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The Oshawa Times, 13 Feb 1959, p. 2

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2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, Pebruery 13, 1959 Truck Driver Suffers Bruises WHITBY (Staff) -- Robert Samuel Trecey 187 Stanley road, Belleville, escaped with minor abrasions, early today, when the truck, he was driving, struck {the concrete supports of the Broek streef, overpass on Highway 40! Trecey, driving west, had just begun to pass a tractor-trailer when he was forced to pull to the left to avoid hitting it. The tractor-trailer, driven by Jack Reid, of Hamilton, was fore- ed to the left by a sander moving from the merge lane to the driv- ing lane because of heavy snow, police said. The cad of Trecey's truck hit the plers. The rear swung over to hit Reld's truck, then careen- ed off the supports. The truck came to a stop, still upright, in the eastbound driving lane, The driver of the sander was Henry Sonley, RR 2, Whitby. IPP Constable Arthur Whiteside 'nvestigated the accident. CITY AND DISTRICT STREETS CLOSED The following streets will be osed Saturday for comstruc- tion: Ritson road south from | Bloor street east toa Wolfe street; |Simcoe street north from Non- {Guon road to Taunton road east: !Glengrove street from Woodlea avenue to Rossmount avenue. Streets will be kept open wher. |ever possible. Emergency con- Hull And Chevies nx eae" In Scoreless Tie | By THE CANADIAN PRESS (ROUGH NIGHT FOR WOLVES | » CHERTER OFFICERS OF PARKWOOD LODGE, AF AND AM ter members of Parkwood | (now Worshipful Master), Rt. | are: Wor. Bro. Harry Gay, Wor, | C. Elliott, Bro. H. Gourley, Bro. | Lodge, AF and AM, the new. | Bro. Harold Flintoff, charter | pro, Al Penfound, Bro. Robert | J. Shephard and Wor. Bro. D. year iy Oshawa, was one of the est addition to the craft. Front | master; Bro. William McDon- | Dunlop, Bro. D. Morgan, Rt. | Ives. notable advances made by the | row, from left, are: Bro. F. E. | ald and Rt. Wor, Bro. James | 'Graft. Seen here arn the char- | Bedford, Bro. Jack. Lowry | Jackson. Back row, from left, Unionville Rink Still Unbeaten In Consols | * The formation of a fourth ic lodge, during the past --Oshawa Times Photo ERROR IN STORY A story appearing on Page Two of Thursday's issue of The Oshawa Times stated er- If this was November North| Pepin's opening goal . gave » --An iron ed di fon from Avonlea,| T. Sellers, Unionville 13; C.!| 4 "SARNIA (CP)--An iron-nerved dian champ [ Bay Trappers Would be running|NOrth Bay a 1.0 first period lead roneously that two basketball games had been played between Ajax and OCCI teams. The Sidney Loscombe, 57, his wife and 15-year-old daughter, June, of 286 Nassau street, escaped as- phyxiation by coal gas early this morning. An oxygen pneolator was used for about half an hour by the Oshawa Fire Department to revive the family. A smoke ejector was used to drive gas| from the house, | games were' played with OCVI 2s the Oshawa teams participat- | ing. OVERHEATED FURNACE Oshawa fire fighters rushed to the scene of an overheated fur-| | egulars sidelined by injuries and nace at the residence of George| Mr. Loscombe said that some Dr. Robert D. W. Guselle exam- | |ined the family and pronounced|aches," Mr. Loscombe "said. them out of danger. The 5 combes had not inhaled enough! of the deadly poison gas fo be in serious condition. |} 1 } Nassau St. Famil 3 Ss Tha LE MR. AND MRS. S. LOSCOMBE AND DAUGHTER, JUNE Overcome By Coal Gas Y . experienc: Saved , Who has been under the care of a physician for arthri- o'clock. My wife almost collapsed tic and chest conditions, has into been unable to work, v at the furnace at about nine The Jomty 4s Living wn er's ce ts to {$136 a month. With this they must {buy food, clothing and pay taxes. "An inspector from the fire de- partment will be coming today