yl'~b‘b=~xev..-w.r.gv 1-‘ > . ... i ‘TO-DAY ONLY—BE EARLYll “TllUllllER limos" EXTRA l l SCREEN NEWS IN TECBNICOLOI suit liliiiiu Too“ with , . _ so?» gig} m; rusroii irfltSulfil .. ” '- Crime oes i snows AT 2.30 - 1.00 AND 9-00 ———-~ »- Ui/ yJ‘ \_‘ HUI-IKE? AND HIS ‘MALTESE FALCON ' TEAM-MATES! A JAP" SLAPPING STORY SENEATION l‘ H MARY A I ' l ~ c ' ._. \\ I Lw;o.mio.==~+:r"~1€~“?' STOR ' SYDNEWEJGREENSTREH Also VAUDEVILLE DAYS -— A Musical Revue \ ' ' ‘Aiifivs iliivsriav our vspBlMA gait‘...aa-h-i-fi-la-“x"""'-'-'-'-'-'.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.~.-.- .-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-i*--..'-'.-.-.-aave-nvnrnawuaw '- . 5 é . E If ‘I “SUNDAY Maliinee 2.30 - EVE. ‘ff-S’?-'-'|'-5"-'-'|i'n"i-r'-"-'-'1'-'-%'fl-f-‘fl-f-‘IV a‘ r ~ '-'i-.r-.-.-.-.-i.'v-.-i.-.-.-.»i.-.v TO-DA Y RilllGE-BUSTIN’ _ eunnits RillRlli’ V m lino 224/ ERWN“ "ii Wen" l; f 1 rlasl Slur 1","! nmn>nv7HE HEART OF TEXAS we!- FUZZY KNIGHI minim HOLT Ind n. JIMMY WAKElY mo ~ -—ADDED_. Chill!!!‘ 3 of "RIDERS OF DEATH VALLEY" (Tartoun -- N 0 V i} LT Y SHOWS 2.30 — 7.00 AND 8.45 msEMPlili A» I|VARKHQIFIJJJu For SALE i floors with rnllerc and tracks, om- rlclivcry- imx nullalilv for coupe rar. Apply MrINNlS BAKERY. u ')'l_3|> .'!'.('l'3l.|l!‘31ll!T!!F.S4l!4m.l! l!" T9 3'55"‘ w" NEWS and COURAGE ala‘o'n"'n"n'n'iir'fi"u"in'u'n'n‘n‘fn'iu' -.~.-.ur.=.-.-.-.--.--.-.---.'.-.'i.'e-- I-Mnmn'-'o'i-v-'-m'-m-' 'l‘()l).~\Y ONLY —- EIGHT COMEDY STARS PUNCH” Chant. R of “SECRET CODE" - Color Cartoon SHOWS 7 and 8.45 I)? CAPITOL ‘i? Basil RATHBONE - ADDED- OUS AUSTRALIA Lend-Lease Report 0f Tanks and Planes Sent to Russia WASHINGTON. Jan. 20—(APl— The Unittd States and the United Kmgdom have sent 5.800 tanks and 4.600 ivlanes to llussia, the lend lease administration reported Lodgy with alpljomise that. aid tn the gwrlct. 'Wlll grow still more in 19- Administratol" Edward R. Stett. inlils said that as of Jan. 1 more than 3,200 tanks nlld almost 2,600 planes had golle from the Unit/id States. and 2.600 tanks and more more than 2,000 planes from the United Kingdom, Announcing ‘important progress" last. year in supplying Russia. Siett- inlus declined:- "TM Deoillc of the Soviet union have no far waged o. magnificent battle against the Nazis principally wit-h their own arms. But lend-lease aid to Russia is growing to a siz- able proportion. It will grow still more in i943." ABEGWEIT By Alan Fergus Murray ‘ Fhirest land upon the water Silnl‘t garden of the wave Ne'er shall Island son or daughter Be a traitor or a slave. Now we wait-malt with impatience Soon we hope to cross the sea wlllilf’. the great United Nationg Fight as one for Liberty. Isle of Pence and quiet beauty Eden Haven; Homeland Ours. We shall hasten to our duty Eager fight the Axis powers. With a voicc of lght we swear it Island of our irth and ride We've your gilerdon. We shal wear Not for naught your song have died. Mlnard ‘l Kills pain. ouetaaarqrrmw" - NEWSY i OLD ENGLAND i ....__ I Two event; occurred in the Bronco Ase. which must hnve due recogni- tion: first. the great impulse given to mining; and second, the intro- duction of the horse. A; already narrated, the work of mining flint was carried» on with energy and skill by the inhabitants of Neolithic Britain. t mining ‘d‘d not at once decline when the first bronze implements appeared," but metal took the cream of the 'market," says an antiquarian writes. (Bronze i; an allay of copper and itln, or zinc; and copper ore was scarce in Britain. but. plentiful in ifreland. Very different was the lease with uri, which however was frestricted to Cornwall; and lhere it occurred in such quantity that it not only supplied