294 SIR F. W. DYSOX, PROF. A. S. EDDINGTON AND MR. C. DAVIDSON ON A 
It may be noted that No. 1 is lost in the corona on the photographs taken at Sobral. 
The star, No, 13, of magnitude 8-0, is shown on some of the astrographic plates 
at Sobral. 
6. The track of the eclipse runs from North Brazil across the Atlantic, sldrting the 
African coast near Cape Palmas, passing through the Island of Principe, then across 
Africa to the western shores of Lake Tanganyika. Enquiry as to the suitable sites and 
probable weather conditions was Idndly made by Mr, Hinks. It appeared that a station 
in North Brazil, the Island of Principe, and a station on the west of Lake Tanganyika 
were possible. A station near Cape Palmas did not seem desirable from the meteoro¬ 
logical reports though, as the event proved, the eclipse was observed in a cloudless sky 
