Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Aug 1965, p. 4

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4 i I She Oshawa Zimes Published by Canadian Newspapers Limited 86 King St. E., Oshawa, Ontario T, L. Wilson, Publisher . THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 1965 -- PAGE 4 Oshawa Shows The Way In Collection Of Taxes The reprimand delivered this week by , Municipal Affairs Minister Spooner. to Ontario municipalities over what he termed their "sloppy tax collecting procedures' pinpoints & serious problem. He said it was costing them thousands of dollars in interest on money borrowed to tide them over, The communities suffering most are those which can least afford it. Mr. Spooner said the smaller com- munities (those with populations 'under 5,000) collect only $74 of every $100 levied. Oshawa, of course, does not fall {n the category criticized by Mr. Bpooner. The Motor City, in fact, sets a fine example for the munici- palities in difficulty to follow, For 'each of the last two years the city has collected close to 98 per cent of its tax levy. The lion's share of the credit goes to City Treasurer Frank Markson end Tax Collector Clarence Cox for Oshawa's enviable record in this field of ciyic finances. The sugges- tions made by Mr. Spooner to the Ontario Municipal Convention this week were anticipated by several years by Mr. Markson and his cole leagues, The municipal affairs min- {ster recommended the early strik- ing of tax rates, preliminary. tax bills and the establishment of capital and working .reserve funds. All these money-saving procedures have been instituted by Oshawa, There's always bound to be dis- satisfaction -- sometimes justified ~~ with the amount of taxes levied, It is however good to know that the job of collecting taxes is being done efficiently, Efficiency in the conduct of any aspect of civic affairs is always one of the surest means of keeping taxes in line, It will also gain the appreciation of another imortant group in the city --- those who pay the taxes! A Kind Word For Press External Affairs Minister Paul Martin had a kind word -- quite a few of them, as a matter of fact -- the other day for daily news- papers. Canada's daily newspapers stand at the crossroads of all information and perform a vital and special role that other forms of communication cannot do, Mr. Martin said, Further, he commended the press on maintaining its position in the field of foreign policy where news is meaningless unless related to analysis and useless unless it con- tributes to the public understanding of what is happening in the world. Canadian newspapers are aware of their responsibilities in informing the public on international affairs and the role the country plays in them. Now Mr. Martin is an acknow- ledged master of political diplomacy. He was addressing a meeting at- The Oshawa Sines e A ag ob Publisher » ROOKE, General Manager CG. 4, MeCONECHY Editor The Oshawa Times corinne the Oshawa Timer lestoblished 1871) andthe ithy Gerette ond Chronicle esteblished 1863) |s published daily fundeys and Statutory holideys excepted) Membera of Canedion Daily Newspaper Publish. at Association, The Canodion Press, Audit Bureeu of Circulation and the Ontario Provincial Dailies Amociation, The Conadion Press is exclusively entitied to the use of republication of @il news despatched in the po credited to It or to The Associoted Press or Reuters, and alee the iocol news published therein, All rights of apecial dee patches are also rese Offices Thomson Building, 425 University A Torenta, Ontario; 640 Cathcart Street, venue, Montreal, P.O SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by corrieras in Oshawa, Whitby, Aine, Pickering, Bowmanville, Brooklin, Port Perry, Prince Albert, Meple Grove, Hampton, Frenchman's Bay, Liverpes!, faunton, Tyrone, Dunbarton, Enniskillen, Oreno, Leskerd, Brougham, Burketen, Claremont, Manchester, Pentypes!, and Newcastle, not over SOc, per week, By moll in Province of Ontarie outside carrier delivery ares, $15.00 year, Other provinces and Commonweaith Countries, $18.00 per yeor, U.S.A, and foreign $27.00 per year, tended by editors and publishers during a teachers' seminar at Kit- chener. And there's also strong likelihood of an election in the near future. With this set of circum- stances there'll undoubtedly be those who may attempt to discount Mr, Martin's remarks by asking how he could be possibly have said other- wise. Mr, Martin's long public record quickly demolishes such a conten- tion, He is not one of those who fawns on or flays the press in keep- ing with political purpose at a given time. Over the years he has re- cognized the responsibilities of the press and given his opinion, critical or otherwise, on how he felt they were being met. The external affairs minister's remarks at Kitchener should not be construed as pertaining only