the home mar- ket, but for centuries alas available for export to the continent. It may [be taken for granted that the early miners obtained their tin ore from lodes WlllCh came to the surface on hillsides. Diolorils Slculus says" The inhabitants of that part of Brita n wlhch is called 391611011 (Land's End in Cornwall) . .. . ilrepure the tin working very care- fully the earth in which it L; pro- duced. The ground is rocky, but it contains earthly veins. the produce of which is ground down, smelted and purified." The finished pro- lduct was taken over the sands at ebb-tide to an island" in front of Britain,“ whence it was taken by merchants to Corbelo at the mouth of the Loire and thence by land and river to Marseilles. The island (cal- led lctis) was Yong supposed- to be the Isle of Wight (Vectis of the Romans)’ but historians are now convinced that St. Michael's Mount. cff Comwalls. was the island refer- red to. It is rather singular, that ivith all this evidence of a floufish- ing trade. there is no sign of any special wealth among the tin- miners. A few coins and beads and some Greek pottery exhaust the list.) This is the common fate 0f primary producers in all times and in nll places, and never more so than when widely separated from the purchasers of their produce. The Bronze Age miners may well have deserved the praise of Dcodorus as being "more civilized in their man- ner of life,“ but it is also plain that they were no match for the crafty Greek and Phoenician merchants who bought their ingots, The re- gion too. was inhospitable so that food- and clothing would take up s large proportion of their income, since both must have been brought ifrom other parts. evidence. dlig i The horse, by all lnot make its appearance in Brita until the Late Bronze Age, and the ‘harness so far recovered, seems be designed for a typical pony 0! about l2 "hands“ (or fcilr feet) high. The earliest bridle-bits were made of deer's antler, consisting of a transverse mouth-piece inserted into flat cheek-pieces which were perforated for the attachment of reins. (Metal bits were not in- ,troduced till about the middle of the Iron Age). The evidence for wheeled vehicles is very dubious till the Iron Age i; reached. It is more than likely that something of the travels type. (such as was once) common among American Indians) was the earliest vehicle Pre- historic Brltaln. The Britons like all barbaric peoples. delighted in costly harness, and even at this early period, ornamented the horse] trappings of sheet copper with gold- | plating and perhaps enamel work. though the later rmore likely to be of Iron "Age origin. Finally it must be recognized that as late as the seventeenth century most British roads were little bet- ter than trails, and that the great bulk of merchandise must have been carried on the back of pack-horses. (A few miles from mv boyhoocrs home was the village d Iieadgafle. on the “gate” or way by which the lead- ore was brought down on pack horses from the mines in the hills, in ormer times) This wasteful m od of employing horses almost certainly originated with the Bronze Age people Juglone from Walnuts. “Horticulture Ilustrated" (Ameri- can), has an article on fungicides derived from black walnut and but- ternut husks. "It had long been known that the soil at the base of walnut trees is toxic to the higher plants. causing them to blacken and die " A few years ago the poisonous chemical was insolntcd and caled “Juglonef from Jugnns, the generic name of the walnut tree, More re- cently juglone has been made by synthesis. Dr. George A. qries. of the Connecticut Agricultural Station, New Haven, had been searching lor