Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 14 May 1960, p. 3

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THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, May 14, 1960 § 'Storm Points Up | Need For Controls + | By J. T. McCauley Itheir children's activities, road] | Field Officer, crews were busy barricading C.L.0. Conservation Authority 'wash-outs and the creeks were] BOWMANVILLE -- This is a|still rising. short story of nine ereeks and aj Many urban dwellers found |very wet weekend. their basements flooded and it} | The rains came to the Central| d that p if not [Lake Ontario region beginning hazard, was becoming the order! | | on Saturday, May 7, and contin-|of the day. |uing steadily through Monday| Soper Creek flooded its banks | afternoon, May 9. It was shaping|and inundated certain low-lying up to another 40 days and nights|lands below Highway 2. All the of rain as in the Biblical story|stop-logs wree taken out of Van- of Noah and the Ark -- periodic| stone's Mill dam to allow the high forecasts on the radio seemed! water to pass through. Surprising- to support this thesis. |ly enough Black Creek remained | A reconnaissance survey of the|about the same as in the previous situation on Sunday evening re- evening, |vealed that all the watersheds| Debris of {within the boundaries of the Cen-|yegan to appear, old cans, ' [tral Lake Ontario Conservation stumps, logs and even whole | Authority were swollen and were|irees were observed to be com- [carrying a volume of water, ing down the turbulent streams, which was very unusual when one|on Oshawa Creek, at Rossland {considered their normal placid| oad, a large white cedar, with |condition. Soper Creek on the|jts root system starkly naked in| |eastern boundary was rising the rain became wedged across | {rapidly and was threatening tothe stream just below the bridge | {encroach on the floodplain below | causing some concern as to the the Bowmanville bridge on High-| ability of similar flotsam to clear | way 2. the underside of the bridge. ; The Bowmanville Creek at) The 7 a.m. reading on Lynde day Miss Medd "Miss OCCI", He Schoo i Students, was yansione's Mill looked like alCreek showed a rise of 1.78 feet adjusted by Barbara Buldyke. ' ie i chosen by the sc ool staff. veritable Niagara Falls as Itlsinco the previous evening. Simi- left) convener of the prom, at | crowned 'Queen of the Prom who crowned the Queen, is seen --Oshawa Times Photo | (wained through the sluice gates Jar readings later on Bowmanville every description QUEEN OF THE PROM IS CROWNED Eileen Medd, a Grade 12 | Central Collegiate Institute Fri- at the annual graduation ball. | at right. Eileen, who is one of student, has her floral crown night. was Fran Minacs, Prior to delivering the main of the Oshawa Riding Pro- | | gressive Conservative Associa- address at the annual meeting | Attorney General erts guest of the Oshawa associa- ATTORNEY GENERAL WELCOMED tion, Friday night at Whitby, tion, He is seen here signing the guest book as William Law- son, of Pickering, looks on, ~--QOshawa Times Phote Kelso Rob- (right) was the dinner : = - ms - tumbling into the cauldron like Creek at the Jackman avenue CAPSULE NEWS Toronto's Oil Only Headache STRIKE IT POOR TORONTO (CP)--The city struck oil, but nobody is happy about it. Trouble is that the oil is a scum covering 2% miles of a stream flowing into the Don diver. The oil came from a leak- storage, tank in suburban Hill laborer was killed Friday tr has to save his television set fro crumbling house. Three fam fled their house in this som Itelian town, but Franc Scelbo ran back in to fetch television set and was crus The house had been condemn ing as dangerous Forest OPPOSE FEDERATION WATERLOO (CP)--The Evan- gelical Lutheran Synod of Can- ne ada has voted 79 to 44 against injured, 25° of