Show ATMOSItlCnn OK MARS 71a 1settesy Planet 111eeI will Ir rnnl < llr lane Vi llir Let tu now remark that the Martian meteorology U I let complicated and moro pleasant than thai of the earth says ihe North American Review hero the weather U almoit always nile especially during summer Very seldom nro there clouds even In winter Generally when wo arc unable to ills Inculth through the telescope Ihn do calls of Iho geographical configuration pan the planet the fault li I In our own tmoipluro and not In that ot Mara It li very rarely tho cato that when our ntmoipherio condition nro good wears unable to see these details Darns Dar-ns tho last period of observance of lara In 1891 I to Speak for myself encountered only fifteen day from Oct 10 to 25 when the surface of tho planet was veiled by III own atmosphere at-mosphere Claude t nro cxcnwlvcly rare on the surface of Mars and perhaps ex ht al nil only na fogs or light cirrus they aro nut clouds ot rain or norm These veils an very Infrequent there while they nro perpetual upon tho earth Probably there li I not a single lay In the > ear when tho entire iur face of the earth li I uncovered so that It could be satisfactorily observed from pace The planets have two meteorological meteoro-logical systems that are absolutely an Ithctlral Furthermore In the rnrc fled atmosphere of Mara there cpn bono bo-no powerful wind like the trndo winds and the predominant ntmotphcrlcil currents which ode terrestrial cll matei Occasionally however observers ob-servers have noted lone itritika of mow which appear to have bceen Produced pro-duced by current In a tranquil atmosphere at-mosphere Shlaplrelll for Inttanrr observed inch streaks trainees In November and December 1881 around ho northern pole and extending n > considerable con-siderable distance from It Hut micli thing nre exception The normal condition of Mars li fine weather |