2 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, Mey 24, 1962 GOOD EVENING By JACK GEARIN By THE CANADIAN PRESS | Three of the four party lead- Prime Minister Diefenbakerjets 'il! change provinces to- nailed two planks into his "con-|day, Mr. Diefenbaker heading lfederation platform" Wednes-\for Saskatoon and Regina, Mr. day night, promising a second Douglas flying to Toronto and transCanada highway and a/Mr. Thompson moving into national power grid. ac ee for a speech at Plagued at times by hecklers,|N°W "Jassow. he told an audience of 4,400 inj. ho a i na gy orn = Pienaiy g! pemtoriom they ope " Tigamins and Kirkland the second highway will pro- , ceed "very shortly" and des-|¥ake. cribed the power grid as "the| Earlier this week in Toronto next great plan" for Canada, |the prime minister said he in- Liberal Leader Pearson,|ends to outline a *Confedera- CITY'S INSURANCE PICTURE INCOMPLETE Facts and figures on the City of Oshawa's insurance set-up are not always easy to come by, even for people like Alderman Finley Dafoe who care about such things. Dribs and drabs of piecemeal information are readily available, but it is sometimes difficult to get all-embracing, overall statistics to put the entire picture in true focus. As an example -- the City of Toronto spends $116,000 a year on insurance premiums (for fire, auto, plate glass, robbery and other types) for which it receives back, in pay- ment for losses, $74,884 a year for an annual loss to the tax- payers of more than $41,000. No such complete statistics are available in Oshawa, as speaking to 1,000 in the slump- tion platform" during the re- ing northern Ontario uranium town of Elliot Lake, said he is "a little sceptical' about Mr. Diefenbaker's statement that a jnew uranium contract with Brit- Mr. Dafoe learned in a recent (futile) factfinding expedi- tion in open Council. Mr, Dafoe wanted to know how much was paid out by the insurance companies last year as losses in handing City business, but the answers were not pro- vided, mainder of the campaign. The promises in his Winnipeg speech were the start. On the power grid, he said the electric power surplus of As a further example, the City paid out a total of $20,061 in premiums last year on its three biggest policies (fire and building protection -- $5,500; Fleet policy $6,100; Public Liability -- $8,461), but this total représents no more than 80 percent of the City's insurance, does not include such things as coverage on employees' cars (used for work), coverage on cemetery lawnmowers, pension fund, etc, \aa is ready for signing. | T. C, Douglas, New Demo jeratic Party leader, predicted |that the reduced exchange value of the Canadian dollar will push living costs to new heights. He spoke in the farm- ing village of O'Leary, P.E.I. Social Credit Leader Robert /Thompson addressed 200 in a half-filled auditorium at Bran-} don Man,, pledging that his|suppor {party would appoint \without political patronage. jfirst appearance of the ca $10,000 Claimed Payment To MP available to the others grid, a_ national power systems. The third phase 0 ernment's development plan without elaboration. BOCTED BY ROBLIN Mr. Diefenbaker got a strong oH uns WHAT DOES OSHAWA PAY YEARLY? The City of Toronto pays more than $8,500 a year in commissions to insurance agents who do absolutely nothing to earn it (under a share-the-wealth system used also in Oshawa), but it is difficult to find out how much Oshawa pays out umder the same system. These questions are oft asked today: Is the City of Oshawa handling its insurance business in the most economical way? Should it not call tenders itself on its various groups of insurance instead of delegating this job to a City agency that also does all the detail work (such as appraising, pay- ing of eleims, determining the best tender)? The Oshawa-Toronto insurance system is not unique, it is widely used. It saves the City treasury department much Paper work, labor, time, but it does bring some spirited protests from taxpayers whe think it is wrong in principle. These people think the City should be doing more of this business itself. They also object to the