PAGE ran HOGS Milne to present heavy run of llogs, "We will not accept Sous until fur- -ther notice. DAVIS 6- FRA$ER i Simple Technique Saves Loss in Transplanting Setting Out Tomato Plants. The soil should be soaked after the transplanting operation is finish- ed. A little dry soil sprinkled over the surface will check evaporation. Small seedlings may be planted in holes made by a dibber. 'I‘his is a steel, wood or iron tool with a round blunt point which is stabbed into the ground and twisted. a much faster operation than using a trowel. Observe distances carefully in transplanting. The little plants may seem lonely when set two or three fect apart, but remember the size they will attain at maturity and see that they have room enough to develop their best. Vigorous growth in seedlings will be assured if plant food is applied while they are small. It will en- able them to develop a good root system. which will feed them well. In transplanting vegetables mix thoroughly one level tablespoonful of complete plant food with the soil in the bottom of the hole before setting the plant. Then apply plant food over a radius two feet from the plant at the rate of one rounded teaspoonful to each square foot of ground. Four to six weeks later another application of plant food at the rate - of two pounds per 100 square feet the stem horizontally under may be made. This is equivalent ' soil fu" several inches. rather to a rounded leaspoonful for two .1 lo‘. it project above the sur- square feet. Apply evenly over the > \ especially the case soil surface except that immedi- l 01;! adjacent to the plant. irarisplanting is a task which ‘i v Gardeners must perform iiout the garden year. So are the young plants h we remove. so often do they . clessncss, we are apt i the aim .2 tech- .l 1 [ircatly reduce the failures. cd. Often carc- . . l result in an a i. oi one which fails to c {lot-res or fruit of good The following points, if observed, will insure that 1:1; plants have a reason- ~ enough lo spread out croirding. In gs which have a '. it will liclp promote owth if this tap root. is ' permitting mod among the‘ that soil is filled in * to cox-er the roots, and m the soil. so that contact since without this contact cannot absorb water from '11. gs should usually .10 tieepcr than they "at. In the case of £"coi-:s A Loxdwavfiifritoriyclsllrvor’rnnriisr: Tlirrr- hate torn only about 2.501% Trcpical soils in general are wall-gram: of i‘3dl'itil~ Jess than the worldis least fertile, flirte- pcunds- -produced in rcrlcl since the Caries‘ experiments ralllnz torrential rains. =;-—~-—~ - — —'_'."‘- '<.——-— _,___ _ i the they are subject to erosion by pre- 4 l l l I . ‘naval escort signals reportzd Finding Derelict In llo. Atlantic ls Tough Joh an mar 00451‘ Poem-Arm ‘.15. finding that famed needle in the haystack is child's play co -, pared with locating a derelict in, the North Atlantic and bringing her| back to port, Officers and men of the, i-LLLCS. Saint John have agreed-l A: least the needle wouldn't drift. around. j saint John, in company with on ocean-going salvage tug, recently s m. nearly 17 days at sea seeking. f iding and bringing back the stern hall’ of a libert shi hich had been shattered in one of the Atlant- ic's worst geles» The freighter had split in two, and the crew had been rescued by other convoy ships and vessels. The stern portion of the freighter. contain- ing the machinery and tons o! carzo, remained afloat. ‘ The successful completion of Saint John's salva e search was a story of co-operat on between the navy. R.C.A.F. aircraft and mer- chant. ships. Recurring snow squalls and to: hampered the search. P-fld constant guard against German submarines; known to be in the vic- lnity had lo be maintained . Two days out of port the frigate and tug spotted a drift-mg life-boat. and with RCAF. planes combed the area for three da-ys with no success. The search was Abandoned and the ships were cndererl to re- turn to port. But four hours later that, the wreck had been sighted again by a nier- chant ship, and course was altered i istorms cut visibility to the new position 130 miles awayo, Then the weather threw in its‘ bag of tricks. Stunt John's comm-l ' fi r, Licut. Ccnimaiiderl R.C.N.R.., Vancouver. two days heavy snow to _nil, and the lship and planes could find no trace 10f the derelict , contact w hours- isea. luck changed. A giant Conditions were so and the tug lost .i each other for several ninth day at] R.C.A. After noon en the patrol plan;- pnssod over. She had green the WIYCR. and reported it 45 , mile [Saint John 5 au-ay. Guide-l bv the plancq and the tug st-sanictli |loward the derelict and found her, , after dziik. marked hya dropped by the aircraft at dusk. lwent over to yrrrnsdiatelv. in the mid rlcnt. to inspect ers who inspected the ship and re- ‘port/editor to be sound and water- itlght were P.O. William Johnston.