Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 10 Feb 1959, p. 4

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le hi hm a he aan ala 1 fh AdSatamnd © 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdey, Pebruery 10, 1959 ™ CREE Own WIN ALL-EXPENSE TRIP John H. Swan, of Swan Hard- | nual Canadian Hardware Show | ware, Oshawa, won two free | in Toronto on trips to Bermuda, for himself | Swan, owner of a hardware and his wife at the 54th An- | store for only two years was | Monday. Mr. | week of the first of four winners this the "Bermuda" draw, which takes place each even- ing at the show. The trip pro- 0 BERMUDA vides all expenses paid for seven days at the Bermudiana Hotel. Photo by Gilbert A. Milne. Freezing Rain Makes Driving Hazardous Oshawa Tesidents awakened/8 a.m, today. These operations this morning to find. the city and were being continued this morn. surroupding areas glazed. with ajing on other streets. Mr. Wood sheet of ice. Motor vehicles were commented that roads, blown) salted and |crew worked all night. No accl- In Ajax rosds have all been , The works man Joe" Joe Primeau Is Honored At Ravina TORONTO (CP) -- "Gentle: who had| Primeau, completely covered with ice. bare of snow, were in an ga- dents were reported. The freezing rain started to fall/iremely slippery condition. The] The Ontario Department - of early } v afternoon with the lowest temperature at the' city Highways, Whitby, reports that result that industrial workers re-(yard during the night was 24 de- lal roads in the district are prac- turned to their vehicles fo find Brees above zero. [tically snow-covered, but all are « windshields coated with ice. Oshawa police reported eight|well sanded. All plows and sand- g whose defrosting equip- (accidents occurred oa city streets| erg were out during the night. as not efficient were faced dUTINE te past 4 bo, Three| v TO EAST ask of TEmoving the ice Streets in the town of Whitby ering rain occurred in Port "He lote evening|Were in the process of being sand- ope during the night. One minor ed this morning. Only one minor|accident was reported near Co- et 4p to some extent| 3 g. Only bog? frhw ature fell during accident, with no one injured, was g on Highway 2 The tem-| {reported tier: perature at 9 a.m. today was 28 degrees above zerg. At 2 a.m. to- day the roads were like glass. They are now in the process of being sanded. The town of Cobourg reported no accidents during the night with very slippéry road nigh e. i | The Whitby detachment of the . Wood, superintendent of the Ontario Provincial Police report- works, reported this eq no serious accidents in its dis- main streets, in-| trict. Hill and the| i VARIED CONDITIONS leading to the plants of "(ari County Engineer R. E. |Sims county plows and |sanders were out as required. He | | | | some great moments at centre| ice during his long and successful career as a hockey player and coach, added enother Monday night. It came at Ravina Gardens but, unlike those' other moments when| he started key scoring plays at the centre spot or stood there to receive some of hockey's top trophies, this was a complete surprise, = Primeaun went along to accept a painting from a service club for allowing use of his name in a promotion and discovered it was Adoe' Primoau Night at Ravina, where he began his professional career in 1927. " King Clancy, assistant general manager of the National Hockey {across the county. In the north- operations ern portion of the county snow at 7 p.m. Mon-|fell last night; while southern day and continued to $ a.m. and sections had freezing rain. tions. All highways are bare to |said conditions vary widely | OF betng League Toronto Maple Leafs and a former teammate of Primeau"s, and Leaf general manager Punch Imlach made presentations to him between periods of an On- tario Hockey Association Junior A game. / CAPSULE NEWS 6 Months Jail In Bowling Break-In LONDON, Ont. Gregory Reely, 19, of Samia, neat Monday was sentenced to six|was no halt in traffic. months definite, six months in- determinate in reformatory for a REMOVE AGE LIMIT Nov. 20 breakin at a downtown, OSAKA, Japan (Reuters)--The H Maruzen Oil Company here has|d bowling centre. HAS 139 DESCENDANTS PRESQUE