Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 25 May 1961, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

CAMERA CATCHES UNUSUAL LIGHTING EFFECTS An alert photographer can . often capture unusual lighting effects. This picture, taken during the weekend at the val at the Oshawa Shopping Centre, shows the results Oshawa Kinsmen Club Carni- | which can be obtained by leav- ing the camera shutter open for a few seconds. --Oshawa Times Photo. Embers Fire Republic's Birth Storage Shed Damage was estimated at $550 in a fire that destroyed a garden| verandah furni-| lawn tractor, tools, ture and two power mowers in a shed at Raglan, at noon, Wednesday. The shed, owned by George Bray, of Hurd. street, in the north end of the village, suffer- ed damage estimated at $300. Damage to the contents was was about $250. Firefighters from the Oshawa Fire Department were called to the blaze that started from a smouldering bonfire. Mrs. Bray said today they had thought the bonfire was out, but apparently sm ing embers f: d into flame again. The storage shed was located on the north side of the Bray By DAVE OANCIA Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON (CP) -- Pain is pain, whether it comes at birth| or at death. | There will be a little of both aspects Wednesday when the) old Union of South Africa dies and the new Republic of South Africa is born. Many agree that what will be witnessed will not be the birth of a glorious republic--with its connotation of freedom and equality for all regardless of color--but the birth of an out- cast. For in taking the last steps towards becoming a republic OBITUARIES home. Members of the Osh Fire Department were not called to any other fires between Wed- nsday morning and this morn- ing, but ambulance crews had three routine calls. DONATE TROPHY Mr. and Mrs. C. Churchley have donated a trophy for the tournament to be held by the ladies' section of the Oshawa Lawn Bowling Club on July 12. The donors will also present in- dividual trophies to the mem- bers of the winning team. COMING EVENTS BLOSSOMTIME Tea at the home of Mrs. George Ansley, Rossland Road West, under the auspices of Phoebe Scammell group of Street United Church on Wednesday: May 31, from 3 to 6. Admission 75. TANNERY Ladies' Auxiliary bingo, "at the Avalon, Thursday, 7.30 ° Six Ja the J. EVERETT MOUNTJOY Following a lengthy illness the death occurred at the family residence, Lot § Concession 6, East Whitby Township, on Wed. nesday, May 24, of J. Everett Mountjoy, beloved husband of the former Gertrude Langmaid. Mr. Mountjoy was in his 73rd ear. A son of the late John and Mary Ann Mountjoy, the de- ceased was born in East Whitby Township Oct. 24, 1888 and was married in the township Feb. 26, 1913. Mr. Mountjoy had lived and farmed in the township all his life. He was a very faithful and active member of Kedron Unit- ed Church and had considerable coe | to do with the construction of the new church in 1952. Besides his wife he is sur- vived by two daughters, Mrs. William MacGregor (Elda) and | Mrs. Hugh Gannon (Bessie) of Oshawa and a son, Percy, of NOVEL BINGO THURSDAY EVENING, 8 P.M. ot ST. GEORGE'S HALL (Albert and Jackson Sts.) | Games $6, $12, $20 May be doubled or tripled. $130 JACKPOT INCLUDED | East Whitby Township. Also surviving are a sister, | {Miss Beatrice Mountjoy, of] Columbus and a brother, Wil-| Vliam L. Mountjoy, of East Whit- | {American orohibition-era gang- |by. He was predeceased by al Door Prize $15 | brother, Harold, July 18, 1945. li | The memorial service will be ST. MARK'S WA |held at the Armstrong Funeral | MAY TEA and WORK SALE at the Church Hall, Stevenson's Road North FRIDAY, MAY 26th 2 -- 5PM Adults 50c Children 15¢ ELDAD UNITED CHURCH SUNDAY SCHOOL ANNIVERSARY SUNDAY, MAY 28, 1961 IN CHURCH SHED 2:00 P.M. and 7:30 P.M. Special Speaker: REV. S. C. H. ATKINSON, Oshawa Music by the Sunday School Choir MONDAY MAY 29, 1961 SOCCER GAME 7 P.M. MILLBROOK MINSTREL SHOW 8:15 