bed", he stated. {and will order us to fix the fir- downstairs at 3.30 and it was ter. inace, but I don't see how we rible. I think I passed out on the can afford 'to", Mr. Loscomibe couch, and I remember every-|said. at 1045 and we all had head "I was sick before I went to p? "I came bac previously - unbeaten Toronto quartet. Kozlik took Campbell 8-7 in the final end. Tied for third are Kozlik and Dr. A. C. Baillie of Orillia who| have won three and lost two. Gordon Gilbert of Chatham| shares fifth with Campbell while| Kozlik 8, Campbell 7 Fifth Round Kozlik 13, Bleich 5 Chernoff 9, Gilbert 7 Baillie 8, Broomfield 7 Sellers 11, Campbell 10 SARNIA (CP)--Standings after added a fifth later. Winger Joe Malo suffered a shoulder injury during his first turn on the ice. | Trappers racked .up . No. 10] { Thursday night with a 5-2 come-| |back victory over Sudbury | Wolves. It was a '"'must" win in |their drive top reach a spot in the out of the gare, too, but nothing standings now occupied Jointly by physical was involved. he Sudbury and Sault Ste. Marie shouted some remarks at referee Coach John O'Flaherty was put| | Fisher, Brock street, Thursday at 16.27 p.m. Four ambulance calls| | were answered all on account of| | sickness. CLEAN-UP PROGRESSING | The board of works snowblow- WEATHER | | TORONTO (CP)--Official fore- |casts issued by the weather of- Foresee World | : | | onl to WR Albert Street United Church, will| Adcock did outstanding jobs at| Pic first base, We have the old reliables, War- PREDICTS BANNER YEARS ren Spahn, Lew Burdette and re- On the left side of the Infield, I/lief artist Don McMahon. Bob honestly believe Johnny Logan | Rush, who pitched very well and| veteran from Unionville and a 22-/Sask., down to a tie for fifth. { Bleich, Owen Sound 6 {but Frank. O'Grady moved Sud- Saskatchewan held the spotlight/nod over Campbell and brought! Dr. A. C. Baillie, Orillia 11; P./cent gains. {neat goals In the second. $inal rounds. | Earlier in the day Chernoff 9, Baillie 7 {Bay .is at the bottom of the six-| Although they outshot North] la A. C. Bdlllie of Orillia and Jim {four playoff berths. -youngster who runs the Kingston of - St Cliff Bleich of Owen Sound. (er, wing plows and trucks were 15-5 by Sellers in the second y : : ips: i red |Up the snow along the curbs in If Sellers is tied for first after ships: Won Lost| In the only otiier Ontario Senior | Misconduci and Parker ordered YP : 8 Whursday night with a thrilling/for the Canadian championships St. C 0 North Bay now trails Sudbury |ing. | day and shoved the former Cana-|Bloomfield, Galt 12 {dogs, five points up on North| Both clubs missed excellent from a welder's torch was blam- {rent hot streak the talk of the Hull net aft li Jo 5 i ey IHil viet sitar goalle (Torry Bras- construction graving dock, Port Thursday, Feb. 12, of Jennie Mc-|ing three goals including two in'sticks ana fists in the opening|POT! The list of top scorers in the Sawchuk's fourth this season. _|Wilson, 349 Kingsdale Ave. The ing .which the visitors banged|in penalties. Neither did much|almost quelled the blaze when * After the 28-year - old centre goat, 882, Mrs. Wilson was a daughter| {out the fire. Damage was report- out 25 games, but right now he goalie, Bruce Gamble, brought up| Grace Church, Trenton, Jan, 20, Horvath fired the winning goal place the injured Gump Worsley, |Were her home and her family. | (One of a series under the (and I think, before he quits, this | and entrenched themselves in| Gamble backed up the outshot maker (Eva), of Scarboro and| chances for 1959) of the greatest switch hitters 1| The night before when Boston|2 15-footer fired as McIntyre was| Also surviving are a sister, | !ing Andy and we have good re- Horvath, a former Ranger, who nets to Mcintyre, who barely got | William McEvers, of Sault Ste. Braves will miss Red Schoendi-|kee system. We also expect fine | rn ger dominated the second period, | dren. {fore the season is over and be his Maye. : " ry het | STI Was Mi Yoo D1 as Lite set up goals for Tod Chapel at 2 p.m. Saturday, Feb.