ISLE, Me. (AP) Winfield Scott Farley, 87, died Monday leaving 138 deseendants.g They are: his wife, 11 children, |e 39 grandchildren, 84 great grand-| children, and four great great grandchildren. ] tent technicians and workers SOUND ADVICE | SINGAPORE (AP) | women leaders got this advice STARTS CRUSADE |, meeting here: 'We must makg HONOLULU (AP) -- Evangel-imen realize that what this world ist Billy Graham; ending a three-| needs is wise men and wise rid week vacation made necessary men not wise guys." It ca by an eye ailment, will leave trom Mrs. F. Balboa, preside Monday night for Sydney to start of the Pan-Pacific and Southeal a lengthy religious crusade in|Agis Women's Association. Australia. He will be accompan- | ROUGH BUSINESS ied by his wife, Ruth. 5 A PIES HONG KONG" (AP)--Two shoes RUNS AWAY, | SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- An|strokes of the cane by a juvenile 1lyearold boy, who raf away court because of their business from home after being spanked, operations. They splattered white was found dead Sunday in an paint on thé shoes of passersby, abandoned bullae a Hoek from tieh offered to clean them for a his home. e sal es| dollar. apparently died of as-| Non comsed by an unvented| _ DAMAGED TREASURE gas heater. | VIENNA (AP) -- The Austrian {National Library says a price CHURCHILL HISTORY TV |less Mozart manuscript wal LONDON (Reuters)--A televi- damaged during its showing at sion company Monday announced {the Brussels We fair. When it plans a series of programs| vas returned, a es in visual form Sir|a small corne: with a notation Winston Churchill's History of the js or Sooners handwriting English - Speaking Peoples. The ha n torn -off, probably a company, ABC television limited, souvenir hunter. will present a series of one-hour | LITTLE GIANT programs for transmission in Bri-| a tain next winter. Sir Laurence PEIPING (Reuters) --- Yang Olivier will be the narrator a x years old but stands four feet oi bi Mam Wallon a Sympose Hall, weighs 82 pounds and can |carry 35 pounds of rice on his CAMPUS EXPLOSION | NEW YORK (AP)--An explo-| sion ed a soa chemistry labor DE basic social units. atory on the Fordham University WINDMILL POWER campus. The loss was estimated] TOKY() (AP) -- Red China at $500,000, including valuable] 51ang to use wind power on a equipment . Research projectsijs roe scale to mechanize farming which barely escaped destruction iy Manchuria, Peiping Padio re- included two for the national in-|norted. The program calls for stitutes of health on chemicals|7p 000 © windmills for rice and which cause or might cause Can-|wheat processing, grass mowing, cer, a similar cancer research hycking, grain 'sifting and for project for the air force, and an| generating electricity. undisclosed project for the| Atomic Energy Commission. No| BOYCOTT YOUTH MEET one was injured. | LONDON (AP) -- The World | Assembly of Youth which claims QUICK REPAIRS membership in 55 countries says ROTORUA, NZ. (CP)--A gey-/it will boycotfe the Communist- ser bursting through the pave- sponsored WomMd Youth Festival ment is all in the day's work for|at Vierna this July road engineérs in this town, cen- Varma, the tre of New Zealand thermal re gio Ww a ming flow al wroke through the main highway moting agineers applied a well - tried ing" News reported. {The boy lives in a people's commune. one of the assembly's president en ste al 'is not CANADIENS' GIFT Rocket Richard presented a (CP)--Clarence | procedure for piping # from be-| h the road surface and there V Wi ~ Imay be retained. The age limit|} for its 55,000 workers was 55 un. |§ il 1956, when it was extended toi was found that conducted the services. He was| | |Wel of Shanghai is only five Perry and Russell Elliott. {shoulders, the Pelping Evening esteem in which the deceased was gift on behalf of Montreal Cana- diens of the NHL. Several other organizations also honored the {man who was centre on the |Leafs' famous Kid Pri- |meau's linemates, Chg ' 4 {helped to make it a b who lived at 300 pm. istreet, was in his 70th { the Liquor Control Oshawa for more h of the late Mr. and Mrs. Gamble, the deceas- born Aug. 26, 1889, in Edward county. A resi- fi of Oshawa jniost of his life as married sere May 24, to promotet