to the metropolitan dailies. There seems to be a tendency sometimes to judge newspapers, like breakfast foods, on their bulk, The provinica] dailies are also providing their readers with more and more background and interpretive information on foreign affairs. The Times, for instance, carries a regular budget of such important features. And, of course, the provincial newspapers do this while maintaining -- their prime function as hometown publi- cations of covering the local scene. Other Editors' Views INCURABLE HAMS From Stratford a correspondent rtports politics, farming and the theatre have one thing in common, Some hams can never be cured, --(Hamilton Spectator) ATHABASCA GAMBLE $190 Million Invested -- In Bid To Tap Oil Sands By RON MacDONALD MILDRED LAKE, Alta, (CP) Great Canadian Oil Sands Ltd. is gambling $190,000,000 that its key will fit the door to one of the world's largest oil reserves, At a mile-square site on the Athabasca 'oil sands here, the company is constructing the fa- cilities for extracting crude oil from the sands and sending it by pipeline to Edmonton, 280 miles southwest, where it will go into the Interprovineial pipe- line for the trip to Ontario re- fineries, Great Canadian-plans to use a water flotation process to ex- tract .oll-from the sands that sprawl! over 13,000 square miles of northeastern Alberta wilder- ness, smelling like a newly- asphalted road on a hot day. Oil slicks cover roadside polls in this area and in places where banks have been cut away by construction crew, oil oozes forth The Alberta Oil and Gas Con- servation Board, overseer of the province's oil industry, es- timates the sands contain 700,- 000,000,000 barrels of ertide, The Great Canadian site now employes about 900 construction workers and the work force will rise to about 1,700 in a year, About 500 permanent workers will run the plant when. it. is completed Construction of the plant, with its processing building, 10 mas- sive storage tanks and 350-foot stack, is going ahead rapidly on a site cut out of the poplar and spruce forests that line the banks of the Athabasca, GIANT SCOOPS Nearby is a pilot plant where 80 technicians are working the bugs out of the water flotation process devised more than 10 years ago by the Alberta Re- search Council and private in- dustry, Great Canadian plans to strip- mine the oil sands on its 3,800- acre lease, The oil-laden sand, an average of 60 feet below the surface, will be scooped up by two giant $1,000,000 buckwheel excavators and carried by a conveyor belt at the rate of 5,000 tons an hour to the processing plant. At the plant it will be mixed with steam and not water to form a thick slurry. When the slurry is placed in a separation tank the oil floats to the top as a froth while-the heavy sand sinks fo the bottom. The oil froth is skimmed off the top by revolv- ing wiper blades that look like huge windshield wipers. Further processing will re- move the last of the sand, Coke js then extracted to fuel the plant and after sulphur and hy- drogen is removed, the product left is light grayity crude; The daily output will be 45,* 000 barrels-of oil, the maximum production initially allowed by> the Alberta government, about 875 tons of sulphur, 3,000 tons of coke and more than 50,000 tons of sand, The sulphur will be shipped out by rail and it is hoped even- tually to establish a glass plant in the area to utilize the sand. The annual operating cost will be about $7,500,000, with another $6,500,000 for payroll and $14,- 000,000 for taxes and interest on debt, NUCLEAR SUGGESTION Total investment will be about $100,000,000, with $67,500,000 from Sun Oil; $12,500,000 from a debenture issue to Alberta resi- dents (initially, one $100 deben- ture to each applicant); and the remainder from _ institutional borrowing. First crude is to flow through the pipeline in September, 1967, 180 years after voyageur Peter Pond first recorded the presence of the oil sands in this area and noted that the local Indians used the gooey substance to caulk their canoes, Since Pond's discovery, many a scheme has been proposed to break the tight embrace of the sands and oil, including a pro- posal by Richfield Oil Corp., Im- perial Oil Ltd, and Cities Serv. ice Athabasca Inc, to use a nu- clear blast One plant near here in the 1930s produced bitumen surfac- ing that was used on roads in Jasper National Park and Ed- monton Lesage Position 'Illogical' On Federal Court Authority Montreal Le Devoir -- The Quebec cabinet has decided to send Justice Minister Claude Wagner to plead Que- bec's constitutional rights, challenged by the expropria- tion powers of the National Capital Commission, before the Supreme Court of Canada, Premier Lesage and his gov- ernment thus repeat their il- logical position on the author- ity of this federal court... . The litigation is of great importance for Quehec, be- cause the zone