p.m. ot Hall Adults 50¢ Children 25¢ R. A. HUTCHISON HOME AND SCHOOL (Off Craydon Rd.) FUN FAIR SATURDAY, MAY 27, 2-6 PM. Games, Bazaar, White ele- phont, candy, home cooking ond tea room. Dancing 8-11. BINGO HARMON PARK ASSOCIATION ST. JOHN'S HALL (comer Bloor ond Simcoe) Friday, May 26, 7:45 p.m. 0 Gomes -- $6 ond $10 5 -- $40 Jockpots son Funeral Chapel, Home, at 2 p.m. Friday, May | 26, followed by interment in| will be conducted by Rev. R. H | Love, minister of Kedron Unit-| ed Church assisted by Rev. R H. Wylie, of Toronto, a former pastor at Kedron, |ag In lieu of flowers, donations to Variety Village would be ap preciated. MRS. ETHEL PARROTT In poor health for several years, Mrs. Ethel Parrott, be- loved wife of Alfred C. Parrott, of Ashburn, died at the Open Gate Nursing Home, Highland | Creek, Wednesday, May 24. The | deceased was in her 61st year. | Born at Ashburn, the former, Ethel Stuttaford, she was a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Stuttaford. During| her lifetime she had lived in Guelph, Toronto and for the ! : past 30 years she was a resident of her native village. While in Guelph, Mrs. Parrott | * taught at the Guelph Business| College. She was a trained sten- ographer. The deceased was a member of the Church of Christ, in Toronto, and attended serv-| ices at Burns Presbyterian | Church, Ashburn. | She is survived by her hus-| band, one stepson, Grant Par- rott, of Ashburn, two sisters, | Mrs. Donald Purdy and Mrs. | Herbert Ashton, of Ashburn, and two brothers, Gordon, of Ash-| burn, and Kenneth of Edmon- ton, Alta. The remains are at the Robin-| Brooklin, | for service in the chapel, Fri. day, May 26, at 2.30 p.m. Inter- ment will follow in Groveside Cemetery, Brooklin. William Perry, a student at Knox Col-| lege, Toronto and acting minis-| ter at Port Perry Presbyterian Church will conduct the serv- ices. 'Dies On Gallows | Collegiate Institute. 'Not Happy Event May 31, South Africa takes the| decisive one of severing her ties| with the Commonwealth of Na-| tions. The indications are the raci-| ally segregated state of Prime| Minister Hendrik Verwoerd faces a future of increasing loneliness and tightening black- white tensions. May 31 is a national holiday in the state but there will be little celebrating. In preparation for what was meant to be a day of jubilation, Verwoerd's government has felt it necessary to take measures that by any yardstick can only be called stern. TAKE EMERGENCY STEPS South Africa is practically on a war footing. A drastic ban on meetings has been imposed. Leave for defence force officers has been cancell*d. Eleven re- serve regiments have been called up. Police raids on African town- ships have been intensified. Thousands of non-whites are be- lieved to have been arrested. And white women of all ages are flocking to clubs to learn how to shoot pistols and rifles. The decision to sever links with the British Crown was taken by Verwoerd when he re- fused to give in even a little at the March meeting of Common- wealth prime ministers. "We don't operate as a judge or jury," Prime Minister Dief- enbaker told reporters after ¥ {ber of the Ottawa detachment $ lof the provincial police, was CAPSULE NEWS WASHINGTON (AP) -- Da- lege educaiton at McGill Uni- versity in Montreal, has been appointed executive director of, President Kennedy's committee on juvenile delinquency. A teen- age chum of the president's brother, Attorney-General Rob- ert Kennedy, Hackett, 34, was well known in Eastern Canada as a college athlete. ACTS AS CONCILIATOR RIO de JANEIRO (AP)---For- eign Minister Afonso Arinos said Wednesday night that Bra- zil is acting as a conciliator between the United States and Supa, He did not go into de- tails. DIES OF INJURIES OTTAWA (CP) -- Leslie Mc- Innis, 19 - month - old daughter of off - duty policeman William McInnis, Wednesday night died of injuries suffered when she ran behind a car driven by her father. Const. McInnis, a mem- backing