something to replace the copper fungicides, and unearthed a formula used by a practical grower lust over 100 years ago It was an in- fusion of black ivalnilf. leaves. Dr. Greg could not discover why the formula had been dropped. but lab_ time the editor of The chapter about old laws NOTES - fi AGI-DOI-A inscription was Ill from the wu- thering which. overtook that on the tombstone. and somewhat gratified the vlnity of the surviving relations as mowing. wealth. In the c urch at the historic little town of Bomurd Castle. County Durham. higland. in e brass plate recording the deaths of two of the chLdren of the incumbent who held office there during the Oclnmon (And in Latin) Jonathan Rog- ers, first-born son of John Rogers, M. A. and of Grace hi! wife, died Anno Christi 1060. Nov. 8. (Then in lmgllsh). Hee peep'd into the World. where hce could see. Naught but confusion, sinne and misery, Thence soapy;- into his Sewers armes thus hee Gott Hcauen for fourteene mortality. (Under this in Latin) John Rog- ers, second son of J R and G. R , dried Anno Christi 1652, Aug. 30 Bleskl Soule Thy name did mind u_< of God's grace Thou wast his gift whose loue shew'd vs thy face But hee that gaue did take in 1en monthsspacc Thou foundbt in Fathers nrmes a rcsfing place It is said that at New Haven, Connecticut. there is an epitaph which looks at the matter from an entirely different angle: ft is on a babe four days old:- 1 "Since I so very |00n was done or, I wonder what I was begun for." In general, epitaphs in. Britain have not the grotesque (llld often ironic) flavor of those composed by their American cousins. In th icravevard at Lisbon, Vermont. it is ,recorded of one Zebedee Haskins, (1767-1804) 2- "'111e wretched man who mould- crs here Cal-ed not for soul or body lost But 0111.)’ ‘Went when death drew near Zoosttlvrink how much his tomb would At bong Newton, naar Stockton, C0 Dllflwm. ll to be seen in the which a brass plate commemorating $11" Gwrae Vane. son of that Sir Harry Vane from whom Cromwell 111113101111 t0 be delivered: "Here lvelfi the body of Sr. George vane interred Mav the First 1679 . . . Hehad thirteeene hopefvll children. viz. fovre sons and nine davghters, His honovr wonne ith feild lies here its dvst. His honovr got by grace shall never rvst. The formfll‘ Indus the letter liall faiie never For why, he ws s. Geo pvt St. Georgeaeverr." we on“ OD-DS AND ENDS “NOW m‘ stimulant. Own ormocun mun, certain 16168. will stimulate rolcllt- formation, when cuttings are treat. ed with them. "Canadian Horti- cultum" Pills DOtasslum permangan- ate amen: these stimulants, and xlvlses amateurs to experiment mm roiaulum to had It any drpu-g storgefzlid figuctfi dayes “hemiws- The denser. 1 imagine, 333d lie in ifs-rig too strong a m“. The method: The leafy cuttings, cleanly cut or trimmec, are stood in a vessel full of the solution (just B! 1f U19)‘ were cut flowers for 24 hours. They must not stand in direct, SWIIBht nor in a draught. Then plant and telld in the usual way. Geraniums will be fine to start with, keeping an untreated cutting or two a‘ a meek Try and determine the Mmi strength of the solution that Ell/es best results. Ray-Shun v. Rush-on. The U. S. broadcasters are credited (in the Ot- tawa Journal) with pronouncing the word ration a "ray-shop." Truth u; tell. I never heard it called anything else till I came to Canada. Now, like BVEYYbOUY else. I call it rash-on, 31°"!!! my Oonsclence prlcks me for Tvlefill‘!!! the more euphonious vowe , was when parent. apparatus. (and ed pay-rent, apparay-tus vc: em. ploying the long vowel. which has a sweeter sound. Now we seem to have cultivated a harsher voice. A terrible