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The Oshawa Times, 28 May 1960, p. 28

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

ined FI oR ONTARIO TODAY SATURDAY, MAY 28 4 Ontario provides the traveller with rich variety in scenic beauty and recreation pvr Vista of beauty from Lookout at Dorset Pearls of the Caribbean NASSAU FOR SUN! FOR FUN! You will find vacation pleasures at their best. Crystal clear waters--the finest sandy beaches. Tennis, golf, fishing, swimming, skin diving. 7 thrilling days, including return air trans- portation, hotel accommodation, trans- fers and sightseeing $177.00 up. Other Pearls of the Caribbean to Bermuda . . . Jamaica . . . \ntigua . , . Barbados . , . Puerto Rico... Haiti, etc. Wi 11:¥:\"11" SERVICE wurp. 9A QUEEN ST, E. jel do] Role] } 8 PHONE EM. 3-3264 coming to TORONTO The new King Edward Sheraton is the only hotel in Toronto offering to registered overnight guests. 24 hour FREE inside parking together with the friendliest possible service and rates ron 6.50 For reservations call: TORONTO: EM 8-7474 HAMILTON: JA 7-5071 GUELPH: ZEnith 10350 TIMMINS: AM 4-424] FAMILY PLAN AVAILABLE THE NEW KING EDWARD SHERATON HOTEL per day By DAVID TORRANCE UPERLATIVES come easily when one talks about travel in Ontario. This is the province that accounts for bettet than 60 per cent of Canada's trade, the in- dustrial province that ranks tourism as one of its major industries, the province that offers such a bewildering variety to the traveller that only superlatives can handle the description. One gets a glimpse of the splendid sweep of On- tario when one considers that it covers an area over four times the size of the United Kingdom, more than six times the size of the six New England States, almost the size of France, Germany and Italy combined. Its southern-most point is in the same latitude as northern California; its northern boundary is in the sub-Arctic; it embraces the greater part of the St. Lawrence Sea- way system, from the river itself on the east to the head of the Great Lakes in the West. Within this area lie 80,000 square miles of lakes and rivers--more than 500,000 lakes have been named, and there are others that still await recognition, virgin waters where the fish feed without fear of anglers. The traveller, then, can find anything he wants-- and it would take almrost a lifetime of holiday travel to sample every attraction that the province has to offer. Where does one start? One starting point for hundreds of thousands has been Niagara Falls, the traditional spot for honey- mooners. Travellers from outside the province can start there and cross the southern edge of the province to the magnificent Thousand Islands in the St. Lawrence on the east, with four-lane highways providing passage most of the way for those travelling by car. Or one could swing west and north from Niagara Falls, through the lush fields and booming cities of southwestern Ontario towards Sarnia and the Blue- water Highway which leads north along Lake Huron to the Bruce Peninsula and Georgian Bay. From there. one can swing south again past the highly developed Couchiching-Simcoe resort area to Lake Ontario and Visual history: Indian Village at Little Lake Park, Midland

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