|second base will be among Mel league last year, should be strong| 65 points on 30 goals and 35 as- scored the third when Sloan and Oshawa Union Cemetery. Rev. Wyse. ley, Joey Jav and Juan Pizarro) 10 assists in 30 games--six of thea second-place tie in the indivi-| |Boom) Geoffrion of idle Cana-| jaw. {diens. ERNEST BRUCE GAMBLE scoreless hockey unitl 8:03 of the ago's final goal, at 19:35 of the| Monday in his 70th year, was|to reach his peak and this could|did last year. : for Detroit a 1-0 win. | |league. {wrong with his arm and he could 3:22 of the second before the Canadians Are In Semi Finals JUPITER, Fla. (AP) -- Mrs. Marlene Stewart Streit and Roma | Neundorf, both of Toronto, and their partners have advanced into the semi-finals of the U.S. amateur mixed foursomes golf tournament. Mrs. Streit and Jack Penrose of Miami Beach, Fla., Thursday |defeated Joseph Mitchell of Fort Lauderdale, Fla, and Mrs. Buddy Cook of Pompano Beach, Fla, 2 up in an early round. Then they won from Dick Chap- n. Youngsters like Carl Wil-man of Pinehurst, N.C., and Mrs. | Philip Cudone, of West Caldwell, N.J., 3 and 1. Miss Neundorf and Howard Everitt of Northfield, N.J., de- feated Truman Connell of Jupiter and Marge Burns of Greensboro, N.C. 1 up and then eliminated J. Wolcott Brown and Berridge Long of Huntington, W.Va., 2 and L The 35 - hole finals will be played Sunday. fice at 11 a.m.: Synopsis: A weak disturbance moved across Ontario during the night causing rain in the southern regions where temperatures were near 40 and scme light snow over the. north country. Colder air moved into the province behind the disturbance, ending the pre- cipitation and bringing partial clearing over most areas. Another storm developing over Colorado is expected to move rapidly theastward bringing snow and rain to the. province turday. aT forecasts valid until midnight Saturday: Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Wind- sor, London: Clouding over this evening. Snow beginning late to- night, changing to rain Saturday morning and ending about noon Saturday. Not so mild tonight. Winds light today. southeast 15 tonight and becoming northerly 15 about noon Saturday. Niagara, Lake Ontario, Tor- onto, Hamilton: Clouding over this evening. Snow beginning after midnight, changing to rain bv mid-morning and ending gat.|for it right now, but' it could |urday afternoon. Not so mild to- | night. Winds light today, becom- ing southeast 15 late tonight and northerly 15 Saturday afternoon. Georgian Bay, Haliburton, |Rirkland Lake, North Bay, Sud- {bury: Cloudy tonight and Satur- day. Snow beginning after mid- night and ending Saturday after- noon. Colder. Winds light today. becoming southeast 15 late to- night and northerly 15 Saturday] afternoon. Timmins-Kapuskasing: Cloudy with a few snowflurries Saturday. Colder. Winds light. Yorecast temperatures Low tonight, High Saturday: Windsor 2 3 St. Thomas London ..... Wingham .. Toronto ... Trenton St. Catharines Hamilton .... Muskoka By AL VICKERY Canadian Press Staff Writer WINNIPEG (CP) -- A world's championship in curling: may not be far off. Says Winnipeg's Ken | Watson, executive member of the, {Dominion Curling Association. Watson has just returned from a 10-day visit to Scotland where he helped set up the first annual competition: between ;enrling champlons of Canada" aiid' Scot- land--a best-of-five series in Scot-| land March 9-11. The prize is the new Scotch Cup, with the Canadian repre- sentative being the winner of the Canadian Curling championship at Quebec City March 2-6. | The Scottish representative will be the winner of a five-rink play- {off--the first time such a series