dilemma. Once on q Newcastle i Chronicle (to which I was an 0c. casional contribumr) presented me,‘ with u book called "Scots Vlvers/‘I As its name implies it was mainly, about eatables. but there was a ' One of here was against extravagance in; dress. and read: "Na woman, m. ceptnhowris. snll drcs< aboon hir est-i ate. There was no punishment‘ prescribed. but it put the Scotch oratory tests find that the synthe- sized form of jnglorie is more toxic than copper oxide, and now- there is a. probability that it will be put‘ to work a; a fungcide to combat minute parasitic forms of plant life| which cause havoc with food crops‘ and ornamcntnls, I Now for my slcry. As a small boy. I noticed that. the village women‘ gathered English walnut leaves to place among stored clothes. and was told they kept away moths and other insects. I was further toll that farmers dried the leaves. crush- ed them, and added a small halid- fiil to the feed oats, to relieve their horses of internal parasltea~wsrms and bots. when I came here. thirty-three years ago. I remembered this, when I saw Black Wirnivts growing here. and wrote to the Federal Department of Aizrculturc, telling them of the practice, and begging them to make experiments with dried leaves of the blnck walnut as a veltnlfuge. I for- get who was in charge then, but he politely threw cold water on the pro- iject and advised me to emnioy a lveterinarv who would glve the ani- mal a capsule to free it from nar- iasites. This expense was just what I was trying in save! And it did not ‘show much sagnclty in turning down the exper ment Canada might have hnrij the honor of discovering Jug- lone, MORE TOMRRTONE INSCRIP- TIONR I Besides the Gravestone in the rllurcynuzfi, people nf muscqilenre in (he part-sh often placed mcmcfial ‘wnll-nintcs" of brass or marble in the interior of the church Budi an lr""'es in a tight spot! i i I ' Power, K. .. M. . “ Minister of finance, Hon, Jamel Minister r, Hon. I-lum- u may. mo. DhIQY lidltchell. HISTORY INSURANCE SERVKI” W. ll. ROGERS Agencies Ltd. Phone 540-541 e . Cheaper than the other iootforming' Old Enellsh more musical. Time land a number of other words) were call- minish r in North Africa y. ARDIAN lain ( l2 En. mg: this sentient country The old nabitude takes on. Ans. The poet la referrinl to win- g: The £10210 ‘comes 33km 861ml’:- un 0N6 "WW w w as "the old hnbitudsf‘ held me Till the man-child was I mm. Canada, great nurse and mother Of the ung sea-IO (ans) e 01mm? he her wide arms unt be tion to‘ far distant places. Cen- nda or the Maritime Provinces is the home of the young sea-mvinl cum, just as England and Norse Countries are the home of the Old sea-roving clan.- (c 7 Now far alien countries call me With the shins of my Balm John. » (Ans) Now that he is o. man. far distant foreign countries call to him whenever he sees the ships of grey Saint John putting out to | loyalists, my fathers builded i This grey port of the If]? RI. (Ans) St. John was founded by the United was loyalists. who left the Uni states after the revolution giving ‘up fine homes to (carve new ones in a vir n coun- Itry, because their atrio ism to- wards Britain woul not et them live under another flag. ( . vsflien the breadth of lcerlet unting Puts the wreath of maple on, CURREN \ BURMA The lend front which mints h China cuuiot serve as s. hue for a major offensive a. linst Jn until it is adequate supp ed. Increased attention is t erefore be- ln given to the possibility of re- ga lug‘ control of Burma, to re- open t e Burma mad and dia- rupi; Japan's efforts at como dat- ing its Posltim in Southeast Asia. The dif lculties of a Burma offen- sive are great. The from India are