federating Waterloo College with when two (rains the University of Waterloo, it was|Hamburg's main station F : announced Friday. The college night, police reported The ¢ board of governors had recom- nvolved an express train ar mended federation. The Synod special train carrying mem leit the door open for future fed- of a Hamburg insurance firm eration when the university pre-/@n excursion sents "terms of federation that are more acceptable." West Germ Fifty people them serio collided HAMBURG (Reuters) 138 BELIEVED DROWNE BOMBAY, India (AP . vessel carrying 150 passen across the Krishna River in lira state capsized Thursday ports Friday said only 12 sur ors have been found MORE PAY BOOSTS FOR 12,000 OTTAWA (CP) Salary in- creases for some 12,000 civil serv- ants were announced Friday by the eivil service commission. They range between $120 and TRAIN WRECK HURTS 5 were {fore it continued its mad raceifeet between 8.30 a.m. and 4.30 |towards the lake. lp | The Black Creek at Courtice) seemed to present the most ser-|the area breathed a sigh of relief. ious problem on Sunday evening,|A final check on Monday even-| since encroachment into the flood-| |plain had already occurred. rred. At|Tyrone Mill dam revealed that 110 p.m. the water was within one during the period from 6 p.m. to and a half feet of the bottom of/g pm, Suny the rain siowped vd WEATHER FORECAST Man Drowned ing with the operator of the the water had dropped the bridge on the Courtice road five inches. {just north of the highway. i ying m a ilies nern esco his hed. ed course just above any the road sly, In the city, Oshawa and Good- near ay rash nd a bers 1 on to public property, although at Continuing west on Highway 2, should precipitate some serious one found similar conditions on|thinking in the minds of all re- Farewell and Harmony Creeks. sponsible persons. While the in| {Due to a sharp meander in its | dividual watersheds are small in issued at 5 a.m.: the bridge, this area, it must not be inferred Farewell was beginning lo cut|ihat the flooding problem is un-| eather picture over Southern noon, Sunday mainly sunny and into its east bank, while adjacent|important. Due fo the high con-lzng Central Ontario has changed warmer. Winds light. to Harmony Creek, the run-officentration of population and in-/yapy Jiftle this week. It is hoped from the Highway was feeding qystry a serious flood could cause "ois nm now crossing the prairies|Kirkland Lake regions, Windsor, the weep-holes in the bridge at amych damage and even loss of Li giclodoe the low - pressure|North Bay: Cloudy with a few 50 8 {prohibitive rate. This caused the|jjfe. It is partly true that poor excess to cut down around the watershed management in |bridge, eroding the shoulders of past has contributed to our pres- {ent day flood problems. TORONTO (CP) -- Synopsis: The day area over Southern cool, rainy weather, ern Ontario, where concentration points. faster down-stream | forecast. Regional forecasts valid the inability of the culvert under|, nivol system in this area based midnight Sunday. Highway 2 to carry the excess run-off. Pringle and Lynde Creeks in Whitby had also risen out of the| bed stream. At the former con-| {siderable ponding had occurred) above thé Highway covering an| the |area of lawn on private proper- pledge to E. H. Walker, cam- |ty. (At this check point your ob-| D A gers And Re "VIV- KINSMEN PRESENT PLEDGE here is John W. Nicholls (right), Al a recent meeting the mem- club president, presents bers of the Oshawa Kinsmen Club announced the club would upon gineering tools as control dams, gian Ba {evacuated d {channel sound conservation prin-| Eastern Lake Drier Weekend An occurrence of this co Seen Prospect Forecasts |ton, with a few sprinkles this morn- to day|ing, Western Lake Erie, Haliburton, Ontario| showers the 'hich has been the cause of the sunny and warmer, Winds light. A gradual| Timmins - ; clearing is expected later today.