has been, held overseas. Watson told a press conference Thursday he hopes the Seotland- {Canada playoff will eventually |lead to a world's championship. "We're not making any' plans Curling Match sald. "There are several other countries where curling is taken seriously enough to rate such a world series." v England, Norway, Switzerland, Sweden, Austria, Italy, New Zea- land, Indo-China and the United States were mentioned as pos- sibilities by Watson, who won the Canadian title in 1936, 1942 and Matt 194! win of Edmonton, |his triple crown The Canadian cham; nship rink going to wi by. - , Who com) last year. a stb. stitute rink if for any reason the champions can't make the trip-- will use its own rules while the Scottish aggregation will abide by: its own. ? Canadian curlers may slide to the nearest hog line and must Tet the rock go before - 'that point. Scots must let the rock go befbfe they reach the head of the hoiide --far point of the 12-foot circle. Re come, and I think it will," he RossS. hills Carpets sud Ros RA.g-6218 Wall-to-wall Broadloom' installed the Types Of Cancer Price For Living LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- There is a growing feeling that cancer of certain types is the price some people must pay just' because they are living beings, Dr. Robert W. Begg, director of the Sask- atchewan C-ncer and Medical Research Institute says. Dr. Begg, former cancer re- searcher in the Collip Laboratory at the University of Western On- tarlo, said Thursday it did not seem to be general kmowledge among people that the very pro- cess by which life 1s maintained, the disappearance of cells and production of others, can suffer breakdowns leading to cancer. by our Killaloe Earlton . North Bay .. Kapuskasing . White River ...... 15 RRHLLRIUBRKABEY 33 earold Queen's University stu-| A takeout rock by Sellers in| M. Chernoff, Kingston 8; G. Well in front of the OHA-NOHA/ vA J ui) a. Queers, the game in/the 13th end gave him an 11-10 Campbell, Toronto 4 Senior A circuit by virtue of re.;Pury into' command with two s the Ontario Curling 'As-/admiring applause from a large Kozlik, St. Catharines 8 But it's February and despite a/ Then the roof fell in on Sudbury piss Bo hamplonship io into|crowd of onlookers. | Fourth Round 10game unbeaten streak North|With North Bay's big third period. Chernoff set| Ted Sellers of Unionville, un-|the stage for Campbell's downfall Sellers 8, Gilbert 6 [team league making a desperate B8Y 31-28 It was a rough night beaten in five rounds, faces Dr. with a neat 8-4 victory over the Broomfield 10, Bleich 5 |stretch drive to reach one of the for Wolves who started with four| Broomfield of Galt today. Mike Chernoff, Kamsack, Sask. entry, goes against Paul Kozlik t. Catharines and winless "Chernoff has a 4-1 record, good ) i ' | 3 : : {Jim Broomfield of Galt and Cliff fifth-round play in the Ontario) Greyhounds. Howie Parker when George Sen- for second place. He was beaten py 1" bn lon cond trail, |Curling Association champion-| or L ESS TE ick was tagged with a 10-minute|&t work Thursday night cleaning round {today off wi t ! 3 h io' {the Oshawa business section. YOPPED CAMPBELL IOSey. 8 played wii be Bed | watouvie rt Ts | . ICH ves 1 ~ - § 4 0 4 4 . Sellers scored his key victory, The winner goes to Quebec Clr |Kinghon , sss 'a scoreless tie in a scheduled, Chico Cabana and Stan Max-| T h St rts extra - end triumph over top-March 2-6 rillia : OHA Eastern game. | well rounded out North Bay 3007} orc a anked Garnet Campbell of To-| "Thursday's results: | 4 : ' : . ronto Royal Canadians. It was| Third Round and the Soo by 10 pois. It Jay It was a thriller at Cornwall | Fire On Dred e Campbell's third defeat of the] G. Gilbert, Chatham 14; nine games left, the Soo eight where 1,000 fans saw fast action, | (and Sudbury five. |superb goaltending and a brisk