Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Feb 1963, p. 2

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G 2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, February 18, 1963 GOOD EVENING -- By JACK GEARIN -MR, GIFFORD'S WORDS OF WISDOM Mayor Lyman Gifford pushed the City of Oshawa's Aus- terity Program one big step further last week. » ~~ Municipal austerity on the scale proposed is a many- "sided undertaking and will not be achieved without the full ca-operation of many over a lengthy period, but Mr. ~Gifford is to be commended for bringing the subject so forcefully to the fore. i With kind but firm words that could not possibly be mis- "interpreted, he made these points clear: The City is most anxious to make the proposed budget cuts, but it won't consider them unless such cuts are across- the-board percentage wise for the three municipal bodies em- powered to issue debentures, namely, City Council, the Board of Education and the PUC. "His Worship made the statement at a mass meeting with these three bodies and added: "Too often in the past, the City has made requested de- benture cut-backs while other municipal bodies refused to go alone -- as a result, we deprived the City of some much- "needed services. This must be a team effort. Don't feel hurt if your estimates are cut. We must economize some- where along the line."' He warned the Board of Education that it may have to sconsider staggering its school hours or putting more portable classrooms into use to assist in keeping the city's debenture 'debt down. "The day may be here again when the Board of Edu- "cation and other boards and commissioners will have *to get along on a temporary basis," he said. He urged all elected bodies to 'tighten your belts and Join Council in cutting as much of the capital expenditure as possible. ("We hope, expect and ask you to play the game with us,") he said, "ONTARIO PC's TO MEET IN TORONTO Albert V. Walker, recently elected PC candidate in Oshawa riding in the next Provincial election, will head a local dele- "gation to the annual meeting of the Ontario PC Association in Toronto, today and Tuesday. He will be accompanied by Kay Wetherall, Ajax; Joan Rowland, Pickering; Bill Newman, "Dunbarton; Dick Donald, Oshawa; John Vivash, Tom Rundle, Donald Dodds and Al Yanch, all of Oshawa . . . The Liberals in Ontario riding will open their Oshawa committee room this »week at 74% Simcoe street south. The announcement was 'made by George K. Drynan, QC, one of the more active Party "workers in this campaign. UNION ROD AND GUN ANNIVERSARY The Union Rod and Gun Club will be 25 years old' Sat- eurday, March 16. = The event will be marked with a banquet and dance at "UAW HALL. It is interesting to note that Ed Button was the first elec- ted president -- the club was organized in February of 1938 "in the old UAW Hall -- and the first 16 members were Fred ~ Gow, Joe Gulliver, Roy Lutz, Clyde Platten, Syd Plowright, Andy Walls, George Sugden, Sr., Dick Courtney, Stan Brown, Otis. Hamilton, Len and Keith Volkenburg, Sam Edwards, Jim Clarke and Percy Williams. The membership has grown to as high as 2,500. The conservation show is held the fourth Sunday night of each month. The ice fish- ing derby on Lake Simcoe © this month is a '"'must'"'. An- ™ other favorite is the Casting "competition at Alexandra b Park in May and June. The Strap and skeet range on = Thornton road north is sec- By JOHN LeBLANC KAPUSKASING, Ont. (CP)--A cold front moved into this troubled Northern Ontario lum- ber area today, bringing with it a promise of at least temporary help in a race to salvage tim- ber before spring puts it beyond reach. Some 1,500 bushworkefs voted Saturday to end their violence- ridden strike against two paper- making companies and a race began almost immediately to make up some of the loss brought on by a 33-day walkout in the heart of a short lumber- ing season. Road - clearing crews which scattered into the bush immedi- ately after the strikers voted were expected to have the way cleared for, full-scale operations by today, Hot on their heels went scores of independent settlers who aug- ment their sparse farming in- comes by cutting timber in the winter and selling it to the com- panies, |HAS GOOD HOPES | R. L, Flatt, manager of the Spruce Falls Power and Paner |Compahy mill here, said the company expects to get enough pulpwood out of the bush to keep it going