|today. Sunday mainly cloudy with ; However, increased urbaniza- g 4.0" should be generally fair|scattered showers and thunder- man Creeks were running almost | ion has resulted in a more rapic ond warmer except in northwest-| storms, Warmer today and Sun full, with no immediate danger yy n.off of water from the land and a 10.30 p.m. Goodman had spread flows at out into the flood-plain threaten-|These facts point out an increas- ing a golf driving range due to ing need for some type of flood scattered day. Winds light today, southerly of showers and thunderstorms are|10 to 20 Sunday. until yow tonight High Sunday -- y Windsor 5 70 Erie, Niagara, St, Thomas . 4 6 ciples and incorporating such en-| jake Huron, Lake Ontario, Geor- London ..... 65 y regions, London, Hamil-' Wingham .. 4 65 In Otonabee PORT HOPE (CP) -- Ernest Mills, 3, of Bridgenorth, a fisher man, was lost in the Otonabee River and presumed drowned early today near Bensfort Bridge, 25 miles northeast of Port Hope. | Mills was fishing for pickerel (with a companion shortly after [the season opened at midnight, {The boat turned over and Mills |was lost. His companion made {his way to shore and notified police. Corporal Lyle Erskine, Cobourg detachment, OPP, left today for Bensfort to start dragging opera tions. Mills leaves a wife and {four children. Toronto, Sudbury: Cloudy clearing partly this after- today. Sunday mainly Kapuskasing: Sunny Toronto .... Trenton .. St. Catharines . Hamilton .... Muskoka . Killaloe . Earlton . Sudbury .. Forecast Temperatures flood-plain lands and| ---- improvements, the right direction inagurate a new sites and im- step in wallis might be to stream-gauging old | this month. | in 'Nova Scotia, He will| return to Oshawa on leave later / contribute $3000 for each of the . rar |prove on next three years to the Oshawa | Paign chairman. server noted a huge sewer rat/ProY stream gauging, CHILD INJURED --Oshawa Times Photo | Swimming Toi At 11/equipment which would provide| A gmall boy was reported fr i __!p.m. a check with the stream ob- siream-watcheers with a compre- knocked down by a motor vehicle server on the Lynde Creek re- $170 a year. Groups included in : the increases are Dc ele- BIG MILITARY COST vator operators, packers ' and. WASHINGTON (AP) -- The helpers, stationary engineers, senate approved Friday a $1,185, fireman - laborers and security 665,000 military construction pro- guards. Only about 1,600 are em- gram geared largely to missiles ployed in the capital Authorization for 12 more missile squadrons is provided in the bill, SOUGHT ROCKET DATA including three additional Atlas] WASHINGTON (AP)--Missiles squadrons, six squadrons of Ti-| and Rockets Magazine said Fri-|¢, and three operational " Funeral l= tans, » a' day the U-2 spy plane downed in/squadrons of Minutemen, oster Welch, General Hospital Fund. Seen | -- kd - Rd hensive picture of flood dangers|jear the Albany Resturant | y at the water was 11.94|at their finger tips. Simcoe St. S., shortly after Jeni ths the Ah eon the| Flood control is one of the ob-|a m, today. He was taken to the | bridge tario Conservation Authority, who|Oshawa General Hospital where | Monday founda the weather un-|jectives of the Central Lake On-|pjs condition was reported as OBITUARIES _ Art Student FUNERAL OF - e FRANK WELCH tD 1 became a distinct possibility, Red|ate with local municipal councils] services for Frank Ge 1p omas Cross warnings were Josued to and/or Sod costo} pa PeRstor mn street | 4 ful ¢ on in settin § rs. D. ) et, | PO A i held a 29 cribbage hand while killed Tuesday, Russia May 1 may have been try- May 10, at Maberly, Ont, A former student of Oshawa De tg with ag ts oo Friday, briefing conducted by Allen Dul- g " LOM Rev. James S. Pierce, of Osh-|duation + 4 . 