The fifth-place Windsor Bull- fist fight. WHITBY (Staff) -- A spark 4 1 | # R od Bay, have 'six games remaining. |scoring 'opportunities and on one|ed for setting a fire, today, in a 2 ed Win £ Dro OBITUARIES It makes for a tense pL both Ron Muir and Nell cabin of the Charles Dick, a hy- hy, all around, with North Bay's cur-|Burke blasted shots wide of the | Graultc droge Th6 disige was a : MRS, MANLEY E, WILSON | | : | The death occurred at the, Tove. in w sard Was completely beaten, | Whithy. a 5 e <17 ) i | Rene Pepin was the fireballer] Cornwall's Bryan McLay and hy Fred W * e jel | Pharedh General Hospital onifor North Bay at Sudbury, scor-|Guy Black of Hull tangled with Supe intendent Fs oi Shout 10| By THE CANADIAN PRESS | The shutout was goalie Terry Evers, beloved wife of Manley E. a fierce third-period upsurge dur-|period and drew seven minutes|a.m. Workmen on the scene had "National Hockey League might/y : SPOT |deceased, who was in her 78th home four without reply. |damage. |smoke forced .them out. | read differently if Bronco Hor-| RADE SELLA hy 3p brought | Year, had been in failing health mere ges vere Fy prep s pacers | Whitby Volunteer Fire Brigade "vath of Boston Bruins hadn't|wings out and dumped Leafs 5ince last October. . {used a fan to draw smoke from broken his jaw last November. |pack into their familiar Gellar : Born at Colborne, Ont., Feb. Milwaukee Braves |the hull, before going in to put suffered the fracture in a game| The Detroit win was a disap- Of the late Mr. and Mrs. Robert led as slight. with Toronto Maple Leafs he was|pointment to New York's rookie McEvers. She was married in i= 4s the kingpin in .Boston's four-from Vancouver Canucks of the/1%02 and had lived in Oshawa I lave Few T roubles game winning streak. |Western Hockey League to re- since 1919. Her main interests { Thursday night as Bruins de-|New York's regular netminder, It| Besides her husband she leaves| managers' own hylines sizing [youngster is going to establish] feated Chicago Black Hawks 5-4 was his second NHL game. |a daughter, Mrs, Perc. Wanna-| yp their teams' pennant {many hitting records. He is one| third place in NHL standings. |New Yorkers with 32 stops to Home son, Gerald, of Vancouver, By FRED HANEY Ihave ever seen. : ; i Sawchuk's 26, and was beaten by B.C. : A \ i" | It was Horvath with the winner Milwaukee Braves Andy Pafko is the, same fight-| came from behind to defeat New falling to the ice. Gordie Howe | Mrs. Otto Haney (Laura), of St. LOS ANGELES (AP) -- There|ports on Jim Pisoni, the fast out- York Rangers 5-3. And it was Passed from behind the RangeriIgnace, Michigan; a brother,lis no question that Milwaukee fielder we diafted from the Yan-| turned a hat trick Sunday night the shot away. Sa Marie, Michigan; eight grand-lenst. We only hope and pray that|things from youngsters such as as Boston demolished Rangers At Boston, Chici_ o's Litzenber- children and 15 great-grandchil-|the redhead will be with us be- Eddie Haas, Al Spangler and Lee] when the Hawks counted four| The memorial service will belold self again, ' | "IN FIFTH LAST YEAR |goals and held a brief 4-2 lead. held at the Armstrong Funeral| With Red out, the battle for| PT MING STIL STRONG th Horvath was fifth place in in- ur pitching staff, tops in the lindsay, then|14 followed by interment in/Roach, Felix Mantilla and Casey| ne { The rest of the infield is|282! sists. He played 67 of 70 games. Lindsay set him up. The three'S, C, H. Atkinson, minister of set. Both Frank Toore and Joe| : ; This year he has 14 goals and|points brought Litzenberger into| ed up valuable experience in| |conduct the services. goals in the last four. He is still|dual scoring with Bernie (Boom | "wearing a mask to protect his, FUNERAL OF In the other NHL game. Thurs- LATE GAME TALLY The memorial service for Ern-|and Eddie Mathews will have|lost some