‘ R.C.N.V R... wright Vllilfred Vessev. wmiiiccz. Sto. PO. v- oeuvre. John's Chief Engine Rocui V freer a Norwegian who ioined the Royal Canadian Naval Reserve after Norwav was inrrfcd by mans. Ho has had no word frcni his Wile aitd family ' Ifllllfilfllld. l the boarding party had no difficulty {getting a boat across ifreighm- crew also was able to get the A boarding party from Saint John the freighter hulk‘ die of thei In charge lis-r. l '. officer I the irigatck ere? . CG Mcliitcsn. torlri, and tlic iiavieaiing off» . Lleut, H.B. Blanchard. R.C.Ni 12., Truro and Saint John» Oth~| f.‘ ,- a 0111., Shin- R.C.N-V.R.. ictor Merson, anzl Saint, Art!- Loirdon, Toronto. ‘ ill‘? Ger- iu his occupied The weather had tnoderated, and to the i112 half- fir-K's tow and return. lines in plus:- withoui trouble. nndi _ _ _ ‘itlia 4C'.'-iiiile haul back to part be-l tii Australia lOGElY deemed m defy ‘ izan before dawn of the‘ tenth Cay at sea. ly/lli] the wind anti sea rising. ii Jllfflfllll to handle Shc w " Then the ireatlier closed in again the increasingly’ reported the triv papers. the THE CH ARLUFYETUWN THE IHHVGS‘. 01' IDMORROW THE AEW 8H4}? OFIREBDOJ! m2 NFWPAHFRN or manna’ IHB NEW PROJECTS FOR A THEE IVILL FOLLOW WEN Luix f BZITER WORLD‘ VICTORY couas Court Action iContinued from page 6) “ml Follows Press A Federal Cabinet meeting call- it R~c~NR~|ed for today to consider the en- tire censorship problem W85 post- poned because Government lead- ers said it would be lm roper to idlscuss the question whl before the High Court. WIS Immediate cause of the struggle Cal of W censorship. censorship by publishing matter ordered deleted during the week-end. They published an ex- planation that the deletions order-g ed did not concern security but President Minister was the conflict between Informa- tion Minister Arthur Calwell, who has cliarg; Rupert Henderson. the Newspaper Proprietors‘ sociation. The Information _ Friday replied to crlticisiiu of hLs department with complaints about tlic pics; generally and Hender- son replied on behalf of the news- ell's statements published fully but reply. ivlien submitted to censor- ship, was cut substantially. All the chief daily and of A5- Oil W978 Henderson's newspapers all tcwing dealt with internal problems. the _liulk HCYli first to tIdrE the ‘The censorship, however, wok ain on the exposed bllliliisud. and Hi3 view that by defying it the 'fi ally asked to have a setond tug iaeivspapers broke the law. 1n ;sent to her assistance. For the first strongly-worded editorials, the 148 hours the labouring little convoy news opera asserted the wtiole ‘managed to average a bare two and quggfiljgn of freedom of the press ‘a half knots. Ani Saint John had was involved, ‘detect-ed an eiitini‘ subiiiiiane app-i During me afte-“Qgn ci-Qwds patently trying‘. to fiiiti lllftii. j gamergd grgund the Sun and icciid o can-going tug thiitgzs went more rasilv. ‘They had to heave-tr) once i us moi: on ITITMlFlOIIS ate.- exhaust- iytllllldllfil‘ stores Then on the fifteen» i ‘ I anlong Saint John On llle thirteenth day the sc- ai med. and irlille the first av the fir: 111g had ‘o proceed i=1 The newspapers leaving Mirror offices and police tried to prevent trucks from building. _ thousands of copies out periodi- cally during the afternoon. the not . . , . . . tN t: Th following story on ilaggilefllm if" ‘b. ‘em iejchhngI the ofilelSlfflllaen newspaper censor- fichmg lligilbjifl.‘ 3a .11“? ship controversy was written for a {raw hcu}; sh 1 n; 172. fa ' just The Canadian Press.) “ .. 1 a mffi-ii-iiii because lJ-lZ-E in-io coast harbour. I SYDNEY‘ Australia‘ Apr“ m“_ - - (CPI -_ Ttie battle of Austra ai. “Unitas Kms Pam iiuyspapers with Government cen- sorslilp. culminating yesterday in ,.,. on of Sydney's four lead- ing dailies and suppression of l _-_._ Keel? Il- UP A40“. You're Bring the House Down ji Feeling "mi well u could be ox- pecled". and “chertshlng the ori- vlleges of old age," former Chief shown during a stroll In lnglon on his 82nd birthday. Justice Charles Evans Hughes ls Wuh- late editions he Herald and the Adelaide actually had its origin in America though hllg roots of disrirscmz-nt have been deeply implanted in a tangle of Australian conflict ex- tending ovcr 12 months. Sharp criticism by a few Unit- ed States_Senators and newspap- ers of Commonwealth Army Miri- Francls E. Forder. meiit of April 8 that Australia's army strength would be reduced by 93,000, caused some hurt and be- later wllderment. Those sentment GUARDIAN Australian