he. 3,500-seat the profits going to charity. other organizations heard of It they asked if they could Join in the presentations to Primeau. Joe + his nickname for his clean pl and in 1931-32 he won the NHL'S\Lady Byng Trophy. Primeau played with Leafs from 1928 to 1936 and during the last years, coached senior teams as well. From 1950 to 1953 he coached ih . Gamble was a veteran of He also the 1950-51 season. | teams. There was one - disappoin note for Primeau. In the hockey game Toronto Marlboros whipped Toronto St. Michael's Majors 4-1. Primeau is president of the Maj- ors hockey club. Blair Blasts Ken Farmer WHITBY (CP) -- Wren Blair, general manager of Whithy Dun- lops, says criticism of Belleville McFarlands hockey club by the president of the Canadian Olym- pic Association is "an insult to Senior A hockey in Canada." He referred Monday night to remarks attributed to Ken Far- Het at a peeked TestEg i Piper, Gordon Robinson :| Moncton, N.B., calling eville Gimblett, Roy Sno, Howard a team of '"'over-the-hil) pros" not : » Lloyd| strong enough to retain the world championship. "Belleville won the Allan Cup last year," Blair said, "and think that is a highly esteemed trophy in the 'eyes of all Cana- dian clubs." FUNERAL OF He gai he would be willing 0 y bet that Mr. Farmer has no DANIEL J, RIORDAN |seen the Belleville club perform High requiem mass was sung this season and added: "I'd be by Rev. P. Coffey at Holy Cross|interested in learning from Mr, Roman Catholic Church at 9 Farmer what he used as a yard: 81, joday for Daslel I: Blordas, stick for his evaluation." oe street north, Belleville now is on a tour of last Saturday In his 71st year. |g, rone warming up for the 1959 The pallbearers were Daniel|\ ord hockey championships at apel at 2 p.m. Thursday, Feb. g, followed by interment in Osh- a Union Cemetery. Rev. S.C.H. nson, minister of Albert United Church, will con- the services. FUNERAL OF HARRY C. GIMBLETT i Gimbilett, 650 King street east, ho died. at the Oshawa General i last Saturday. was held at the McIntosh Funeral Chapel at 2 p.m. Mongay, Feb. 9. Rew. Bruce Miles, of Listowel, a former minister of St. Paul's Presybterian Church, Oshawa,| assisted by Rev. H. A. Mellow, minister of Northminster United Church, Interment was in Osh- The service at the chapel was largely attended and the many florpl pieces indicated the high held. Leafs, winning the Stanley Cup in mo coached Memorial and Allan Cup n Oshawa Public Utilities Com: mission blames yesterday's sleet storm for a 15-minute break in the hydro supply during the af- ternoon. '| George F. Shreve, manager of the PUC, said that the power failure stemmed from a pole at Bloor street and Park road south, He said that electricity leaking from the insulators on the 44 KV line on the pole grounded on the bolt securing the cross-arm, which heated and set the pole on, fire. The top of the pole fell, shid, carrying the 4 KV line lower on the pole. He said that the sleet accelera- ted flow of "free" electricity from the insulators to the cross- arm boit, When the high voltage line fell, power was immediately cut off from an area extending east from Park road along Bloor to high voltage line down onto a Sleet Blamed Power Break Simcoe, and nérth on Simcoe. A secondary effect of the break was a fracture in the lower volt- age 4 KV line. Mr, Shreve explained that when this line was struck by the high powered line, a surge of 44 KV electricity along the 4 KV line damaged a number of hydro of the city. Although normal service was restored in most areas within 30 minutes, PUC crews. were still working at midnight in the College Hill area. Mr, Shreve said that minor de- fects in the south-west corner, resulting from the break, can only be tracked down by the PUC from complaints by resi- |dents in the district. A SAD STATE Official MILWAUKEE AP) -- Avery. {tion in the world of sports." The only way to reverse the trend, says staunchest advocate and severest critic, is to start teaching chil- dren in kindergarten "to play for fun and not for money." Brundage made the remarks In an interview Monday night after the male and female athletes-of- the-yeAr banquet sponsored by the Fraternal Order of Eagles. C. Miller memorial trophies