February 27, 1891.] 



SCIENCE. 



125 



is distributed gratis by the members of the General Assembly of 

 Ohio, but, if any one wishes, he may buy it for fifty cents. 



— The "Investigations of the New England Meteorological 

 Society" for 1889, includes, besides the usual tabular summaries, 

 three essays on " Weather-Types in New England," " The Sea- 

 Breeze on the New England Coast," as observed in 1887, and the 

 " Characteristics of the New England Climate." The greater part 

 of these are contributed by the director, Professor W. M. Davis of 

 Harvard College, and Professor W. Upton of Brown University. 

 The essay on weather types opens a line of writing that might be 

 taken up to advantage in other State weather services, where some 

 addition to the monotony of the annual tabular reports would be 

 refreshing. The study of the sea-breeze is based on the reports of 

 about a hundred volunteer observers on and near the eastern coast 

 of Massachusetts, from Newburyport to Plymouth. The irregu- 

 larity of the occurrence of the breeze is so great that it does not 

 appear a hopeful subject for further study. Professor Upton 



summarizes the climate of New England under the following 

 headings: changeable and unsettled weather; great ranges of 

 temperature, both daily and annual; variation of seasons from 

 year to year ; equable distribution of temperature; and variety of 

 local features from the low southern coast to the mountainous 

 northern interior. 



— In LippincoW s Magazine for March, 1891, the first instal- 

 ment of "Some Familiar Letters by Horace Greeley" form an 

 interesting feature. This is a series of letters written by Horace 

 Greele.v to an intimate friend, and covers the period immediately 

 preceding and during his political campaign. These letters are 

 expected to remove many unfounded prejudices. Another of the 

 series of " Round-Robin Talks" appears in this number. Among 

 the guests are Paul B. Du Chaillu, George W. Childs, T. P. Gill, 

 M.P., George Parsons Lathrop, Julian Hawthorne, and others. 

 The piece de resistance of this instalment is the story told by Paul 

 Du Chaillu of his discovery of the gorilla in the wilds of Africa. 



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