120 



ME. LAY ON THE OUTLINES OF A 



Barometer. JHynrometric 

 State 



A.M. P.M. 



29,96 



29,95 



29,97 



30,00 

 30,00 



30,03 

 30,06 



30,06 

 30,03 

 30,00 



29,99 



29,97 

 29,97 



29,97 

 30,00 



30,00 



Dry. 



Moru, N.E., 

 puffs from 

 S.E. at 

 noon. 



Morn, N.E ; 

 noon, puffs 

 from S.E.; 

 dayfall, 

 N.E. 



Morn, calm ; 

 noon, S.E. 



Do., Night 

 calm. 



N.E. 



N.E , nearly 

 calm ; p.m. 

 southeily. 



N.E., nearly 

 calm. 



N.E.; P.M., 

 southerly. 



N.E. ; near- 

 Iv calm. 



even- 

 west- 



N.E. 



ing 

 erly. 



Moru, N.E.; 



eve, S.E. 

 Morn, N.E., 

 nearly 

 calm ; noon 

 S.E., puffs. 

 W., nearly 



calm. 

 S.E. : eve, 

 S.W. 



W. ; south 

 erly puffs. 



Atmospheric Phenomena. 



Clear aloft. Mist over the 

 city and skirting the hills as 

 usual in clear weather. 



Morning, cloudless aloft, «ith 

 dew on the grass. 



Moru with stratified clouds, 

 dew on the grass. Noon 

 sky cloudless ; evening again 

 cloudy. 



Morn, sky cloudy, no dew; 

 day clear. 



Morn, pale copper-coloured 

 cloiuls with swathes of va- 

 pour as if driven by the 

 wind in the region below ; 

 mid-day clear ; sunset cloud- 

 les>. 



At sunrise not a cloud visible. 



A few small clouds in patches. 



Morn clear and cloudless ; a 

 copious dew. 



Morn cloudless; mi»t over the 

 city ; a copious dew. 



Morn, plentiful dew on the 

 grass ; a few wavy patches 

 of empurpled cloud. 



A cloudy mantle investing the 

 sky; sun at rising just peep- 

 ing between the patches. 

 A slight shower. 



Sky clear ; night moonlight. 



Clear aloft, foggy below. 



Fog-clouds rising from the 

 nortli-east. 



Morn sky mantli-d with clouds; 

 little dew. Uiyfiue; over- 

 cast at day-fall ; weather 

 pleasant to sense. 



Rain preceding night. Morn 

 with a mantle of clouds. A 

 light shower at noon. Chilly. 



Day showery. 



Hushandr)/ and Gardeninc/. — 1-10. Wheat sown in holes on the high 

 lauds from which a crop of Sweet-potatoes has been just removed. — A layer 

 of mould finely mixed with ashes is put into each hole either before or after 

 the wheat is sown. In one instance trenches were drawn by the hoe, the 

 grain thrown in, and a dressing of night-soil. — Reaping the second crop of 

 rice commences at the opening of the month. It is forthwith threshed in a 