'the Atlantic missile range Friday tario College of Art in T. 9 . 8 awa antecos Shure son- oronto. les, U.S. central intelligence di on its fourth successful intercon. @wa Pentecostal Church, con 4 in his Y ing to photograph huge new So- SUCCESSFUL FIRING 53rd year, were held at the Arm-| Central Collegiate Institute, { viet rockets 200 feet long. It said " ppl , strong Funeral Home, Friday,| Irene Kowalski, received a dip-| . | May 13. y | CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) Toma Frid Fini 1 CI its story was based on a secret A Ti toed i May 13, at 3 p.m a Friday in annual gra- a C 1 A itan missile thundered down ceremony of the 'On-| | | ! | misene fo Ca DISTRICT rector, for members of Congress... range flight. The air ducted the services. Interment he only f | student . from Osh-| 3 { on the U-2 incident, adding that| =." oo ited the big military Vas at Mount Lawn Cemetery. awa in the graduating 2Girl Escapes | TO TELL OF FESTIVAL 3 | Ken C the rockets were being prepared i tan Pallbearers were Douglas Miss Kowalski was a pupil of C 7 nti ) rocket achieved all test objec ¥ : ug SE wa J rone, a former executive| for a spectacular new sbace|y; oc in registering its 10th fully Branton. William Neal, Benjamin Miss Agnes Miocich, art teacher of the Stratiord Music Festival, . ' . | shot successful flight in 15 launchings. Page. Harry Gay, Frank Marshal at OCCI. She graduated from the |will be the speaker at the meet- and Frank McLellan school in 1956. Her parents are ing of the Rotary Club of Osh Mr. and Mrs. W. Kowalski, 253 aw ¢ ; i pak Sg hii Mrs. David Peebles, 70 Gren- awa next Monday. He will speak ALBERT BECKETT | Verdun road. about the festival and its man; : 2 1 i y Albert Richard Beckett, 285, Miss Kowalski chose to spe-|fell street, relented last night pe SENTENCE UNION LEADER RRR $42 rR WASHINGTON (AP) ~ Mayr.| FREE 'BANK ROBBERS ice A. Hutcheson, president of the, SACRAMENTO, Calf. (AP)-- 800,000-member Carpenters Union Judge Sher Holbert hss dis- i . ) , to six Missed . bank robbery charges 4 ) Re id $500 4h against six Santa Rosa College home, Friday, May 13. refusing to answer questions be- students who staged a fake A on of the late Mr Mr: fore the Senate rackets commit. holdup with toy guns and cos. George Beckett, he was born al tee. . Hutcheson, 63, president of tumes "This is patiently a fool Shirley, Reach Township, Cept. 28, the Carpenters Union since 1952, ish stunt, committed in an un-/1878 and had lived all his life in will remain free on $1,000 bond thinking moment, Halbert sald 92 Qunavs SigtHic) dot pe) q Using air rifles and toy guns, the e deceased 1S survive y 'his pending ontearme of an appeal, S1¥ a the mock holdup at!wife, the former Lucy Ann Grills; SPIES the Bank of America in Santa two daughters, Mrs. John Cook Burk street, died suddenly at 'his|¢ialize in interior decorating, at|permitted her daughter, Colleen, the College of Art. A piece of her|aged 8, to stay up a little late and Mrs, | Work, a circular coffee table. can|to watch a TV show -- and saved| be seen in Toronto at the Guild|the girl's life. of Canadian Handicrafts. While Colleen watched A number of former Oshawa Disney, a fire broke out in students graduated in the second |cupboard in her upstairs as and third year classes in the|demolishing the room. She would | kard, third in the girl's solo| | collegiate. They are: June Fuller, | normally have heen asleep in the| S1ass i Years and under; George a former OCCI student and art/hed which was badly burned zh, Nuithy, Just s the 'Hic: J.5. and West|Rosa April 22 Yema) and we Haram Ham ova I ise D. Yan When the fire broke out about 8|y;0 "ochawa second in the 10 Berlin authorities joined Friday oly (Verna poth "of ;0shawa|y,.ati ni & Sudan! : . Y a .