out of his garage. SUSPENDS LICENCES EDMONTON (CP) -- The Al- berta government announced Wednesday the susp of re- tail licences of four Independ- ent Grocers' Alliance stores in Calgary for "exchanging gifts and premiums for stamps." A test of the government's ban on trading stamps now is before an Edmonton court. ICE HITS INDUSTRY HALIFAX (CP) -- Ice closed in on the $10,000,000 Northum- berland Strait lobstering indus- try nearly a month ago and still hasn't let go. Most of the in- dustry's 5,000 fishermen have still to set traps and those who {have report some of the poorest | catches in years. The ice, usu- {ally out of the strait by mid- April, has shown no sign of | melting this year. | UNVEILS PLAQUE LONDON (AP) -- Mrs. Dor- |othy Hammerstein, widow of lyricist Oscar Hammerstein, un- veiled a plaque to his memory in Southwark Cathedral Wed- nesday. LUNCH WITH PRESIDENT WASHINTON (AP) -- Prin- cess Grace and Prince Rainier III of Monaco lunched Wednes- day with President and Mrs. Kennedy at the White House. REPORTS RED SHIPS LISBON (Reuters) -- The An- golan newspaper Provincia de Angola said Wednesday that a fleet of Soviet trawlers, includ- ing a factory ship, had been sailing off the Angola coast for more than a year. The news- paper said there were many Negroes among the crews. The presence of trawlers off the coast at the present time was "strange," it said, because fish were scarce. SET RECORDS NEW YORK (AP) -- Three U.S. Navy jet fighter planes set unofficial coast - to - coast rec- ords Wednesday. The fastest of the three made it in two hours and 47 minutes. Tthe transcon- tinental marks were set by F-4H-1 Phantoms. The previous Kennedy Picks McGill Athlete vid L. Hackett, who got his col-| mil in 1957 for the distance--2,445.9 es. ANNOUNCES CONTRACTS OTTAWA (CP) -- The defence production department awarded contracts totalling $19,988,979 to 174 Canadian firms during the last half of April, it was an- nounced Wednesday. The larg- est, valued at $3,827,040, was iv Canadian Pacific Airlines Lim- ited, of Vancouver, for the op- eration of a repair depot. TREAT UN WRITERS OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana- dian government Wednesday night threw a dinner for United Nations correspondents from five countries besides Canada. The 19 reporters arrived earlier in the day, guests of the gov- ernment as a goodwill gesture, and are scheduled to meet Prime Minister Diefenbaker today. GOES TO WARSAW TORONTO (CP)--Gary Ashby, a final year medical student at the University of Toronto will become what is believed to be the first Canadian exchange student to study behind the Iron Curtain since the Second World War. The Toronto student will spend four weeks this sum- mer at the Warsaw medical academy's clinical hospital. 2 DIE, TRUCK GOES ON DORION Que. (CP) -- Two school children on their way home from classes were killed Wednesday when hit by a truck that did not stop. They were Gary Howard, 9, and Terrence Ferguson, 8. Dorion is 25 miles west of Montreal. FIREMEN ESCAPE NEW YORK (AP) -- Seven firemen escaped Wednesday night after being trapped in the collapse of a blazing frame ten- ement building in Brooklyn. Three of them were trapped un- der heaps of debris for 10 min. utes before they were rescued. One Injured In Collision COBOURG Miss Joyce Dunk, 31, of Oshawa, was treat- ed at Cobourg General Hospital Monday night for cuts to her face, after the car in which she was riding was in a series of rear-end collisions. At the height of westbound traffic on Highway 2, three miles east of Cobourg, a car driven by Joseph Phillip, 53, of Toronto, slowed down for traffic immediately ahead. His car was struck in the rear by one driven by Lorne Grice, 23, of Lansdowne. The Grice vehicle was then struck by the third car, driven by Jean St. Ament, 31, of Oshawa. This was the car in which Miss Dunk re- ceived injuries, when it was struck in the rear by a car driven by Gilbert Ward, 59, of