THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tussdey, May 22, 1962 7 High School Graduate wine rn :secan ripe page me r cent; Prairie provinces, 2.2/Th same held true for women. | A r cent, Brit- 4 \ ete cenkiend 4.5 Ger OF The type of occupation also is | B by: See 48 er com, ans related to unemployment. Blue- | e er O . : collar workers had a jobless | Men have consistently hadirate between four and five By ALAN DONNELLY there wer two or more wage|1960, showed an unemployment/higher os Pipes peggy Raber, agers Ady 2 OTTAWA (CP)--If you arejearners. [rate of 18.7 per cent among per-/than women. Last year $4 per/iit eect tas * mechat. married, over 25 and with a EDUCATION IS FACTOR [sons who never finished pri-/cent of "he mate lanot loll was i "construction and unskilled high school education or better,| On the other side of the coin, Mary school and only 2.7 per|UnEMPloyer colpalel Mil' V sboring jobs. Classed as white- you stand the best chance of however, were the 44.9 per cent/cent among those who finished| Per cent @ collar are those in professional, keeping your job. of families hit by unemploymnt| secondary school or better. The|!0r<e: managerial, clerical, ommer- - If you haven't finished pri-|in which thre was no other | jobless rate was eight per cent) 'The average rate for men un- cial and financial jobs. mary school, you're seven times| wage earner. About one-third of|for those who had finished pri-| 5. 99 was 16.6 vbr cent. or more liekly to be out of work! these families had two or three Mary but not secondary school- than if you have a full second-!members, nother third wer |ing. qua anal ioe ee veralll cate for blue - collar workers! ary school education. oe familis with four or five mem- nIGHEST IN EAST rate for men. averaged 12 per cent compared! Moreover, you'll have a better|pers and the ermaining third of| 'The joint effect of youth and IK. with 2.6 per cent for white-| chance of staying out of the the families had six or morejinadequate education is evi- BLUE-COLLA RJOBS HIT collar. Blue-collar workers rep-| Last year the unemployment employment service office f/ members. denced by the very high unem-| 'The jobless rate for single resented only 29 per cent of the yo uwork in some industry, Last year, when unemploy-jployment rat --about 30 per/men averaged 14.1 per cent last|labor force but accounted for 52 other than forestry, fishing,/ment averaged 469,000, just/cent--for persons under 25 who|year, more than double the 6.4- per cent of unemployment. trapping or construction. Last/oyer 45 per cent of the jobless|did not finish primary school," ----------+-----___-- _ a sc year unemployment rates in|were heads of families. One-|the report says. those industries ranged from 20\third of thm were singl sons| The special survey found that \ SVISIT THE PACIFIC COAST i~ to 30 per cent. lor daughters living with their|more than nine of every 10 job-| The facts emerge from a de- parents and 11 per cent of the/less in February, 1960, hadn't) tailed study on unemployment}ynemployed were other rela-|finished secondary school. during the last decade issued|tiyes living in families. About) The Atlantic provinces have, by the Dominion Bureau of Sta-inine per cent of the jobless consistently had the highest un-| Varlouk travel plans 46. thobse from, : tistics. . scat me ldidn't liv with family. oavernen fg --an a at + Stopovers available. é od : The report, bristling with per-| The report, while concentrat-|5.5 per cen uring the five! a Pate die, PHONE 723. jcentages, charis trends in un-jing on cold statistics without|/years 1951-55 and 11.1 per cent ? 23-4122 723-4512 i : t jemployment and provides some going into the reasons behind/last eyar. Quebec as_ next poin lof the main facts about the|them, indicates two main fac-|highest with 4.5 per cent during jcountry's jobless --their sex,!/tors in unemployment rates--|1951-55 and 9.3 per cent last age, family status, where they | youth and lack of education. year. Jobless rates in other| 91-61 live and what kind of industries! A special survey in February,'regions for the same periods ithey come from. ~_---- in . sab peer neneeirewnenpiren een = by Train--Dependable schedules. See Western Canada, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Edmonton, the Rocky Mountains and Vancouver, 5 ae * TREND I SUP SENATE INVESTIGATORS It finds a "fundamental long- Sen. John I. MeClellan, D- | chief counsel, Donald F C- Estes Charges of -- ment rates running through the Ark., left, chairman of the | Donnell today before the start | government treatment of Es- up-and-down busitiess cycles of committee, confers with his | of Texas Financier Bilhie Sel --(AP Wirephoto) in the five veats 10856 40 ai 3 : . average 3.5 per cent of the = Mother-Daughter First Quarter sues fell sharply This rose to an average 5.7 per Retirements of foreign-held cent during 1956-60 and last Banquet Planned . | apita xport be large, due mainly to con-'7.9 per cent tractual maturities. Net pur- yp with the growing labor force Cub and Scout Mothers held . Job opportunities haven't kept their meeting in the lower hall $62 000 000 residents of Canada were large.'959 909 to an average 6,049,000 of the church i" " reflecting the purchase Of/, rise of 18.7 per cent, But the ; han OTTAWA (CP) -- Transac- extent of European issues h 4 A! would be no May meeting as the sicna hetween Canuie anh ollier Ss : ? : ,of employed persons. rose by group is catering for the mother The gross turnover of secur tween 1951 and 1961 the number} lo a pik avai i Guides and Brownies on May|.<d {0 bg RB ae fxnort of countries in the first quarter of cent, up by 1,295,000 to 6,518,000. | 24 at 6.30 8 4 this year was more than $1,250,- The report points up one fact A Parents' Night is planned|tictics reported today | for the 21st Cubs and Scouts on 'This followed an outflow of doesn't necessarily mean an} vited to come to the church to of 1961 and an inflow of $65,-| PHILADELPHIA (AP) -- The income see what their boys are doing. 000,000 in the first quarter of slumping Philadelphia Phillies Four special surveys last year| ardson, the special speaker for' Repurchases of outstanding|from Buffalo Sunday and sent the families hit by unemploy-| the evening, showed slides of Canadian bonds, debentures and|pitcher Bobby Locke to the In- ment--55.1 per cent of them--} of Mr. McLaughlin's gardens at scale in the first quarter while|a 20-year-old righthander, was;mmbers with a job. In about} run upward drift" in unemploy- Senate Investigations sub of hearings into the affairs tes are involved tha tase 10 saace residents of new: Canadian is- jabor force was unemployed Canadian securities continued to|vear the jobless rate averaged KEDRON -- Recently, the 2ist chases of foreign securities by It was decided thal there United States and to a lesser|ianor force increased 24.8 per) and daughter banquet for the/COUM™es In portfolio securities| jie. between Canada and other have jobs or want them. Be-| ter of 1962, the bureau of sta- 000,000 --unemployment in a_ family, June 21, and all parents are in-/§5,000,000 in the fourth quarter) PHILS RECALL HURLER = ending of the family's earned) Commissioner Stanley Rich- 1961 recalled pitcher Paul Brown/found that in more than half of} activities at Camp Samac, andistocks occurred on a modest|ternational League club. 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