which were critical directed not States critics who. it was realized were inadequately APRIL 26, 194i 1 gro PUT VICTORY F.IRST ‘lbildfilhaqtbuewfloufplnnilnunninnuobwdnnon wig 6cm ovdlsdoaod bulb din {manned savings this crucial you demands. To cut corners, trim spending, and ellmionoe every loern of waste and extravagance-these are imperative. To some these ways no victory may be o! little significance, unless beyond victory they 501%" 41¢ 51"!" locuritythatdirlfcwillrneaneoeach ofusinthcpoet-Wlr W011i- Shape for yourself a new parcem of security aloe: the we: by spending less now. Until victory is won none of us can feel secure. A Message from the Life Insurance Companies in Canada. JC7Q1€Y%Q/\@S "i-Km then on. ‘with-fast quick’: ening tempo, events moved to great America; Jefferson szild t" “till-elm: News. censorship. All were deleted from Thom; his statement by censorship, but 1,1 ivn en the press their climax when Sydney, a city the Telegraph published uncen- tree nnd every iiiun is able to rear‘. of 1.750900 people was confront- sored portions passed by the all is safe." The spaces between ed with the suppression of its censor with 23 inches of blank the blocks and the box and below newsrltiPcrs. space indicating censorship excis- the box tothe foot of the column ris. were blank- Penk Points Later the some day the Sunday The censorship ordered the Sun- Telegrnph was ordered to submit its page proofs to the censor who eliminated completely- a further statement by Henderson, part of nhlCll said that although Calwell had issued a statement accusing the newspapers. in effect. of en- gaging 1n anti-Australian fifth column activities in the United States, when Henderson sought ta answer this as a "vicious and un- true" statement by giving some day Telegraph to closeup (fill in) its bl ‘s. 1t refused. The Coni- lhUllV tli police officers con- fiscated all editions. ighe rest of the story is simply The Herald and the Telegraph on April 17 printed in full Hen- derson's censored statement, also a reproduction of the Sunday Tele- graphs page on.- and commented editorially. Both papers were 1t is easy to follow events with chronological clarity. Hera are the eak point-s‘ p replying to stitc- Aprll l2. Calwell. criticism, said Forde's statement was "torn from its context by Australian correspondents and cabled abroad". Hg blamed some Australian newspapers for a large share of the responsibility for Am- erican misunderstanding. newspapers _ re- against United informed, but with blistering emphasis against A rli , . G. Henderson. facts. all the facts were cut out. ‘suppressed. Later the same day Fords and Information Minister; cha rmun of the Australian News- A leading article also was severe- the Sun and the Mirror took Arthur Calwell. against the fornziripaper Proprietors‘ Association. oc- 1y censored. The Sunday Tele- similar action. They also were for what the newspapers consid-icused Calwell of making baseless graph, to indicate the censorship suppress-ed, though u thousand end the misleading inadequacy oflcliarges and alleged political cen- hls statement ion tioni and the latter for not pro- parlng his United States office in derson of-untruthfulness. advance formation to correctly American reaction. cuts, then left titres-quarters of a. column of space blank on page three and on gage one in two coplt-s managed to reach readers _Lriter the same afternoon the High Court granted an injunction the army rcziuc- I sorshlp. April l4, Calwell accused Hen- _ _ columns placed locks on l-fender- restraining tha censorship until with fiflmplThfillSll/B‘ 111-1 April 16. Henderson replied. son lhd Cllwell at the tops of Friday. rendition quoting l number of ‘ ‘ nee the coluiruis with a box i-iaii way All thg papers now a2": publish- a s Iwhlcli he declared were political down reading “Pree press — bll<"il‘lg normally. Ylllll Help is URGENTLY Menu! IDLE BOTTLES THREATEN YQUR SUPPLY QF CARBONATED BEVERAGES! “Toddfs Number One threat lo your supply of carbonated beverages is the slow return of empty bottles to our plants. Beverage bottling is a process where containers can ho sterilized and re-uscd dozens of limes, and existing supplies of beverage bottles will answer the need frilly IF YOU KEEP THEM MARCHING BACK PROMPTLY FOR REFILT.“ Your soft drink retailer is cooperating 1007c. Qu “Amuse give him all the support you can by bringing these bottles back early in the (|lV——l\I‘ vlurivuz now-welt ofw-vmnn how". Your cooperation lb uecucu, and it will neip you too- lo assure you the maximum possible delivery of your favorite carbonated beverage. Return them early in the day. Avoid the rush hours- Your loft drink Jatailer will appreciate your “ thoughtfulness.