tough decisions, should day Wings and Rangers played| Al Arbour accounted for Chic-|est Bruce Gamble, who died last banner years. Mathews has yet/win more than the 10 games he third period, when Jack McIntyre second. {held at the Armst: Funeral be the year. There isn't a more| Gene Conley did not win but - potted the only goal of the game| Fleming Mackell scored for cpapei at 2 p.m. Gay Feb. valuable third baseman In thelhe showed there was nothing {Boston at 15:33 of the first per-|yp iod, and Guy Gendron tallied at "ry, services were conducted] We have a few ifs in the out-return to form. Bob Buhl gave TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -- Veter- , ans wielding hot putters were the +big show in the first round of the $15,000 Tucson Open golf tourna- «ment, Marty Furgol, who has been playing golf 31 of his 41 years, «sank eight putts of from five to 115 feet for birdies and an eight- «under-par 62 Thursday. That was his finest score in 18 years of pro 'play and sent him into today's second round with a three-stroke 'lead. . Fiftyfour pros made the most «of the El Rio ¢lub's good greens Its better par 35-35-70 for the .6,434-yard layout. Another 13 had Chicago onslaught began with] Sloan's goal at 6:41. Leo Labine sneaked in a goal| at 19:58 of the second period, and| tied things up at 5:50 of the third.| Horvath ended the deadlock at| 16:59 on a play set up by his Uke| line partners, Vic Stasiuk and Johnny Bucyk. Would Develop Curling Centres SARNIA (CP) -- The president of the Ontarlo Curling Associa- tion said Thursday he feels the [OCA should take a more activel {role in the development of new |curling centres. ' B. C. Phippen of Sarnia said he {is planning to direct more OCA effort into guiding curling's rapid | by Rev. 8. C. H, Atkinson, min- ister of Albert Street Urited Church. Interment was in Osh- awa Union Cemetery. 'She pallbearers were Cecil Stephenson, Paul Babarik, Arth- ur Wright, Manley Ayres, Lorne arrow and Roy Hicks, ALFRED PARRY The death occurred in Toron- to on Thursday, Feb. 12, of Al- fred Parry, beloved husband of the late Agnes Lappin. Mr. Parry is survived by four daughters, Mrs. Herbert Polson (Ceil), of Oshawa; Mrs. Basil Pelletier (Marjory), of Toronto; Mrs. William Scovell (Doris), of Toronto and Mrs. Jack Mercer (Isobel), of Newmarket and one som, Bud, of Vancouver, Also surviving is a granddaugh- ter, Mrs. J. Bertrand (Barbara), of Oshawa. Mr. Parry is resting at the Mc- field . . . Wes Covington's leg and|evidence during the last month of Billy Bruton's leg. If these fel-|the season that he was over his lows respond to treatment and alarm trouble, : winter's rest I think we'll be in| In Del Crandall and Del Rice, {good shape. we are well protected behind the | There is only one Henry Aaroniplate. House Thumps Loan Sharks OTTAWA (CP) -- Commons Roberge's amendment were {members have administered talked out in a 4%-hour debate. | their annual thumping to the loan x |sharks but without reaching a| The question now drops to the {firm decision whether to control| bottom of the list of private mem- |lending activities by limiting/bers' bills with little chance of |rates of interest on loans. being debated for some time. | As he has for several years paigps FERRY ISSUE past, Hazen Argue, CCF House leader, afforded the opportunity| Before the Commons embarked Baptist Minister Dies Suddenly WINDSOR (CP) -- Rev. Dr. Harry R. Nobles, 75, for 51 years a Baptist minister and for 25 years Minister of Temple Baptist Church in Windsor, died suddenly Thursday. He retired from Temple Bap. tist Church in 1955 but remained minister emeritus as well as minister at Trinity Baptist Church. DIED ACCIDENTALLY QUEBEC (CP) -- A coroner's jury Thursday ruled accidental the deaths of two Quebec City residents crushed when a section of a department store marquee collapsed Feb. 