|years and' under violin class; ir blacking out deals on two hree grandchildren and one great- Bo oF ee oo, Janes Damage from (he five was Rept ylvia Bell, Oshawa, first in the, Germans arrested as Soviet spiess LONDON (AP) The Queen Srandson leted their' third year lo. a mmmum, ki 0 years and under, piano solo, against American forces here. and Prince Philip have accepted Mr. Beckelt was married in Osho, year griduate . $500, by prompt action ol Sh-| sight reading, class: and Janet West Berlin police disclosed the|zn invitation to visit Pakistan in awa in 1909. He lived in the city) qo" 20 Fe adustes from awa firefighters. {Leslie Carmichael, of Oshawa, | arrests Thursday. Judicial au-/ February next year, President for 22 years Joe Catalano and "Paul Whiting. 1 cannot praise these Heemep | fing in the girl's solo class for thorities said the case had been|Mohammed Ayub Khan of Pakis- The funeral will be held from ng- enough, Mrs. F eebles sail :| contestants 14 years and under. sent to a court at Karlsruhe, in/tan announced Friday night. A the Armstrong Funeral Home REI "There was hardly any water N : : West Germany. spokesman of the Pakistan hjgh Monday, May 16, at 2 p.m, The damage and they did not even COMPLETES BASIC | commission in London said jar service will be conducted by Rev.! MORE SKATERS break the flowers in the front aor on Maton, son of Mr. visit probably will take place in W. A. Gibbs, of Westmount United pop ARTHUR. © : {garden with their ladders. They = 4 Irs. G. + B Moulton, 57 A the second half of February. Church. Interment will be in the : » Ont. (CP)-- {are very efficient and very care. lomas street, who is serving pra---- i Nine outdoor skating rinks here ful." with the Royal Canadian Navy, has successfully completed his EE Oshawa Union Cemetery. had ; ne t d ' had a t " Py Fi i ising the fire depart- : ad an attendance of more than' While praising P: basic training at HMCS Corn- FUNERAL OF 155.900 during the winter, an in. ment, she has no praise for a ">" FESTIVE WINNERS Five Oshawa and district con- testands in the Kiwanis Music | walt Festival at Peterborough on a doll| Thursday won awards. The win- room, | ners were: Karen Green, of Les- WINDOWS DOORS FACTORY PRICES CALL RA 8-371 FREE ESTIMATES RAINBOW PRODUCTS 328 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH OSHAWA HOLD RED BERLIN (AP) -- TO VISIT PAKISTAN KILLED SAVING TV CATANZARO, Italy (AP) -- Russian Charges Worry Pakistan LONDON (Reuters)--Pakistan's| was a big factor in the increase, operator, and told her my ad. said recreation director Ray Wit- dress and asked her to call the, |fire department," she said. ""The| -- (operator 'said 'just a moment please'. 1 told her again that my M house was on fire, but I still had and Benjamin, into hang on a while before she] Oshawa, and a brother, Frank|called the fire department." {Foote, of Oshawa. She was pre-. Mrs. Peebles' youngest deceased by her husband, w Mrs Josephine Bailey, 15 Charles B. Bailey. in 1951 sitting in front of the TV eating | Wegimoreiand ve ey 2 Bd The memorial service will be potato chips from a paper plate. | Oshawa Genera ospital, rl » is! For % keh Arms He put cost on over his Laven M 1 2 5 t % Hajar day, May 13, after a short serious jot 2 oly isi rong. Paershile, Du R up his chips | .ang une 0 the Stort illne: y A y, Ma) \ Jud ) y 8 Dy (parliament) that the U2 orang Mess a p.m. The service will be taken walked to the front lawn and] tended fo land at Bodo aittiod on «onc, former Josephine Foote, yajor M. Rankin, of the Sal watched the firemen fight the at Bodo airfield in she was a daughter of the late vation Army. Interment will be blaze, while calmly eonsuming under way. northern Norway Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Foote. . : ; i ize Friday night Russia warned He expressed understanding She was born in the