through the year by rushing woods operations. The mill uses some 450,000 jcords of timber a year, about a third of it supplied by the in- dependent settlers. It has been eating through huge stockpiles during 'the strike. Colder weather today--fo ing a brief spell-of barely-freez- ing temperatures--raised hopes Nl eveer Lorw- March, - With the spring thaw, the melting muskeg can no longer support woods opera- tions. The strikers' vote--950 in fa- vor of ending the strike at Spruce Falls and at Kimberly- Clark Pulp and Paper Company at Longlac, 180 miles west of here, versus 64 against--came although neither labor nor man, agement was happy about the strike-ending settlement terms. The men returned to work un- der the terms of a contract that expired last Aug. 31. A three- man arbitration board will be set up for each company to set- tle all contract issues. iS NOT SATISFIED Joseph Laforce, president of the Kapuskasing local of the Lumber and Sawmill Workers Union (CLC), said the union was told at government-spon- sored negotiations in Toronto last week that arbitration would he forced on it by legislation if it did not accept the terms vol- untarily, He saw dire implica- tions in the action for future la- bor disputes. "It means that in future dis- putes the management will hold back and let the government pass arbitration legislation," he said. 'God help the trade union movement if this is going to be forced down our throats every time it happens." Mr. Flatt said he was "'not too happy about the arbitration but I don't think there was any opinion." However, he said he was "very, very pleased that the sirike is over and that the vote that the spring breakup in the bush would not come until mid- was so strongly in favor of it, because I feel that the majority Britons Head For Australia ter, am Englishman's fancy se- riously turns to thoughts of Aus- tralia. During January Australian immigration authorities here |handled mearly 34,000 applica- tions from men, women ani children seeking new homes in sunny Australia. "That's the biggest we've ever had," a spokesman said. "Our total for 1962 was 95,683 and that was considered. a good year. | "Nine out of 10 say they're going for their children's future --better opportunities. We're getting just about everything from bus driver and laborer to lecturer in surgery." Although Australia is reaping the largest harvest of disgrun- tled Britons, Canada, New Zea- land and the Republic of South Africa are also getting their share. | ond to none in layout and ~ equipment -- some of the scores compare with the best in Canada. The annual trap = Shooting championship is © held in September when the ~ Lewis system is used in ~ scoring to give every class > of shooter a chance to win a ; Prize. On the conservation line, the club has helped stock . streams with Trout -- it has also assisted with the banding " and caring of pheasants in adjacent townships. Members are < also on the local conservation commission that handles the ; Many problems in the Second Marsh, where more ducks are ™ banded than in any othér Eastern Canadian station. , The club owns two farms in the Newcastle area. ED. BUTTON OSHAWA SKIER, 17, DRAWS PRAISE ; Did you know that one of the outstanding performances » at the recent Ontario Junior Ski Championship in nearby = Kirby, belonged to a 17-year-old Oshawa boy ? He's Car] Campa of 555 Ritson road north who flashed = down the rugged, lightning-fast 2100oot downhill course in «= 32.7 seconds, just six-tenths of a second off the pace set by A Canada House official said current inquiries indicate that LONDON (CP)--In the win-!"We've been absolutely - inun-| dated with written inquiries for the last three or four weeks," A South African spokesman said the emigration showed a "'tre- mendous increase" over last year. ~ Reasons most often given are the mounting unemployment fig- ures in Britain--although few applicants are out of work themselves--and general dissat- isfaction with Britain's. lagging economy. For many the last straw ap- pears to. have been the unus- ually hard winter Britain is suf- fering. A Daily Sketch cartoon has two Australian immigration officers gleefully) watching the snow. One comments: 'Looks like another busy week, cob- ber." An added inducement may be the pictures flashing across tele- vision screens of the royal tour of New Zealand and Australia and the test matches Down