fact that the City agency (W. B. White Insurance LAd.), after collecting OTTAWA (CP) -- A Cornwalljof his influence man testified Wednesday that! deal. se : he paid a member of Parlia-| Bergeron testified with pro- ment $10,000 as a "'fee" for the tection of the Canada Evidence purchase of his property by the Act under which his statements government six years ago but/cannot be used as evidence didn't learn until two years| against him. i : later that the payment was un-| The Cornwall service station necessary. operator was arrested at the He also said two Montreal|same time as Bruneau, about a | | | 10 percent of the yearly premiums as its fee, pays back a men who had an interest in the|¥oar ago, and charged with cor- "major portion' of this fee to fellow agents who are City taxpayers and members of the Oshawa and District Insur- ance Agents' Association (with a membership of 30 firms). These City agents get a chunk of this City insurance eake although they actually do nothing to earn it, unless indirectly by joining the ODIAA and by paying their munici- pal taxes. |property told him the "fee ito be paid or the sale would not }go through, | Abe Bergeron, 45, was the chief witness at the opening of h corruption trial of Raymond Bruneau, former Liberal MP for Glengarry-Prescott. The case continues ODIAA HELPS "PUBLIC SERVICES" * haa|tuptly giving a bribe to the MP. He was tried twice last fall but both times the jury disagreed. He is out on $500 bail. Bergeron said Bruneau prom- ised him a government job. The Crown introduced letters alleg- edly written by Bruneau to about a dozen firms, most of HY hould be made) ; pai yds gpenge ge the/from Toronto before flying h | ookup o B f the gov-0n various issues, in the land Prices had dropped to 46 cent : on the dollar in 1958 compared today.them outside the government,| Dief Promises Second Trans-Canada Road paign. Mr. Roblin called him "the best friend Western Can- ada ever had." "We believe in your vision for the building of your Canada for tomorrow," the Conserva- tive premier added. Mr, Diefenbaker said he had read in the papers that Mr. Roblin was cool to the federal conservatives. "I wonder what happens when he gets hot." A half - dozen persons in the balcony gave Mr. Diefenbaker' the most heckling he has had in the campaign so far. There also was scattered applause once or twice when he mentioned Mr. Pearson. The Liberal leader spent much of the day driving east orth. He spoke of 200 at tiny rooklyn and 300 at Trenton At Elliot Lake, in his own e asize processing|'iding of Algoma East, he noted pI i tdded| that Mr. Diefenbaker did not jmention prices in announcing |Tuesday that the British ura- nium deal was ready. "So you can see that I am a speech from Pre-|little sceptical about this sort of judges|mier Duff Roblin, making his|thing coming out on the day m-|that I am to be in Elliot Lake,"| # jhe said, 'It should have been signed years ago." POTATO ISSUE RAISED Mr. Douglas also stressed a key local issue saying the farmer is getting less and less of the consuner dollar despite rising retail prices of his goods. The farmer's share of potato 8 to 68 cents in 1951. Earlier, at Charlottetown, he said the NDP has just as much chance of winning the June 18 election as the Conservatives had before the 1957 election, in which they upset the Liberal government, He also said labor support | A detective carrying a ma- | chine gun patrols in front of | a bank in Ste. Scholastique, Que., 35 miles northwest of Montreal where one gunman | foiled a | holdup attempt. Three other | TERPRETING THE NEWS died when police IN ! a | y Ex-Officer Admits Kept Pornography | TORONTO (CP) -- Robert) 2. Wright supplied information | |J. Wright, former provincial po-|for gamblers at Peterborough. ; liceman convicted as a tipoff man for gamblers, admitted to the royal commission on crime Wednesday that he kept ob- scene pictures seized in a raid. A bagful of pornographic playing cards and pictures were displayed at the hearing. Com- mission counsel Roland F. Wil- son said the cards were found in Wright's yong mee when he was arrested on May 28, 1960, Mr. Justice