poor. Coastal invasion lrequires naval superiority in the |Bay of Bengal. The supply prob- ilem is enormous, because of the ion h of ocean transport routes ‘an the necessity of supplyin other area-s. Then too. torrentis imonsoon rains in the Calcutta- Rangcon area begin in May. mak- ing it necessary to start In in vasfon some months earlier, that important. positions can b0 boiled before it becomes eue-rv do dig in. The political situation requires some mention. Bitterness i of feeling in Indie. has been built iup during the 1 A though India is lat the present iways the danger breaks. when the Japanese were over-running Burma. they receiv- ed the aid of a smell section of the Burmese people. ‘me Allies ,need to develop some m-Ogramme i for obtaining greater support from {the Burmese in order to simplify ithe problems of their cunpe n. . The air and sen power of the Al 0e ‘in In has been steadily in- ‘cieasing 1n the est nine months. A chain of air rornes have been constructed alon the Burma. bor- der by the RA. . and the UAAJ‘. | A powerful army has been recruit- ‘ ed. mostly of Indians. In mid-De- cember a British column, under General Wavell, struck down the Bay of Bengal toward Akymb 100 i miles from the Indian frontier. It ‘ was taken by the Japanese on May ,5. Rangoon. Burmas ca. ital, lies more than 300 miles far er down . e c . i William Phillips hu been u?- i painted by President, noouvet. Amb to India. General Sikorski is held 0f the Polish Government - in exile with headquarters in London. ~ Th Russian Ambassador w Eng- e L! al rson ismlbobert roads Ivan Malskv Pres dent Roosevelt's ' THE ED PRESENTING NEWS AND VIEWS 0F INTEREST T0 TEACHERS AND ALL OTHERS SEEKING ( : Once in your wide um! you him in become a man, then he escaped in imlllnl- past nine months. October, 1943 UCA TIONAL HO -A SATURDAY FEATURE~ ‘ IMPROVEMENT [N EDUCATION ‘ ' LITERATURE 1 ma‘: diefl. too-clip n) moor gs With the ships of lrey it. John. ) The mercantile in of J on (Ans. Britain is a small Union o. Iieltlil of red. wtzmh m . era c a ‘all’: theyC mun mi of mfis an the red (scarlet) field. when Ou- men sees s ship leaving 8t. John for an alien country he must, in imagination slip his moorings and sail out with it. (f): Peerless-hearted port of heron, Be e word to lift the world, Till the many see the lilllll‘ 0f the few once more unfurled. (Ans) Carmen pra a that the ideals which animate the build- ers of St. John may be l t0 to other parts of the world until the whole world may learn to live un- der e principles of freedom which the oyalists brought to this coun- r y. . . How does the story of “The Ship of St. John" fit with the facts 0 Bliss Carmen's life Carmen did not nil with the ships of at. John, but in iiu ima- gination he roved the whole world. ‘was gets? it tell us o! the spirit o e ahlifiwiaih“ Ell “fill” .““‘ e o ven ure and loyalty tolgls native country. Hedsees a1 the beautielbofz agar‘: m u filled with a longin for tum: and must have even if only in imagination. Notice the way in which contemplation on the ships crmin the her ads the ‘hhlhinl iifililiki’. “til e "cross the final bu- of life" and nil out into the unknown. T EVENTS Saburo Kurusu was the special envo from Japan in Wuhinmn at tflnalof Jnpmeu initial at. h r on Pea Harbour. World's largest battlelitp launch. ed at the Philadelphia, Penn, Navy Yard on Dec. 7, 1942 one your after Pearl Harbour was the " ew Jersey." Frank Knox ll the Unified Intel Secretary of c Navy. President of UWfllI-y ll Jinn J00 de Amezogn. Admiral William I‘. H . Jr.. ls commander of the Uni Not- ions’ forces in the South Pacific. fill t ‘ignorant nations of the worl w have not yet become direcgy involved in the ore Arge inn, Chile, nine, ugsl Spain, Sweden, tau-lend In ..r.iE*;::.r.:.i- - "- "M '~= ""- aoliweb 111D?!