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Durham Review (1897), 3 Aug 1933, p. 6

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& + U 1 1| & . ‘The longer the contest continues, the more popular it becomes. We are still compelied to discard a great many entries because sufficient care has not been taken in securing the proper rhyme and rythm. Following are our selections from this week‘s winners:â€" Milk of Magnesia o Why Milk of Magnesia is lauded, Just test it and know like my Paw did, And now he will vow That there‘s no other cow G€an yield him such milk Bince his Maw did. Who t 1 h€ From Alberta, Comes a super£ae fuel, 1 assert, Ab. A trial proved it so, F‘en at fourteen below, Now we‘ll always use coal from Alberta. Wrimiey‘s Gum A youns man nicknamed Piggly Wiggly, Had a gir: who was silly and gigaly. He bouguat her some gumâ€" She could chew half a ton, For she said "There is none quite ie Wrigley." W Baby‘s Own Tablets There‘s a wonderful nurse who‘s named Graham, Healthy babies have won her much fame, "Whatever their habits, Use Baby‘s Own Tablets," Says sensible, careful Nurse Graâ€" ham. Miik of Magnesia "Doc. Phillips, who comes from Mombeeza, Makes a very fine Milk of Magâ€" nesia, For heartache it‘s fine, For heartburn sublime, So try Phillips‘® Milk of Magnesia, Miss Ariel M. Smith, Box 112, Erin, Ont. Scholes‘ Hotel There is a young man named Poronto, Who frequently visits Toronto, "You will sleep and eat well At Scholes‘ Hotel," Exclaimed this young man named Poronto. Miss Amy F. Corrigan, RR. 1, Shawvillie, Ont. Salada Tea There was an old man from Arcada, Who always dined at "The Arâ€" mada"; He held his nose high As the waiter passed by It his tea was not made of Salada. Miss Mabel Freek, Macleod, Alta. The Friend (Bloemfontein): Great Britain has everything to gain in conâ€" vening these Imperial Conterences. She has nothing to hide from the Dominions, who on their part have mostly a great deal to gain by their friendship and close contact with Great Britain. Not only, therefore, would we like to see the next Imâ€" perial Conference held at an early date, but we would urge again that It be attended not only by members of the Governments in office for the time being, but by representatives of the Oppositions. At present the Imâ€" perlw) Conferences are really conferâ€" Fletcher‘s Castoria Mrs. Jiggs has a baby, young (loria, She‘s raisine on Vletcher‘s Castoria, This baby, you see, Is smiling with glee, While mother is off to Victoria. Mrs. M. B. Rhodes, Box °%52, Merritt, B.C. Miss V. 8. Jarvisâ€"After being passed upon, unsuccessful limericks are not kept, co that it is imposâ€" sible fo us to trace your letter of January 2%5th. Evidently the limerâ€" Icks contained were not quite up to requ‘rements. Proses are sent out at the ond of cac‘h\ week. Mrs. R. H. ".indenâ€"Sorry, but we could not make any use of the book you describe. There is plenty of enjoyment for h M «t M it Red Rose Tea a young man Alberta Coal coal fields of Sunny ind Rose ard‘s Liniment ° an old man named Joyous Jingles By®> Gifted Rhymsters Miss L. Abercromlke= *R 2. Ravenna, Ont by Mrs. Geo. Paddick, Glencoe, Ont. ". John Mortimer, Box 170, Elora, Ont h Mrs. E. Cramp, Hagersville, Ont. n Jas. M. O‘Neill, Kent Bridge, Out. Our ment » right off the toe and his and pretty, said he, tea", m from the Ont ind v£ I‘ve walked eighty milesâ€"" Another new flotation which has atâ€" / ces * like=â€"_â€"_. Then his face werathed in smilesâ€"| tracted attention scarcely second to / € "By gosh, here‘s a plug in my|that of Ventures, Limited, is that of packo." the Connell option (Central Patricia * & Mrs. W. H. Stevinson, Mines, Limited), in the Crow River \J & Box 548, Macleod, Alta.| field. _ Initial financing has been unâ€" [ â€"3 \ M ; Ne es cevareserraccaes \ dertaken to provide about $250,000 ~â€"â€" ifor development purposes. . This gold '"> the whole family if all join in the @iscovery was undoubtedly the most C 2 e fun of writing Limericks. {remarkable ons made in Canada last } .