W. D. Roach, sole member of the commission, asked Wright whether obscene 3. Wright could "'buy or sell' anyone on the OPP. i 4, Sgt. John F, Cronin had . made at least $100,000 from | gamblers before retiring from the squad, ; H 5. Insp. Allan Stringer, now ¢ head of the OPP Peterborough j district, had tipped of MecDer- mott and others to a projected | series of raids at Hamilton, * which failed. ' 6. Closing of the McDermott- Feeley Roseland Club near # Windsor had resulted in a cap- articles seized by the anti-gam- bling squad should not have been destroyed, "No, other offivters kept ob- scene photographs and maga- ital loss of $250,000~"absurd." 7. In 1960 Albert lanzelli of! Niagara Falls was looking into | the possibility of opening a club in St. Catharines and an inspee- POLICE FOIL HOLDU r\cines at headquarters," Wright replied. He admitted taking m\part in an OPP raid on a poker game at the home of Leonard J, Elderbroom in Cornwall in August, 1958. Wright said he must have) thrown the pictures into a brief case during the raid and un- loaded them into a dresser drawer at home. HOME SEARCHED money. Insp. Harold Graham, head of 11. Inspector Allan Stringer, the OPP's Criminal Investiga-now head of the OPP district tion Branch testified to search-\centred at Peterborough, had ing the Wright home in Belle- tipped off McDermott and oth- ville during May, 1960. ers to a projected series of -- Insp, Graham said he found|raids at Hamilton, which failed. articles including a diary and| Wright conceded that some financial papers but found no|parts of Scott's reports were jtrace of a second diary which| truthful. iWright claims would corrobor-| He had stated, as Scott re- ate much of the testimony he| ported, that he had been told has presented in the last four|information on OPP activities % days. |was being given Sammy Bal- ' Wright has been convicted,|sam, Niagara Falls gambler, " with gambling bosses . Joseph|who 'fanned it out to those re- » McDermott and Vincent Feeley,|quiring it." This information * of obtaining police information|had come originally from Cro- - illegally from a member of the/|nin. }gambling squad after he had| He also could have told Scott + been transferred from. the/that an American-Italian named - squad to Belleville. |Nicoletti controlled the old tor there had been bribed. 8. Police Chief John Patrick , of Kitchener was called by the ' Cooksville club to OK any / cheques presented by Kitchener customers. : 9. Police Chief Cecil Pay of } Niagara Falls once had called " McDermott asking to see him 10, Some Niagara Peninsula politicians had taken gamblers' § 3 P bandits and one detective were wounded, This picture was taken by Montreal Star photographer George Gay who sat out a_ three-hour stake-out with police. --(CP Wirephoto) | Wright's financial affairs fig-/Ramsey Club at Niagara Falls for the party is measuring up} ured prominently at the session|and that he was an agent of . to expectations. The goal of 200,000 NDP. members from la- bor unions by next December had already been passed. Mr. Thompson attacked what he called the old-party concept of political patronage in public office. A Social Credit govern- ment would set up a non-parti san committee to advise on ju- | By HAROLD MORRISON Canadian Press Staff Writer The United States is working New Solution Seen For Laos lers, the Royal officers are the) first to get into their jeeps and} flee. | WANT NEUTRAL LAOS Mafia principals. He denied tell- Bruneau has pleaded not guilty./seeking work for Bergeron. Bergeron told how in 1956 the| The witness said he 'drifted' | "One of the vital roles in so- |government paid $48,000 for his/for about two years before) .icty is that of the judge, yet lgarage property in Hawkes-|"people" told him that Bruneau) ' ' A spokesman for W. B. White explained that the ODIAA dicial appointments. commissions are divided after donations are made to cer- tain "public services," such as the Oshawa General Hos- on a new solution for Laos| So the Ameribah idba $4 tp under which they hope the/cet these well-trained attackers jungle country would be trulyjout of the country as part of neutralized