to? well of bacterla It has long been known that the bac-| (usually advertised in most ands of years, .vfz., by the work of soil’teria in the nodules on the roots of pers). =~ Plow thoroughly; harr i e bacteria. We came to this conclusion, {tain leguminous manufactured | Mark in rows 26 inches apart. e = ¢ not because we particularly wanted to, | ny ' out of the super-|inoculated seed two inche: e NOTWIC! ecmc 0 but because we had to just as soon aS|abundant reservoirs of the a Note, | thin ont to four inches. b 4 the real facts relating to the subject|now, the second and third it that| of the roots during the summ the experiment crude mineral [ have fallen from the vines, harves c:;} " 10 do rhis without losing the ust sofl in practically 1-w thy Xt season$yseed. THis| 0f she feld ‘for the scason to plant and pla ood Dot i inocuigtion 6" other] the soy Leals L cyra, pluwing ther rock n I jand .c077) ;stubble n during the fah . a5 well as Soed. . i v haif the your fiold, agdl, When any plant is ence thoromghli Fafoitais i a2 o in0 i4a soy bean bacleria th 57 they've been | to th $01 from. that’ plat will serve, the =uc or untold asos i for m > do it. now 2 4oeiant In & Mane maw ot . And e ). wastes snould L2 Now done m to 4o for h m. have de- o matnta'n thy = =oil with a good. harrowipgi e to mave cnougn weed today and tomorrow and for all the fu-|for amother time. . . _ bt o oc ot . ture. | Tulrd Year: Plow again: appy ‘and| ¢ mhreterd-—Mir Henry Sey | Youll agree. T think, that w the to-the-acre dressing of TaW | mour Rebinson and Eilzabeth Trum- |ty well gone over the underlyin: round pho a ton of,ground | buil’ Rebinson will “at home” Priday and the controling principles of | imest plant any: "crop | Affernoon, Dec. 9, from 4 until § o'clock new agricuiture. How ahout its prac- | d WATCH IT GROW! |4t No. 132 Woodland street. Miss Rebin- ould one €91 gonrth Vear: The same as the third.| Son Wil be introduced 2t a dance at the to risk but who| T e | €Xcet (hat cvery other year you want | Hartford Golf ciub in the evening. Bhe moelfat trl ""1m put on the soy beans. A practieal! s to be the first debutante of this season. a pretty ou'd be g but can't GOLDEN BROWN TOAST THAT'S THE WAY AN ELECTRIC TOASTER MAKES iT— CRISP AND H?T.’ 1art of = n Green in and cula will ba; hen the leaves' 42-44 Franklin Street parable importance. While the nitrates which are found » virgin sofl have been due to the work of bacterfa in sifting them out of the air, the potash in similar soils has us- vally been derived from the decomposi- tion of rocks. How it got into the orig- inal rocks is another story and of siight bearing on the - present discussion. Enough to say that they are full of it and, as they have been worn or ground {or rotted into sofl,.the imprisoned pot- | ash has been released to become an es- | al constituent of that soll. Says authority: is a very common ele- seven‘ others are more There is more potash in the| the earth than there is Waterl All forms ot reck kmewn to the Unit- | ed States are well supplled with potash, ! ! excepting only the coral rock of th | Florida and Gulf coasts. ‘Repeated i | alyses show such figures as the:follow- | for the potash content. per acre of | | the upper sevenirches of isoil: Sofls derived from. gnelgs or granite ; soils derived from Co sandstoney 46,000 .pounds; WE WOULDN'T t want everything velvet—just as lite is, it is fine. We wouldn’t want eve in our wine. thing sugar—ijust a bit of the tart e light and the hings and t shadow, a well-halanced t | tempest as much as the sweef- ything perfect—Iots of us keep e country vith th helps to harpen 't want he thorn; wouldn’t be much mcentive to rise at the call of the morn. re and contention—Dbut sweet are the wa 2es mn the Baltimore Sun. from * limestone . 40,00 0 colls derived from 000 pounds; < #ot's- derived from ta- s older- sandstones 51,200 to 57,400 pounds. Don't forget ‘that this, rieans e amount of pire potash—not sulphate | muriate—in just’ the -upper seven | ches of plow-dirt on each: acre. The | fizure: reassuring ‘to any éd to wonder what' re the:German sunply Aboufthe only sofls United ‘States'. which are ent in it-are the Everglades- of Flo ‘/IIHIH.HI‘III_\(,I I Qi »ismal Swamv-of Virginta; and swamp: land -in o as to phospherus. y-be s 0000 acres of thun New York, a alone. o-have analyzed = them t ‘the ‘original reserve of in - ma; een reduced to as little as 150 . and: that.in the lcast rms. . Both ‘science and . farming therefore are agreed he deporable result. n | New Jersey | WERE NCT ABLE TO SUFPLY THE The remedy, wo far_as at present 00d, consists stmply. in the. rost esting talk and exhi work done by scar Heinrich, of t sing at the Co morning next speak on “Pi Manhattan nal Ciinese w Co. church C. W. Han- rims and Sojburn- | n o= visible supply of aporox- pounds.of reck. phasphate ted acre. That is, they ¢ about.five. times great- the original - stock. . Evidaatly, there is no danger .of any Immediate phosphate famine. Real Rest Depends Largely Upon the Depth of Your Sleep