__\ 8 Any nationally advertised article! YOar. It promises to open up an imâ€" 9 f, “ ‘ or service found in this or any|Portant new gold, camp. _ The stock & %‘» kA previous issues of this paper may| Was heavily overâ€"subscribed at forty zd * ‘ be made the subject of a limerick,. Cents per share. It is proposel to Q :7 C One dollar will be sent for every take two diamond drills to the propâ€" «3 Limerick accepted. Give name and :l"y for dthe cx:lrrent nheason'sl °p‘°m' onl N oo ie Tess uts uons c‘n address and name of ons, and to do swch exploratory | . ,, Write: _ Limerick lgdit:)l;ts ::s?)::!l‘: work as may be pursued without takâ€"* .. ;:s,i);) .rm:’}f- f);pev:vrittgr e tllimt ated Publishers, Rooms 421.5, 73| !D8 in # mining plant this year,. The __, 5‘ C ene a‘f‘ay y a traveling Adelaide St. West, Toronto, 2. _ | CrOw River field will undoubted!y be ; esman,. c + may be set down anyâ€" 9t very active after the Spring breakâ€"up.| «"°"¢ uon sstreereniumemmomâ€"omecs<o< 0 ~ ~ ~I9t . AiugL prospecting effoct wilt undoubt-f weisk <trcles hk « hacestanice enctes of Governments an‘ «> . ;. ;. edly be directed to Noithern Maniâ€" THE KINDERGARTEN tions or peoples. {toba, the Lac du Bonnet district and' The kindergarten was introduced Winmepronemeoi t snompan uy to Northern Saskatchewan during the| by Friedrich Froebel, a German eduâ€" THE conGEnN EEL coming season. The copper and tlnIMtOI'o who applied that name to this The conger cel. which is *n ’m.id!;coverles of the Lac du Bounet area‘ method of teaching. It has been a portant food fisk o! Enusosc, is said hbave attracted much attention and a| part of the public school system for to lay 35,000,005 ca=; sn it is estl-l'tm“‘ party including Dm;sln and| 30 years. mated if each e;: m,mm,ismfley McLeod, Fred Galer and Enoc Socs meniBire ic iffiiinimes ns Lo and the increase i t tmr.loluuon are reported to have acquirâ€" TRANSPORTATION same rate every o }"% would!'d some interesting territory. Between â€"$12,000,000,000 and be full of conger : 10 years. | ANSWERS TO INQUIRIES 000,000,000 is spent in the \_ e mithetiresatlecie. :) hn (Kieinburg) â€" Central | Manitoba‘ States annually in the put .as s INSURANCE IN FORCE lmlnu was greatly overdone in ‘the! maintenance of motorcars aad t _ s. Approximately $100,000,000,000 of earlier stages when the price of its! eâ€"â€"Â¥g_â€"« ___> life insurance is in force in America. Shares were moved up out of all proâ€"| The heat that wses blisters, he This amount exceeds 70 per cent, of DPortion : .» known merits Milling said, probabiy +. «. not emanate the world total C _ results were poor at the outset. Efâ€" from the e>>‘. inner core. to lay 35,000,005 css1 and mated if each e;; and the increase :.>; same rate every c be full of conger < Red Rose Tea > When you‘re feeling depressed and you‘re weary, No use to sit down and get teary, "Red Rose Tea is good tea," Try a cup then with meâ€" See if it doesn‘t make you feel cheery. Magic Baking Powder There once was a girl named May Crowder, Of her cakes she got prouder and prouder, "It‘s Magic, you know, That makes them rise so, For "Magic‘ is my Baking Powder. Mrs. H. W. Day, Bradford, Ont. Minard‘s Liniment John Dodds had his toes badly frozen, Cause he walked in the snow while adozin‘, But the pain it soon went When Minard‘s Liniment Was rubbed on the toes which were frozen‘! Magic Baking Powder There was a young lady named Lulu, Ambitious to bake and to brew, too, Her failures ere tragic Until she used "Magic" She now has no reason to "booâ€" There was an old lady named Addy, Who said "About tea I‘m quite faddy, I like my tea green, And it‘s plain to be seen It‘s Salada I keep in my caddy." Mrs. J. . Cook, €3 Forest Ave., St. Thomas, Ont. Mrs. Brown looks so rosy and thrifty, Though she surely is round about fifty, Good 4éaltn she has found, Comes from Pinkham‘s Comâ€" poundâ€" It makes you keep well and look nifty. Salada Tsa Small Jimmie watched mama and dada Enjoy their hot cups of "Salada", Sez he, "Ain‘t it funny That even my bunny * Loves little curled leaves of Saâ€" lada." Simond‘s Saws An ambitious young fellow named Spinnet, Said "Shucks! your old saws are not in it. The shavings beneath The Simond‘s dragteeth Pile up in the space of a minute." Mrs. H. W. Stevinson, °< Box 548, Macleod, Alta. Big Ben‘s Chewing Tobacco Said a footsore and weary Cheâ€" chako, "I‘m out of Ben‘s chewing tobacco. I‘ve walked eighty milesâ€"" Then his face werathed in smilesâ€" "By gosh, here‘s a plug in my packo." Any nationally advertised article or service found in this or any previous issues of this paper may be made the subject of a limerick. One dollar will be sent for every Limerick accepted. Give name and address and name of this paper. Write: Limerick Editor, Assoctâ€" ated Publishers, Rooms 421â€"5, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto, 2. Lydia Pinkham‘s Compound Miss Grace I. Wright, RR. 1, Singhampton, Ont. Mrs. T. P. Rowe, R.R. 6, Woodstock, Ont. Salada Tea Mrs. W. H. DaY. Bradford, Ont Mrs. Inglis Ripley, Wallacetown, Ont Mrs. H. Fowler, Clinton, Ont. it is estiâ€" meturity J at the >~a would 0 years. Mr. Lloyd Moore‘s Columns Prove of Interest to Readers Enquiries are Starting to Pour inâ€"If You Want Informâ€" ation This is the Way to Get it By L. J. MOORE Public interest in Canadian mining stocks continues at a high pitch as February approaches its close. The Lindsley stocks have predominated as regards shahp advances, intenstâ€" fled by the possibilities opened up by‘ the proposed copper refinery on the Atlantic seaboard. _ The issuance of a limited quantity of Ventures, Limâ€" ited, shares by the Lindsleys kas also provoked considerable corament. The new issue has won early popularity and some observers have predicted for it a very satisfactory market career. It is much too early to gauge the latter at this stage, but it is perâ€" hapg apropos to quote the old adage "Nothing â€" succeeds â€" like . success." Ventures, Limited, starts out with large interests in Sherritt Gordon, Sudbury â€" Basin, Falconbridge and numerous other properties of merely prospective merit. It will have a large interest in the proposed copper refinery. It has the advantage of shrewd and capable manugemoat, The private offering of $8 per share was overâ€"subscribed several times »ver. Falconbridge and Sudbury Basin achieved noteworthy gains during the third week of the morth. The speculâ€" ative public has beguu to discount the future of the Falconbridge Nickel enâ€" terprise. There are understood to be some interesting developmenrts in connection with the disposal of this company‘s products. . The beginning of production is a long way in the future, â€" however. Recent â€" develop ment results have been quite favorâ€" able. It is noteworthy that there ds only a limited amount of stock in the public‘s hands,. and the price is thereâ€" fore susceptible to sharp fluctuations. Sudbury Basin attained a new peak price at $13.75. It was carried up. partly in sympathy with Fal:onbridge asd also because of .urcher favorâ€" able developmects at Vermillion Lake. The interests of Sudbury Basin, Faiâ€" conbridge and Ventures, Limited, are linked together suffic_iegutly that it is quite conceivable that developments affecting qne or two directly wili. move the whole group. «*The higher priced issues that conâ€" tinue to command a great deal of atâ€" tention. Internatioral Nickel has been fluctuating between $58.75 and $62.75. This stock was affected adâ€" versely by the general drop of New York stocks, influenced by the anâ€" nouncement that the reins of credit would be drawn tighter, _ Nickel bas acted remarkably well ‘aking everyâ€" thing into consideration. _ Its sponsâ€" ors are still talking confidently of much higher prices ,pointing to extraâ€" ordinary developments at the Frood imine and probable profits in justificaâ€" ‘tlon. It must be conceded that this strong Canadian financial group has remarkable record of success over @ period of many years. o Noranda has shown quite remarkâ€" able steadiness and Las held up at a slightly higher price than has Nickel in recent markets. There has been no buying of big claibre for some litâ€" tle time and the stock has behaved remarkably well. There are, some developments forecast which have not yet become public property. Howey Geld receded under the volume of profit taking that put in an appearance recently. . The ex,. »cted announcement regarding hydrcâ€"elecâ€" tric power bas been delayed, aithough there seems to be little doubt about a favorable outcome. Howey has been purchased by wellâ€"informed buyâ€" ers who are aware of the importance of mine making efforts at this prop: erty. MARKET STRONG ficiency has improved in this respect and the mine is looking some better. It would be folly to expect substantial profits from a 150â€"tou mill, considerâ€" ing the capitalization of .4,500,000 shares, the property should come unâ€" der aggressive development work. (G.C.B.)