‘ th-bili-lt ouad f'u' 31w‘ $ l‘ DI I fled islands of resistance mm Llnll n ' to Qllewvlceroyu ‘llfim continue as for on additions! six months unt . He was appointed Vlcero in 1936. His term was exten ed in 1941 until April 1943. WAR. IN’ ‘I'll PACIFIC In New Guinea, intense fighting had continued in the Jungle: and along the shores. st summer the Japanese had established a beachhead alon the coast, taking h Gone, s pr itive native vil- tl-icr r0 h settle- Bun the pew timeut" ‘staid I n. Q min-lstra/tive centre of the Near Mission were clearin used or the beachhead the Ja/panese had driven over the Owen stanley Mountains to within 32 miles of Port Moras- by. They were forced back to thieirloriginal pfleitlon. n a te November and early Dc- cember. Gena and Buna both fell attack by American bombers. Ja- panese warships and trans orts had seen prevented from land g rein- . rcements on Gusdaleonel etc November. A heavy battle wu fought off the north comet of the island i MEMBERS 0F THE SIXTEENTH DOMINION Prime Minister. President of the Prlvymiiouzvcll, Score of State for ternal Affairs, R.- Bon. W. L. Mackenzie King, . . . Member of the Administration and Minister without portfolio. Rt. Hon. Raoul Dandurand. K.O. Minister of Mines and Resources, I-Ion, Thomas Alexander rerar. Minister of Public Wor , Hon. Al honse Fournier. elinister of Transport, Hon. JOI- epti ha/ud. E. Mic . Minister of Notional Defence. K.(‘.., Hon, James Layton Rslston, C.M 11.8.0. _ Minister of Pensions and Nat- ional Health. Hon. Ian Alistair MacKenzie, K0. Associate Minister of National D ‘ and Minister of National Defence for Air, Hon. Charles G. IXIICIII I In each of the followlnl limits put a. emu (x) before the one int or m: Group - 51 in I th Magoo Cute gait/Alicia? Benliochbum Crusades . Nonnan conquest of Iilllnd. Group i- flicloyum of John cum to Am- a. Cartier: visits ltodmoona. Founding of Quebec Discovery of America. roup 3- British Conquest 8f Canada American Revolu onery War. rbunding of the lied liver colony. Bulldlnir of the Inter-colonial Railway. Group 4- Aot of Union. British North America Act. Quebec Act. The Cflnltltutionel m. Group 5- Complctlon of the Olnldlln Manitoba enters Confederation. of Fisheries, Hon Berti-an Minister of Munitions and lili- plyiuI-Ion. Clarence D. Howe. nister of Agriculture, Hon. James G. Gardiner. Secretary of State. Hon, Norman A. MoLarty, KC. Minister of Trade and Commerce, I-lon. James Angus MacKinnon. tmsster General. Hon. Wil- liam P. ock, KC. Minister of Notional Revenue. Hon, Colin W. G. Gibson. .0 M.C.. V.D. Minister of National Defence for Naval services. Hon. Angus L. Mac. donald, K.O. Minister of Notional War Ber- vices, Major-General L. It. Lnlfleche Minister of Justice and At- torney General of Canada. Hon. Louis S. st. Laurent, KC. Rebellion of Uwer Gouda. ro l- Tl-larnsfer of R ‘s 14nd and the North West to Oimede. Alberta enters Oonfeder tion. Red River on. Blsknfohewln Rebellion. IXQCIII ‘I! Put a cross before the ltete- ments that are true: l-Jn North America the Beven Years We: was foueht mainly to profits!‘ tthhe. New mliuui colonies III fi-‘Phis war ended in rm and had cost Britain e lreet deal of money. 3- t seemed fair that the New mglsnd colonists nhoirld on some of this ex nse. G-By the l no Act. and oth- er Acts of the British Par ilmonl. taxes were imcoud on the New England colonilta. 5—'I'hese the c0l0ni|t4 refuled to nay. a d they at int. offered erm- ed res tance. 0-1hey It once declared their independence of British rule, . 