Above the Forecast Room---This is where the weather charts are prepared and the forecasts made. Mr PF. O'Donnell, 'assistant forecaster, who og Thursday celebrated his seventeenth anniversary in this post, is seen In the foreground, and at his left, a little to the front, is Mr. A." J. Connor, the present climato- logist. To the right ng the Skies--This is not an antiaircraft gun but a "six-inch" telescgpe through which the celestial movements are watched. This telescope, which is as old as the bureau itself, is in charge of Mr. F. L. Blake. The man in the foreground is Mr. W. 8. Jackson, the magnetic assistant. At the right of the top of picture--This is the "mean-time clock," the purpose of which is to record the correc standard time, is credited with a history regarding which there has been some dispute. The huge time-plece is believed to have been the same that rested at the bottom of the Atlantic for a time in a wreck sixty years ago. The fact that it was eclosed in a waterproof ease is said to have saved it. This magneto clock, which technically 1 aizimtes he, ne ry Above is Sir Frederick Stupart, F.R.C.S, Director To the right is the Transit Telescope Room--This " office. It creates its own electric current. The weight noticeable in of the Dominion Meteorological Service, who has department, where time is determined, is in charge hate I § : Bh re i Ae ee ee eptiaia Jom been at his post for about a quarter of a century. of Mr. F. L. Blake, the astronomer, who has an ds- mime tne providing the power for the other clocks. He is Canada's one and only "Weather Man." > tronomical record of 30 years to his credit. a yurbances. The man who keeps tab on the 'quakes fs Mr. James Young. 2 '