â€"Your inquiry concerning the Coxheath Copper property of Cape Breton is perhaps answered best by reference to the spectacular rise and fall of Arno slfares in the market recently. The conservative market element accepted the stories of By LLOYD J. MOORE Member, Standard Stock and Mining Exchange, who reviews the mining market and will answer enquiries for you. spectacular developments with reseryâ€" ations. _ The public is too frequentâ€" ly carried away by waves of enthusiâ€" asm which loses sight of intrinsic values. _ Even granting that. developâ€" ments at the Coxheath have been enâ€" tirely favorableâ€"it would be almost too much to expect a sixfold increase in the price of shares could be justiâ€" fied in such a short time. _ It is quite within the sealm of possibility, howâ€" ever, that the merits of the property will be proven further by additional work. Jt has not been notable in the past «s a highâ€"grade copper property, although some stipping ore has been claimed for it. (A.B.)â€"At the time Canad: Gold Syndicate was put out it might have been noticed that some of the leadâ€" ing Canadian journals fou.d this adâ€" vertising â€" unacceptable. Its merits appeared very dublous to the writer at the time of the flotation in Novemâ€" ber, 1923. _ We question very much whether you will be able to fina any market for it In the future you should never buy stock of any descripâ€" tion from highâ€"pressure salesmen. (G.E.S.)â€"The~â€" merits of Howey Gold Mines have been deait with in considerable detail through these columns and you have doubtless formâ€" ed the conclusion that we consider this a speculation of merit. R (McK. Linwood)â€"You will do well to return a firm negative angwer to glibâ€"tongued salesmen. They have done more to the detriment of the mining industry in Canada than all other factors combined. _ We cannot recognize the name of the sydnicate you mention, but that is perhaps no reflection on your handwriting. Genâ€" erally speaking, syndicate shares should be purchased only by those who are close to the mining situation and who are able to take the risks of ploneer operations. You will doubtâ€" less be able to learn our views on deâ€" sirable mining stocks by reading these columns. _ You will be well advised to follow our dictum "Investigate beâ€" fore you invest". "A portable typewritter is one that is easily ca~cd away by a traveling salesman, : i may be set down anyâ€" where." THE KINDERGARTEN The kindergarten was introduced by Friedrich Froebel, a German eduâ€" cator, who applied that name to this method of teaching. It has been a part of the public school system for 30 years. Between $12,000,000,000 and 000,000,000 is spent in the \ States annually in the pu> .as maintenance of motorcars aad t EMA x i /cfigij _ g@\/\\ , h P/%\s y h ’ March 10. Lesson Xâ€"Baptism ano The Lord‘s Supperâ€"Matt. 28: 19, +20; 1 Cor. 11: 23â€"29. Golden Textâ€" This do in remembrance of me.â€"1 I. Baprism, Matt. 28: 19, 20. II. THE LORD‘S SUPPER, 1 Cor. 11:23â€"29. Introov&®tonâ€"There has been a wor xrful revival of interest in the sacraments of the church, and differâ€" ect views exist as to thâ€"ir number and meaning. The Roman Catholic church believes that there are seven sacraments, as also does the Greek church, but the Protestant churches hold that there are two sacraments only, Baptism an i the Lord‘s Supper. There are also great differences as to the meaning of these solemn sacraâ€" ments. The Roman Catho.ics teach that in the Lord‘s Supper the sacrifice of Christ is râ€"seated. For our purpose there is perhaps no better definition of a sacrament than that contained in the Westminster Confession of Faith, "A sacrament is an holy ordinaace inâ€" stituted by Christ, wherein by senâ€" sible signs Christ and the benefits cf the new covenant are represented, sealed, and applied to believers." The passages which refer to the Lord‘s Supper fall into two groups. Mark and Matthew go together while Luke and Paul form the other group. It is in 1 Corinthians that it is mosi promâ€" ilr’)’eg:. See 1 Cor. 10: 1â€"13, 14â€"22; 11: I. sAPTISM, Matt. 28: 19, 20. V. 19. Baptism is the rite of initiaâ€" tion into the church. It was institutâ€" ed by Jesu. himself and we find that it was practiced from the very earliest days. In some passages baptism is in the name of