Township of in the Oshawa Union Cemetery. his chips. Norway, Pakistan and Turkey it that Russia is "embittered over Ernestown, Ont., Oct. 4, 1868, would be compelled to take "re-| What happened." She was married June 29, 1892, taliatory measures" if their terri-| 'But from this rostrum I must in Napanee. She lived in Oshawa tories continue to be used as/Protest against the threats|/for the last 54 years. She was a bases for spy planes. against Norway which in this con- member of the Salvation Army The Norwegian govern. nection have been levelled by re-'since she was 14 years old. ment Friday lodged a protest sponsible political quarters in the The deceased is survived by with the United States and barred |Soviet Union." one daughter, Mrs. Ruby Holmes, the use of its bases as a stopover|" Bs -------------------- - | F. RICHARD BLACK, O.D. planes flying over Russia in the 136 SIMCOE N. AT COLBORNE |William and Doreen Carr, who| died at the Sick Children's Hospit- al, Toronto, May 9, was held in!tenberg ] Speaking at an official banquet Bowmanville. Rev. F. Jackson Foreign Minister Mohamed Ik- in honor of a Soviet parliamen- conducted the service ramullah said here today "weltary delegation visiting here, he have cause for bitter complaint" | said if Russian charges are true that! «If we were not fully convinced sides her parents the downed American U-2 spy|that the North Atlantic pact on { plane left a Pakistani base with| ganization were purely a defence He Inestion of flying over the organization and nothing more, Ikramullah, in London for the {1 LOUREY Would. not belong. fo just-ended Commonwealth prime ministers' eonference, made the eomment in a statement issued by the Pakistan high commission here. A Pakistani investigation is BEVERLY ANN CARR crease of 68.359 over the previ telephone operator. 'When I saw BL The funear! service for Barbara ous winter the smoke, I didn't know the fire| Tender EATN A. Family participati ; "a Ann Carr, beloved daughter of y participation number, so I dialled "0" for the| i of Oshawa: two sons, Harold, The child who was four weeks Boston. Mass old leaves a sister, Brenda be- TRUE-TRIMBEEF (( » ii David, aged 5, was not perturb- \ o> son, MRS. JOSEPHINE BAILEY by the blaze. He had been 12 KING ST. E. RA 3-3633 Meat Specials! Mon. & Tues. LEAN RIB STEWBEEF 3 .- 1.00 MEATY PORK HOCKS 5 .- 1.00 MONDAY ONLY! Buy 4 lbs. Country SAUSAGE for . . . GET 4 LBS. FREE! TUESDAY ONLY! END CUTS BY-THE-PIECE BOLOGNA 4 .- 1.00 JORDAN'S GREENHOUSES Top Quality Spring Plants ALL VARIETIES - A ~ We Grow Our Own 120 ARLINGTON AVE. (OFF SIMCOE ST. NORTH) Circular Driveway future. The Soviet note to Norway warned Russia has %means which, in case of necessity, will make it possible to render harm- less the military bases which are used for the carrying out of ag gressive actions against the So- viet Union." WON'T ALLOW USE Norwegian Premier Einar Ger: hardsen said Friday night Nor- way never will allow its territory to be used as a starting point for aggressive action against the So- viet Union. The Examination of eyes Fitting of Contact Lenses And Glasses Children's Visual Training For Appointment Please Call RA 3-4191 EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT RA 3-3243 RA 3-3243 Employment Opportunities (Civil Service of Canada) SURVIVAL PLANNING OFFICER (with @ number of years of progressively responsible administrative experience, to give guidance to provincial and municipal eivil defence authori= ties ond the public), Emergency Measures Organization, Privy Council, Ottawa, $8,340-$9,420. EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT TO THE DIRECTOR (with administra~ tive experience at a senior level, and more particularly, - experience as Secretary of Committees), Emergency Meas ures Organization, Privy Council, Ottawa. $8,340-$9,420. FEDERAL