Un- der. | between 25 and 30 per cent more people will emigrate to Canada this year than in 1962 when the figure topped 16,000. A New Zealand official said: | Sandy beaches, tropical wa- ters and coatless games on a sun-baked lawn seem worth ex-) changing for heatless hearths! and frigid homes. | board of directors of the Ontario |Academy of Medicine. * Timber Salvage Race Begins In N. Ontario of the men had no desire to go on strike in the first place." Nor was Mr, Flatt of the com- pany pleased, although 'I don't think there was any opinion" about arbitration. However, he was happy to see the strike police charges as a result of a clash between strikers and in- dependent settlers last week that left three strikers dead and nine wounded, Nineteen settlers are to ap- capital murder charges. They are being held without bail at the district jail in Haileybury. GO FREE ON BAIL with rioting were released from confinement on bail of $200 each, most of it put up by their union, in time to take part in Saturday's voting. Nearly 40) more remain to be charged, all as a result of the fatal clash. Union officials hope to have the strikers excused from mak- ing a court appearance Tuesday so bush operaticns are not halted. Their cases are expected to be remanded and their bail renewed, but a court appear- ance will mean they will lose a day of work. Provincial police began dis- persing reinforcements of 230 men brought to the 200-mile-long snowclad stretch before and after the Monday clash. Doctors In PSI. over, : Still unsettled are a host of| © pear in court Tuesday on' non-|& Nearly 200 strikers charged) ¥ Described As 'Scabs' NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) Doctors who subscribe to Phy- sicians Services Incorporated are a "bundle of scabs' who work for less than scale rates, a prominent doctor told the On- tario Federation of Labor's ed- ucational conference here Sat- urday. Dr. Paul McGoey of Toronto startled the audience during a panel debate of medical care in- surance, He is a member of the Dr. McGoey said doctors who| subscribe to the doctor-spon- sored PSI are paid only 90 per By JACK BELL WASHINGTON (AP) -- The Kennedy administration is brac- ing itself for an onslaught in Congress over what its critics call an intelligence gap in its surveillance of Cuba, This involves the period from early September, 1962 until Oct. 14, left blank when Defence Secretary Robert S. McNamara Le DRONE SUB KILLER A drone anti-submarine heli- copter with two homing torpe- does takes off from fantail of Destroyer Hazelwood in a demonstration of the U.S. Navy's anti-submarne weap- on. The pilotless robot craft is flown remotely by radio from the ship and guided to the tar- get by the teamwork of Son- ar and Radar. The Dash (for Drone Anti-submarine Helicop- ter) gives the destroyer a long range of the enemy sub's tor- pedoes or gunfire. --(U.S. Navy Photo via AP Wirephoto) Glenn, A Year Later Still Eyes The Stars HOUSTON, Tex. (AP)-- A year after John Glenn thrilled the world by soaring three times around it, he still has his eyes on the stars. "Sure," he'd like to venture again into space, to go to the moon, He doesn't know whether he will make a trip to the moon. But he's confident that Ameri- can space pilots will after a lot cent of the profession's ac- cepted fees. He described the! medical profession, which had| always policed its own members| to maintain standards, as pos-| sibly the oldest union in the! world. | Earlier, the doctor accused Theodore Goldherg of the United Auto Workers' welfare department in Detroit of lying. Mr, Goldberg said only eight per cent of Canadians had any form of medical insurance 20 years ago, while 52 per cent were covered now. He credited labor unions with bringing about the Increase by insisting on medical insurance in collective bargaining agreements. "That is an outrageous life," Dr. McGoey called out. He said of hard spadework has been done on the ground by thou- sands of persons working as a team. As he sat in his office last week for a first - anniversary discussion of his 'orbital trip, it was obvious he is looking to the future, "My flight was a beginning, a stepping stone in space, to the moon, to the greatest 'ex- ploration of all time,' he, said with the same boyish look which captiyated millions who hailed his feat Feb. 20, 1962. BOOSTED MORALE Rarely had there been such last year, the astronauts moved |here