Climatological data, South Carolina . RALEIGH, X. BUREAU OFFICE. OlTOBKR ig. 1904. HOh P ci ^ —i_Jl-H? w a,p &H H <: HZO. imoA Si:ri IMiiii;, IMiM. ( AND C KOIS: SOUTH (^Al{()l>INA SlX^lTON. V. s. i)i;rARiMi;\r ov ACKicn/rrKi:. CL1MATI-: AM) CROP Sl-RVICE \vi-;\tiii;k \\vk\i.\u. CKNTRAI. OFFICE: WASHINGTON, D. C. SOUTH CRf^Obl^fl SECTION. J. W. BAUEK, Section Director, COLUMBIA, S. C. Vol. VII. Columbia, S. C, Septembeb, 1904. No. 9. PROGRESS OF -pARM WORK. While tlie closing dates of September, 1904, had midsum-mer heat, and were the warmest on record for those dates in


Climatological data, South Carolina . RALEIGH, X. BUREAU OFFICE. OlTOBKR ig. 1904. HOh P ci ^ —i_Jl-H? w a,p &H H <: HZO. imoA Si:ri IMiiii;, IMiM. ( AND C KOIS: SOUTH (^Al{()l>INA SlX^lTON. V. s. i)i;rARiMi;\r ov ACKicn/rrKi:. CL1MATI-: AM) CROP Sl-RVICE \vi-;\tiii;k \\vk\i.\u. CKNTRAI. OFFICE: WASHINGTON, D. C. SOUTH CRf^Obl^fl SECTION. J. W. BAUEK, Section Director, COLUMBIA, S. C. Vol. VII. Columbia, S. C, Septembeb, 1904. No. 9. PROGRESS OF -pARM WORK. While tlie closing dates of September, 1904, had midsum-mer heat, and were the warmest on record for those dates ina period of from 10 to 33 years, the month as a whole wasonly sliohtly warmer than usual, and had a wide range intemperature, especially during the last decade. Light frostswere reported from Newberry county on the 23-24th, whichis unusually early. This variability in temperature had nonoticeably harmful effect on crop development, although itundoubtedly hastened the maturity of growing crops and theopening of cotton, some of which opened prematurely fromthe eiiects of the heat. The precipitation was below normal, with deficienc


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