LIAISON OFFICER (to maintain liaison with those departments having responsibilities in the civil emergeney planning field), Emergency Measures Organization, Privy Council, Ottawa. $7,260-$8,340. DISTRICT SUPERINTENDENTS OF SCHOOLS (university graduates with provincial First Class or Academic Certifi- cate, preferably with degree in Education or Paedagogy), Indian Affairs Branch, Citizenship and Immigration, Wine nipeg., Prince Albert, Sask. Vanderhoof, B.C., The Pas, Man., end Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. $6,900-$7,860. SUB-DISTRICT VETERINARIANS -- Animal Contagious Dis- eases (graduation in veterinary science and qualifications for registration to practise veterinary medicine in Canada), Agriculture, Athabasca, Alta, Shaunavon ond Broadview, Sask. $6,780-$7,860. AIRBORNE COMMUNICATIONS OFFICER (to act as projeat officer and Air Force design authority in the field of Aire borne Communications), National Defence, Air, Ottawa. $6,480-$7,200. ARCHAEOLOGIST (university graduate in archaeology, to plan and conduet archaeological investigations concerned with the restoration of Canadian Historical sites), Northern Affairs and National Reseources, Ottawa. $6,360-$7,320. PAROLE SERVICE OFFICER (to be in charge of a Case Prep- aration Unit at Headquarters), National Parole Board, Justice, Ottawa, $6,360-$7,320, GOST ANALYSTS (professionally qualified accountants, one for the Aircraft Branch, one for Shipbuilding Branch), De- fence Production, Ottawa. $6,300-$7,020. (In addition, a position in. the Financial Adviser's Branch, with duties "to review audit reports" may be filled from this eompetition), PLACEMENT OFFICERS (to develop opportunities for per manent placement of Indians in industry), Indian Affairs Branch, Citizenship and Immigration, Whitehorse, Y.T., ond Fort Smith, NW.T. $5,820-$6,540. HISTORICAL RESEARCH OFFICER (university graduate with specialization in Canadian' History), Northern Affairs and National Resources, Ottawa. $5,700-$6,180. HEAD CLERKS (to assist in surveys and investigations relat- ing to methods and procedures, and the development of work standards), Unemployment Insuronce Commission, Ot- tawa. $5,400-$5,940, ESKIMO LANGUAGE SPECIALIST (ability to speak, read and write the Eskimo Language; additional credits for university courses in_anthropology or sociology), Northern Affairs and National Resources, Ottawa. $5,130-$5,730. AIRWAYS SERVICEMAN -- DIESEL MAINTENANCE, Civil Aviation Branch, Transport, Toronto, Ont, $4,650-$5,100, TECHNICAL OFFICERS (with several years of practical experi- ence in Landlines Communication services, to arrange for the provision of special eommunication services and ex- pediting of work projects), Telecommunications and Elee tronics Branch, Transport, Ottawa. $4,200-$4,800. EDITOR (with very good knowledge of editorial practices and procedures), Directorate of Naval Division, National De- fence, Ottawa. $3,900-$4,800. ASSISTANT EDUCATION OFFICER (with graduation from e university or college of art, and a knowledge of the history of art, paedagogy), Exhibition Extension Services, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa. $3,420-$4,020. PAPER CUTTERS (with completed apprenticeship in a bindery trade, and at least five years' experience as a journeyman Paper Cutter), Public Printing and Stationery, Ottawa, Ont., ond Hull, P.O. $2.45 an hour. STENOGRAPHER - SECRETARY (with several years of experi- ence in general office work, involving responsible duties), Government Departments, Ottawa. Starting salary $297 a month, . STENOGRAPHERS (with at least two years of office experi- ence), Government Departments, Ottawa. Starting salary $257 a month, : Details and application forms at main Post Offices National Employment Offices or Civil Service

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