. The Columbian magazine : or, monthly miscellany. , damp,Froll, cloudy. 9 2J 2 0 3 0 39 10 5 N E I 4 5 Snow, frolt. 20 36 7 2 29- 6 6 WNW ■ I 3 Rain. 21 34 i I 29 II I idem Froft, fair, clear. 22 30 0 I 0 29 10 5 calm I 2 4 Snow, froft. 23 27. 5 0] 2 0 29 83 W !>[ W Fair, froft. ■24 25 0 3 2 0 29 11 NW Very fair, froft, clear. 25 34 2 I 30 W N W Idem, after cloudy. 26 27 5 0 2 0 30 16 ENE [dem. 27 4 4 29 8 3 S w Cloudy. 2S 22 2 0 4 4 0, 29 10 6 N Fair, clear, briflc N. wind, froft. 29 14 2 0 6 9 0 29 It N. Fair, fun, briflc N. wind, froft. 30 50 8 29 7 variable Froft, cloudy, after fair. r


. The Columbian magazine : or, monthly miscellany. , damp,Froll, cloudy. 9 2J 2 0 3 0 39 10 5 N E I 4 5 Snow, frolt. 20 36 7 2 29- 6 6 WNW ■ I 3 Rain. 21 34 i I 29 II I idem Froft, fair, clear. 22 30 0 I 0 29 10 5 calm I 2 4 Snow, froft. 23 27. 5 0] 2 0 29 83 W !>[ W Fair, froft. ■24 25 0 3 2 0 29 11 NW Very fair, froft, clear. 25 34 2 I 30 W N W Idem, after cloudy. 26 27 5 0 2 0 30 16 ENE [dem. 27 4 4 29 8 3 S w Cloudy. 2S 22 2 0 4 4 0, 29 10 6 N Fair, clear, briflc N. wind, froft. 29 14 2 0 6 9 0 29 It N. Fair, fun, briflc N. wind, froft. 30 50 8 29 7 variable Froft, cloudy, after fair. rA 29, oreareflD. of 0 le 29 D. dii plus gr. froid. 10 3 0 the 16, great-eft 2 I _ _ ^ 7th,^,.,ueft ie 7, the loth, leail [nconftant, cold, ani wet. ^ D. of heat. de chayd. elevation. W N W 6 3 2 I 7 V3 i 70 2 7 29 4 «Variation, Difagreeable weather early winter. Variation, Variation, ai 61 2 27 3 9 3 - 1 Tcmperiiture Temperature Imean 1 29 6 8 L 40 ? „ ^• —*--• tl! \i » -. ^ ^ >•- i^^i ^^^ ^h y^. ^i ^^ >> A ^ %i V- «r *aa dK^ W- f THE COLUMBIAN MAGAZINE, For NOVEMBER, 1786. Defer//)Hon c/ B o n e s, 5:c. y3«/;i /tear tl:e River Ohio. EXPLORING tbe paths ofnature, and tracing her throher numerous meanders, is certainlyan occupation fuited to intellcdlualbeings, who cannot more gratefullyacknowledge the blefTmg than byemploying their facullies in con-templating the power and good-nefs of the Divine Giver, as ex-hibited in Iiis works ; nor has heonly adapted, in a confiderable de-gree, the mind of man to the taflc,but has likewifc added a (lirriulus,by making many of our worldly en-joyments depend on an acquaintancewith her ; but were all other ad-vantages wanting, there is onewhich would render the favour in-valuable. Abftraded from the doc-trine of revelation, which is as yetbut partially believed by the world, book of nature is the only re-cord from which the cxillcncc,power, &c. of the Gre


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