Christ, but in the present verse it is what is called trinitarian baptism. Most of those baptized in those early days were naturally adults, but we have hints that the enâ€" tire family of a believer would receive baptism also. This is trve of the Philippian jailer. V. 20. It is quite eviden. from this verse that baptism was not a mere! magical act, but was directly aswciat-! ed with obedience to the teaching of: Jesus, 1t was not only a privilege, but it also involv=d certain cbiigations. Those who received it were called to a! life of service. Jesus does not teach that there are any mysterious virtues in the baptismal water wh.ch change the person as by m.upic. But we think chiefly of the .ichness and aptness of the symbol. We continue to celebrate this sacrament bevcause it was the command of Christ. In the practice io{ irfant aptism. while the child is not yet consciois of its meaning, wet the act is a bo.d claim made that the ‘&blessing and savin,; power of Christ are available for suce little onss. ’These chiluren are also part of Christ‘s church. Did he not himse!f say of little children, "Of such is the kirgdom of heaven?" II. THE LORD‘s SUPPER, 1 Cor. 11:22â€"29, Â¥. 23. The uora‘s supper is aiuerâ€" ent Jrom baptism in taat it conunues right througn the ie or the discipie,| wnereas baptism is aispensed once for all, ‘This iette: gives very valuable testimony to the usage of the eariy church; for it was written about twentyâ€"six years: atter the death of Jesus; and in this passage Paul takes for granted that this sacrament has long been a part of the Christiin worâ€" ship. When he says he received it from the Lord he does not likely mean that it came direct! by a special reâ€" velation to hi self, but that it came from Christ through the words of those who had been with Jesus during those last hours wher he instituted this feast. o % _ V. 24. When Jesus says, "This is my ‘body." he does not mean the bread and wine are actually turned into his flesh and blood: but just as the body is the medium through which the spirit of man expresses itself, so this visible sacrament is a means of bringâ€" ing to us the mind and will of Christ. The one necesity in a true celebration is to keep Christ before our eyes and to remember that he is ever near us. E. ~rything in the sacramert turns on the presence of our Saviour. Most will know of the famous pictu e of the Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci, and it is to be noted that all the attenâ€" tion is turned uron Christ alone. We may notice three facts about this sacrament : | It‘s hardly possible for one to beâ€" address come as mean as he feels on Monday‘ !u'“l V. 25. (2) It is, as this verse says, a covenant, by which we understand that God enters into an agreement! with us and pledges him:e‘f to watch‘ over and bless us. Christ has estabâ€" lished the covenart, sesling it with his blood, ard in this feast we are to claim this privilege which he has so simply provided for us. I V. 26. (3) It is a prophecy. Jesus, as he instituted the supper, looked forward to the time when he would be raised in glory and ascend to the righ hand of the Father; and h promises the disciples that the time will come whken he will return for them, and take them to the house of many manâ€" sions, when he will again drin‘ of the fruit of the vine in his Father‘s presâ€" ence. Thus does Jesus lift up the eyes of his sorrowing followers to the glor. ious vision of chose days when all their t=â€"~ubles will pass away in the joy aven. We may, therefore, ad . this sacred sacramâ€"nt feeds two .. the most important streams of Christian life, the memor{ and the imagination. Every scholar should look foward to participatingy in the Lord‘s Supper. Cor. 11: 24. (1) It is a commemoration, "This do in remembrance of me." The feast is meant to stimulats our mind and to enrich and strengthen our Christian memory, so that the past will more ana more be colored by the love and lite of Christ. Sunday School LW I AMIN ANALYSIS Xâ€"Baptism and fertility, râ€"â€"Matt. 28: 19, egss m PATNWS as v m« SUPPLEMENTARY RATION **"* BREEDING pouLTRY It is now being recognized that the fertility, hatchability and viability of eggs may be influenced by the manâ€" ner of feeding the laying bhens. purâ€" ing the hatching season the Expertâ€" mental Station at Kentville, NS