Toronto. Damage to the Ward vehicle is estimated at $400. Damage to the other vehicles is slight. The accident was in- vestigated by OPP Const. John mark of three hours, seven minutes and 44 seconds was set Goody. South Africa ed her de- cision to quit the Common- wealth. Young Murderer LONDON (AP)--Victor Terry, 20-year-old killer who believed himself the reincarnation of the ster Legs Diamond, was hanged today for shooting down a guard in a bank robbery. Terry shot the bank guard in Worthing, south of London, ex- actly an hour after his school {friend, Flossie Forsyth was | hanged for another murder. Terry's last wish went un- answered. He was refused per- mission to see for the first time his daughter, born four weeks p to a 16-year-old unmarried London girl. i Ei ¥ ¥ ' ' MASTER'S DEGREE J. Edward Broadbent, who will receive a master of arts degree at the University of To- ronto convocation on June 2. Ed. obtained his degree in philosophy with honors and was also awarded an open fellowship valued at $1,650. He will return to the university in the fall to work on his doctor of philosophy degree in politi- cal science. He is the son of | Mr. and Mrs. P. Broadbent, Central Park boulevard south and is a graduate of Central {10 Mr. Mark M, Annesley, 118 {11 Eudy's Dream, NB, 113 OLD WOODBINE ENTRIES claiming all $6,500, purse $1,900, foaled in Canada, 2-year- olds, 4%; furlongs 1 Sweet Fashion, Borge., 115 2 Bull Blaze, Trombley, 118 3 Frosty Day, Gordon, 115 4 Warfred, NB, 115 5 Mr. Prom Dill, Fitz., 118 8 Epic Accord, Fitz., 118 7 Heavy Man, Clark, 118 8 Red Freeman, Gomez, 118 9 Scarboro Girl, Harrison XXX105 10 York Ridge, Grasby, X113 11 Cagey C, Nash, 118 12 White Water, Williams, 118 Also eligible: Count Rico, Re millard, 115; Rocky River, Har- rison, XXX105; Dorenes Child Coy, 115; Greg's Boy, Warme, $2,500, purse $1,800, 4-year-olds and up, 7 furlongs 1 Fair Cause, NB, 118 2 Brandy Fib, NB, 113 3 Queen's Gem, NB, 113 4 Rouge Rose, Dittfach, 118 5 Rube's Ace, NB, 113 6 Scarboro Lad, McMullen, XX106 7 Evening Express, NB, 122 8 Gay Page, Parnell, X103 9 Swamp Fox, Coy, 118 (1) THIRD RACE (1) "STEWART", maidens. Purse $2,100. 3-year-old fillies. 7 furlongs. 1 Rainbow Ridge, Clark 112 2 Brutessa, Remillard 112 3 Diba, Dittfach 119 4 Hot Decree, Fitzsimmons 119 5 Arctic Pilot, Hall X114 6 Haitian H'day, H'son XXX109 7 Romping Chance, D'fach 119 8 Maggie Yates, Clark 112 9 Maple Gal, Rock 112 10 Loma Linda, Gomez 119. FOURTH RACE (1) "TIMMINS", maidens. Purse $2,100. 3-year-old fillies. 7 furlongs. Division of the third. 1 Mrs. Fish, NB 112 2 Joy's Runner, Parnell X107 3 Paid Hoan Wilk Williams 112 Ea. Friday, May 26, 1961 FIRST RACE 5 Becky Armbro, NB 112 (3) "DAYTONA" maidens,| 6 Lyford Cottage, Fitz'ns 119 118; Jum on Mum, Olah, 115;|(11) Ace Orphan, NB, 118. QUINELLA--BETTING (2 and §) SIXTH RACE SECOND RACE (6) "SILVER STRIKE" alw, (2) "BOLTON" claiming all| purse $2,700, 4-year-olds and up, 7 Oui Miss Su, NB 112 8 Tenaga, Dittfach 112 9 Third Girl, McComb 119 FIFTH RACE (2) "DOUGLAS" claiming all $2,500, purse $1,800, 4-year-olds and up, 7 furlongs, division of the second 1 New Door, Gomez, 118 2 Lovely Susy, Warme, 113 3 Six Sons, Zehr, 113 4 Prince Robert, Clark, 122 5 Princess Teddy, NB, 108 6 Lea Dandy, NB, 113 7 Hasty Hope, Morreale, 118 8 Giver, NB, 122 9 Saya Miss, NB, 113 10 Sultop, Trombley, 113 11 Royal Eighteen, NB, 113 one mile 1 Winisteo, McComb, 115 2 Purple Row, Gomez, 118 3 Star Gun, NB, 120 4 Mayfair News, Dittfach, 115 5 Stormy Morn, Parnell, X102 6 Dottie's Girl, Fitz., 109 SEVENTH RAC E (4) "EGANVILLE" &iw, purse| $2,400, 3-year-olds, one mile 1 Milton Man, NB, 110 2 Wise Command, Gomez, 120 3 Chops On, Coy, 114 4 Toronto Street, Fitz.,, (A)113 5 Star Shadow, Gordon, 115 6 Gramp's Pride, Dittfach, 113 7 Bomar, Fitz, (A)113 8 Cathy Yates, Parnell, X103 (8) (A) Windfields Farm Entry EIGHTH RACE (7) "CLEVELAND" claiming all $2,500, purse $1,900, 3-and 4- year-olds, one mile 1 Sam The