by the maintenance/any final East-West deal to } : political appointments too often 'bury, Ont., as the site for a was not entitled to payment and have reduced these posts to in- effective sinecures," he said. pital and the Oshawa Safety League. The W. B. White spokesman said that the City's insur- ance was handled through several agencies, mostly in Tor- onto, prior to 1944, the firms with the lowest bids getting the business, This resulted in frequent change of agencies, with Mitle continuity of experience or knowledge resulting, he said, The City's general insurance plan today provides fire . and supplemental protection for 80 buildings (from one- family dwellings to the City Hall, McLaughlin Library and Hillsdale Manor -- as well as the contents of some buili- new post office. A few days later he went to ment Buildings. Bergeron said he placed $10,000 in small bills on the desk and Bruneau picked the money up and stuffed it into a pocket. "The $10,000 was his fee for looking after the business in Ot- tawa," | Bergeron told County) advised him to get it back. Bergeron said he went to is money but Bruneau said he didn't have it. Bruneau's office in the Parlia-/Bruneau demanding return of, WOULD END PATRONAGE Canadians had the right to be tried by non - political judges Two bank managers testifiedjand these had to be the best- th loans within four days of the|Support at Bruneau paid off $5,000 in/qualified persons available. of his party would date on which Bergeron said|"see an end to, jobs-for-the-boys the $10,000 was paid. Bergeron said that some time/efficiency." patronage and bureaucratic in of balanced factions and forces and the withdrawal of the ferocious North Vietnamese to Hanoi. Policy-makers jwill make it withdraw its say the U.S clear it won't small band of advisers from Laos the Communists also agree to withdraw the North who. apparently overwhelming | Vietnamese shown neutralize Laos under Prince Souvanna Phouma. And when this is done, and the Americans also withdraw, the troops that support the pro- |Red Pathet Lao, the neutralists {and the pro - Western Royal |factions would remain in their present enviroment--the Reds in the North and the. pro- Westerns in the South. Further, the planners. visual- as he revealed his income tax| troubles and the commission|ing Scott: "I know lots about ° counsel delved into his total|the Mafia." earnings by about $8,700 during| Wright's general answer, un- « four years. der sceptical questioning, has Despite earlier evidence that|been that he was trying, on his he had boasted of cleaning up|own, to get information on OPP $50,000 in gambling tipoffs--a/information leakages through statement he disavowed Wed-|Scott and McDermott. nesday--Wright told the com-| He accused Scott of fabricat- mission he is: broke. jing some statements purporting DENIES DIARY REPORTS |to have been made by himself, Much of Wright's day was| of being drunk when some con- taken up with a long series of|versations took place, of denials of material in reports| 'name-dropping"' and of getting turned in to the OPP in 1960)some of his material from a jby Const. George Scott of the|book on the Mafia he was read- anti-gambling squad who posedjing at the time the game of as a crooked policeman to|counter-espionage was going on. gather information against! som Wright, McDermott and Feeley. | Wright denied the ewe statements attributed to him: 1, Wright received $1,000 a/ month for "looking after' the| McDermott - Feeley gambling! JOHN A. OVENS Optometrist HARE OPTICAL Court Judge Frank Costello of|after Bruneau refused to return) ~~ pepe esas |Kitchener, who is hearing the the $10,000 he went to the FARM ELECTRICITY superiority over the Royal La case without a jury. RCMP at Cornwall and gave| Of Alberta's 63,500 farms in|tjan defenders ! an The Crown alleges that the|them a statement, Later both/1961 more than 83 per cent, or| 7, fact. as one official de-/ 2 neutral with yoy minis- money was a bribe which Bru-|he and Bruneau were arrested/53,000, had electricity, a gain Of | cribed it, the Royal Laotians ters of state under him, repre- |have o. ize the key defence