too. | {TRY FOR PRIVACY | The Glenns live in a subdivi- |sion within two blocks of the |homes of astronauts Scott Car- penter, Wally Schirra and Vir- gil Grissom. For privacy, all four homes have windowless fronts and enclosed gardens in the rear. The seven Mercury astro- nauts and the nine new pilots recently named have offices in a wing of a building which is a space agency nerve centre here. Glenn shares an office with Carpenter. When Glenn, oow 41, greets you at his desk, wearing a sports coat and bow tie, he looks like a prosperous insur- ance salesman than a space hero. He readily answered questions about his flight. What does he consider the most significant contribution he jmade to the U.S. man-in-space | program? | "It was the first extended pe- jriod of weighlessness we had. an emotional United States out-/There was some doubt about eater Glenn cogent = \in-| weightlessness before that and cy 0} 4 sr Pp val wnat man's capability would simism brought on by the cold) he in this state, whether all his war, Russian' space achieve-| capabilities would keep operat- WEATHER FORECAST during his address that he could jnot sit by and listen to distor- tions, but he did not explain which part of Mr. Goldberg's Turning Forecasts issued by the Tor-| onto weather office at 4:30 a.m.: | Synopsis: Northern Ontario) temperatures have dropped well below zero as an arctic high-pressure area moves in. The colder weather is expected) to advance slowly southward, accompanied by light snow, _ the winner. Carl, a Grade 13 high school student, thus travel- = led 43.7 miles-per-hour, but this is not the important part = of the story. 5 Carl's right wrist and hand were encased in a heavy = cast to protect a 'fracture suffered in a mishap after he had $ won the Southern Ontario Downhill Championship at Colling- = wood one week earlier. Young Campa, unable to hold a ski > pole in his right hand, could not compete in Slalom race, * which is a cross between the Twist and the Mamba through <a series of offset gates, while travelling downhill at high = speed. : Carl was picked to represent Ontario in the Canadian « Championships at Banff starting February 28, but his injury «, will likely prevent that. 2 John Armstrong of 103 Alexandra street, finished second * in the jumping event for boys, 15 and under. Miss Joanne ' "Conway, lone feminine entry from Oshawa, also per- *. formed well in her first official competition. ' © OF C PLANS ANNUAL MEETING * The annual meeting of the Oshawa C of C will be held " Monday, February 25, in the Hotel Genosha. The guest » speaker will be W. J. Admas, vice-president and secretary, * Canada Life Assurance Co. Ltd., Toronto. He is president « of the Ontario Chamber of Commerce * Edwin Burrows is beating the publicity drums for the * annual Mardi Gras Dance of St. Gregory's Council of the * Knights of Columbus, which is to be held this year Friday, ' February 22, in St. Gregory's Auditorium. reaching the lower lakes to- night. Lake St. Clair region, Wind-|Timmins sor: Cloudy with a few snow- jf 1 urries tonight. Tuesday Cloudy. Winds light tonight and Tuesday. Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Ni- agara, Lake Ontario regions, London, Hamilton, Toronto: Turning colder with snowflur- ries tonight. Winds light north) |to northeast Tuesday. | Georgian Bay, Haliburton re-| gions: Partly cloudy and colder jtonight and Tuesday. Winds) jnorth to northeast 15 Tuesday.| Timagami, Algoma _ regions, North Bay, Sudbury Sault Ste.| Marie: Clearing tonight, mainly) jclear and colder Tuesday. Winds shifting to northeast 10) }to 15. | White River, Cochrane re-| | gions: Mainly clear and cold to-| day and Tuesday. Winds light. Foregast Temperatures Low tonight, High Tuesday WINGKOR oc disseenc 00 35 St. Thomas ......: 3 |LONdON. ...-cesceee Kitchener ...0.... {Wingham . Hamilton St. Catharines ... 32 32 32 25 30 30 HEAT wi 7H OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gos Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Cobner of Athol) JOHN WILSON SIGNS THE BEST FOR LEAST You will be surprised when you Call for an Estimate 728-5071 | | | | | | During Tonigh jremarks he thought were dis- torted. $50,000 Damage In Belleville Fire BELLEVILLE (CP) -- Fire| jcaused $50,000 damage Satur- day night when it destroyed a) block of businesses and apart-| ments in downtown Belleville, | | The properties, including al | shoe repair shop, a bookstore }and a laundry, were owned by |Joseph Legault. a The fire is believed to have} Colder 30 25 30 25 Toronto .iivescecs ae 22 Peterborough e ) Trenton'. Killaloe ... Muskoka :.. North Bay Sudbury Earlton .... Kapuskasing . White River . Moosonee .. merts, the feeling that the United. States no longer was first in everything. Asked whether the flight had made any marked change in his personal life or that of his family--wife Annie, David 17, and Lyn, 15--Glenn replied: "Because of all the publicity we received, almost everyone everywhere we go recognizes some member of the family. This can't help but make a lit- tlé change in the way you do some things. But I think we've been pretty successful in keep- ing the family pretty much down to earth, conducting . as normal a family life and activ- ity as possible." When the manned spacecraft centre transferred its headquar- ters to Houston from Virginia sheen | t ' . | Sault Ste. Marie | Started in the shoe repair shop.| GET NEW HOME | | The British crown jewels, 4 ; housed in Wakefield Tower in High Sunday the Tower of London since 1870, 13 18 are to move to a new jewe!! 46 house at the Tower, 5 "a Mount Forest Observed Temperatures Low overnight, Dawson Victoria Edmonton . LIST NOW! we have the Knowledge Regina .. 11 NEED Buyers Winnipeg . Lakehead Sault Ste. Marie .. White River Kapuskasing . North Bay ... Sudbury ..... n |FUEL OIL...| CALL PERRY | DAY OR NIGHT . 723-3443 | x Financing \ JOHN A, J. BOLAHOOD REAL ESTATE -- MORTGAGES 725-6544 J jing as they do on the ground. "With all things that went |wrong with the capsule on the | flight, the medical results, my comments and my experiences, we proved that a man in space is a working, living, breathing entity just like he is on earth." TREAT AGED MINDS Swedish doctors are using the drug Cosaldine to try to improve the orientation, memory and thinking powers of old people. SaES MORTGAGES Ample Funds for Ist MORTGAGES 2nd MORTGAGES We Also Purchase , Ist and 2nd Mortgages N.H.A. LOANS ARRANGED You Will Find OUR SERVICE iS FASTER OUR COST IS LOWER SCHOFIELD-AKER Limited | 723-2265 -- 728-3376 | After Hours 728-3376 | SnES | gave the public a photographic briefing over television of Rus- a military strength on the is- and. At the Feb. 6 showing of re- cornaissance photographs, none was included for the S»>* Oct. 14 period and when McNa- mara was asked about this omission he said time permitted! the showing of only a small portion of pictures made on more than 400 sorties since last July. The secretary then added: "We did carry out recon- Intelligence Gap Cited Over Cuba 29th of September, the 5th of oo and the 10th of Oc- tober," yg? = cid SPECIFY silly cNamara did not 5) what was shown by taken on these flights. It was on Oct. 10 that Sen. Kenneth B. Keating (Rep. N.Y.) reported that Soviet strategic missiles were being in Cuba. President Kennedy told a Sept. 13 press conference that Cuba then was "under our most careful surveillance." What this surveillance showed in this period, when the Soviets were moving toward installation of the intermediate-range mis- sile sites revealed by Oct, 14 photographs, seems certain to be the subject of intensive in- vestigation by the Senate pre- paredness subcommittee. Sen. John Stennis (Dem. Miss.) who heads the group, naissance flights . . . on th 5th of September, the 6th, the said he plans to begin closed hearings next week. TORONTO .(CP)--Nearly 700 delegates have registered to date for the 1963 Anglican con- gress to be held here. They will represent 18 autonomous and indigenous churches that com- prise the world-wide Anglican communion, With six months to go--the congress is scheduled for Aug. 13-23--planning committees of the Anglican Church of Canada are hopeful that delegates will exceed 900. Many will be ac- companied by their wives, and the total numbers of delegates and official guests will probably reach 1,500. Unlike the decennial Lambeth conferences held in London and restricted to Anglicamism's 340 bishops, the congress will bring together bishops, clergy and laymen, the latter, for the first time, including some 40 youth delegates. The first congress, held at Minneapolis in 1954, was attended by 658 delegates. Various committee reports were presented this week to the national congress committee presided over by Rt. Rev. F. H, Wilkinson, Bjshop of Toronto, and chairman of the congress. They indicated wide and grow- ing interest by churchmen in various lands and also by the religious and secular press. MAKE PLANS The diocese of Toronto, in its role of host, is making elabor- ate plans for the care and en- tertai t of del who + 700 Register For Anglican Rally ics under the general theme of "the church's mission to the world." They will have an im- portant bearing on future An- glican policy, particularly as they affect young churches es- tablished in lands: that have at- tained independence in recent years. Under the general theme, del- egates will consider the church's future on ri a the eligious, litical and cultural fronts, challenges confronting Chris- tianity and the organization re- quired to meet them. Larger Blocks Of Unions Urged NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) --Stanley Little, president of the National Union of Public Mr. Little said union leaders in the public service field he- lieve the number of unions in Canada must be reduced for greater efficiency and improved bargaining. His unior and the will. represent some 44,000,000 Anglicans. Billeting arrange- ments for many of the visitors are being made at the parochial level and already 1,200 motor- ists have advised that they will provide transportation facilities. The Royal Ontario Museum and the Toronto Art Gallery are expected to arrange dis- plays of religious art and trips to the Stratford Shakespearean Festival and Niagara Falls are being sponsored by the dio- ceses of Huron, Niagara and Toronto, Although not legislative body, congress deliberations will cover a wide variety of top- National Union of Public ploy (CLC): recently on a merger that would create a 90,000-member organization. Mr. Little maintained the same policy of one union to represent workers in the same , field 'should apply to all trades. But. many unions were not redy to change their positions. "Old suspicions die hard, and some leaders are firmly de- cided to protect only their vested interests," he told an or- ganization discussion of the On- tario Federation of Labor.' "It may also be that several unions simply cannot change their pol- icies without approval from their (American) head offices." COMING EVENTS two BINGO Tuesday 'clock ry 8.15 o'clock. Bastview Park PO 'Wednesda: |KINSMEN COMMUNITY CENTRE RUMMAGE SALE | High monthly score $5. izes, freshments. Admission 50 cents. KINSMEN BINGO TUESDAY, 8 O'CLOCK FREE ADMISSION EXTRA BUSES Jackpot Nos. 50 and 54 EARLY BIRD GAMES 109 COLBORNE ST. W. TUES., FEB. 19, 1:30 P.M. ST. JOHN'S HALL 31 BLOOR ST, EAST Clearance of all articles. WOODVIEW COMMUNITY CENTRE BINGO Nos. 54 and 58 TONIGHT--8 P.M. RED BARN EXTRA BUSES Muskoka .... Windsor . London .. Toronto .. Ottawa .... Montreal ....ee0s. Quebec ...... Fredericton . Halifax .... OSHAWA'S ORIGINAL WOOLWORTH'S Super Bakery Specials BAKED FRESH DAILY IN OUR OWN KITCHEN !! CARPET CENTRE at Nu-Way, carpet and broad. |) loom has been a specialty for 18 years . . . with thousands of yards on display to select from, PHONE 728-4681 NU-WAY RHUBARB Made with Flaky Special This Week Delicious, Fresh PIE | CHOCOL Pastry Ag: Special Thi Your Favorite LAYER CAKE SPRING hat tea St. Mark's Church, Bueerling and_ Stevenson' Night of Cards Feb. 19 at 8 P.M. Legion Hall Auspices of Ladies Auxillary Royal Canadian Legion Branch 43. Admission 50c Refreshments Free Admission Free BINGO AT DNIPRO HALL 681 Edith Street (off Bloor E.) TONIGHT--7:30 P.M. 20 Regular Games-- Jackpot 53---$170. $20 CON. PRIZE--. SHARE-THE-WEALTH (No Ghildren Under 16 Years) Dutch Credit Union ANNUAL iSat., Feb. 23, 8:00 p.m. MEETING McLAUGHLIN PUBLIC LIBRARY Refreshments will be served. Latest news reels from tHe Netherlands will be shown. © BINGO St. Gertrude's Auditorium TO-NIGHT AT 8 P.M. 690 KING ST. E. AT FAREWELL FREE ADMISSION Snowball Jackpot $190.-56 Nos. $20 Consolation Reg. Jackpot 59 Nos. $100. Everyone Welcome $20 Consolation Good Prizes ATE BANANA s Week 53: RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY, ST. SPECIAL PRICES ALL THIS WEEK !! PHONE BAKERY ORDERS -- 725-3421 HOME OWNERS ATTEND GARDEN NIGHT U.A.W. WED., FE GUEST SPEAKER:-- B. 20TH, 8 P.M. Mr. Neville Richards Former Editor of 'Garden Magazine' DOOR PRIZES VALUED AT OVER $150 FILMS ON LANDSCAPING -- FREE ADMISSION Sponsored by the local members of the Regional Ontario Nurserymen's Association

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