7--'I'ho war that followed lulled over twentv years. lb-Ihe Munch-Canadians ell- Ofly supported the New England OOlOIIIIlI. i Pacific Railwa Bed River Rebellion. ‘us-gun 10rd 011% and moot e Whig Ballad. favoured the cause of the rebel- lious colonists. l0 - The New Inglend colonists themselves were not all in favour of independence. a ll-Froun a third to a half of the people favoured the British clues ll-Afier the we: fifty thousand of than. known u Inyflilis, went to live in Canada. 1l--'1‘he American colonists were successful because the British were In was o. poor. oblcurl clerk in also employ of the East Indie omoeny. By nature he was eb- solutely fearless and was a mili- tary go us. The Hench and English were strugglin for the mastery of India. B e Treaty of Aix-lii-Chepelle, adru had been restored to Britain but in 1151 Dupleix, the French leader, pre- pared in attack it. Aware of his Ian Clive seized Arcot, the cap- tal of one of Duplelx’: native al- lies. Here Olive ‘ 4i to stand e long siege und f0 it so well the the out ves deem that the Bri- tish might be even better fighters than the French. In 1757 Surajah Dowlah, the ruler of Bengal. de- roliinstion ll the trl-nlferuwe of from the anther to the stigma of a flower. Belf- llina- tion is the transference pollen from the anther to the stigma of some flower, Cross-pollina- is the transference of pollen from the anther one flower to the stigma of a war of another t o! the some kind. Croes- llfmtion lgfcda either ca) (i) a ger crop see , or seeds of better quality. Pollinating agencies - Gravity, the wind, in- mo, by hand. machines and a. P is ted b! (l) one: <=>"'.=..8.i'§"a."<s> buddine. (4) grafting. (ii layering (6) spores. Note carefully that when verbs such ll "ti-ate, d, 100k, fee smell and appear" an almost 0&1." in uremia: to the verb ‘to they are followed by odiectives and not adverbs. Select the correct forms in the following sentences: x (l, Cm you not sit (quiet, quiet- Y The lick men wu very (won-k. weakly.) last evening. J. ‘My feet feel (cold. co y). GREAT BEAR LAKE G Bear Luke has an area of wbvut 12000 square miles ll the fourth largest lake on the continent and it is the largest lake th all its shorelim within the boundaries of Canada. miles North of Edmonton. northern waters being within the It has been ucer- teiried that under the rocky mores o! that faraway lake are vast stores of‘ "precious metals. mere have been discoveries of The Dominion of New Zaaland consists of three main islands. North Island. South Island and Stewart Island and several other smaller islands. New Zeulurid is moped much like Italy and is of much the same size. There are mars, hot s rings in North Is- d. ‘rho vers are numerous and are ideal sources of wa power of which New Zealot-id ll mski d North than it The differe . Ital and New zenlsnd is due to ther relative positions, one a peninsula on a warm sea. the oth- er e grogpmof islands in u at ocean. greatest rllnf of New Inland is in the west. The flora and fauna are in general un- like those of the rest of the world. Native plants include flax. tree ferns and kaurl pine. which is found on North Island. yield valuable timber. From its roots is obtained to res- lnous substance called Keuri gum. which is used for making varnishes and linoleum. Native birds clude several almost entirely winc- lms, such as the kiwi or apteryx. DUBNED T0 DEATH Jan. 20—(CP)-Mar- O-months-old daught- er of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Crlss of nearby Hammond's Plains, was HALIFAX. geret Cliss, l JANUARY 23, 1943 RIZ ON M filed!!! inoollfllliitgcg. li-And Lilo boo Queers-ail. i‘??? m vol-la. ' pm‘ °’ l5—'1‘he Treaty of Mx-la-Clm- mic gragltad the colonies. m“. eiwfill dresser“ w- Q Hawthorn... “W” ~ BY as mfwlllli of respect andrglsllfi ROBERT CLIVE mended the reason for the f _ % of Calcutta by the B11145. en the answer dici not SlltlSfy him, he seized 146 British viimun his reach and confined them in a, small prison room. when the door was opened on 33 were 10mm alive. Clive hearifl! of the terrl. bio deed. hastened from Mudiss retool: Calcutta and later defeat.