ministry of 8 BOND ST. EAST 723-4811 operation in the Windsor area! the neutral regime in the hands ' while it was running. ings, such as the Library, insured for $180,000) with a total value of $3,763,944, Premium for the above coverage costs approximately $5,500 annually -- a total of $37,555 has been paid out in claims in the past three years. (EDITOR'S NOTE: approxi- neau corruptly accepted for use|by the Mounties. fe __lare so afraid of the Vietnamese jsenting eac h of the troop |factions | 3,000 in 12 months. mately $37,000 of that amount was damages collected by the City from the Alexandra Park grandstand fire). "As important as the above," said the spokesman "is the protection for valuable equipment in the Board of Works department, mechanical equipment ranging from traffic counters to bulldozers, cranes, snowblowers, totalling over 50 pieces and value at nearly $500,000". These items are unlicensed and separate, he continued, from the 100 City-owned vehicles ranging from passenger- type cars of the Health, Welfare and Police Departments, etc., to ambulance and aerial ladder trucks and pumpers of the fire department, insured under the Fleet policy. CITY FLEET POLICY IS EXPLAINED The Fleet policy protects against liability incurred due to operation of al) licensed vehicles, as well as loss caused by fire or theft of the vehicles. "This policy is written at a current annual premium of $6,100 ~~ during the previous terms it was subjected to 52 claims, two of which required payments totalling more than the premium," he said. "The policy which protects the City from its Kability to the public for bodily injury and property damage, due to ownership and operation of property and unlicensed equip- ment and negligence of employees, is the most important of all," said the spokesman. "This policy is written on the broadcast form of pro- tection available with a total annual premium of $8,461 (the highest bidder having quoted a charge of $13,000). Claims under this policy for the past term numbered 75, all of which had to be defended whether payments was re- quired to be paid or not." The above are the principal types of insurance pro- tection purchased by the City. Said the spokesman: "Remember the City has more than 600 employees, more than 50 pieces of mechanical equipment, 80 buildings and 100 licensed vehicles, 160 miles of roads and 145 miles of sidewalks, 31 public parks, a Children's Arena, Hills- dale Manor and an agricultural fair. "It seems unreasonable to understand why a local agency is called up to keep accurate records and obtain | WEATHER FORECAST Clear Tonight, Sunny Friday 5 a.m. EDT Synopsis: Drier air is moving lerly 20 Friday. quotations for renewals of coverage. The W.B. White agency |into southwestern Ontario and| Northern Georgian Bay, Ti- Toronto ... jit will be cooler in southwest--magami Algoma, North Bay,| Ottawa where tempera-Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie:|Montreal .. has access to the services and quotations of more than 50 insurance companies. It is their duty to see a gap in or overlap of available protection. Hither a gap or overlap could prove costly to the taxpayer and no policy is placed without obtaining competitive prices, It is important that the job of protection be handled by someone. who has a mutual interest and responsibility with the Oshawa tax payer and a reputation at risk." 2 Young Children Die In House Fire SCHUMACHER, Ont. (CP)-- Two young children died in a blazing house Wednesday while their parents were at a funeral in nearby Timmins. Chapman Young, 4, and his sister Lillian, 2, were at home with two older sisters when the fire broke out. Fire Chief Malcolm Mac- millan said the youngsters set fire to a can of gasoline. Neighbors rescued the older Chinese-Canadian children from the ground floor, but missed the i fern Ontario, jtures rose well above 80 Wed- nesday. Little change in tempe rature is expected in the res of Ontario today but tonight should see somewhat lower tem- | peratures. Lake St. Clair, Windsor: i Sunny with a few cloudy inter- Forecast Temperatures vals and cooler today. Clear Low tonight, high and cool tonight. Friday in-|Windsor .......... creasing cloudiness followed by|5St. Thomas showers or thundershowers in| London the evening. Winds southwest 20|Kitchener today, becoming light tonight| Wingham . and east 15 Friday. pan Ail Lake Huron, Lake Erie, Nia-|..