Man, Dittfach, 116 2 Janic G., NB, 111 3 Michalena, Dittfach, 116 4 Sir Benjamin, NB, 118 5 Ship Bottom, NB, 113 6 Brilliant nd, Remillard, 118 7 Cline Road, Fitz., 104 8 Lauralane, NB, 111 9 Running Gold, Parnell, X108 10 Risque Chance, Harrison, XX103 Post time 2 p.m. Clear and Fast 4 Sweet Lucy Brown, AAC--X-5 lbs, XX--7 lbs, CITY AND DISTRICT IODE TAG DAY Members of the Oshawa IODE will be holding their annual tag day in Oshawa tomorrow, May 27, to raise funds for the wide- spread service work that is car- ried on in the community, prov- ince and the nation. The organ- ization now has 984 chapters ang 32,000 members across Can- ada. BIG CHANNEL CAT Mr. and Mrs. Nick Rogozin- ski and George Waschuk, all of Oshawa, caught a 30-inch chan- nel cat while fishing in the Bay of Quinte last weekend. The fish took about 20 minutes to land. The party also caught five pickerel, one which weighed about 12 pounds. HOSPITAL REPORT Following is the report of the Oshawa General Hospital for the week ending May 21: ad- missions, 276; births -- male 24, female 25; discharges, 272; new- born: discharges, male 29, femalc 26; major surgery, 61; minor surgery, 95; eye, ear, nose and throat, 59; treatments and ex- aminations, 116; casts, 17; phys- iotherapy treatments, 370. Eichmann Hearing Disturbed By LIONEL WALSH JERUSALEM (Reuters)--Hy- sterical shouting by a Hungar- ian-born Jew in the public gal- lery today briefly broke up the trial of Adolf Eichmann. The man rose from his seat and began screaming as Pinhas Freudiger, former head of the Jewish orthodox community in Budapest, was telling the court about promises made to the Jews by the Nazis after they ville youth, Robert Clarence Wilson, 18, was fined a total of $600 and costs when he apnear- ed before Magistrate R. I. Moore here this week on charges of driving while under suspension, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, Mey 25, 1961 3 PROMINENT SPEAKERS AT WORKSHOP STEPHEN DAVIDOVICH, left, Donald Bellamy, centre, and Alan Clarke, right, will each speak on subjects of in- terest to newcomers and oth- ers at the Workshop on Inter- group Relations, which will be held on Saturday at 1 p.m., at the Community Recreation As- sociation Centre, (CRA), at 100 Gibb street. Mr. Davido- vich is the director of citizen- ship, Department of the Pro- vincial Secretary and Citizen- ship for Ontario. Through his department he has co-operated with various communities in Ontario to create new types of schools in which newcomers may learn the English lan- guage. Donald Bellamy is the assistant director of the On- tario Welfare Council. Since 1958 he has helped to develop nine local conferences on com- mun ity integration. Alan Clarke is the executive direc- tor of the Canadian Citizen- ship Council. He served as sec- retary for the Planning Com- mittee for York University, and has been active in the work of Frontier College. The Janetville Man Fined $600, Costs LINDSAY (Special)=A Janet- moved into Hungary. "You saved your own family and gave the rest of the Jews to the Nazis," the man, identi- fied by police as Sandor Szil-|t agye, screamed. The burly spectator waved his |i fists as he shouted. Uproar broke out in the courtroom and a bearded orthodox Jew rose in the gallery and began to shout in Yiddish. Police rushed to eject the Hungarian - speaking spectator and criminal negligence. $100 and costs, or 30 days on ond charge and $300 on the crim- Worship described Wilson's acci- dent, that was described in evi- dence, as one of 'gross careless- ness and wanton negli He said it was worst" he ever heard. leaving the scene of an accident The magistrate fined Wilson he first charge, $200 on the sec- His nal negligence charge. Welfare Board Member Resigns Dr. R. E. Richardson resign- ed from the Oshawa Welfare Board Wednesday night for health reasons. He served a three-year term (1958-59-60) and was reappointed this year for a second three-year term. City council will appoint