the tribune stouffville ont thursday june 23 1949 good luck rally for arthur walwyn sparks cabaret aurora friday evening june 24 motor cavalcade entertainment dancing 9 pm to 1 am everybody welcome y sponsored by north york young progressive conservative association 9htario supplies half market hogs ontario is supplying almost half of all hogs being marketed reports wje tummon secretarytreasurer mrs annie king dies in her 111th year brantfords oldest citizen and one of the oldest in canada mrs annie king died in hospital there saturday june 11 at the age of 110 mrs king who has always attri buted her longevity to the active life she led had been ill for five months she was born at salis- burg england one of 13 children of mr and mrs john penny her husband predeceased her in 1930 at the age of 70 when they first came to canada mr and mrs frank king settled at simcoe they moved to brant- ford after the close of the first world war her hobbies were needlework coking laundering and marketing until a short time ago she still prepared the noon meal for her g6yearold son francis king she believed in the old adage early to bed and early to rise surviving besides her son is a sistor mrs frank topp garrick saskatchewan of the ontario hog producers mar- in the previous week total market- g 3 gnd keting board ings were 114g with ontario sup- tata marketings to date for in all canada marketings for the plying 31507 marketings for the 1949 a canada are three quart week ending june 11 were 72959 corresponding weeks of 1948 werelers of a million hogs less than for of which ontario supplied 33104 91574 and 87021 with ontario the same period in 1948- experience in the public service counts jwiii zhm w george drew alderman mayor provincial party leader three times premier of ontario i then ieader of the opposition in the house of commons ottawa no other national leader can match this record of public service on all levels of governmental activity george drew more than any other national leader knows that government to remain democratic must remain in the hands of the people as an alderman he concerned himself with the problems of his ward as mayor he worked for a better community as provincial legislator he worked in the interests of the people of his constituency as premier of ontario he gave his native province the finest administration in its history george drew has succeeded as an administrator because he believes in teamwork and cooperation on all levels of government as premier of ontario he held more cabinet meetings and with greater frequency than any government in ontarios history as leader of the official opposition at ottawa he brought new life and energy into the house of commons and a renewed respect for the principle of parlia mentary government progressive conservative candidates give wholehearted support to george drew because they will be members of parliament in fact as well as in name no longer will members be forced to yield all power to bureaucratic cabinet ministers and centralizers and fail to give full representation to their constituencies compare the records of george drew and your progressive conservative candidate with those of other party leaders and candidates your vote on june 27th for your progressive conservative candidate will mean that you will be represented in parliament by a supporter of a progressive conservative govern ment under the leadership of george drew t -i- vote fr arthur walwyn north york frank mccallum ontario riding your progressive conservative candidate doctors save man who died twice baltimore june 1c how a man who died twice on the operating table and came back to life both times after a surgeon massaged his heart was told here today physicians said the 49yearold patients heart and respiration stopped for 20 minutes at one time and nine at another the man james w staneck en tered maryland general hospital for a hernia operation wednesday this is what followed as told by dr joseph v castagna staneck a printer was given the customary preoperative physical checkup and his heart and lungs were reported in normal condition he was given a commonlyused anaesthetic and shortly afterwards his breathing stopped as did his heartbeat dr castagna made an incision in the chest and began gently mas saging the heart according to all the rules the dootor said this man was dead twenty minutes after the heart stopped it began to respond under the massage then just as signs of life returned they began to disap pear again nurses and doctors started filing out of the operating room but the surgeon continued his work again the signs of life began returning the heartbeat and re spiration picked up staneck was placed in an oxygen tent he regained consciousness last week dr castagna said staneck has shown no signs of his experience will produce a- lasting disability scsxssssxssaaeesxsxsacxssssaa what do we do with our milk by r j deachman i have been looking over the fig ures of total milk productionn and the things we do with it all honor to the farmers in a period when help was difficult to secure and sometimes woefully inefficient pro duction was maintained at high levels right through the war farm production of dairy products was actually increased there were de clines in some products but they were more than made up by increa ses in others in a free market we shift from the production of one product to another as price relationships change and cost factors involved in production are altered i do not like to put down too many figures they are boring to some people un less they appear on the credit side of a bank account hut that is the only means by which we can com pare production from one year to another let us start with the year 1939 the year the war began produc tion of milk in that year amounted to 15781 million pounds in 1948 it was 10022 million pounds if you feel thats not a big job just remember that it involved the milk ing of somewheiie in the neighbor hood of 3750000 cows the distribution is particularly interesting start with icecream we produced over 8 million gallons in 1939 and believe it or not we raised our consumption to over 25 million gallons in 19 is do you wonder now why the faces of the kids looked so bloomiri appy we gave them over three times as much icecream in 19is as we did in 1939 what about butter there was a slight increase in the production of creamery butter it went up from 2gs million pounds in 1939 to 281 million pounds in 1948 but fac tory cheese fell oft there was a decline from 125 million pounds to s9 million what were the rea sons it would be rather difficult to figure thorn out but a shift in relative prices may have been one factor another was the increase in demand for fluid milk we were drinking more of it in 1939 the sales of fluid milk totalled 3012 million pounds but in 194s it had risen to 4009 million pounds an increase of very closp to a million pounds of increased consumption put it another way consumption increased over 30 mapkham fri sat june 24th 25th 1 revenge runs red coroner reek tuttim scott tnt chapman mon tues june 27th 28th jean simmons t donald houston in invtbiidierful6l6rby tjecglllcolor fr6m tffodaring story 6 h do vere staepooie with vcv lik c el 1 c yvrpui cti s ajk jfamfsf ha yl r sjjujpn sfrarjkj pelerines xan h eagteiuon feleaie wed thurs june 29h 30th two top hits robert marjorie hutton reynolds in wallflower plus dennis okeefe in raw deal 3ss3txxxxssxxxxsjexxxxx what farmers know about cost of peas a top county yield per acre of us and the amount of use each 240 pounds and a low county i vear average of 1215 pounds is reveal- some costs per acre vary only ed in a compilation and analysis slightly seed prices are in this of costs in connection with peas grown for canning purposes during 19 is the farm economics branch ontario dcpt of agriculture an- category others vary more widely in essex the number of acres planted in peas per farm averaged eight in prince edward county nbmw4 by progmtfr cownrotfv potf o conotfo 141 loirw aw w onowo nounces the analysis was made j the average is eight and a half from records kept by 115 growers acres it is quite evident that yield located in the counties of essex i per acre is an important factor in huron xorfolk and prince edward net returns this is indicated by and is of interest in claremont disj the fact that prince edward coun- trict where peas for canning are tys yield per acre is shown as being grown more than double that of essex xet cash returns are widely var- county net returns and yields led net returns on the enterprise are as follows in ce edward county is reveal- essex 7571 net return per acre ed as 3i97 but in essex county al1 j 215 pounfis yield per acre was only so71 mk j rt is pointed out that 1918 was i f i net rclum and an excellent year for peas hence 3 p yield per acrc the results might seem somewhat norfolk 15782 net return and high to many average farmers in h- pounds yield per acre each case results cover the entire prince edward 37797 net re- county actual cost of seed ferturn and 2161 pounds yield per tilizer hired labor and land were acre available from records machinery seedbed preparation required and tractor upkeep were computed some three man hours labor per at rates which take into account acre in essex in huron it was five depreciation and upkeep for thej hours norfolk five hours and kind size and type of equipment prince edward three hours