4. Ten other per- sons were injured. Eyewitnesses told how the 150-foot steel and sheet-metal marquee ripped from the front of the store with a roar and crashed onto the sidewalk. Therese Lamarche, 33, and Paul- Henri Zicat, 45, died under the THE FOOD PLAN THAT HAS PROVEN ITSELF OSHAWA REPRESENTATIVE STAN BRYNING _ 1061 RAVINE ROAD RA 8.5358 FOOD CHAMBERS : 65 UNDERWRITERS RD. oD GI AR Fi: establishment of a publicly-owned wreckage. lending system. Several Conservatives warned that placing too low an interest | limit would drive legitimate lend- | ers out of the business. Others doubted whether legislation would protect those fleeced by | loan sharks; such people prob-! ably would lose their money to ANNUAL MEETING THE SIXTY - FOURTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE | Thursday to castigate those who on the interest-rates debate, A.[some other shark. | Gordon Alken (PC -- Parry Sound-Muskoka) said he supports and Brown Funeral Cha-| pel, 646 St. Clair avenue west, [charge exorbitant juerest raiesiDen. McPhillips (PC--Victoria)| | Toronto, for servi , |by proposing a private bill tojtried unsuccessfully to bring [Fog ov ew Monday, i mit the rate to 12 per cent a about a debate on the Canadian|3 12-Per-cent maximum rate on _|year. Pacific Railway's plan to sus./mortgages and bank interest. But Most of the members ex- pend ferry service between Vap.|t00 low a rate might dry up PHELPS TO SPEAK pressed accord with Mr. Argr='s|couver and Victoria Feb. 25. ney Jor Sal loans and pur- Prof. Arthur Phelps will be the|attack on what he called "hord><| Speaker Roland Mich ruled chaser credit. speaker at the meeting of the of loan sharks and parasites" bu' him out of order on the ground Oritario County Canadian Club to|his suggested rate met with less Mir. McPhillips's attempt failed be held Thursday evening, Mar. | support from Liberals and Pro-ito on»lifv as a matter of urgent 19 at Hotel Genosha, club presi-|gressive Conservatives than. did nat' " A A J; dent David Morgan announced|the proposal of Gabriel Roberge mingham of Toronto with 38-34; cial finals today. Prof. Ph ; Ard hat 1 : wl . 4 y. 3 elps is one of|(L--Megantic) that a committee] 1 ing t > Co s 10 ap. *Ge Magee of Toronto with' Each district. now has its own Canada's most distinguished edu- study the question before further orove the 8 ie Tor his bill | 73 M% Norman " Rick Neto, be aid, aid the deadline cators, and has an international|action is taken on Mr. Argue's Mr Argue said' tie chartered anipeg had a 37-37-74 [rar ay Wansry Ning reputation a & waiter aut womb) {banks failed to do a proper job in! is . mentatar | However hoth the hill and Mr (the small 1aan field We propo. Pe Ally. norte We Sot 3 |growth in Ontario, : or Ju-| « group shoul ius Boros, Gene Littler, Henry, A lew | the 1 le ie "Williams Jr. and Joe Campbell. yi, C0 of he assoclation for : suc atters as ice "Al Balding of Toronto led the|making, club organization and -eight - man Canadian contingent related matters," he said. .with a 60. Stan Leonard of Van-| Mr, Phippen, interviewed at the current OCA single rink Frank Willey of Vancouver and |championship competition being George Knudson of Winnipeg shot held here this year, said he would 1s. {also like to see a new system of Carding 72s were Bob Cum- declaring winners for the provin- 1 importance although it) was a « matter regionally. | WHAT IS EVERYONE SAYING ? MAPLE LEAF FARMERS' MUTUAL FIRE INSURANGE CO, Head Office, Columbus, on Monday, February 16th, 1959 To receive ond disp of the | WILL BE HELD IN THE AT 2 P.M. Fi tol Conbore Directors, and Auditors, and any other business that may be brought before the m the interest of the company. LT.-COL, R. B. SMITH, V.D. President F for the year 1958, the election of Four eeting in W. JOHN ROLLS, Secretary md

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