A warning to “light” or “poor” sleepers ‘The deeper and sounder you sleep the better you feel. Five hours sound refreshing sleep does you more actual good than ten hours restless, disturbed sleep. x This is because the final conversion of food into vital tissue and nerve cells goes on more rapidly when the physical and mental forces are &t rest. y You can't get sound, refreshing sleep if your nerves are agitated with tea or coffee. Both thess . drinks contain caffeine, which is sometimes very % irritating to the brain and nervous system. Ii you want to know the joy, vigor and stamina that comes to the person who gets sound, hezlthful sleep, why not stop taking tea or coffee for « while, and drink dslicious, invigorating Postum instead. Thousands of people everywhere have found that this was the enly thing they needed in order # briug about these very happy results. Postam: from your grocer. today, Drirk t2ie delightful ceras! beverage of coffee-like fiavor, for @ week. Periup, Hie thousands of ethers, you'll nover be willing to go back to tea or coffee. Postam comes in two forme: “nstant Postam (in tins) made {bstantly in the cup by the additicn of boiling water. Mn&nd!(;: ;::I;nnbuk.fo’t:lm-h prefer to make w! maenl is being prevared) mads by beiling for 20 minutes. i . Postum for Health But we've got to change enr phesphate policy, for-all that. Hitherto, we've been using mostly acid pliosphate. Now,.acid Phosphate 1s:simply ‘a’ mixture of one ton of sulphuric. acid with- one ton of Tock phosphate. 'There:are -280 pounds of phosphorus in a'ton of the rock: Of course, there is no more ‘in,the two tons of acld phosphate which is.made by add- ing a ton of ‘acld to the ton of rock. It follows that the acid phosphate has on'y Just half as much phosphorus in it, per ton, as the raw rock. Yet the cost of the acid and the manufacture combine | to make it much higher-priced, per ton, than the raw rock. ' The farmer' pays more for 140 ponnds of phosphorus in a ton of acld phosphate than for 280 pounds In'a ton of raw Tock. The only. excuse for this wastefulness of .money and fertilizer-has been that the acid rendered the phosphate more fmmediately avaflable, Yet hundreds of expertments and thousands of practicai farm' tests in the last dozen years.have established the fact beyond cavil that:the 'raw rock, if only it is ground-finely, -is as-effective as the acidulated: rock.-- Not- enly have experimental .trfals in. this country and Eng'ang - indicated - thix, - but . practical | farmers on - hundreds- of farms- in. the ‘Wwest and scores of farms right here !n Connegticut have proved it.- As one ex. Dert puts it, the. discovery that phos- phate rock could.be -dissolved was .a benetaction, at the time, but the later discovery that it can be ground zo fine “that the farmer can do his own acidu- lating in the =ofl” s of even greater im- portancs. Drive » nall in, Wght fhere, ¥ you please. For this i3 where wo hang mp another tribute to the work of bacteria. The farmer doesn’t “do_his own .acidu- lating.” Not by 2 long shot. It is those same bacteria which'do it-for him. “In his own spll,” of ‘course, not'inany big manufacturing plant with ‘acid made out of pyrites imported from Spain.. Without any - charges for . frei; FREEY This $7.50 Set and Free The set comprises ten pieces, all of the best Carbon Tool Steel, including six fine sharp knives, two kitchen forks and two spatulas. Knives are finely ground and guaranteed to hold a keen edge. Handles are fitted to the hand. They are light- weight Rubberoid finish and strictly sani- tary. Blades are firmly pinned in. AN 3 freights, or ‘commission EVERLASTING or wages.' ejther. GIFT Prof. ‘Epten: thus; summerices il Fation - of - IngepSntaree: whith TO YOUR WIFE. ndepeddent Fertiilty Fiela” | MR. HUSBAND, to”submit’tosthe farming | “We make, the -bacteria ; fertilizing. " “In- the flrst .pluce, they- manufacture ‘the | nitrates:s, ~ s oo p + " “In the serend mlase thav. mannfae THINK 1T OVER, JUST $1.00 WILL'DO IT | OUR LAST SALE OF HOOSIER KITCHEN CABINETS HAD TO BE. HAVE SECURED A NEW SHIPMENT OF 50 CABINETS. QUIG(-’ACTION I8 mY IF YOU WANT TO SECURE ONE OF THESE CABINETS FOR CHRISTMAS DFJJVB!Y ki3 BEGINNING TOMORROW MORNING DEMAND. WE ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT WE A $750 SET OF KITCHEN TOOLS And a Specially Built-In TOWTM‘ We déliver your Hoou;r w:llen you pay your first doflar. Yol pay the balance a little at a time. ® You pay an exceptionally low. price for the Hoosier you select during this sale, and you get FREE'the Kitchen Set and Spe- cial Tool-Compartment Tray — T!’E GREATEST SINGLE CONVENIENCE EVER INSTALLED' IN- A KITCHEN There is no kitchen convenm that ‘can compare with the Hoosier. A demonstration’ costs_you nothing: PRICE OF HOOSIER, COMPLETE (Including Free $7.50 Kitchen Set and : special tool-comparment), as low as i $1 Delivers Your HOOSIER to Your Home ' Be Sure to See the New Apartment Style Hopsier, ‘ Also Included in This Specia} Offer.

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