Miscellaneous Intelligei 



inches, in March. The greatest am 

 as 10-466 inches, on March 21st. 



which fell in one 



BaUy Journal of Rain at HUo, Hawaii^ f 



om August I 



1846, 



to July 



.11, 1847. 



p^:r& 



^ 



Nov^ 



"""•So 



"^00 



~360 



Mag^ 



^50 



-mST 

 ■025 



"^65 



-^ 



i -149' s 



























•24( 



















•155 















•720 















•015 







•055 







6 -155 























7 -244 











•024 













I -.039 ;015 



•152 



3175 













3-98( 







10 -399 -2^; 



























r7oo 





















•10( 

















■195 



























I :i ijjo 



•02( 



•080 



S? 



no 



•050 



2^080 



^•730 





•040 



Vll 







•8.).5 









l;290 







•500 







•065 

























•810 















■130 





19' -022 -290 



•005 









•830 



■525 













•415 



















21 400^ -168 







2-0(;7 



2^91() 



1-205 



10-4?6 









■325 









2^420 





1-315 

















•228 





■590 























■145 







•050 







-_ J-n -100 



T^ 



3 •565 



■ t 



•100 

 1-125 



•020 

 ■825 



i|o 



•095 



■36a 



■020 



•070 



-^ '1^ S5 



•10? 



1-4H5 





•050 

 1-505 



•8?S 



'•io 



•US 



•040 



•135 



■150 

 •085 















•030 



025 































:«^ 



1^ 



25^52 



IF93J 



^5 



9^ 



ssrie 



1T865 





5^2^ 



9^919 



^A short course in Astronomy and the use of Globes; by 

 ttEXRY KiBDLE, A.M., Superintendent of Schools, New lork, 

 Author of a " New Manual of the Elements of Astronomy."' New 

 ^ork, 1871. (Ivison, Blakeman, Taylor & Co.)— This little book, 

 01 190 pages, beautifully printed and illustrated, contains, m con- 

 «8e language, an outline of the elements of Astronomy, so jire 

 sented as to make it a good text book for schools, especially in the 

 'iands of teachers capable of supplementing its condensed state- 

 nients and explanations with suitable oral instruction. It appears 

 to be accurate as to facts, clear in expression as its brevity per- 

 onts, and conformed, in the main, to the latest and best authorities 

 on the matters of whir-l, it fr^nfa' 



Willie Chauyenet, LL.D., Ex-Chancellor of Washington 

 J;mver8ity, St. Louis, died in St. Paul, 3Iinnesota, 13 Dec, 18,0, 

 f a httle more than fifty years of age. He had long been m poor 

 ^e^^lth, and on this account resigned his connection with the Lm- 

 ^■^'^'ty in 1869. After traveling in the South without the restora- 