in which the NCC is to create a_ setting worthy of the country's capi tal includes territory within Quebec, notably the city of Hull, If an earlier court's. de- cision is upheld in appeal, our province will have lost a part of her jurisdiction there, in the manner of town planning, for example if the British North America Act is extended to the develop- ment of the federal capital, overriding the powers the provinces have so far held, the idea of a Washington- type federally-controlled capi+ tal, its land taken from the provinces of Ontario and Que- bec, would partially have be- come a reality, The idea naturally arouses strong oppo- sition in Quebec. In the conflict over under- water mineral rights, Mr. Le- sage rightly refused to see the constitutional problem handled by the Supreme Court. It was a political rather than a legal question, he said, and at the federal - provincial conference Prime Minister Pearson con- Ce ee s ENDLESS SURVEY OF SURVEYS .. . un A onetime agate tt sented to political negotiations while awaiting the Supreme Court decision Ottawa wants, Mineral rights are import- ant to Quebec's autonomy and integrity, but so is the plan- ning of a part of the province which includes her fifth most populous city, Is the second question less political or more legal than the first? ... And yet, unless Mr, Wagner is go- ing to contest the Supreme Court's jurisdiction in this fed- eral + provincial conflict, Mr. Lesage is admitting the court's jurisdiction in the matter, Quebec opposition to the Supreme Court's dealing with constitutional disputes is not a question of distinction be- tween things political and legal. It has two specific bases, The first is that the Supreme Court is not federal in nature, bul an organ of the central power, its judges named exclusively by Ottawa. The second is that when the Canadian Parliament abol- ished appeals to the British Privy Council in 1949, it gave the Supreme Court a role of court of last resort which it didn't have in 1867, To settle constitutional disputes over provincial -- especially Quebee rights, we should demand the creation of a true federal court which is not an organ of the central government, Mineral rights and the rights of the city of Hull... both require settlement by a court whose members are not appointed exclusively by one of the parties to the dispute.-- Paul Sauriol, (Aug. 11) paar . . . CAUSEWAY MADE IT Hopes Rekindled For Chignecto Canal By DON. LeBLANC AMHERST, N.S, (CP) The decision to build a causeway- bridge-tunne! linking Prince Ed- ward Island with the mainiand has rekindled hopes of Maritim ers for a canal across the Isth- mus of Chignecto Many had regarded the two projects in the same light -- nothing more than dreams--un- til Prime Minister Pearson an- nounced July §& plans to £0 ahead with the Northumberland Strait crossing. Now visions of a cana] across the 17-mile stretch of land between nearby Cumber- land Basin in the Bay of Fundy and Baie Verte in the Northum- berland Strait appear more re- alistiec The Prince Edward Island- New Brunswick link-up, to cost $148,000,000,. was discussed be- tore Confederation. The Chis- necto Canal, cost of which would run more than $100,000,000, dates back to a plan devised in 1688 by Jacques de Meulles, local administrator in New France Both projects were the sub- jects of a seemingly endiess series of feasibility and engi- - peering surveys. And there are probably more in store for the Chignecto Canal PROVED FEASIBLE Since de Meulles suggested excavation of @ ditch 10 te 13 feet wide and four feet deep nearly 200 years ago--he said the strong Bay of Fundy tides would widen and deepen the canal--there have been at least a doren surveys and studies Not one of them disputes its feasibility and only the Young commission in 1875 and the Sur- veyer commission in 1934 ex- pressed doubt about the eco- nomic aspect of its construction, However, these two surveys co- incided with the depressions of the 1870s and 1930s, A natural extension of the St Lawrence Seaway, a waterway through the isthmus would cut 700 miles off the Montreal-Saint John, N.B., run and save 300 miles on a similar trip to the eastern seaboard This is what GH. Ketchum, a railwayman, had in mind when he launched a plan to build the Chignecto Ship Rail- way in 1875. A company was formed, plans prepared and $5,500,000 in cap- ital raised, much of it in Eng- land. Work began in 1889 but the company was beset by problems even in the first year of con- struction. An unprecedented rainfall caused near flood condi- tions in this area throughout the summer, an earlier survey had overlooked extremely borry conditions in. one section and there was e@ shortage of man- power, Railway building was at its peak and the labor situation was desperate WENT BANKRUPT Work progressed despite the unexpected setbacks but by the autumn of 1891 the company was