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G&S cV o* '?%/'S:'jk,''4 » w mji «..-, ,<,/ss aw®,. f **\ f i PL -iv < M * f # M w '**& >*'-'# ✓' ?v # «* s *'*lf Of, i***f**U *&» f~> f ? . '* &i* if I The value and importance of "Super" in growing wheat is now generally acknowledged and it is almost universally realised that " Super" makes important increases in the bushelage and at the same time improves the quality of the wheat, assists in combating disease and offsets the climatic vagaries of varying seasons. Nevertheless, even well-informed opinion differs on the actual quantity of "Super" that is required to return the best results. No doubt this difference of opinion is the result of two different viewpoints ... some authorities considering only the immediate result and others taking a longer view and giving thought to ULTIMATE returns. Authorities who aim to get the greatest IMMEDIATE return from their outlay for " Super " believe that lcwt per acre is sufficient, claiming that this amount gives the most economical return. A somewhat similar line of reasoning is followed by others who consider that 1 bag (licwt) per acre is the minimum that should be used. I \ LX\ A third, and ever-increasing number favour the application of 2 bags of "Super" per acre as being sounder farming ... their method being either to drill in 2 bags with the seed, or else 1 bag with the seed in the autumn and to apply the second bag as top-dressing to the crop in the early spring. By following this method (2 bags to the acre) the ground is left in "better heart" for following crops. In other words it is recognised that wheat makes a big drain on soil fertility and by using 2 bags of "Super" per acre the RESIDUAL FERTILITY after cropping is then as high, or even higher than it was before ... in other words the " land is in good heart." In support of the larger quantity it can be remembered with advantage that the once fertile Middle West Wheat lands in U.S.A. are in ruin to-day because the soil has not had returned to it the plant food removed by cropping. In Britain the position is different because the average sowing of fertiliser is from 4 to Bcwt of a complete mixture with a minimum of 4cwt of " Super " per acre. Think twice before you sow the minimum quantity of "Super" ... Wheat is a hungry feeder. "LAND IN GOOD HEART" after cropping is of the greatest importance. There is no half measure with Mother Earth. Aid Nature to do her work and you will be repaid many times over. IF YOU HAVEN'T A BIG ACREAGE READY FOR, SOWING ... AT LEAST MAKE SURE OF YIELDS PER ACRE.

Womanly Charms ENHANCED BY DR. MORSE’S INDIAN ROOT PILLS

Not all of the popular motion picture actresses are beautiful, are they? Some of them are not even pretty. Yet they have a subtle allure which attracts thousands of people. ' They possess the most essential of feminine assets —charm. Almost any woman can be charming if she will be intelligent. Yet here are three very definite physical hazards to feminine charm which many women do not even consider. They are much more important than powder or rouge or pretty clothes, and con- : sist of Lack of Pep- Unsightly Skinand Unpleasant Breath. In many instances these troubles are due to improper functioning of the digestjve tract and elirninatory organs, end call for the use of a good laxative medicine. A recognised remedy in ca^f s is Dr * Erse’s Indian Root They are purely vegetable, not habit forming, stimulate the liver and drive the waste matters out of the system.

Somewhere there Is someone who has something you need or needs something you have. Read and use "The Press" Classified Want Advertisements —12 words Is, 3 insertion? 2s 6d. —a

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19370527.2.52.3

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume LXXIII, Issue 22103, 27 May 1937, Page 9

Word Count
632

Page 9 Advertisements Column 3 Press, Volume LXXIII, Issue 22103, 27 May 1937, Page 9

Page 9 Advertisements Column 3 Press, Volume LXXIII, Issue 22103, 27 May 1937, Page 9

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