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Ontario Hotels - OnlineTravelComparison
Ontario is a province located in the central Canada and it is the largest province in the country in terms of population and second in land area. It is bordered by Manitoba, Quebec, and the United States via Minnesota, Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. Most of the border that Ontario shares with the US is natural and starts at the Lake of the Woods through four of the Great Lakes. Toronto serves as the capital city of Ontario.

The population of the province has steadily increased since 1851. It started with a population of under a million in its founding year and as of 2006, Ontario has an estimated population of over 12 Million residents. Canadians make up a majority of the population closely followed by the British, the Scotts, the Irish, the French, and the Germans. South Asians and the Chinese make up most of the non-Caucasian population, followed by people of African descent and then by Filipinos and Latin Americans.

Electric power in Ontario is generally derived from its rivers and from its share of the Niagara Falls. This creates affordable power for the entire province. It has also encouraged manufacturing industry to set up business there. The province leads Canada in the manufacturing industry and is said to account for over 50% of the total national manufacturing shipments in 2004. Agriculture is another dominant industry in Ontario. Farms have been decreasing in number but increasing in size since 1991. They have also become more mechanized. The agricultural produce in Ontario includes cattle, dairy, and small grains.

Onlinetravelcomparison Travel News
Posted May 18, 2010 by Roger Yu
Holiday travel is making a comeback. The downside for Memorial Day weekend fliers, though: higher fares and packed flights. “People seem to feel more confident about travel and the economy in general,” says Genevieve Brown, senior editor of travel website Travelocity.  
FEATURED ARTICLES
Posted April 17, 2010 by Kitty Bean Yancey
The Strip has a new attraction for highflyers. SkyJump Las Vegas, promoted as the world´s highest controlled free fall, plunges the fearless 830 feet from the 108th floor of the Stratosphere Hotel & Casino at speeds of 40 mph. It officially opens Tuesday.  
Posted April 10, 2010 by Larry Bleiberg
It might come as a surprise to some, but the new movie Hot Tub Time Machine builds on a richtradition of time-travel literature and film. Award-winning romance writer Gwyn Cready, the author of the new time–travel novel Flirting With Forever (Pocket Books, $7.99), says people are fascinated with shifting time because it lets them ponder what they might change in their own lives.  
Posted April 05, 2010 by Kelly Carter
Rick Steves is known for his popular European travel guidebooks, hosts a travel show on public television and talks about smart travel on public radio on Saturdays. His new free audiotours of museums and historic walks in London, Paris, Venice, Florence and Rome are now available via iTunes.  
Posted March 27, 2010 by Kitty Bean Yancey
The 2010 National Cherry Blossom Festival starts Saturday and ends April 11 in the nation´s capital.The blooms on more than 3,700 trees “are just starting” and should peak by Easter weekend, says festival president Diana Mayhew.  
Posted March 18, 2010 by Grace D
The Four Seasons Las Vegas is truly a remarkable place. At first I didn´t think it was possible to escape the sounds of a typical Las Vegas evening, but I was wrong. Don´t get me wrong I like coming to Las Vegas for the gambling, food, and pure people watching entertainment  
Posted March 12, 2010 by USA TODAY
Wednesday might be St. Patrick's Day, but you don't have to be Irish to be favored by fortune. Whether you smooch them, tickle them or jitterbug around them, good-luck monuments can leave you feeling, well, lucky. Frank Nelson, world traveler and author of All You Need is Luck (iUniverse, $13.95),  
Posted March 06, 2010 by Roger Yu
Business traveler Mike Monroe no longer rummages through his bag at the airline counter fishing for his flight ticket or confirmation number. The consultant from Lakeland, Fla., has gone paperless, thanks to Continental Airlines' electronic boarding passes.  
Posted February 26, 2010 by Ed Perkins
People keep growing larger and airline seats keep growing smaller. That's the unhappy truth, at least in economy or coach class—where the vast majority of you sit. No wonder so many of us are interested in finding out as much as you can about what limited seat space you have.  
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