°,, ; araga, London: Sunny Wie cloudy. intervals and cooler to-| Ags day. Clear and cool tonight. |neeroorough Friday mainly sunny, becoming! kines R cloudy by evening. Winds south-inuskoka west 20 today, becoming light| North Bay . \Sudbury .. variable tonight and Friday. "|Mainly cloudy with a few show- jnight and. Friday. A little cooler. Winds northwest 20 to- day, west 20 Friday. two toddlers who were huddled together in an upstairs bed- room. The eight other children of r. and Mrs. Chong Young were away at school or work when the fire broke out. MONEY FROM HEAVEN ODAWARA, Japan (AP)--It rained money in Odawara to- day. Residents scrambled as the notes fluttered down--10,000- yen bills, 1,000 yen, 100 yen. Police said seven persons so} Lake Ontario, Haliburton,|Kariton ... far have turned in 98,000 yen'Southern Georgian Bay, Tor-| Kapuskasing ($272) worth of notes. The po-jonto, Hamilton: Cloudy, clear-| White River lice speculated that the moncyljing this afternoon: Not much} Moosonee . dropped from a passing plane.|change in temperature. Clear'S.S. Marie ..., |Winnipeg ..... Ce TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts|tonight. Friday mainly Sunny.|Sudbury ... i issued by the weather office at! Winds southwest 20 today, west-| Muskoka sebebeers | ¢jers today. Partly cloudy to-| Halifax { lthat on hearing of the approach) lof the black-uniformed aitack-|, Church Damage $1,500,000 This kind of balancing would) ontinue for many months or) even years while efforts con-) tinue to reduce and eliminate rivalries among the Laotian princes so tha the troops could be integrated gradually. IDEA NOT IDEAL This, the Americans consider, would be elss than the "'ideal" but it would be sufficient to After Blaze guarantee a measure of stability BUFFALO (AP)--A fire, ap-| ang prevent the reshaping of parently touched off by a bolt|Laos into a Communist spear- of lightning during a heavyjhead against South Viet Nam '\thunderstorm, caused an esti-/and Thailand. * 2, While this is the plan. the mated $1,500,000 damage to St. 4 nericans have in mind, there Michael's Roman Catholic;, great deal of 'question in h|Church near the downtown busi-/official and unofficial quarters ness section Wednesday night./on whether it would work. One The 94-year-old structure on|American observer, on becom- Washington Street was a roar-|ing acquainted with the idea, ing mass of flames, visible from/said it seemed like a U.S. fall- most of the business section of/back position, a strategy based the city. jon weakness. There were no injuries but Pi aeg vat SS ' teon:| 0 | j gevera) cases at smoke poison: reutralist Souvanna Phouma) ing were. reported. would not deteriorate into a EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES Civil Service of Canada *EMERGENCY PLANNING OFFICER, experienced Administra- tor, to co-ordinate emergency measures planning in accom- modetion control, emergency construction ond repair of buildings, services, harbour facilities, highways and bridges; preference in appointment to graduates in Science, Engi- neering or Architecture, Public Works, Ottawa. $11,000- $12,500. Competition 62-207. BACTERIOLOGICAL AND BIOLOGICAL RESEARCH POSI- TIONS, Virology, Tissue Culture, Physiology, Immunology, Fisheries Biology, Biologics, Manufacturing. National Health and Welfare, Fisheries and Agriculture. Up to $10,300. Circular 62-1401. SENIOR ASSISTANT ENGINEER, for hydrologic and hydraulic engineering studies of Canadian water resources at the Great Lakes St. Lawrence River Study Office, Northern Affairs and National Resources, Cornwall, Ont. Up to $10,300. Circular 62-1259. ARCHITECTS, for administration -- design, direction of pro- fessional and technical staff concerned with design and construction of public buildings. Public Works, Ottawa. $8220-11,800. Circular 62-1002. ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF FRENCH, Royo! Military College of Canoda, Kingston, Ont. Up to $8760. Circular 62- 1704. CHEMICAL ENGINEERS, for work on guided missiles and lubricants, National Defence, Ottawa. $7,320-$8400. Circular 62-1551. RESEARCH ENGINEER - FOOD PROCESSING, Mechanical or The fire was discovered while | povernment highly influenced| several units of the city's fire-/hy the Communists. And since) fighting equipment wWerethe Royal Laotian troops have battling a multi-alarm fire On| chown no taste for war, there the city's west side. would be no guarantee they) All off - duty firemen were|would become an effective bal- ordered to return to work andjance against the Reds. j officials summoned aid frOT |e jsurrounding communities. | | An unusually high number of| \lightning strokes--170 in two} jhours during two separate) 'storms--were recorded. | | The fire appeared to have} istarted in the 28-foot steeple of} /the church and spread rapidly. | The main roof collapsed two Observed Temperatures | Low overnight, High Wednesday) Dawson 68 Victoria 56 Edmonton ..ssseeee Regina 49 39 33 42 56 50 53 53 51 51 57 63 Special Weekly Message To Members Of CHAMBERS Fort William...... White River....... Kapuskasing ....- North Bay.. S. S. Marie. Chemical Engineer, experienced in design ond development of food processing equipment. Agriculture, Ottewa. $7320- $8400. Circular 62-1204, FIRE PREVENTION ENGINEER, experienced in fire protection engineering including inspection of buildings, waterworks systems, fire department operations and apparatus, ond fire alarm systems. Public Works, Ottawa, $7320-$8400. Circular 62-1206. INFORMATION OFFICERS, one experienced in agricultural journalism ($7260-$8340), the other in planning ond broadcasting television programmes ($6000-$6660) and a TECHNICAL EDITOR, with knowledge of illustrative and printing techniques ($6660-$7680), Agriculture, Ottawa. Circular 62-1964. ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICERS, Job Evaluation and Organization Analysis, experienced in matters concerning staff establish- ments, job evaluation, work measurement, job specifications, Transport and Public Works, Ottawa. $6660-$7680, FOOD CLUB Windsor London hours after firemen arrived. The business building on the west side was destroyed. The |six-storey brick building housed} the Sterling Bag and Burlap] Corporation and the Niagara| Trading and Belting Company.' 60 54 54 58 Quebec .. Fredericton poy. Circular 62-1906. COMPUTER SYSTEMS PROGRAMMER, experienced Program- mer to prepare flow charts, block diagrams for pay record programmes. Army Pay Unit, National Defence, Ottawa. Up to $6660. Circular 62-1104. LECTURERS IN ELECTRICAL AND MECHANICAL ENGINEER- ING, Royal Militory College of Canada, Kingston, Ont. Up to $6540. Circular 62-1705. Cliff Mills 48-Hour Special 1957 PONTIAC Laurentian Sedan Automatic, custom radio. Spotless $995 RS LTD. 725-6651 7 CLIFF MILLS MOTO 230 KING STREET WEST ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OFFICERS, to administer 'pro- grammes of selection, relocation and placement of Indian people; responsible placement experience, preferably uni- versity training in Social Sciences for Regina position and training and experience in forestry for Nanaimo, B,C. posi- tion, Citizenship and Immigraticn. 6420-$7140. Circular 62-877. *FURNITURE SPECIFICATIONS WRITER, four years' exper- ience in design, development, manufacture or quality con- trol of furniture or associated general stores. National Defence, Army, Ottowa. $4440-$5160. Competition 62-764. EDITOR, with good knowledge of English language ond writing ability. Information Division, Agriculture, Ottawo., $4080- $5160. Circular 62-1963. *LABORATORY TECHNICIANS, in Chemistry, Plan Sciences, Entomology, Microbiology, Medical Technology. Agriculture, Ottowa and Hull, $2970-$3420.. Competition 62-374. For details and application forms write IMMEDIATELY te Civil Service Commission, awa. For position marked *, details and application forms available at Post Oftices in major centres, National Employment Service Offices end Civil Service Commission Offices. Quote Competition or Circular Number as indicated.