the polar seas. 
T 51 
n the month of Mav irw «• T i T 
ne PW, Ja mes Clark B,7 ' - ’ * J ° Lu IlOSS ’ accom panied by bis 
entered Prince 77 ^ «* P ° W W He 
!l;ul been dismantled and abmd’ “TT?* ** foorid the Far, .h which 
years before The nm ■ • ° Ue< ^ Barry in these regions, eight 
ou ** •“ 
navigator explored the Berth; ‘sss crews. The distinguished 
sbeutively i n p ort; gp , U TTninsuia, 11,1,1 passed four years con- 
the m™r a m? 7 t0 '«* —1, 
Wlth theEs^nimaux. Sir John? T t0 become “for 
sojourn in polar countries has ivv "TV' 1 US account of this long 
natives, which our space does* not n ^ COnversatio,i « with the 
terrible position he was extricated P 7 US t0 qU ° te - From this 
this my prison, when all hope of’ 1 7 emerged Wlth his crew from 
After being exposed to a thousand da 77^ been “doned. 
a last observed by a whaling ship TST’ ^ “ d his crew were 
after many efforts to attract atteSoI n tLcm 011 hoard, 
which had saved them was the iZella t T g ** *» *ip 
reception Captain Boss 
7 rds S * “es Clark f ^ Commander ( a ^r- 
Magnetic Pole. This was ■ t ■ 1 7 , uosel y approached the North 
1.‘ of June, 1W " * * ‘ f**. on the morning „ f ° “ 
fflagnetic needle „ . D- dip », £ 
une seconds— one minute short of’nin ,° lg lty ' mne degrees fifty- 
7 at shore . ri 'sing into ridges fromTft T* 68 ’ Tbe site was a 
about a mile inland. ° fif V to sixty feet high, and 
Contrary to the iudement ef 
explorations, the last and most fctaUf ° f eXperience “ polar 
^ken by Sir John Franklin, with one h iT expeditions wa s under- 
go Lfi CerS ^ men - iu til e ships Erebus and 7^ and 7 irty ' Seven P ie ked 
eernesson the 26th of May 1846 ^ Terr .° r \ The adventurers left 
7 m eVCTy c °nceivahle way and fo f?" W strength- 
^ ^ -ety of the 4^7^^ 
