IOOUTI GATEEI LONDON (CF) - The Boy Scouts' international bureau an- nounced that the world Jamboree at Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ont. next August, will be followed by the l5th international conference of scout leaders at Niagara Falls. Ont. HI'MII.ER RIB I Truck Tire rum . uld b sup” g rob L C0memUNIl-Y l'l'3TEh0USE 33 eD0i-IKIBS . , g e and then to Edmonton for red by They would, with ease, charge Whig: gggld magenta with human” Station is filled to capacity. The W:';l5c3i'l”eb:)'L1::7'I”i::g::- 1"; assembly, . rates. figure our. interest, prepare beings genial manager Mr. Wilfred Cof- akin h Ygk ,h. by I Seventeen months had elapscdi payrolls and write cheques or in- ..The' om” wm.kc'r of tomorrow 1111 Of 53V388 HITIJOUI” W111 IIIVE Unnedmgttte "A03; Igelgted 1:9 when the refinery went "on voices. from a stub of tape, and Wm not only be H nmuuy " A "cw at Work izrndlns early in wppfy me? (gr m'm31fam.:ed tome: stream" July 17. 1948 and the Electronic Brain May By THE CANADIAN PRESS The electronic "brain" may re- volutionize the office of the future even more than the typewriter and adding machine changed the office of the past. This picture was given by J. A. Calder. president of the Canadian Ma.nufacturers' Association, in an address Tuesday to the Montreal chapter of the National Office Management Association. He foresaw. perhaps within five or eight years. big offices operat. lng with electronic devices which would be able. within a matter of seconds. to cope with the complete handling of hundred of accounts. even issue them for mailing at specific times. Office management must start now, said Mr. Calder, to prepare Revolutionize Office of Future. CMA Head Says machines would require new skills and perhaps completely new con- cepts. For a start. office procedures should be streamlined and simpli- fied. because the new machines. though capable of performing most intricate and involved calculations and processes, must be fed with material both simple and free from exceptions. The office "brain" might be too expensive for every office. but big. ger businesses would need them. and small offices might arrange part-time rental arrangements. The new era. however, would not mean that the office of the the machines. but will need a bet- ter all-round education-in some kinds of offices a university edu- savage Harbour Mr. John Maclnnis of Point de Roche was a business visitor to Charlottetown on Saturday. senator and Mrs. J. P. Mac- Intyre of Savage Harbour were recent visitors to Indian River where they were the guests of fri.nds. , Miss Ann Mclnnis of Point de Roche was a welcome visitor to Savage Harbour during the week where she was the guest of Min Thelma Macxay. 1-1allowe'en has come and gone. The odd trick was played of course, but as far as can be learned no damage was done. Potato digging has been about completed in this area and the the week and very soon the first shipments will be on their way. Two motor boats arrived at Sav- age Harbour from Rustico on EDMONTON led the length of the continent now produces 25,000 barrels of oil daily on the east Edmonton site it soon will share with a 315,000,000 lub- ricating plant. Imperial Oil Limited's Edmon- ton refinery started its last move early in 1947 when the company brought in a Ledur: well at the start of the Alberta oil boom. When other wells followed. it was clear that Edmonton was the logical place for a refinery. Company officials reckoned it would take three years to build a new refinery and materials during the Second World War. .m.,.j..i.j.j;.. War Surplus Refinery Now Producing I 25.000 Barrels Daily At Edmonton (CP)-A wsr-sur- plus oil refinery which has travel- Many of the refinery's units had been hauled from Corpus Christi. Tex, Pinedale, Ca.. and others from Hamilton, Ont. It was pur- chased from the U. 5. war sur- plus commission for 51,000,000. TRANSPORT FEAT One of the greatest transport- ation feats of northern Canada be- gan for the refinery's trip to Ed- monton. Parts of it were trucked 919 miles to Dawson Creek and then by rail to Edmonton. Others too large for road shipment were hauled to Skagway. Alaska, ship- ped dmvn the coast to Vancouver, total cost was 58.700000. But 19 valuable months of refining opera- tion had been saved. 'i rrtday, November 5. 1954 The Guardian at cammew cope with the” mac” The refinery originally produced for such changes. for the new A. -. incs and to keep up with the in- creasing complexity of business methods and operations," said Mr. LOW PRICES i31'5 . our me - I6) IAIGAINS IN OTHER SIZES TOOI C ome in soon! ioox Ioa YNII L-""”";R'"T -mansion" or ouauvv MOTORS no CHARLOTTETOWN Says insects Show World Getting Warmer SAULT STE MARIE, Ont. (CF) A scientist at an entomological meeting here says a shifting in- sect population indicates the world is getting warmer. Prof. E. M. Walker. who until recently was head of the depart- ment of zoology of the University of Toronto. said Tuesday insects once common to southern Ontario are now found farther north. while new species there are immigrants from more southerly areas. Increases of cod population for north of orginal limits also points to a warming of the sea. the pro- fessor said. Temperature records for south- ern Ontario show the mean annual temperature has been rising dur- ing the last 6 years at a rate esti- mated at three to four degrees a century, he said. Prof. Walker said the duration of the temperature increase is not known. urabie in decades and even if the present change is only a short nne. it will be long enough to be (yf great interest in humanity," he said. "Climatic fluctuations are mess-Int in Little Sands over cud. Calder. Little Sands ..'Miss Ardlth Dixon. R. N., of the P. E. Island Hospital is spend- ing two weeks vacation at her home in Little Sands. Miss Marlene Dixon, teacher at Eldon, arrived home by bus on Friday evening to spend the week- end with her perents, Mr. and Mrs. James Dixon and Miss Ardith, her sister. Mrs. Angus Matheson of Glen William was visiting relatives in Little Sands on Friday at the home or Mr. M. A. Mat-Kenzie. Her daugh- te er at the Airport school at Sum- merside accompanied by Miss Mac- Innis. day for Chipman, N. B.. to spend the week-end. r, Miss Barba'f'a Matheson. teach- another teacher left Fri- One of Mr. S. J. Reilly's trucks was loaded with a large load of potatoes in Little Sands. Monday morning and left for Nova Scotia. Miss Mary MacPherson teacher Union Road was at her home the week- The many friends here of Don- nie Livuigstone regret to hear of VUI. NIZING .. ,. omliiu -.--:2--mm-:m IIRY I2lEANlNIi his serious truck accident in Nova Scotia last week. Donnie is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Living- stone of I-Iopefield and our thoughts are with the parents and family in their anxiety. We wish him a speedy recovery. Sincere sympathy goes out to the family of A. B. Vincent Buchanan of Eldon. who died one iiour after a truck accident, in GARAGE MONTAGUE CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE SERVICE 4 CUDMORE'S DRY CLEANERS 120 Kent 80. Phone 4922 s New brightness! New long-life shine! 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Mr. and Mrs. Archie MacLean and their daughter, Ethel. Murray River visited Sands on Sunday. relatives in Little Mr. George 1-1. Blue accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Alex Blue and Monday for the purpose of towing the small clam-shell dredge No. 25 back to Rustlco. No. 25 has been digging at Savage Harbour for the past several weeks and her work here having been completed she will now move on. It is un- derstood that several boats from the harbour will assist in the tow when weather conditions make such a venture feasible. workmen aided by two Govern- ment road maintainers are busily engaged in making needed repairs and alternations to the Northside Road. That is the road running from Gunn's Corner beyond Tem- ple Murphy's to the shore. Mr. Valentine Maclntyre, local road- master is in charge of the work. Trees and undergrowth which served no useful purpose are being removed and it is hoped that now this important part of the high- way may be served by the snow- plows when necesary. An ov:;'low crowd greeted the opening card game at Savage Har- bour school on Thursday evening. Play was keen but far from one- sided. The veteran player Joseph MacKay was the high winner of the night but his superiority was disputed to the last trick. A fine group from Mt. Stewart and an- other from Dredge No. 12 lent greater interest to the competi- tion. However the pasteboard twirlers from Point de Roche and Savage Harbour were foremost among the best. A delicious lunch was served by the members of the Women's Institute. under whose sponsorship the entertain- ment was held. -C1-I. Too Many Bombs Could Produce Race of Monsters VANCOUVER (CF)-A leading Canadian physicist says a race of human monsters could be created by nuclear poisoning of the earth's atmosphere as a result of an ”un- due number" of hydrogen and atom bomb explosions. Dr. George Volkoff. physics pro- fessor at the University of British Columbia, said in an interview Tuesday night that too high a rate of radioactivity in the atmos- phere could cause changes in hu- man reproductive cells. thus caus- ing the birth of freaks. He was commenting on a state- ment made earlier Tuesday by Prime Minister Churchill that an "undue number" of atom and hydrogen bomb explosions might have serious effects on the earth's atlnosphere for about 5,000 years. Dr. Voikoff said the bulk of ra- dioactivity resultlng from a nu- clear explosion is short-lived. ”But . . . it piles up depending on the number of bombs you ex- plode." he continued. ”Each time we explode a hydrogen or atom bomb We add to the atmosphere something we can never subtract." He added the harmful effect on human reproductive cells would 6.000 barrels a day but its present capacity is 25,000 barrels. it now is equipped with a 7.800-barrel-a- day fluid catalytic cracking unit. Near the refinery, just east of Edmonton, workmen are busy con- structing a 315,000,000 lubricating all plant scheduled to be in opera- tion within a year. The plant will have a capacity of 2,000 barrels daily and will manufacture 55 dif- ferent kinds of automotive and ira- dusirial lubricating oils. HEROIC SERVICE LONDON (CF) - A memorial to 414 men and women of the Lon- don fire service killed on duty during the Second World War is to be erected in the Lambeth dis- Than FUEL OIL and STOVE OIL Delivery WHEN YOU CALL DIAL IN CHARLOTTETOWN. 8504, 8505 IN SUMMERSIDE. 2615 IN MONTAGUE, 109 trict. W; A extend over gr-m-rations. daughter Lila. all of Little Bands visited at the home of Mrs. Bluels sister. Mrs. Rowan Sencabaugh, Oak Valley, on Sunday. ' Mr. and Mrs. George 1-1. Blue of Little Sands received congratula- tions on Saturday, October 30. This being their 25th wedding annivers- ary. Mr. Peter O. 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Una or two evenings e weelr, In thousands of Canadian homes, doors open wide. From then: come young men who have accepted full responsibility as tree Canadians . . . the responsibility of helping to preserve the freedom we all enloy. They do It by serving pert-time es Citizen-Soldiers In the Militia. Their training, skill and devotion is combined into one great common effort - to build a strong Militia capable of helping to defend Canada. Ron Milliehemp is typical of many young Canadian: who realize the necessity for and the practical advantages of Militia service. By this service, they are training to be ready and able to protect their own families and communities, in time of emergency. Many more young men are needed to help in this great national effort. Hear about you? Are you doing your share? ILITIII Doha to "Voice of Me Army" - Tnahy cal The-slay evoolefa - our the De-Isle: Ilohuri gr. I3-r. . rii-rte” . 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