for being named the world's foremost athletes of 1958 in the annual Associated Press poll. SEES MYTH EXPLODED Brundage, president of the In- ternational Olympic Committee, told a erowd of 600 the selections of Elliott" and Miss Gibson "should dispose of this myth that an amateur is, someone not good enough to he a pro." Later. "he discussed what he called '"'a sad state" of affairs. "In the last Olympic Games we were outclassed in half of the sports on the program, Australia won 35 medals and we won 74. On a per-capita basis, they did 10 times as well as we did and they're not the only ones. amateurism's | filer Herb Elliott of Australia| antl tennds star Althea Gibson of stories about them paying their New York received the Frederick Explains Athlete Decline | "We haven't won a long-dis- lany international competition in many years, .25 years or so I would say. trained gymnasts three or four years ago when I visited there. | You couldn't find 800 in the U.S." |# {NO PROOF ..Asked about reports that Rus- sla pays her athletes, the 70-year- old Brundage replied: "They swear they are within the ama- teur rules. You hear rumors and | athletes, but so far we have no proof. Told of Elliott's sug; that ti, fixtures in the south-west corner "Russia alone had £00,000! Brundage says the United States|tance race over a half-mile in| is "slipping into a secondary posi: While Loran Sheffer, 28, lis- tens glumly, Pauline Giles, 24, Fastcote, Middlesex, England, INTERNATIONAL - tells newsmen how she left her English boy friend in the lurch to accompany Sheffer on a plane ride to the United States. isis SES IRTT BECERRA LON EE I RE gi LOVE AFFAIR She says she did not want te come and wants to go home, He says she came willingly. {Australia reimburses its Olympic [athletes to the tume of a half- | day's pay fore each day's training, CITY AND DISTRICT 135 Lb. Impost h 4 | Brundage | "You can't make a with a subsidy. It takes diligence and hard work. That's why El- {liott got where he is. Anyone who For Round Table BUILDING FUND TOTAL Bro ks and Company Limited, It is announced that $29,584 in|W' iby; George H. Harding Con-| ARCADIA, Calif. (AP)--An al- cash and pledges has been re-'-iruction Company Limited,| most unprecedented 135 - pound ceived to date for, the building Whitby; Irving S. Margles Hold- impost for Round Table |says you can wear yourself out |by three or four hours of training ia day is silly. | "We're victims of our own | erity . . . we must get back {to fundamentals. We must rec- |ognize that physical education is |important, more important at | certain ages than mental educa- |tion. We must start at the bot- 'tom... . Athletics (One of a series writen un der the managers' bylines siz- ing op their teams' pennan t chances for 1959) By HARRY CRAFT Kansas City Athletics THROCKMORTON, Tex. (AP) This is the time of the year when eviry manager is optimistic and I am no exception, I don't mean to imply we're going to be pen- nant contenders but we should have a sounder, more balanced club. 1 thought our "biggest weak- nesses last year were lack of infield replacements and not enough front line pitching. Sec- ond base is the position we thought would present our biggest problem, Our first draft choice was secnd baseman Wayne Ter- williger. If he can break in as a regular we will. be a, much sounder ball club. TO MOVE LOPEZ In that case, Hector Lopez will | with our infielders earlier game and be able to rest eglilars from time ot time. Hal Smith did a fine job for us at third and was adequate at first. He wasn't getting enough regu- lar work splitting the catching duties with Harry Chiti and Frank House. I think we will be stronger in 1959 through the experience gained by players like Roger Maris, Chiti, Ralph Terry, Mike Baxes, Ray Herbert, Dick Tom- anek and Bob Martyn. Jim Small, Lou Klimchock, Kent Hadley, Jim McManus and Milt Graff have improved. I'm told. that Zeke Bella swings a good bat. OUTFIELD STRONG I would say that our strongest departments are the outfield and catching. Dick Williams, Bella and Terwilliger will make the battla, for regular Jobs more spirited bettet| Terry is improving from year to year. Herbert was excel- lent (the last two months of the seasdn and