Page:Early western travels, 1748-1846 (1907 Volume 3).djvu/386

 +         June                  |       Observations +           Thermometer         | -+-++-+ Greatest degree of heat on the 17th Times of |Highest|Lowest|Mean | and 27th, least on the 6th. Rain on the observation|      |      |     | 4th, 5th, 12th, 15th, 16th, 18th, and -+-++-+ 19th. The remainder of the month A.M.  |   76  |  61  | 69  | pleasant. No days smoky. M.   |   83  |  72  | 78  | P.M.  |   87  |  72  | 83  | The meazles have prevailed this, and -+-++-+ the preceding months, with greater Barometer        | severity than had been known before. +-++-+ In many instances they proved fatal. A.M.  | 28,80 |28,33 |28,54| M.   | 28,81 |28,32 |28,56| P.M.  |28,77  |28,29 |28,54| -+-++-+         {85} July             | + The greatest degree of heat was on the Thermometer        | 12th and 13th; the least on the 6th and -+-++-+ 7th. The termometer has stood at 90 Times of |Highest|Lowest|Mean | two or three times at between III. and observation|      |      |     | IV. P.M. We had rain on the 2d, 4th, -+-++-+ 16th, 17th, and 24th. A.M.  |   77  |  64  | 71  | M.   |   86  |  72  | 79  | For the two last months the prevalent P.M.  |   89  |  75  | 73  | winds were from S.W. to W. We have -+-++-+ very few winds from the east. Storms Barometer        | are heard to roar in the mountains, +-++-+ fifteen miles south of this place, for A.M.  | 28,79 |28,39 |28,58| one or more days before they come. M.   | 28,80 |28,35 |28,59| P.M.  | 28,78 |28,34 |28,57| -+-++-+ Note. The time of P.M.        | observation is a little past   | the greatest heat of the day.   |