carâ€" NCB ol cpne â€"~ t en asneni it ng UHC HERTERCCE 0 l mental Station at Kentville, NS., car~ ried out an experiment to determine the effects of using such supplemen tary feeds as cod liver oil, rawliver, bone meal, etc. when added to the regulation ration given to the breedâ€" ing stock. The regulation ration used consisted of dry mash made UP of 1v0 pounds each of cornmeal, oatmeal, brand and middlings, nd 50 pounds of beef; %& pound of salt was added to every 100 pounds of the mixture. The test groups of hens were fed alike on this mixture; in addition some of the hens received, when fed singly, cod liver oil, 1 teaspoonful to four birds daily; raw liver, 4 ounce pes bird daily, and bone meal, 5 per cent. by weight of dry mash. When these special feeds were given in combination _ only half of these amounts were used. l¢ 19.k utm eEEMROPMEEEOE PPR CC The experiment was divided into} two parts with a week elapsing beâ€"| tween them. The results of this exâ€"| periment are given in detail in the| report of the superintendent of the| station for 1927, published by the Department of Ag:° ulture at Ottawa. The most outstanding conclusion to be arrived at from the study of thls‘ s DTW:T! VSC EPW ET NCBR CC report, which may be obtained at the | Public Branch is that the pens uslng! the cod liver oil were outstanding, | particularly in the percentage of hatchability of eggs laid. THE PRONUCTION OF PURE SEED I:}EPENDABL * VARIETIES In the great wheat growing argars of Western Canada the use of pure | seed of varieties adapted to the grow-= ing districts is of great importance. , Investigations carried on by the Cenâ€"‘ tral Division of the Department of Agriculiure at Ottawa, as weli as by: other institutions, indicate the need‘ for the utmost attention to this mlt-i ter. Reforring to this question in hln, latest annual report. Mr L H. New-‘ man, Dominion Cerealist, regards l.ho! development of depend wie seed as, one of the most important and most preâ€"sing features of the work of his division â€" The Coreal Aivision has done a great amount of work in deâ€" veloping â€" dependable â€" varieties ot‘ grain, particularly iz producing pure seed of varieties adapted to the widely varying conditions found in this counâ€" try. It is recognized that while plant‘ rigor ma»y produce and develop suâ€" perior varieties, yet, real value in such ;varleues to the country depends upon the extent to which they come to be ‘used. To encourage and promote a more general use » ot only of the best varieties, but of good seed of these varieties the Canadian Seed Growers‘ Association was organized some 225 years ago. The Dominion Cerealist and his organization are working in close coâ€"operative :o raise the general standard of the cereal growing indusâ€" try in this country. @)Tarm Notes sSPORTS TYPE Fister feels quite grownâ€"up in her new sport sdress of sheer woolen in lovely soft green shade with matching suede belt and braid trimming that emphasizes the modern line of blouse. The skirt is boxâ€"plaited in smart allâ€" around effect. Style No. 374 is deâ€" signed in sizes 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 years, and made in about two hours, as shown in small views. Wool jersey, sheer tweed, wool crepe, wool reps, printed rayon velvet or velveteen. Pat.| Amundsen reached the South Pole, tern price 20c in stamps or coin (coin| &nd a month later Captan Scott is preferred). ‘Wrap coin carefully, |achieved that objective but perished HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. with his companions on the way home Write your .ame and address plain.|‘° *!# base. 1 i number and size of rmmed en Apgnprameact p’.'u:::‘“ you want. Enclose m.'