Ned Garver is sound physi¢ally. Bob Grim will' be in "ye starting rotation from ise be- ginning, Jack, Urban is a battler and }f he recovers from his in- jury of last year, he'll give a good account of himself. ¢ and John Tsitouris are youngsters who will be given every oppor- fipity to pitch for us. Walt Crad- PERSONAL Riordan, Jr., George Price, Patltario Hockey Association's East- Wiley and Thorpas Tilley. , |ern Senior A series in which Interment was in St. Gregory's Whitby also plays. Cemetery. Riordan, Peter Riordan, Joseph prague. The club is from the On:| Will . Mr. former employe of the St. John's, Newfoundland | Daily Journal, who is be- MISSING NAMES MOSCOW (AP) -- The names) DID YOU KNOW? Ravindrajof former premier Nicolai Bul.| Indian! ganin and the late foreign min. said the Vienna fest]. ister the best means of pro sing from the new' edition of the international understand- Little Soviet 'Engyclopedia which You con have @ living room (ap- prox, 12' x 12') installed with wall-to-wall broadloom and under. pad complete for only 129.50 by NU-WAY RUG & CARPET SALES Phong RA 5-1202 Andrei Vishinskr are mis | | lieved to be in Oshawa, || contact me at the Times office for important in- formation, T. L. WILSON bas just been di<ributed hers. Ou pitching should be much|r Howard Reed, Ken Johnson E. Jackson, || Hope To Be Stronger dock should be a better pitcher in 1959. Bud Daley, T«mau..cl: and Tom Gorman will draw spot starting and relief assignments. Our goal still is to make our; selves a .'rong first division con- tender. We finished 4% games out of the first division in 1958) and this makes us belleve we're headed in the right direction. | WEATHER TORONTO (CP)---Offictal fore-| casts issued by the weather office | at 11 am.: | Synopsis: The storm which| brought Ontario's worst winter weather so far this season is now moving rapidly northeastward |and will cross the province dur- | ing the night. Thus, the moist air {Which swept up from the gulf, |causing thundershower activity in {Missouri and Ohio will not reach jour district and cold air will re- |main over Ontario. As the storm |approaches and passes the prov- lince winds will increase and in {its wake still colder' air and some {more snow are in store for most |sections tonight and Wednesday. ke Erie, southern Lake |Huron, Niagara, Lake Ontario, | Windsor, London, Hamilton, Tor- onto: Freezing rain or snow to- day, turning much colder with occasional snow tonight. Wednes- day cloudy with snowflurries and cold. Winds easterly 15 to 20 to- day becoming northwesterly 20 to| 30 Wednesday. Northern Lake Huron, Georgian Bay, Haliburton: Cloudy with light snow today and tonight. Wednesday cloudy with snowflur- ries and occasional snowsqualls in lee of lakes, Colder. Winds northeasterly 20 to 30 today be-| coming. northwesterly 20 to 30 Wednesday. Southern Kirkland Lake, North Bay, Sudbury: Cloudy with snow today and Wednesday. Colder | | | Northern Kirkland Lake, Tim- mins Kapuskasing: Mainly cloudy with some snowflurries to- day and Wednesday. Continuing cold. Winds light becoming north- easterly 20 to 30 tonight and |the 'Oshawa and District Associa- fund appeal being carried on by|ing Company Limited, Portiday's San Antonio Hah Hope; Queen's Hotel, Port Hope, | 4.0 brought no cries Limited, of Port Hope; and| {Toms and Sons Limited, of New-|from the stable of racing {time money winner. castle. Following is the report of the) | "I think the weights ! Oshawa General Hospital fo e ~--\ TEACHERS MEET | said trainer Willie ee fi week ending Feb. 7: admissions| Pups of Oshawa and district| rack is. fast, we'll " 215; births, male 15, female 21;|gec ry schools are having a AS WEL. IV. major surgery 31; minor surgery holiday today while their teach.| Next high-weighted is C. Wi 57; eye, ear nose aud throat 35; ers hold a business meeting at| Smith's Hillsdale, the Santa Anita treatment: 86; casts 17; physio- the Whitby District High School.|meeting's hottest stakes runner" tion for Retarded Childrer HOSPITAL REPORT therapy (reatments 278. +The conference opened 'at 10 a.m. VISITORS AT ROTARY . pts wt me meeting ot 5' St. Kitts Rink: Consol Finalists Genosha on Monday, included: L.