bankrupt. The railway was within one year and $1,750,000 of completion although the com- pany's deadline was still three years away. At this point docks at either end of the railway were nearing completion, ties had been laid for much of the 17 miles and rails laid for all but five miles, Buildings to house the machin- ery for lifting ships on to over- sized flatcars were built and all that was necessary was instal- lation of the hydraulic machines and the excavation of channels leading to the two docks. The lifting equipment was already on the scene. Much of the railway bed is stil visible, especially at the ends, but the centre section has disappeared into a bog. With the company's failure, the idea of carrying. ships piggyback was forgotten and engineers again turned to thoughts of a canal The idea of a Chignecto Ca- nal has grown from de Meulles' concept of a ditch to include the harnessing. of the Bay of Fundy's high tides for power generation, The power project, which would generate about 1,000,000 kilowatts, would cost an estimated $325,000,000 CAN SUPPORT DAMS Atlantic Development Board engineers have already deter. mined that the bottom of the Bay of Fundy could support dams for a massive tidal-water power project. At the same time, other engineers say such a power development in the Bay of Fundy would decrease the cost of the canal Most Maritimers. consider a short cut through the isthmus of paramount importance to the region's development, For this reason the Chignecto Canal Committee, a group of politi- licians, economists and busi- nessmen, continues to press for it Their feelings jibe with those of Premier R. L. Stanfield of Nova Scotia who says low-cost transportation is essential to the economic development of the At- lantic provinces "The Chignecto Canal will provide a waterway through which can flow the commerce of the Atlantic region,"' he says. "It will provide also, in con- junction with the St. Lawrence Seaway, a water route from the Eastern Seaboard to the mar- kets of Central Canada." '2 MAGNIFICENT MEN IN FLYING MACHINES eae Aco Italy Enjérs Crucial Phase Of Campaign Against Mafia 15 YEARS AGO Aug. 26, 1950 Recurring outbreaks of van- dalism of the interior of Rit- son Road School had resulted in the closing down for the sum- mer of the adjacent swimming pool, William Sowers was appointed head of the Seventh Day Adventist educational work at the Oshawa Missionary Col- lege. 30 YEARS AGO Aug. 26, 1935 Duncan Campbell, Oshawa photographer, was honored by having two pictures hung in the photography salon at the Cana- dian National Exhibition, Fire during threshing opera- tions destroyed a large barn on the farm of W. D. Dyer, Columbus Famed Fir Lost Atop Siwash Rock VANCOUVER (CP) -- A fir tree immortalized by Indian poet Pauline Johnson has come to an ignominious end, The ancient and twisted Doug- las fir atop Siwash Rock is a victim of birds and unauthor- ized climbers on the rock on which Miss Johnson's ashes are scattered, Miss Johnson retold in one of her poems the Indian legend of the rock and its tree, The rock was a famed Squam- ish band warrior named Si- wash, He was turned to stone by the Three Tyees, three fear- some men in a war canoe who caught him bathing in their path centuries ago. The tree grew out of the bough with which Siwash was rubbing his body and which the angry Tyees stuck in his head, The tree became a landmark here and was featured proudly in tourist brochures and posters. The rock is a_ showpiece of downtown Stanley Park. J. Alan De Bou, assistant park board superintendent, says the tree was in poor shape for years, damaged by humans and by birds which nested, in its branches. "Se Mr. De Bou says there is hope that seedlings struggling for survival on the rock will re- place the landmark, BIBLE And_he said unto them, Take heed and beware of covetous- ness: for a man's life consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth, -- Luke 12:15. To overcome covetousness, re- member that before God we are confessors, not complainants. By JOHN ORGAN PALERMO, Sicily (Reuters) Italy's fight to eliminate the stranglehold of the Mafia in western Sicily is about to enter a crucial phase. Two big question marks hang over the biggest effort since the days of Mussolini to crush the Sicilian secret socicty. The first question concerms a major coup by the Italian police in August in arresting a group of alleged Malia and Cosa Nos- tra bosses on charges of con- spiring for criminal purposes, Those seized in the swoop in- cluded 75 - year.- old Frank (Three Fingers) Coppola, once deported from _ the States; 73 - year - old Giuseppe Genco Russo, reputed to be un- crowned king of the Sicilian Mafia, and 74-year-old Frank Garofalo, Their names have been pub- licly bandied about as reputed Mafia leaders for many years, Rut little or nothing has ever been proved against them, Now the question being asked here is whether the courts this time have sufficient evidence to convict them, The police say that they have built up a fat dossier proving new and extensive links be- tween the Sicilian Mafia and the U.S, crime syndicate, Cosa Nos- tra, The police also say that lead- ing underworld figures on both sides of the Atlantic used Sicily as a springboard for. smuggling drugs and tobacco between the Middle East, Europe and the United States, POOR BASE Some people heré believe the financial power of the Mafia in Sicily, a comparatively poor and underdeveloped Mediterran- ean island, is derived from the rich yields of iptyrnational nar- cotics smuggling and links with the American underworld, The Mafia has a_ different face in the United States from that in its native Sicily. But in recent years there have been increasing similarities The Mafia in the U.S., mainly Cosa Nostra, is an enormous crime syndicate described by Robert Kennedy when he was U.S, attorney-general as "one of the biggest businesses in Amer- ica." On its 'home .ground in Sicily the Mafia is a complicated and baffling problem, so extensive in its ramifications that some people even describe it as a way of life, In the western part of Sicily, stretching from Palermo across to Agrigento, the Mafia has been dispensing patronage and operating protection rackets with apparent impunity for many years, a self-styled '"hon- ored society' protected by the traditional "omerta,"' or refusal TODAY IN HISTORY By THE CANADIAN PRESS August 26, 1965... . Te archers of the Eng- lish army won the battle of Crecy 619 years ago today --in 1346 -- defeating by their superior speed and tactics a French army four times larger than the raiders, The success of this campaign, the second of the Hundred Years' War brought England the French port of Calais, which it was to hold for more than 200 years. How- ever the English never var- ied their marauding tactics and, within a generation, all their conquests except Cal- ais and a strip of Gascony coastline were gone SS B.C.--Julius Caesar's first (and unsuccessful) in- - vasion of Britain began i914 -- German armies Pillage Belgian town of Louvain. First World War Fifty years ago today--in 1915 -- heavy snow slowed up operations in the mount- ain districts of the Austro- Italian front; Squadron Commander A. W , Bigs- worth, RN, became the first man ever to sink a submarine by air attack. Second World War Twenty-five years ago to- day -- in 190 -- No. 1 Squadron, RCAF, went into 'action for the first time, shooting down three gsGerman aircraft for one Canadian pilot killed; the RAF bombed Berlin, Turin, Milan, and airfields in France and the Low Count- ries; German bombs killed three schoolgirls in neutral Eire. university United of local people to talk to the police, While the Mafia in the United States operates as a highly or- ganized gangster network, in Sicily it is more a mysterious and hidden power, operating in town and country and preying on peasants and businessmen, MAFIA MODERNIZED In recent years the Mafia in Sicily has moved more into modern protection rackets, fol- lowing the example of its gang- ster kin across the Atlantic, and concentrated on trade and in- dustry--building and contract- ing, electrical household appli- ances, garages, food markets. As bloody gang wars broke out among Mafia members for control of new rackets, the po- lice found themselves with prob- lems of increasing complexity. The climax came in 1963. On June 30 of that year nine persons, including seven police, were killed in Palermo by Ma- fia booby traps which exploded in parked cars, Public anger was aroused, Umberto Madia, an energetic Milanese from the north, took over command of a special Pa- lermo police squad. Since then he has rounded up hundreds of Mafia suspects. Mafia killings have dropped from 107 in 1960 to 39 last year The other major development in 1963 came on the political front, After long delays an Ital- jan parliamentary commission representing all parties opened an 'inquiry into the Mafia and how to eradicate it. The parliamentary commijs- Sion, which is still at w6¥k, raises the second big question: whether the commission will really lift the lid off the Mafia and expose its criminal and po- litical ramifications even though this may cause embarrassment fo some powerful men, international Unions Strong OTTAWA (CP)--The domin- ance of international unions on the Canadian labor scene is em- phasized in the statistical re- port of the Corporations and Labor Unions Returns Act, The report, covering 1962 fi- nancial operations, shows the big international unions far out in front. in terms of member- ship and money. Of the 189 unions reporting under the federal act, 95 were international with parent head- quarters in the United States These 95 had a total mem- bership of 995,903 or 65 per cent of all unionized workers in