14 The Guardian, H Thurs. Feb 13, 1964. 4 Jobless Figures Reviewed By ROBERT RICE OTTAWA tCP)——-Canada's la- bor force began the new year with an estimated 6.231.000 per- . sons at work and 466,000 un- employed. The jobless total at mid-Jan- uary was down 75,000 from the year-earlier count. but up 120, 000 between December and Jan- uary. The mid-winter increase In‘ unemployment was described‘ as “normal for is time of year" in a joint report issued Wednesday by the federal labor department and the Dominion Bureau of Statistics. The report was based on a survey of 35,000 households across Canada for the we ended Jan. 18. Figures are es- timates, not precise totals. As a percentage of the labor force. unemployment was seven substantial droi; 0 January. & ad-‘ Justed, the unemployment rate was 4.9 per cent. the same as in December. A year earlier it was 5.9 per cent. Employment showed a sharp jump over the total at the starti of 1963——up by 275.000. or 4. l per cent. to 6,331,000. Since September. employment each: month has been well ahead of; the comparable period last-’ year. FORESTRY HELPS Continuing strength in goods- producing industries — chiefly‘ manufacturing, forestry and: residential construction — havej kept more men at work than is i usual during the winter months,l the report said. An estimated 4,416,000 men were employed last month, up 143, , or 3.3 per cent, over - earlier employment count. Over the last. five years. in comparison. the average an- nual rate of increase in male employment has been 1.4 per c nt e . Employment of women con- tinued at a high level as well-- 1.815.000 women at work com- pared with 1.683.000 in January last year. ‘ Regionally. employment was up considerably from last year in all regions except the Atlan- tic, where it was virtually un- changed. The increases ranged from 4.4 per cent in Ontario to 6.7 per cent in British Colum- . a. The decline in unemployment over the year was shared by all 1 regions. but e Atlantic area j still had the highest jobless rate -12.6 per cent of its labor force compared with the lowest rate 4 of 4.7 per cent on the Prairies. Iowa Farmer Tells Russians To Keep Trying By GEORGE SYLVERTSEN MOSCOW iAPi — Iowa corn farmer Roswell Garst has told the Russians they will not catch American farmers. but advised them to keep trying anyway. Garst. a personal friend of Soviet Premier Khrushchev. en- ‘ couraged the Russians to follow the American lead in farming‘ ‘ a 3,000-word letter to Soviet agricultural officials now meet- ing in the Kremlin. Izvestia published the letter Wednesday 1. o g e t h e r with speeches made at the third day of the Soviet Communist party‘: , central committee meeting on 4 farm problems. ' note said that altliough “we cannot agree with all the con- clusinns of Mr. Garst. espe- cially in relation to his evalua- tion of some politic mo- ments." his views on farm tech- gology “deserves great atten-. on The Coon Rapids farmer said I he had travelled extensively . through the Soviet Union and,‘ East Europe in the at nine‘ years. "1 saw that we are far. far4 ahead of the agriculture of East .‘ Europe," he wrote. 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