| HAMILTON (CP)--A St. Cath- Sherry, Claremont; Jack Shaw, | Toronto; John Regan, Mel Smith, arines rink skipped by P. Kozlik became the final entry in the On- Dr. 0. G. Mills, E. R, 8. Mec- Laughlin and Angus Gordon, all of Oshawa; Howard Law, Whit- by; George Lavers, Truro, N.S. |bec Wh Rotarians M. Martin and tario Curling Association finals ter Reynolds. of Bowmanville|by defeating a Dixie foursome | and Cliff Soggite, of Regina. Monday night to win the District | ' 7 tig. e St. Catharines quartet will go against seven other rinks in the round robin tournament which opens Wednesday at Sar- nia. The winner will represent Ontario in the Canadian cham- pionships at Quebec City next jmouta HEAR TAPE Others in the finals: M. Chern- A tape recording of an .inter-|off, Kingston; G. Gilbert, view with District Governor Ed. Chatham; Dr. A. C. Baillie, Or- Ruggles, of Cobourg, doaling with [illia; Gatnet Campbell, Toronto the forthcoming district confer-(Royal Canadians; Ted Sellers, | ence in Toronto, was Listened to|Unionville; C. Bleich, Owen with interest by members of the Sound, and J. Broomfield, Galt. | Oshawa Rotary Club at their) RES A NEP easy mocnssane | Say Auto Not | Worth 65 Cents | Members of the Rotary Club of Oshawa were told on Monday that a total of $3355 had been received to date in its campaign for the : crippled children's rehabilitation Maurice O'Day bought a Sal centre to be built in Toronto, The Jan. 28. It wasn't much of a car,| club is seeking $16,600. la 1937 model which a policeman |later said wasn't worth 65 cents. OFFICERS ELECTED | However, Maurice wrote al Ted Middlethas was elected cheque for $65 to pay for the car. chairman of the Oshawa Traffic|He signed the cheque "Maurice Advisory 'Council for 1959 at a|McKay". budget meeting Monday. Tom| ; ron Prest was elected vice-chairman. | Te was Jailed fr a th vy [Magistrate F. S. Ebbs, Monday, PC EXECUTIVE MEETING [0 2 charge of false pretences. | Executive of the Ontario county| PC Charles Daniels of Picker-| provincial riding Progressive|ing Township Police fold the/ Conservative Association will|court of the transaction. He said] meet Friday next to consider a that the car was not roadworthy: | date for the annual meeting. "I wouldn't give 65 cents for it," FIRMS INCORPORATED he said. | Looking over O'Day's record, | The current issue of The On- tarlo Gazette carries the infor- the.magistrate said: "Apparently mation that letters patent of in- THREE SPOONS PRESENTED . spoons were present. ed to Hayden Macdonald, S. F. Everson and W. R. Branch at the meeting of the Rotary Club of Oshawa this week. They cele- brate their birthdays this week. who beat Round Table by a head" ' in the seven-furlong San Carlos.. The Indiana flyer drew 120° Round Table's load for the $50,- 000-added mile and one - eighth {San Antonio is the highest handed |a thoroughbred at Santa Anita since Discovery carried 138 in the ' 1938 San Antonio. Discovery fin-"" ished out of the money in that one, behind Time Supply and others, Others and weights in the Sas ' Antonio include Maine Chance Farm's Tempest II, 117; Bug Brush, 118; Terrang, 116; Jew- el's Reward, 114; Eddie Schmidt, - 113; Nashville, 113; Fleet Nasrul- lah, 110; Gone Fishin', oi Boom cial Climber, 110 and era Live ing, who almost beat 1sdale recently, 108. OPEN HOUSES MONDAY TO SATURDAY Best In The North West 2PM TOS P.M Model Homes 1. Stevenson's Road North at Annapolis. 2. Park Road North at Ridge. way. 3. Annapolis Avenue opposite St. Christophers School. LOW DOWN PAYMENTS JOHN A. J. BOLAHOOD LIMITED REALTORS Zz you have been in the habit of do- corporation have been issued to | ing this sort of thing." five district firms. The new lim- O'Day made no c ited companies are: Franklin] | WOOL Scatter Rugs Sale 1.50 each NU-WAY RUG SALES 174 MARY ST. i RA 5.1202 Borthwesterly 20 to 30 Wednes- ay. { | | I 1061 RAVINE ROAD CHAMBERS 65 UNDERWRITERS RD. THE FOOD PLAN THAT HAS PROVEN ITSELF OSHAWA REPRESENTATIVE STAN BRYNING RA 8.5358 ! 57 King Street PHONE R (Jo]0]s) CLUB OX. 9-1188 FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL Sea - Air - Rail - Hotels Tours - Documents (ALL FREE OF CHARGE) SERVICE World Wide Travel Arrangements East, Oshawa A 8-6201

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