someone to finish the term, Gross costs of welfare last month were $32,381.13, up $12,- 000 from April, 1960. Total share- able cost was almost double last year's figure, at $25,669.84. Net cost to the city was $855.56. There were 981 persons on welfare in. April, 671 employ- ables among them. fourth speaker for the plenary session of the workshop will be Miss Charity Grant, Senior Liaison Officer for the Cana- dian Citizenship branch, Dept. of Citizenship and Immigra- tion. She was a director of five camps for displaced per- sons in the American Zone of Germany for UNRRA, and has had considerable experience in Canada with newcomers and with ethnic organizations in Canada. Each of the ahove speakers has prepared a short but interesting talk on a spec- ific area of integration, and will pose a number of ques- tions to be discussed in small workshops groups by those at- tending the afternoon confer ence. Anyone who is interested in taking part in this confer- ence is invited to attend. FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL CONFIRMS YOU ON THE SPOT 2 ALSO & ALL & OTHER TRAVEL ©" srrancrments © ma 86201 "one of the Chief Constable Weaver, of walked out of the courtroom. and the three judges adjourned the court for 15 minutes and NAMED DIRECTOR Frederic W. Ecker, board chairman of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, to- day announced the election of W. Earle McLaughlin, presi- dent of the Royal Bank of Canada, as a director of the company. Mr. McLaughlin's appointment fills a vacancy left by the death of a previous Canadian director, James Muir, former chairman and president of the same bank: Mr. McLaughlin, in addition to heading the largest bank in Canada, is a director of Stan- dard Brands Incorporated, Montreal Trust Company, Sog- emines Limited and a number of other firms. i |bv Laverne Freeborn, of Osh- Fenelon Falls, described a chase he called "hair raising," from Fenelon Falls to the scene of an accident at the junction of High- ways 35 and 121. According to the chief, he started chasing the accused in Fenelon Falls at 50 miles an hour and during the chase over dust clouded 'and freshly oiled roads, Wilson reached speeds up to 90 miles an hour. Chief Weaver said Wilson rounded a corner at the two of e family moving into East R. A. PATTE, Chairmen. REGISTRATION of SCHOOL PUPILS The Township School Area of East Whitby Requests that all children who expect trending any school in East Whitby Township, September 1961, should be registered with the principal of their nearest East school during the week May 29 to June 2, 1961. This applies to any new pupil, whether he Pome zinner or an older child A beginner must be et least six yeors of age December 31, 1961, to be admitted. A birth certificate or other acceptable proof of ege must be produced. Your co- operation in this request will be eppreciated. . fo commence @ on or before J. H. PASCOE, .- Treasurer, highways junction at 45 miles an hour and struck a car driven awa. Damage, he said, to the Freeborn car was estimated at 00 Witness H. Henry said the accident occurred within six feet of one of a large group of children. NEW APPOINTMENT VANCOUVER (CP)--A parole officer whose sole task will be supervision of paroled narcotic addicts will be appointed here soon, as a step in the govern- ment's campaign to combat addiction. every until 9 (Saturday until 12 noon) night GOOD FOOD NOON SPECIALS PLATE LUNCH 55° SNACK ROOM .... BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCH, DINING JVENING DINNER-- counse 1.35 HOTEL LANCASTER venience, $50 to $5,000 without endorsers or bankable security Many plons end repayment schedules to fit your budget. Loans Life Insured. UPERIOR 17 SIMCOE ST. NORTH Superior, the fastest growing all-Canadian loan Company, now serves you even better, with evening office hours for your con- 15 Offices in Ontario INANCE PHONE RA 5-651 XXX-10 Ibs |

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy