Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Apr 1963, p. 2

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

Selkirk Riding Said Predominantly Rural -- By KEN CLARK SELKIR,K Man, (CP)--Three newcomers to federal politics) }jare trying to unseat Progressive Conservative Enric Stefanson in Selkirk riding in the April 8 election. Mr. Stefanson, 50 - year - old Gimli businessman, took the seat from the old CCF in the 1958 Conservative lendslide and retained it last June. : This time the New Democrats, successors to the CCF, are run- nung Ray Cromarty, 30-year-old salesman, and the Liberals have Rudy Usick, 31. former presi- dent of the Manitoba Farmers' Union. Social Credit is runni Carl Hollborn, 64, a Wires consulting engineer who Belgium in 1936 in the face of ME a in Wal Party Leaders Clock 100,000 gest and oldest in Canada. It was formed in 1871, four years| after Confederation, and was altered twice later. Now it extends in a wide band from the town of Selkirk, om north of Winnipeg, for 270 miles : z to the north. The whole of Lake ay aS 1 Distenhaker did most of his by Winnipeg and most of Lake|, OTTAWA (CP) -- Campaign.|train and car. ing leaders of the four political] 'The four party, headquarters ae ror have clocked about|made these estimates of total , les in their election! nitea e--Mr, T 39. tours by this weekend. Mir Dich ae e wba: 2G Rerky . bus and auto| Douglas, between' 25,000 and 30,- plus shanks mare were their|99: 4 , modes of travel as they voughtl and Mr. Pearson, 19,000. 2 {THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, Apel 5, 1963 MDs Plan Campaign Against Cigarettes quest of the Canadian Cancer Society. It decided to recommend an educational program for the public, Dr, Magee said, al- though "it is a tremendous task because it endeavors to change a habit that has occupied man- kind for many years and has become accepted." Dr. R. M. Taylor, executive vice-president of the cancer so- ciety, said the committee con- |sidered a number of scientific studies linking cigarettes wth lung cancer, as well as criti- cism of the studies. The criti- cism was not considered valid, he added. Dr. John 0. Godden, associate editor of the CMA journal, said doctors "will have to sit down ultimately and talk to cigarete manufacurers about this prob- lem." he won every poll last June in his home town, site of a large iceland'ng community. SLOW START FOR NDP The old parties got a cam- paign jump on Mr. Cromarty. Nominated late, he is conduct- ing a personal-approach cam- paign based partly on his' party's anti - nuclear message. He has sat on Selkirk town council since 1954. Most varied' background among the candidates belongs to Mr. Hollborn, a German-born Canadian with a handful of un'. versity degrees. Living in Bel- gium in the early '30s, he con- ducted anti-Nazi broadeasts and - the Gestapo tried to wo he, i forcing him to flee to The campaign pict in. Sel- kirk might have ie Eg if. Mr, Justiee J. T. rson, president of the Can an Ex: chequer Court, had ied through plans for a_ political comeback in the riding. It was reported in Ottawa -- earlier that the jurist, held ithe seat from 1 til for ithe Liberals, inte! ta seek 'he nomination again but was prevented by injuries in a holdup Dec. 16 during a South American trip. twagn smoking and lung can- cer), the next step is to con- vince the public. We _ think something in the way of a cam- paign is called for to restrict smoking and to prevent young- sters from ever starting to smoke." Dr. Norman C, Delarue, chest surgeon at Toronto General Hospital, said--as an individual, rather than as a committee member that 'we can't pussy- foot around any longer." "We. hope to take as strong TORONTO (CP)--A vigorous national campaign to induce Canadians to stop smoking cig- arettes will be recommended to the' Canadian Medical Associa- tien at its annual meeting in June. 'The CMA's committee on can- cer agreed unanimously to the recommendation Thursday after réviewing evidence linking lung cancer. and cigarette smoking. MA President Dr. M. R. MacCharles of Winnipeg, who recently urged fellow doctors to quit smoking themselves, told ajaction as has been taken any- press conference after the com-|where in the world," he said. mittee's meeting: | Dr. R. K. Magee of Paterbor- "When some of my colleagues|ough, Ont., chairman of the and I graduated, lung cancer|cancer committee, said the 'as almost unknown. But it has|CMA had called together rep- increased remarkably, and is|resentatives from every prov- now eight to 10-times what itjince but Quebec--whose repre- was 20 years ago. The major|sentative could not attend -- to part of this increase is due to!discuss the problem at the re- cfearette smoking. ------ soot § Rhodesia Will Gain Its Freedom | By DOUG MARSHALL | Canadian Press Staff Writer READY FOR EGYPT TOUR Members of a CBC concert Canadian Army's number six party that will tour United Na- personnel depoi in Toronto. tions Emergency Forces bases From left to right are Sgt. in Egypt next month line up Glen Chisholm of Antignish, for their inoculations at the N.S., singer Shirley Harmer, B.C. Highways | LABOR BEAT Graft Probe | Local 222 Chief band leader Bert Niosi, singer Tommy Common, and dancer Agota Gabor. (CP Wirephoto from Nat. Def.) | a: a MES CR a SIO inced our-| ction be-| ]-Legged Man Veteran With Manitoba lie within it and fish- ermen form a substantial per- centage of its 27,000 voters. FARMS PREDOMINATE It is predominantly rural with a farm - based economy. The desias. This in time could lead) jto UN intervention. | Parachute NEW YORK (AP) -- George As: the dust settles on British government's to allow Northern the| decisio Rhodesia to} The alternative is for leaders n\on both sides of the river to realize what Britain has been) trying to sell them since the} Adjoumed | town of Selkirk, with 4,000 vot- ers, is its only truly urban, in- dustrialized centre. The other voters, including many Indians, The Social Credit leader cam- paigned in all provinces except Newfoundland and Prince Ed- ward Island, concentratin; to eonvince voters of the merits) of their programs at political rallies, coffee parties, platform chats and Main Street encoun- Began In Mines By ALLAN BAILEY |tee, a position This is the first of a series.) |1953. ble agriculture minister in a Few men in the labor move-| It was in that year that the|Liberal administration, made an ment have been connected with|local decided to employ a full-jearly pitch for the farm vote. unions. as long as Malcolmitime president. Mr. Smith was|He travelled the rural areas in Smith, president of the 13,000-jin the running. He won the elec-|a succession of 20-hour days ad- member Local 222, United Auto pr and a the first full-|dressing rallies, attacking gov- te ; ; : ; |Workers of America. \time president. ernment farm policy. pin dighean gine Mie investi! He was just 13 years old) He was elected again in 1954, A big name in Menitoba agri- lands in the skydiver's standavdlaition the country radically al-/northern leaders and, when|"angeig Branca, lawyer for|When he went to work in the|but was defeated the following|culture, he had been sought by tufibler's roll, distributing thelters its constitution to give|tempers have cooled, realistic|wichways Minister Gaglardi coal mines in his native Scot- all four major parties as a can- shéek over the whole body. Bu:|Negroes at least 50-50 represen- moderation from the white ele-|,4q his department, . said: |land where he joined the didate. : hedlso has made stand-up land-|tation with the whites, now in ment in the south may preserve) «phe press hasy't done a|Miners' Federation of Great Liberal 'candidate Crawford ings, a privilege allowed only to} gontrol. la measure of economic C0-0p-|reaily honest, true job with the|Britain (now known as the McMillan ran second to Mr. skydivers with 200 free - fall) 9 Since this condition is un-|¢Fation. lnntniaies in the past." National Union of Mine Work- Stefanson last June, taking 6,- | Increased trade and prosper- | lity might in time convice the whites that a liberal constitu- tion is a better choice than armed isolation and incipient terrorism. ; lsecede from the Federation of| : r | VICTORIA (CP)--The legisla-| /Rhodesia and Nyasaland, it be |federation was formed in 1953:) e's board inquiry inte allega-| tor'of the parachute centre in| 1 that one way orjlt makes economic sense for|' a 4 | Flemington, N.J., has made|Comes clea! tuk i cdesia willlthe Rhodesias to work together. ticns of graft into the highways} than 300 jumps in the last | another Soushern Pee , |department adjourned in disor-| mare 3n dump: *\win its own independence 4 The federation's postal serv-| three years. Looking at the Central Africanjices, railways, air services and|der Thursday over newspaper His highest jump has beenjcituation from London, there|¢lectricity are interdependent.| "CVn ae. of the board called from 18,000 feet. He fell free '0l appear to be three possib E le/The south needs the commer- 2,200 before opening his pata-| gevelopments: cial markets and the copper] chite. 1. Britain may grant Southern|mines in the north. Gividen has only one leg. He/Rhodesia independence on con- on Ontario, the Prairies and 'Brit: ish Columbia with one trip inta' ie Maritimes and two to Que ec, are scattered in tiny -communi- ties 'and on farms. - Mr. Usick, touted as a possi- Gividen, 34, founder and opera- ters. | Three of them Liberal Leader Pearson, Social Credit Leader Thompson and New) ; Democratic Leader Dowglas --|DOUGLAS FOLLOWS SUIT * piled up most of their mileage| Mr. Douglas also skipped in air travel. Prime Minister|Newfoundland and Prince Bd- lard nad, eeentee aay ts Four Men Held In Beating B.C. with one visit to Quebec, Of FBI Agent Mr. Pearson, who began his campaign in Montreal and ends it in Ottawa this weekend, made NEW YORK (AP)--Four men were held in lieu of $100,000 bail each Thursday on charges of four separate visits to and Ontario, two each to the Mr. Stefanson, campaigning|beating an FBI agent in Brook- on his government's agricul-|ly Atlantic provinces and the Prairies, and a lengthy one to B.C. tural record, puts across his message with personal calls on Mr, Diefenhaker began' by whistle stops: en route for the townspeople and farmers during the day and addresses to rallies formal opening of his campaign at night. Of Icelandic descent, at Prince Albert, Sask., his | Price Controls home constituency. He made On Cuba Goods three Prairie swings. two 1 Quebec, three in Ontarie ' HAVANA (AP) -- The Chan government placed all goads a and one each in the Atlantic prov- inces and B.C. On election night, Mr. Diefen- baker will be in Prinee Albert, Mr. Pearson in Ottawa, |%\. Thompson in his Red Deer, Alta., constituency, and Mr. the beating were Camillo ¢ .C.| Douglas at his home in the Van- Lombardozzi, John Joseph Lom-|°uver suburb of Burnaby in his and services under price con- trol Thursday. ' The decree regulates prices and profits in private and state enterprise. Almost all of Cuba's industries and wholesale 'activi- ties are state-operated. REED'S bardozzi, Daniel Joseph Marino, constituency of. Burnaby-Coquit- and Michael J. Zampello, all jam. e ig Flower Show relatives of the dead man. A son of the dead man, Car- || THIS SUNDAY, APRIL 7th mine Lombardozzi, was one of EVERYONE WELCOME he held until) for a complete review of all newspaper articles and head- Statesmanship from the ers). After working in the mines for nine years, the young Mr. Smith, who was then 22, mar- ried, with one son, decided to come to Canada. He had his passage advanced by a relative in Oshawa. After working for several construc- tion companies, he was able to A : ; a |pay back his own passage and {| plaints, inquiry members said. bring over hia wife and son SPARKS THE. ROW jabout six months later. It was an attempt to subpoena| Starting to work in General the publisher and two execu-|Motors paint shop in the West tives of The Sun that sparked|Plant, he was later transferred the row. to the stamping plant. Waldo Skillings (SC -- Victo-| Mr. Smith, who is one of the ria) asked for the subpoenasjoriginal charter members of Wednesday. Local 222, recalls the first meet- Lawyer John Farris, appear-jing to discuss the forming of a ing for The Sun, said Manag-junion was held in his home ing Editor Erwin Swangard was|November 11, 1936. willing to. appear Friday. but} Everything was so secret, he Publisher Donald Cromie and|says, that when the time came Assistant, Publisher. Lawrence|to apply for a charter from the Dampier could not give any rel-}International union, they would evant evidence. not mail it at the Oshawa Post Mr. Skillings insisted they|ffice, but drove to Whitby to come, He accused Mr. Farris|mail it. : : of trying to throw up a smoke-| 'We were afraid there might sereen by declaring that '"'an-/be a leak to management," gel' was an accurate.descrip-|Says Mr. Smith, "and we felt tion of a backer. that if GM kiew what we were "If Mr. Skillings wants to|UP to we would all have been launch a special investigation|"te¢- into the press let him bring up| In December of the same a motion and we'll vote on it,' |year the charter was granted. said Liberal Leader Ray Per-| Less than six months after *\reault. |the local was formed, it experi- enced its first strike, which last- ed two weeks until a contract $50,000 Award was signed. Mr. Smith was f For Atomic Physicist Chief Steward at. that time. In 1938 he was elected vice- president and in 1940 he was called upon to complete the term. as president vacated by Thomas MacLean, who resign- ed to become assistant to George Burt, the Canadian WASHINGTON (AP)--Atomic)Director of the UAW. physicist J. Robert Oppenhei-| Mr. Smith was given an mer, 59, denied a security clear- ance by the Atomie Energy Commission nine years ago, has been selected to receive the AEC's highest honor--the $50,- 000 Fermi Award. His selection immediately opened two avenues of specula- 272 votes to Mr. Stefanson's 8,- 797. The NDP was a fairly close third with 4,198 and the Social Credit candidate a distant last with 920. likely to be realized, Southern Rhodesia may assert its own jindependence--by force if nec- . jessary and with the moral or York Mirror today by columnist! military support of the Republic! Sidney Fields; lof South Africa. A native of Lexington, Ky.,| Gividen went to airborne school té"become a paratrooper after graduating from West Point In} the Korean War in 1952, Gividen| got a grenade between the legs| while his unit was raiding an enemy outpost. G BLOWN OFF + "It blew off my left one above ie knee and broke the right Board Counsel Lloyd McKen- zie said a Vancouver Sun head- line Monday saying "Contraetor called Angel for Gaglardi" was "a tremendous injustice' and could be libellous. Four B.C. daily newspapers-- the Victoria Times and the Col- cmist, the Vancouver Sun and the Province--have caused com- hits. | "Sve never been hurt yet,"| he. said. His story was told in the New 3. Once independent in this) way, alienated from most of the Commonwealth and threatened by the United Nations, Southern |Rhodesia may decide to go the |whole hog and merge with] |South Africa. |HELPLESS PARENT Britain is again in the position of being a helpless parent proffering embarrassed apolo- ie," he says. : ; WwW ivi gies for her children's beha- «When Gividen got out of hos-\vior She retains vestigial re- han Ban SS psy bo ui ok af West Point tor two years| fluence the course of events. H | Reports Salisbury sa. asked to get back to jump nn aiush feeling among } army said yes," he re-|the whites in Southern Rhodesia Galls, "'hut the surgeon-general|is hardening into belligerence. as sure I'd break my other|The more passionate element Is Burned Body Identified By Police LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Pro- vincial police Thursday night identified the burned budy of a man found in a ditch on a West- minister Towaship concession road .a mile southwest of here early Thursday as William H. Doxtator, 52, of the nearby Oneida Indian Reserve. Earlier Thursday, Inspector A. E. Ayers said Doxtator's |com "head was bashed in and the |racial D 'P\ body set on fire.' 'Retiring from the army in/from South Africa. Meanwhile Police, meanwhile, have 460, Gividen went to New York|the Negroes remain as bitter aS) <eized a taxicab for examina- niversity as a research psy-| ever. jtion in the slaying. The cab was ologist in adjustment prob-| If Southern Rhodesia becomes} stolen Wednesday night and was lems of amputees and pickedjan alkwhite bastion, the inde-|believed to have been used to wp skydiving as a weekend|pendent Negro nationalist gov-|take Doxtator--or his body--to gport. He bought 485 acresjernment in Northern Rhodesia the lonely lane. around Flemington to start the/may resort to a series of) 'We are checking on a num fri:state skydivers and the tri-|terrorist raids across the Zam-|ber of persons in this case State parachute centre. 'besi River separating the Rho-|said Inspector A. T. Eady of the WEATHER FORECAST te age Ne oe "Cloudy, Warmer -During Saturday It has not yet been determined <: whether Doxtator was dead be- fore he was burned. Inspector 'Forecasts issued by the Tor-| Low tonight, high Saturday gato weather office at 4:30|/Windsor ... 40 n. The attack upon Agent John P. Foley, 44, took place Wed- nesday outside a church where the four attended the funeral of Carmello Lombardozzi, Foley underwent surgery) Thursday for a compound frac- ture of the skull and was taken 'from the critical list. Charged in connection with MALCOLM SMITH year by Russell. McNeil, the present financial secretary of the local. He worked im the plant again until 1959 when he again sought | the president's seat, defeating} Clifford Pilkey. It was for a} two-year term. | Mr, Pilkey, now a city alder- man and president of the Osh- awa and District Labor Coun- cil, challenged Mr. Smith again in 1961, but without success. | Another election is sched-| uled for May o° this year. The 58-year-old president intends to be in the running once again. _ Sorrow hit the Smith family in 1949 when his oldest daugh-| ter was killed in a traffic acei-| dent and again in 1961 when Mrs. Smith died. He has two sons and three daughters all living in this area. Both sons are foremen in| General Motors. | SMOOTH When the longest strike in| SPIRITED! GM history took place here in| 1955, Mr. Smith was in charge! mN ABD LONDON be guinea pigs for anti-smoking © ra researchers, A clinic bas been set up in the building and 3 smokers so far have volun teered for treatment, COMING EVENTS | ST. STEPHENS UNITED CHURCH Corner Taunton Rd. & Simcoe N. TURKEY SUPPER Sat., April 6 -- 4 p.m. ADULTS $1.50 ~ BINGO AT U.A.W.A. HALL SATURDAY, APRIL 6th 7:30 P.M. | those ly brought into Federal Court as a participant at a ae eonference in A , N.Y, Foley had been detailed to the Sipticing team." church in search for a fugitive. i Park Ci every Briday, § p.m. sharp. Freeze- [cookies 4c. Tea, coffee and TEEN-AGE DANCE U.A.W. HALL 1 P.M., SATURDAY HARDTIME APRIL 6th ADMISSION 25¢ Eady said an autopsy today should reveal the time elements of the case. } Stewart Wright, a London taxi driver, said police seized his cab Thursday night and later asked him to identify charred parts of a blanket which was missing when the cab was re- -- about midnight Wednes- ay. BINGO. ORANGE TEMPLE SATURDAY, APRIL 6th 7:30 P.M. 20 Games -- $8 Share the Wealth 4--$40 Jackpots to go 1--$150 Jackpot to go Children Under 16 Not Admitted of all the pickets. The strike| lasted six months. | One thing Mr. Smith has| never done, which might seem strange for an autoworker--he's never driven or owned a car. NOW IS THE TIME To have that carpet or chest- erfield cleaned professionally in # Oshawa's Original Carpet fh: St. Thomas ......- «Synopsis: A weak disturbance|London ... ing into northwestern Onta-| Kitchener rio is causing southerly winds|Wingham . with increasing cloudiness and|Hamilton milder temperatures north of|St. Catharines pane Superior. The warming/Toronto ....... rend will continue over tke re-| Peterborough . mainder of Ontario through Sat-|Trenton urday. | Killaloe * Lake St, Clair, Lake Erie,|Muskoka ake Huron regions, Windsor,|North Bay ondon: Variable cloudiness| Sudbury +s d much the same tempera-|Eariton .... * 'ure. Winds becoming southwest|/ Kapuskasing ..... 5 Saturday. | White River'...... * Niagara, western Lake Onta-|Moosonee ......... io, Georgian Bay regions, | Mount Hope ...... milton, Toronto: Partly|Sault Ste. Marie eloudy and warmer Saturday) Timmins . with chance of a few showers.| ; : : '| Observed Temperatures Winds becoming light this aft-\; ight, High : 1 DAN YA acclamation to ihe presidency tion: | in 1941, but the next year de- That the government may ask clined to stand for the position. Instead, he was 'elected chair- Budget Speech jhim to do secret work and that : \the administration wishes to see man of the bargaining commit- QUEBEC (CP)--Premier Le-|dispelled the cloud that envel- sage tonight makes his annual|oped Oppenheimer ia the 1954 budget speech, apparently) security case. limed for maximum effect on| A theoretical physicist, Op- the waning federal election|penheimer directed 4,500 work- | Campaign. jers at Los Alamos, N.M., from Any personal and corporation 1943 to 1945 in designing, build- tax changes that might be dis-|ing and testing the first atom closed are expected to be mi-|bomb. nor. | Since 1945, he has been direc- _ But its effect on the campaign |tor of the Institute for Advanced in Quebec could be major. |Study at Princeton, N.J., and The premier has called a rare |from 1947 through 1952 he Friday night sitting of the legis-|served as chairman of the gen- lative assembly to deliver his|eral advisory committee to the speech. ee |Atomic Energy Commission. He has indicated several; Oppenheimer lost his security Newspaper Faces Charges On Poll OTTAW A(GF)--The Toronio| Telegram has been charged un-| der the Canada Elections Act) with illegal publication last) Monday of an advance poll count in the April 8 federal elec-) tion, Chief Electoral Officer Nelson Castonguay said Thurs-) day. } : He said an information has cinnee Centre'. ... where been swom out against Theip 'lly guaranteed satisfaction is Telegram and J. D. Mac ar a lane, its vice-president and edi- hone 728- tor-in-chief, for publishing "the| 8-468! result or purported result" of voting in an advance poll in the a VY Quebec constituency of Terre- bonne. 20 GAMES $10 A GAME 4 GAMES OF $20, $30. $40, $50 JACKPOTS ONE GAME $150 SHARE THE WEALTH NEW PARTY CAVALCADE _ STEVENSON'S RD. and KING ST. 1 P.M. SATURDAY, APRIL 6th - on the rocks or with your favourite mixer ernoon and southwest 15 Satur- day afternoon. Vv * Eastern Lake Ontario, Hali- urton regions: Variable cloudi- hess with a few showers late Saturday, warmer Saturday. Winds light tonight, then south- erly 15 Saturday afternoon. ) Algoma, Timagami regions, orth Bay, Sudbury, Sault Ste. timés he will go heavy. on the problem of federal - provincial fiscal relations. His speech is expected to end about 10:15 p.m., leaving little time for the federal parties to! reply because, by broadcasting Earlier, he announced a simi-| lar charge against Ottawa Le) Droit and three of its staff. clearance by a vote of 4 to 1. Three commissioners based their decision on "his persistent RUGCO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. and continuing association with The lone vote upholdii Op-| Communists."' ' mg penheimer came from Dr Henry c--¥ $35 5 VOTE HALL Want Your VOTE EILEEN COUTTS. VOTE regulations, television and ra. dio reports and comment on the campaign must stop at mid. night, 48 hours before the vote. SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Gas Dealer in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 D. Smyth, who had worked with Oppenheimer in developing the atom bomb. "He is completety | frie: Considerable cioudiness|guan'Ge. iiacie oka t and Saturday with a few| musk ers and a little warmer. 'inds becoming southwest 20 Saturday. » White River, Cochrane re- gions: Mainly cloudy with scat- fered showers and warmer to- night and Saturday, turning colder during the evening. Winds becoming southwest 15 this evening and northerly 20 Saturday afternoon. 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 ited : Lim 723-2265 -- 728-3376 After Hours 728-3376 sums Home Sold: WE REQUIRE ROW oh each eect New teapersuip ror our Nation Toronto .... | errrerer ree Montreal .......+. Quebec YOUR HOME PROPERTIES ARE MOVING FAST! We Sold Over $165,000 of Homes IN THE PAST 10 DAYS! Call To-day For Action! SCHOFIELD-AKER 360 KING WEST (Limited) 723-2265 OPEN 9 TO 9 --~ SAT. 9 TO B BILL MecFEETERG -- 725-1726 REG, AKER -- 725-0201 LES HALL -- 728-5513 STEVE MACKO -- 728-5868 HENRY STINSON -- 725-0243 FREE PARKING AT REAR OF OFFICE D EDICATED CANDIDATES with DeteRMiNATION P OSITIVE PLANS WITHOUT P ROcRASTINATION "KINDNESS BEYOND PRICE, YET WITHIN REACH OF ALL" GERROW FUNERAL CHAPEL 390 King W. 728-6226 THIS TIME VOTE EILEEN COUTTS IN DURHAM OIL FURNACE? CALL PERRY DAY OR NIGHT 723-3443] BOLAHOOD REAL ESTATE -- MORTGAGES 725-6544 H

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy