t , . l .ln1...'L3...r J..- ...3. ” l m- . M. .t3ti;liGl.iCAblJCHURCH ARE AT ALBERlTON otller,pal'ts of Prince Cntttity 'dam- places. This picture of the Ati-1lican';ttitl wit'cstl1tritiu the rt-tit-tit storln. y Clltlrcli zlrca at Alhcrtttii lilill':illL'S nliittitluii tnlltlitttitix lit-cttille averse age l0 DOWOF and ielltilllllllli 111105 was up to 100 per cent lll mostl some of tile ueigllt oi ice on trees after this picture lllln takcll. Like GRIM scenes Fallen telephone poles and pow- tuorst "silver thaw" in memory oil eriines, as well as twisted. brokcniPrince Cotttity'S Oldest 1ie51dem5-. ClP:hlAMENTAL mes Beautiful. ornamental trees. partiterntetl by the severe ice -torm M the- natural. decorative bcautyylltsi weekend. and a row 0. these r-oi. the damage done to Beaver Street. tfhc town. Summersidc. the type of destruc-3 trees tell the grim story of thclThe above scene shows a part of tion that was general throughout, I'iERA E-D. tabovel is typical of the mass of iil'atir'lltw thsit existed througlloli broken and smashed limbs and the town. (Photo by Wottoni . him above the mac t Photo by Wottonl if Summerside. were all but obli- in one of the residential Lens Nuns Lead 104 Children To Safety During Fire tllvcd in " oinnuns led 104 chiidrc in safety for children. She was treatcti ntllhe Saturday nhen flames broke all! in ” ilmpllal mm "M-'”l”d' tit main bull in;: of the Gr-"maul Four firemen also received ni- ' an Cdlh is orphan home ind or lily spread .- two wings '- ch structure -- children were led from ---rt ling holding hands while he showering them with debt-is.'l'llroe time. . ”' .1-s syrarti d.wn s ro. olwcl-e treated at hospitals. and We -; S”'ci' rising from the d and up other at the scene. : the control administration th;rd floors. 8" '7!- fnssh cure. mother air including ssomoon to the ttutierug Museum of o ience. . g -nu rim dri:.cov- and 3.'li0,0w to the contents. ””"h.yg,,;rneb ".,,,';.,m,f,.y VT; wnscusn non wnvnow I. sttshe out A 7!-year-old ssstnstrass who in oortneosurs Buffalo. rphanage. Mary '.nr-1 occll. was rescued by flren "ti 3 "'lrd'5mrey window" She 'msllr(ll int ilcenrlv two hours. carried to satety down 8 tWrIor.i CAUSE IS i'st(NowN Sister Clare told authorities itntl The wnx.-v 'h EUFFALU. A Y. t.-iPi-Twetity- ..earc-hing zt smoke-illl:.. hallway3:?::yE:l::gefm::c"g:';min:S1” wrrldnrs on the second injuries while fighting the th, playroom. and ,dm.m"m.'ns ,n'till'l(!fS . he blaze. Two of them were hurt when the first and second noon. 1-hH.(.tL Th: llllll(l.llL! housed offices. dor- 8 N681 EXPIOHM ill B W711 9001' other nuns who normally live at, he ccrridor blew of part at the rmf. the urohanage were away -t the 1' '1llll'(lh .i.ct tlt"lE'rll tttcti i tihl The lli.'llfl with one shot Huntlrotlx of firemen fought the .”mi four-ttlztrni fire in treating fem ivlizitiies roared out of ll as not immediately it'li(ln of the orphan- ud age r-nilsistt-tl of the ndminidn- .tlon lvllldinl: and two winjl IM She said the chum-an were myihrcc other itttildinlzs linked to the by Iirit-k pnssagewayl. mitorios. classrooms. play:-ms. a lvarmat-y and other facilik. I Sisters ft't.m the third CNIQY d The children were housed em-Isl F”'”('t-l t" W”l5m5VmC Q9" porr 'y in a school ”"idlng about mil "1" Mm"- Firc commiss"-let Wnlism A. 100 yards behind the main build- "fr" Duly estimated damage at 8310.000, lugs. and in the nearby '4n"olo TRlPI.l'ID BAG BLANCHl.ll.VD. The olphsnsge is located on --Out shooting on the 0134!! III! Norway streets in a bet-land moors tznrnrze ownC"IIl . heavily populated residential Korea Austin brought down thron i a 3! JOHN 3. I130 Canadian Prom Stall Writer OTTAWA (cpl-nun... snug... '1 ation no longerih acnraih enoujs to guide today's comglax machin- ery or precise measuring equip- ment. it is being displaced by an- other product of mania inggnuuy. llltolllltis. control gadgets. '. ' MMsn has 0; role to play wit 5 power reasoning er- able to the inflexibility and mr of failure of automatic control aya- ' terns. An ntliomaticidavlac tint could detect a change in the tone of an aircraft enlillforxa weakness in the controls. weigh the'p1-on and -cons of a forced landing and then. execute one still bag to be In. vented. Man's Ibiil to think put; a in an emer- gency of this kind. ' THE HUMAN FACTOR Until recent years measuring 11;. struments were an aid only to manual measurements by man. As a result, the manufacture of ma- chinery. aiming of guns or driving of vehicles was good or had de. Pending on the skill or the mood t of the human controlling tlu gpef. ation. ”0" EVETY lland demands of speed. lower and precision tire is chanle in the relation of man to machine." say .1. A. Tanner and C. A. M. Smith of the National Research Council's air- craft and instrument laboratory. HTMI ...S I. . L .. luiii affect our potential productlvy- ity and standards of living." The two scientists quoted three examples where the task of co- troliing or measuring often is too difficult for the average pnaided (Piintn by Wceksi. human. I.,Trainlns Derlods for pilots and navigators of high-speed jet air- craft are becoming longer and the ” ntimber of failures greater. 2. Precision of control required in many industrial p I o c e s s es makes manual control uneconomi- cal. 3. VSL-ientists are finding it lin- llossilile to cope with the speed and acuracy demanded by some :utt:ay's more complax expiri- VABYING TIME LAG Experiments have shown there is n time lag of about two-tombs of I second before the hand acts, on o meuasrrecorded by the eye. The tests also have shown that this time lag never is constant. Mr. Tanner Mr. Smith do- scrihe this variation in the time as "the will-oi-the-wisp naturn the human agent" as an operator of automatic machiery. As a result, the monitoring tuna- ilon of the human in reading and inlcrprsting instnlmults. and in many cases deciding what cor- vices. Instruments which formerly measured and indicated now are being equipped with power ampli- fication and used to measure. ludi- cstegand control. "These steps have been highly. instrumentation," the two scien- tists ssy. "for they have not only freed the automatic control system from the limitations of the phys- ical and nervous systems of the human, but they have also ra- lieved the human of many monot- onous monitoring tasks." - SIMPLE EXAMPLE A water-level gauge developed by NRC is a simple example of the t tic pr” 1'. Prior to lb depelopmcnt tests of water sur- face elevations on scale river mod- els were made by-trained tech- nicinns. Readings were taken by means of a point gauge. When the point of the gauge met its reflection in the water a reading could be taken on a micrometer. "The over-all accuracy of these measurements, made by several human observers. was lntolertlbly low," Mr. Smith says. "Not nniy was the setting of the point gauges tedious . . . but when the xvnrer surface was subject to periodic movement, the human observer be- Gam-bling'F Newfoundland con"erence of the United Church of Canada has re- affirmed its stand against gamb- ling in a directive issued to min- lsters and chairmen of church ed- ucation boards. The directive. in the tom of a resolution passed by the confer- ence. calls money-raising by lot- teries and sweepstakes "unchrls- tian and therefore morally wrong." v I your.plaa at tho ooorost Book Coomema. ST. JOHN'S, Nlld. (CPI - The. t l-........ lllll'S All YOU DO . .1. Lookovertbechrisunssclobplonsinboxst lowerrighnduckplanwhichnliuyvlllbtldgu. 2.Askfort1simnnOobCoopm)ookfu braachofThsCsudlaa I. Simplyaoksshcdopositolyomclolmb scar:-ondotsacvotyuuadwoalr. United Clergy Oppose or Charity" The, resolution was also for- warded to: Attorney-General Cur- tis with the request that he take "fearless action against those who L, .ly defy-the criminal code with respect to gambling in any form." It appeals to people not to par- ticipate in bingos, lotteries and raffles. and to try to find other inleans of raising funds for char- tes. . r reel-ive action should be taken. in mg being replaced by automatic da- signiflcant in the development pl I "W Every January, bills, bills, bills!!! I Humaln,lS.kilI Inadequ.a,ie- ' For Cjomplex Me'cl1a,3.rtl.',psri:ts. , came qultolnadcquste as s inun- urinlr mm " ' A complex. automatic nuutning inst:-tumult. was to en- lvlaco tho act elnvstkal is transmitted lee- tronicollyto a self-rocordhr in- strument oftor tho point 0 he and: junction the surface or 'te 'A.'iycl(lta-n3l'o-. i W-od'M9delj. NICE; Franco--(AP!-Aly Khan 15 Pllillllll t0.inarr! Bettina, well- VDOWII Plril fashion modeirone d P109360 Prince's lawyers said Saturday: -' i -- v The lnlorlnnnt said the marriage at glut!” .onllt Irecosul VOEII. N9V- ,A..,Paris court is ex- vectetr to hand down a decision in s.- - . 30tttIII. wllolic real name is Sllnpno Bodin. has been visltinil at NY! Villa at Goilo Juan on the ltivioro. - CHANGE IN TONE .' SARNIA. Ont. (C?) -A sur- prise item on the program 6! a high-lldellty record concert at the local library was an old-timer. "The Stars and Stripes Forever" was first Played on" an historic Edison-Belly cylindrical phono- graph, and then. for comparison. the saline tune was heal-d,on a hi- i ds. or V - --------------------f--1 ----m;4--.-ag----------J . l l : Km wont! have bill: after next Christmas ifyou 1 X I start-now on this easy plan to gut; yoursolfsavo! R -----n-v-----.---I------I HOW MUCH MONEY do you necd tbr December shopping? 350? 3125? 32502 Set yourself a definite goal and start saving for it right away by joining the Christmas Club at your nearest branch of The Canadian Bank of Commerce. Your Christmas ClubCoupon Book reminds you so make yourself put sosnctlling away every two weeks till youivc reached your objective. At the end of ifty waaks (25 deposits),-yootll got ochoqoonsxtNovombar.ingoodnllnafotynm Cllristn-aoods-.os'wbsssvoryoowish. Q!" DIAYI Drophmdoyumybroodofihsbcsoadiu IIIIEJCOIIIIIRO-dntOIlOIIItlOtlIQ7lW osssrvoyoo.JolnoorCltrist-sstilobrighcoow oadbsnnotyooschoqtnfualrlstnsstliltl Join our loss chrlgtsm Club tlttnmtr at branch of THE CANADIAR -illllt K or icon italics xCllsrloi'totown W. M. WHUSH. Managsrt ' its own. as. Burma Tuosdoytltlon. 11), sugar” u Malaya P-tans Declare Independongcoafltiax-theAdg, somuw. India (Ari-utihya reclaim - independence urowhlleenroutotolaondoato negotiate long - coveted lnd'cpfnnd- encs. He did not say whatbsr Malsyawouldproclslmltsfree- the ellth..Tlle ilkeindlmorpnlloutentirolyoll did. The only blnt he gave was in his expressed admiration for;tlla way India won freedom from Brit.- aln in 10t'I. Three years later India declared itself a sovereign republic but remained in the Com- monwealth. t "The lessons at the mini inde- pendence movement stand us in good stead in wrcstlng power from the British," the prince said; "Our lreedom fight is .smooth and methodical. and we are try- inngmto emulate the example of Britain, which has used Impa- rinl as wall as Malayan troops to wage an increasingly successful war against Communist guerrillas in the steamy Malayan jungles, in not likely to oppose the lndepnd- ence move. Malcolm Macdonald. Britain's retiring commissioner- general for southeast Asia. said last August that if Malaya and Singapore did not get self-govern- ment soon, they would "come un- der the influence of the forces of evil and chaos." t Malaya had. its first legislative elections in July. About all some Common r BARE PENTICTON, is. c.. tornlu type. from Williams Lake, ' B.C., have been released here to strengthen holds in tho am. They are among the rarest of .11 mountain sheep. - FRENCH LE830Nl g VICTORIA (OP) -Oral French courses for elementary school pu. pits in British Columbia will start in September. education min. ister Williston announced. '11,. plan is being worked out by . committee of department official; and specialists. itli!