‘ ed Sarajah Dowlahsgreat army l; Plasseya with his trained lluopg, nus ttle decided the fate India and left Clive the real ruler C! B9118“. W116!) Chi seven Year’; Wer ended in 1768, the French agreed to ke no military rm. session! in In a. NATURE STUDY Grafting ll the practice fitting a twig or brunch on to u growing plant. firmly and in such a way that the sap from the one flolvs through the other monitoring life. some plants store up winter food in a close cluster 0i llruxill‘ leaves and are known as blllbn, 0. . the onion. tipules u: mall, leaf-like at. techments mt the base of a leaf. Petiolc is the leaf-stalk, Node is the point at which a leaf is attached to the stem. Whorl is an arrangement ol leaves in a circle above the stems of some plants. llbrn leaves are called fronds. Fern seeds are celled spores. EXERCISE IN GRAMMAR sourly). 8. It seem: (ltnngo. lf-rlngclyl than you think we acted (strange, strangely). l. Your garden looks so (differ- mt. oifferently) now. 10. The roses there smell (sweet, sweetly). 11. The boy looked at us (crou, ‘n12. They loolkged (oi-on. croesiv). en they e. 1S. His runqraioin swa makes him mppfazwmishones, di onestly). 1 i. He looked at me (cold. cold- ). . e found our way cults s. My vacuum ‘ docs not (easy. easily). work (good, well). 16. The lenwneu seem (can, , I om (reel. m7) well now. sully) vodey. 'l. The milk nu boeune (sour. GEORGRAPHY metals, with l. promise of wealth in silver, gold, copper and more import-ant still, vast deposits of nitchblende ore. from which radi- um is extracted. ‘fills new min- ing district ls growing to major importance, rospectors and min- ers having sreamed in by plan; A town o. tlon is rapidly growing at Port Radium. formerly known as Cani- oron Beyrcn theeest of the ‘lake in the centre of the known mining area. NEW ZEALAND Colonization was begun in 1340. when Wellington was founded. The early colonists found the country already occupied by a native race called Maorls. The industries of New Zealand are principally, agri- culture, forest , stock-raising, dairying and min g. Horses, pigs, sheep and cattle are raised. Wheat, oats, and other crops are cultivat- ed. The fruits are oranges. le- mons, peaches. and olives. Min- erals include gold. copper, gold. coal, silver, and iron. Wool and dairy roducts are the most im- nortan e . The fishiniz in- dustry in New Zealand is still in its infancy. The chief import! are clothing and textiles met-all and machinery, Most of the - ports come from Britain. Other countries which send cocoa to New Zenland nrr the Ilnltcrl States, Australia and Canada. Welling- ton on Cook strait is the capital. Other towns are Auckland. Christ- church, Dunedin and Wariganui. ~n,_nnaunugunuqnnnnmungqnnll Thin Department is con- ducted by the Prince Edward Island Teachers’ Federation. Contribution are welcomed and should he adtlrfsscd lo Miller ltlacllndyrn. K 1-2 Fel- ling Sh, Charlottetown. which destroyed the home of Porter Allloon, where the family lived. Other members of the household were unable to enter the babiwi room where the fize started. all- pareutly from an ovcrlicaicd stove. burned to death yesterday in a lire ARMY snow fivryfmwfl/ii?‘ l0 to 10.30 A- D. T. sin OVER STATION BFBY O4