Canada. Their outlay in wages to Canadian staff was $7,677,000 for the year com- pared to $2,873,000 fpr national unions and $700, for civil service organizations, The internationals also paid out $2,575,000 in strike benefits and $2,360,000 in health and welfare bonefits, National: un- ions reported $305,000 in strike benefits and $38,000 for 'health and. welfare. OTTAWA REPORT Wizards In Waters Of World By PATRICK NICHOLSON OTTAWA -- Apart from our hockey teams Canadian athletes . have taken unflatteringly low positions: in international cham: pionships. But suddenty our . Swimmers have made us, con- sidering our: population, the wizards of the world waters. In the British amateur swim: ming championships' at Black- pool earlier this 'month, Canada placed in the firgt three in all six men's events and in all three women's events except the two breaststroke races; in four free - style and. butterfly stroke races, Canadians 'won two of the first three places, Assistance by the government financed National Fitness and Sports Council has done much to make this success possible, DISGUSTED WITH STRIKE A Montrealer, disgusted by the postal strike, has announced that she will not pay her income tax "on the grounds dhat the government does not provide the service for which I am pay- ing." This action, she asserts, "is the most potent weapon a private Canadian citizen can have." The critical taxpayer is Mrs. R. W. Stedman, daughter of the late great Liberal cabi- net minister, \Rf. Hon, C, D, Howe. RACE 3,500 MILES "Mr. Canada," alias John Fisher, the Centennial commis- sioner, tells me that the Alberta proposal for a cross « Canada canoe race, from the Rocky Mountains over 3,500 miles of river, lake and portage to Mont- real, has now been accepted, This three-month event, to. honor the achievements of the voy- ageurs, will be one of the giant spectaculars of centennial cele- brations in 1967, Mr. Fisher officiated at the start of a "dry run' experimen- tal race between eight six-man canoes, which left North Bay on August 9 and will finish at Gan- anoque, 600 miles away down the Trent waterway, Aug. 29. The competing crews come from Ontario, New Brunswick, Alberta, the Yukon and the Northwest Territories and in- clude one Indian crew and one Eskimo crew, Before the start of the race, each canoeist was presented with a two-foot long package - labelled "The World's Largest Chocolate Bar" weighing two pounds, by George Metcalf, President of Loblaw's groceter- jas. The weight of these monster candies was an insignificant ad- dition to the load of canoe, Sleeping bags, fry - pans, food and clothing which has to be carried over every portage by the crew, averaging one ton per a, or 333 pounds per pad- er. WESTMINSTER WHISPERS During a recent visit to Eng- land, I was invited by some MPs to enjoy a drink (alcoholic, officially served -- unlike Ot- tawa!) on the terrace overlook- ing the spectacular view of the River Thames, followed by lunch in the elegant parlia- mentary restaurant, There, as I had done in the Pubs of London, I heard talk of a new scandal echoing the Pro- fumo case in some ways and involving a person well known in public life. This suggests that the internationally known man has been wooing his secretary for several years, and recently her husband was offered a sub: stantial sum--six figures in dol- lars--to abandon a divorce ac- tion and leave the country, The moral to this story is that stiff libel laws and punitive ver- dicts are having the unhealthy effect of muzzling Britain's en- terprising news ferrets. If they established the facts one way or the other, either the wide- spread public talk would be hushed, or public indignation would bring the episode to an- other end, AID TO VIET NAM Despite military contributions from other countries, Canada's aid to the U.S. in Viet Nam is limited to medical supplies. Dentures, say the cynics, for~ the benefit of the Yankees who are getting kicked in the teeth, POINTED PARAGRAPHS "Youths will soon take over the world," says a socialogist. Considering the condition of the world and the attitudes of many of the youths, one might say they deserve each other, Just as you have observed, statisticians learn a lot that, the rest of us have known all along. For example, one of them recently announced that a check of 700 representative types of people showed that women are broader-beamed than men, For rodding and chaining inatrumentmon in prepering SURVEY RODMAN CITY OF OSHAWA Selery Renge---34,193.00 . $4,455.00 (40 hr. week) Salery Renge--Nov. 1, 1965---$4,445.00 ~ $4,934.00 (40 hy. week) May ; ros sheets, reduce survey nétes Applications ciese 3:00 p.m, Tuesdey, August 31, 1945. Apply giving full, particulars of qualifications, experience, te: Personnel Officer, City Nell, Oshewe, Onterte, operate transit and level. onsist

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