é: QUEBRACHO EXTRAcT stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap| A ton of quebracho extre®t will tan it carefuly) for each number and|enough leather for 3000 shoe soles. address your order to Wilson Patternm|One company operating a large forest Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronte, ‘ tract in the Argentine turns out a «on Patterns sent '.'l_“ early maii. _ j>@f the extract every Viree m**uces. RATION FOR Terms U_”",P", Explorers to Antarctic explorers have a vocabulâ€" ary that sometimes puzzles the lay reader." The follownEg is a gloss®try of terms used to describe certain conâ€" ditions in the south polar regions: Barrierâ€"The Great Ross Barrier is a wall of ice several hundred miles long and about 100 feet A‘gh which I "% Dohass honuda= of the Barrierâ€"1he a wall of ice & long and about forms the sout! Ross Sea. Bergschrundâ€"A gaping great depth, formed when a glacier moves away fro field. â€" It is sometimes RVUBE CCC Bergschrundâ€"A gaping crevasse ol great depth, formed when the body of a glacier moves away from the snow field. _ It is sometimes used to deâ€" note the great cleft between the lowâ€" er part of the Denman Glacier and the Shackleton Sheifâ€"Ice (Queen Mary Land). o Loo ar Aantine Brash or Brash Iceâ€"S® fragments of ice, broken of er pieces, usually seen 1 tract of pack ice. To Depotâ€"To cache . or away a stock of provisions Floe or Floe Iceâ€"The © ly flat, frozen surface of th sected by cracks and lead: of open water). _ Hooshâ€"Pemmi cuit. Nunatakâ€"â€"An outcrop of rock, reâ€" sembling an island, projecting through a sheet of enveloping land ice. ma Pack or Pack iseâ€"A field of loose ice originuting for the most part from broken fice, to which may be added material from the disintegration of bergs, and bergs themselves, Primusâ€"A gasoline stove used durâ€" ing sledging excursions. Radiantâ€"An appearance moted in clouds (especially cirroâ€"stratus) which seem to radiate from a point on the borizon. Rampâ€"A bank of snow slanting away obliquely on the leeward side of an obstacle. Sastrugiâ€"The waves caused by conâ€" tinuous winds blowing across the surâ€" face of an expanse of snow, varying in size according to the force and conâ€" tinuity of the wind and the compactâ€" ness of the snow. Seraceâ€"Wedged masses of icy pinâ€" nacles which are produced in the surâ€" face of a glacier by dragging strains which operate on crevassed areas. A field of such pinnacles is called serac ice, Shelfâ€"Iceâ€"A thick, floating, freshâ€" water ice formation pushing out from the land and continuous with an exâ€" tensive glacier. Narrow prolongaâ€" tions or peninsulas of the shelfâ€"ice may be referred to as icetongues or glacierâ€"tongues. Subâ€"Antarctica â€" A genera‘ term used to denote the area of ocean, conâ€" taining islands and encircling the Antarctic continent, between the fiftieth parallel of south latitude and the confines of the icecovered sea. * Tanksâ€"Canvas bags for holding sledging provisions. Whirly (pl. Whirlies)â€"A whirlâ€" wind carrying drift snow and pursuing & devious track. Antarcticâ€"The continent whose hisâ€" tory began in 1775, when Captair James Cook crossed the Antarctio Circle and found evidence that conâ€" ivtnced him that a great mass of land lay much further south. arctica. Later, JuJes d‘Urville of the French Navy, Charles Wilkes of the United States Navy, and James Clark Ross of the British Navy made important discoveries. In 1841 Ross located the great Ice Barrier, where Commander Byrd now has his base. The era of modern exploration in Antarctica began with the expedition of Captain Robert Falcon Scott in 101. _ Sir Ernest Shackleton discorâ€" ered the Polar plateau in 1909, and T. W. F. David reached the South Magnetic Pole area. * Or _ December 14, 1911, Roald Amundsen reached the South Pole, In 1819 Bellingshausen, dispatched in charge of an expedition by Czar Alexander I of Russia, _ discovered land south of the Antarctic Circle, and in the following year Nathaniel Palâ€" mer, the youthful master of an Amerâ€" can sealing vessel, sighted what is now known as the Palmer Archipelâ€" ago. For many years the Antarctic reâ€" gions were known only to sealers and whaling captains. _ Weddell} Biscoe, Kemp and Balieny all added new isâ€" lands or land to the man of Ant. d d 18 WoOuMa CZ 000C Describe Certain Condiâ€" tions They Meet in the An Antarctic Desolate South Polar bout 100 feet *A southern bounda Po cache or to place of provisions in a depot. s Iceâ€"The comparativeâ€" surface of the sea interâ€" cks and leads {channels i Iceâ€"Small floating broken off from largâ€" y seen bordering a can and plasmon bis *4 And just suppose tha Army has to call a dis Chicago is describe paper correspondent 4 stable. . This is the | the "Aw, Gee!" into Ar charms of my sex is t us remain boys to the Stanley Baldwin. liberate the he; which « downfal peror," througt an apj Kaiser. 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